UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 04-1347
DANNY O. SCHAFFER, on behalf of himself and
all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
versus
WESTINGHOUSE SAVANNAH RIVER COMPANY,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
South Carolina, at Aiken. Cameron McGowan Currie, District Judge.
(CA-02-799)
Argued: February 1, 2005 Decided: March 11, 2005
Before WIDENER, MOTZ, and GREGORY, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by unpublished per
curiam opinion.
ARGUED: Marion Clyde Fairey, Jr., SPEIGHTS & RUNYAN, Hampton, South
Carolina, for Appellant. Steven Mark Wynkoop, NELSON, MULLINS,
RILEY & SCARBOROUGH, Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON
BRIEF: Daniel A. Speights, SPEIGHTS & RUNYAN, Hampton, South
Carolina, for Appellant. Giles M. Schanen, Jr., NELSON, MULLINS,
RILEY & SCARBOROUGH, Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
See Local Rule 36(c).
2
PER CURIAM:
Danny O. Schaffer brought this action against his employer,
Westinghouse Savannah River Co. (“WSRC”), alleging that the terms
of the company’s pension plan or promises made by the company
entitled him to certain pension benefits. Alternatively, he
asserts that he was entitled to “appropriate equitable relief”
under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3) (2000) because WSRC breached its
fiduciary duty under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1) and (a)(2)
(2000), to provide him with accurate information about these
benefits. The district court granted summary judgment to WSRC and
Schaffer appeals. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm in
part, and vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Schaffer began working for Westinghouse Electric Corp. (“WEC”)
on May 20, 1970, at its Hampton, South Carolina, plant. In early
1989, he moved to the Savannah River Site, a nuclear facility in
Georgia operated at the time by E.I. DuPont De Nemours & Co., with
the understanding that the Department of Energy would imminently
enter into a contract with WEC to operate the site. On March 31,
1989, WSRC, then a wholly owned subsidiary of WEC, began operating
the Savannah River Site. Schaffer claims, and for purposes of
summary judgment the district court assumed, that before he agreed
to move from the Hampton facility to the Savannah River Site and
3
after he did so, management personnel informed him that his service
for pension purposes would include his years at both WEC and WSRC.
WSRC administers the WSRC/Bechtel Savannah River, Inc. Pension
Plan (“Plan”), which is fully funded by the Department of Energy.
In June 1989, Schaffer received a letter from the “Manager of the
Benefits and Plans Section of the Human Resources Department” at
WSRC informing him that he had an “Adjusted Service Date of May 20,
1970,” and that “[i]n the interest of expediency [WSRC has]
verified your employment service date(s) with your prior
Westinghouse Site(s) and [has] adjusted your service date
accordingly.” In 1990 Schaffer received an annual benefits
statement from WSRC indicating that both his eligibility for a
pension and the amount of the pension he would receive were based
on his combined years of service to WEC and WSRC. As late as 2000,
his annual benefit statement continued to report that his “Adjusted
Service Date (for Pension eligibility)” was May 20, 1970, and that
his “Credited Service (for Pension calculation)” was based on his
combined years of service to WEC and WSRC.
However, in November 2001, WSRC informed Schaffer that the
annual benefits statements it had been sending him since 1990 (i.e.
for 11 years) were inaccurate because his years at WEC should have
counted for pension eligibility only and not for calculating the
amount of his pension. More than thirty employees had similarly
received annual statements reporting inflated pension values. One
4
other WSRC employee, George Donald Benton, took early retirement in
reliance on the inflated estimates of his pension benefits.
Schaffer and Benton filed contemporaneous suits against WSRC.
Schaffer raised three distinct and independent claims for relief.
First, he alleged that the Plan documents required WSRC to credit
his years at WEC in calculating his WSRC pension benefits. Second,
he asserted that if the Plan documents did not require WSRC to
count his nineteen years at WEC in calculating his WSRC pension,
the doctrine of equitable or, more accurately, promissory, estoppel
required WSRC to do so because prior to adopting the Plan, WSRC had
promised Schaffer that it would credit his years at WEC. Third,
Schaffer maintained that WSRC breached its fiduciary duty under
ERISA by sending him inaccurate benefits statements for eleven
years, entitling him to “appropriate equitable relief” under ERISA,
29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3).
The district court limited discovery in this case because the
parties had access to discovery from Benton’s case. The court
entered a discovery order requiring WSRC to provide Schaffer with
all Plan documents and any records regarding his participation in
the Plan or WEC’s pension plan and permitting the use of discovered
materials from the Benton case. In the order, the district court
advised:
The parties are encouraged to discuss whether further
discovery should be had prior to filing of dispositive
motions and to conduct such further discovery as they may
agree is appropriate. While the court will not require
5
further participation in discovery prior to filing of the
dispositive motions, it will consider the necessity for
further discovery when it reviews those motions. To the
extent a party seeks further discovery at that time, that
party should attach appropriate documentation to
demonstrate that the specific discovery is not only
necessary to address the particular motion, but was
requested and rejected prior to filing of the dispositive
motions.
Despite this order, Schaffer did not file his first set of
interrogatories or first request for production until the day the
parties filed dispositive motions.
II.
Ruling on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, the
district court first addressed Schaffer’s belated request for
further discovery. The court concluded that “[b]y failing to
comply with the court’s written directive regarding discovery,
Schaffer ha[d] waived any right to seek further discovery in
advance of resolution of the pending dispositive motions.” The
court also pointed out that some of the information Schaffer sought
“should have been within the discovery produced in accordance with”
the court’s discovery order, and, absent a timely motion to compel
production, the court would “assume[] that the production was made
as directed.”
After reviewing the Plan documents and summary plan
descriptions (“SPD”), the district court concluded that the Plan
6
did not require WSRC to count Schaffer’s nineteen years at WEC in
calculating the amount of his WSRC pension. The court
pointed out that Section 3.02(f) of both the 1989 and 1994 Plan
documents specifically states that
An employee with service credited under a qualified
retirement plan sponsored by either Westinghouse Electric
Corporation or Bechtel Group [or their affiliates] shall
be credited with that service for purposes of determining
eligibility for certain benefits, but not for computing
the amount of any benefit, as of his first date of
employment by an Employer or Affiliated Employer.
Similarly, the 1992 SPD defines “credited service,” which is used
for “benefit accrual purposes,” as years worked for WSRC or Bechtel
Savannah River, Inc. The court noted that the 1989 SPD states
nothing to the contrary and even “suggests that only employees of
WSRC or Bechtel Savannah River, Inc. . . . accumulate” years of
service “used to calculate the amount of a pension benefit.”
Accordingly, the court concluded that Schaffer’s “strained, though
plausible” reading of other “selected and isolated provisions” of
the Plan could not “survive the clearly contradictory language [of
§ 3.02(f)] which unambiguously limits the purposes for which WEC
service may be considered.”
The district court also rejected Schaffer’s claim that under
the doctrine of equitable or promissory estoppel, promises made to
him prior to the adoption of the Plan bound WSRC to calculate his
pension based on his combined years of service to WEC and WSRC.
The court reasoned that the oral assurances made to Schaffer before
7
he moved to the Savannah River Site were too vague to constitute a
promise to count his nineteen years at WEC in calculating his WSRC
pension because the comments could be interpreted merely as
guaranteeing that his years at WEC would be counted to determine
his eligibility for a WSRC pension. Similarly, the court held that
the June 1989 letter Schaffer received from WSRC’s human resources
department informing him that he had an “Adjusted Service Date of
May 20, 1970” could be interpreted to mean merely that his years at
WEC would be counted in determining his eligibility for a pension.
The court also noted that the 1989 SPD, though issued by WSRC
before adopting the Plan, did not entitle Schaffer to the relief
sought because it did not state that WSRC would count years of
service to WEC in calculating the value of a WSRC pension.
The district court found that “[t]he only documents which
clearly suggest the result Plaintiff seeks are the annual benefits
statements.” The court concluded that not even the earliest annual
benefit statement could constitute a binding pre-Plan promise as to
how benefits would be calculated because Schaffer did not receive
any statement until after the Plan was adopted, “which occurred no
later than the fall of 1989.” Thus, the court found no estoppel
doctrine required WSRC to count Schaffer’s years at WEC in
calculating his pension.
The court explained, however, that “[t]he conclusion that
Schaffer cannot succeed under the terms of the Plan does not
8
foreclose the possibility of all recovery. It remains possible for
Schaffer to obtain equitable relief for WSRC’s breach of its duty
to provide accurate information.” Noting that “it is undisputed
that WSRC provided inaccurate annual benefits statements” and “that
the same mistake was made consistently over a period of years and
as to many (if not all) similarly situated individuals,” the court
concluded that “Schaffer is entitled, as a matter of law, to a
ruling that WSRC breached its fiduciary duty by providing
inaccurate information” in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 1025 (a)(1) and
(a)(2).
Relying on Varity Corp. v. Howe, 516 U.S. 489, 514-15 (1996),
and Griggs v. E.I. DuPont De Nemours & Co., 237 F.3d 371, 380 (4th
Cir. 2001), the court stated that it could only award a remedy for
the breach that was “truly equitable in nature” and “limited to
that necessary to remedy the breach of fiduciary duty.” The court
rejected Schaffer’s request that the court order WSRC to pay him
the benefits estimated in his annual statements, explaining “[t]his
form of ‘specific performance’” could not be “fairly” classified
as equitable relief and “[was] not, therefore, within the remedies
the court can grant for a breach of fiduciary duty.” The court
similarly rejected Schaffer’s request that WSRC compensate him for
the increased costs he sustained by staying at WSRC rather than
transferring back to WEC, which he claims he would have done had he
9
known WSRC would not credit his years at WEC in calculating his
pension benefits.
Schaffer noted this appeal, arguing that the district court
erred in curtailing discovery, in concluding that neither the Plan
nor pre-Plan promises required WSRC to credit his years at WEC in
calculating his pension benefits, and in finding no equitable
remedy existed for WSRC’s breach of fiduciary duty.1
III.
We review de novo the district court’s order granting summary
judgment. Lone Star Steakhouse, Inc. & Saloon v. Alpha of Va.,
Inc., 43 F.3d 922, 928 (4th Cir. 1995).
1
After noting his appeal, Schaffer filed a motion asking the
district court to set aside its judgment that no equitable remedy
exists for WSRC’s breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. Schaffer
relied on Hollingsworth v. Westinghouse Electric Corp. and
Westinghouse Savannah River Co., No. GD 99-18449 (Pa. Ct. of Common
Pleas Apr. 26, 2004). There, the court found that by 1991, WSRC
had learned that “because of the quirks of WEC’s qualified pension
plan,” employees who moved from WEC to WSRC “would receive less
money from their pensions because of their transfer to WSRC.” Id.
¶ 18. In response to this realization, WSRC created a plan, known
as the “delta plan,” to compensate employees for the shortfall in
their pensions. Schaffer contended that the district court should
order, as a proper equitable remedy, that he be permitted to
participate in this plan. The district court denied Schaffer’s
motion when WSRC agreed it would not argue claim preclusion if
Schaffer filed a separate lawsuit seeking benefits under the delta
plan. Schaffer argues on appeal that the district court erred in
denying his motion because the Hollingsworth factual findings
contradict assumptions underlying the district court’s conclusion
that no equitable remedy exists to cure WSRC’s breach of fiduciary
duty. We need not consider this argument because, as explained
within, WSRC has now conceded that, regardless of the Hollingsworth
findings, an equitable remedy for this breach does exist.
10
We read the Plan documents and summary plan descriptions as
the district court did. Accordingly, we hold the Plan does not
require WSRC to credit Schaffer’s nineteen years at WEC for pension
benefit accrual purposes.
We also agree with the district court that Schaffer’s estoppel
claim must fail. Only promises made prior to the adoption of a
Plan can give rise to a claim of equitable or promissory estoppel.
See Healthsouth Rehabilitation Hospital v. Am. Nat’l Red Cross, 101
F.3d 1005, 1011 (4th Cir. 1996). As the district court recognized,
the annual statements constituted the only representations made by
WSRC to Schaffer promising to credit his years at WEC in
calculating his pension benefits, and Schaffer did not receive
these statements until after WSRC adopted the Plan.2 Therefore,
2
Schaffer argues that a genuine dispute of fact exists as to
whether WSRC adopted the Plan before it sent him his first annual
statement. This argument fails. “[E]ven where the evidence is
likely to be within the possession of the defendant, as long as the
plaintiff has had a full opportunity to conduct discovery,” a
plaintiff cannot defeat the grant of summary judgment by resting
“upon mere allegation or denials of his pleading, but must set
forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for
trial.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 256-57
(1986). The district court’s discovery order required WSRC to
provide Schaffer with the relevant information and gave the parties
an opportunity to seek further discovery. If Schaffer thought the
discovery order insufficient, he should have filed a timely request
for further discovery; if he thought WSRC failed to comply with the
order, he should have filed a timely motion to compel. He did
neither. The district court did not abuse its discretion by
denying Schaffer’s untimely request for further discovery -- even
if the potentially discoverable information was relevant to a
dispositive motion. See Lone Star Steakhouse, 43 F.3d at 928-29.
We also note that at oral argument WSRC represented that it
produced in discovery all evidence it had pertaining to the
11
the district court correctly concluded that the annual statements
could not give rise to relief under the doctrine of equitable or
promissory estoppel.
But just because Schaffer’s first two theories for relief fail
does not necessarily mean he is not entitled to any relief. The
district court determined that WSRC breached its fiduciary duty
under ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1) and (a)(2), to provide
Schaffer with accurate information regarding his pension. WSRC
does not appeal that determination. By statute a court may “enjoin
any act or practice which violates any provision of [ERISA] or the
terms of the plan” or award Schaffer “other appropriate equitable
relief (i) to redress such violations or (ii) to enforce any
provisions of this subchapter or the terms of the plan.” 29 U.S.C.
§ 1132(a)(3).
The district court correctly ruled that requiring WSRC to
credit Schaffer’s years at WEC in calculating his pension benefits
would not be an equitable remedy because it would put him in a
better position than he would have been in had the breach never
occurred.
However, we disagree with the district court’s conclusion
that, as a result, no equitable remedy exists for WSRC’s breach.
Indeed, at oral argument, WSRC expressly conceded that it was
adoption of the Plan; thus we have no reason to believe remanding
the claim for further discovery would have any effect on the
ultimate resolution of Schaffer’s estoppel claim.
12
within a court’s equitable powers to require WSRC to provide
Schaffer with a pension equivalent to that which he would have
received if WSRC had not sent him the inaccurate annual statements
and he had returned to WEC upon realizing the true method by which
WSRC would calculate his pension benefits. Because the record
lacks any basis for determining whether this equitable remedy is an
“appropriate” one, we must remand that question to the district
court. In making its determination, the court should consider
whether the pension Schaffer would have received had he returned to
WEC would have been greater than the combined value of the pension
he will receive from WSRC for his fifteen plus years of service at
the Savannah River Site and the pension he will receive from WEC
for his nineteen years at the Hampton facility.3
IV.
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the judgment of the
district court except as to its conclusion that no equitable remedy
exists for WSRC’s breach of fiduciary duty; with respect to that
3
The Hollingsworth court found that some employees who
transferred from WEC to WSRC would receive smaller pensions than
they would have if they had stayed at WEC because “the WEC pension
plan tended to reward longevity of employment once it was achieved
and did so by increasing the employer’s annual contributions as an
employee . . . neared retirement age, whereas the WSRC pension plan
called for level employer contributions, without regard to
longevity.” Hollingsworth, No. GD 99-18449, at ¶¶ 18-19. At oral
argument, WSRC insisted that this holds true only for employees who
are higher paid than Schaffer. We leave it to the district court
to resolve this issue.
13
issue only, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED
14