11-4232
In re Lehman Bros. ERISA Litig.
1
2 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
3
4 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
5
6
7
8 August Term, 2012
9
10 (Argued: March 14, 2013 Decided: July 15, 2013)
11
12 Docket No. 11-4232-cv
13
14
15 ALEX E. RINEHART, JO ANNE BUZZO, MARIA DESOUSA,
16 LINDA DEMIZIO, MONIQUE FONG MILLER,
17
18 Plaintiffs-Appellants,
19
20 -v.-
21
22 JOHN F. AKERS, MICHAEL L. AINSLIE, THOMAS H. CRUIKSHANK,
23 MARSHA EVANS JOHNSON, CHRISTOPHER GENT, ROLAND A. HERNANDEZ,
24 HENRY KAUFMAN, JOHN D. MACOMBER, MARY PAT ARCHER,
25 AMITABH ARORA, MICHAEL BRANCA, EVELYNE ESTEY,
26 ADAM FEINSTEIN, DAVID ROMHILT, ROGER S. BERLIND,
27 JERRY A. GRUNDHOFER, RICHARD S. FULD, JR., WENDY M. UVINO,
28
29 Defendants-Appellees.*
30
31
32
33
34 Before:
35 SACK, WESLEY, Circuit Judges, NATHAN, District Judge.**
*
The Clerk of Court is directed to amend the official
caption to conform to the listing of the parties stated above.
**
The Honorable Alison J. Nathan, of the United States
District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by
designation.
1 Plaintiffs-Appellants, former employees of Lehman
2 Brothers Holdings, Inc. (“Lehman”), initiated this action
3 under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”)
4 in the United States District Court for the Southern
5 District of New York (Kaplan, J.). They claimed that
6 Defendants-Appellees who were members of Lehman’s Employee
7 Benefit Plans Committee breached their fiduciary duty to
8 prudently manage the company’s employee stock ownership plan
9 (“ESOP”) by failing to “eliminate or curtail” Plaintiffs’
10 investment in Lehman stock during the class period.
11 Plaintiffs also claimed that these Defendants breached their
12 fiduciary duty of disclosure, and that Defendants who were
13 members of Lehman’s Board of Directors breached their
14 fiduciary duties to appoint, monitor and inform the plan
15 managers. The district court dismissed Plaintiffs’
16 complaint(s) pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) because Plaintiffs
17 did not allege sufficient facts to show that members of the
18 Employee Benefit Plans Committee knew or should have known
19 that continued investment in Lehman stock was imprudent.
20 The district court dismissed Plaintiffs’ claims against the
21 former Directors as derivative of Plaintiffs’ failed claims
22 against the ERISA plan managers. We AFFIRM.
23
24 AFFIRMED.
25
26
27
28
29
30 MARK C. RIFKIN, Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman &
31 Herz LLP (Daniel W. Krasner, Gregory M.
32 Nespole, Matthew M. Guiney, Beth A. Landes,
33 Maja Lukic, Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman &
34 Herz LLP, New York, NY; Thomas J. McKenna,
35 Gainey & McKenna, New York, NY, on the brief),
36 Interim Co-Lead Counsel for Plaintiffs-
37 Appellants.
38
39
40 JONATHAN K. YOUNGWOOD (Janet Gochman, Hiral D.
41 Mehta, on the brief), Simpson Thacher &
42 Bartlett LLP, New York, NY, for the Benefit
43 Committee Defendants-Appellees.
44
45
2
1 ADAM J. WASSERMAN (Andrew J. Levander, Kathleen N.
2 Massey, Dechert LLP, New York, NY; Thomas K.
3 Johnson II, J. Ian Downes, Dechert LLP,
4 Philadelphia, PA, on the brief), for all of
5 the Director Defendants-Appellees Other than
6 Richard S. Fuld, Jr.
7
8 Patricia M. Hynes, Todd S. Fishman, Allen & Overy
9 LLP, New York, NY, for Defendant-Appellee
10 Richard S. Fuld, Jr.
11
12 BENJAMIN R. BOTTS, Attorney (M. Patricia Smith,
13 Solicitor of Labor, Timothy D. Hauser,
14 Associate Solicitor for Plan Benefits
15 Security, Elizabeth Hopkins, Counsel for
16 Appellate and Special Litigation, on the
17 brief), United States Department of Labor,
18 Washington, DC, for Amicus Curiae Hilda L.
19 Solis, Secretary of the United States
20 Department of Labor.
21
22
23
24 WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
25 Plaintiffs-Appellants (“Plaintiffs”) are former
26 employees of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (“Lehman”), or
27 its subsidiaries, who participated in the Lehman Brothers
28 Savings Plan (the “Plan”) and, specifically, in the Lehman
29 Stock Fund (the “LSF”). The Plan is covered by the Employee
30 Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq.
31 (“ERISA”). Under the Plan, employees of Lehman could choose
32 to contribute portions of their salaries to different
3
1 investment funds to save for retirement. One of the funds,
2 the LSF, is an employee stock ownership plan (“ESOP”)
3 invested exclusively in Lehman common stock. Though the
4 Plan prohibited employees from allocating all of their
5 contributions to the LSF, after Lehman declared bankruptcy
6 in September 2008, that portion of Plaintiffs’ retirement
7 savings invested in the LSF was rendered essentially
8 worthless.
9 Arguing that Defendants-Appellees, the members of
10 Lehman’s Employee Benefit Plans Committee (the “Benefit
11 Committee Defendants”) and the company’s Directors (the
12 “Director Defendants”) who appointed them, breached their
13 fiduciary duties under ERISA, Plaintiffs instituted this
14 action in the United States District Court for the Southern
15 District of New York in October 2008. The district court
16 (Kaplan, J.) dismissed Plaintiffs’ initial and amended
17 complaints for failure to state a claim. We affirm the
18 district court’s decisions and hold that Plaintiffs failed
19 to plead a plausible claim that Defendants breached their
20 ERISA fiduciary duties.
21
22
4
1 Background
2 I. The Plan
3 The Benefit Committee Defendants were responsible for
4 administering Lehman’s employee retirement savings plan.
5 Lehman Directors who served as members of the Board’s
6 Compensation Committee were directly responsible for
7 appointing individuals to the Benefit Committee, which the
8 full Board endowed with “complete authority and discretion
9 to control and manage the operation and administration of
10 the Plan.” Joint App’x 436.
11 The Plan consisted of a Trust Fund that offered
12 multiple investment funds including the LSF. Id. at 433.
13 During the class period, if a Lehman employee failed to
14 designate a fund, the default investment option was a target
15 date mutual fund, not the LSF. SCAC ¶ 243. Plan-
16 participants “were permitted to allocate 20 percent (20%) of
17 their Plan contributions to the” LSF. Id. ¶ 80. The Plan
18 specifies that the LSF “shall at all times be invested
19 exclusively in Lehman Stock except for such reserve invested
20 in short-term fixed income investments or cash as shall be
21 determined to be necessary or advisable for the purpose of
22 maintaining appropriate liquidity . . . .” Joint App’x 430
5
1 (emphasis added). However, the Benefit Committee retained
2 the right to cease offering the LSF, or to divest some or
3 all of the Plan’s holdings in the LSF, as necessary to
4 comply with ERISA’s fiduciary duties. Specifically, the
5 Plan provided:
6
7 The [Benefit] Committee shall have the
8 right . . . to eliminate or curtail
9 investments in Lehman Stock . . . if and
10 to the extent that the [Benefit]
11 Committee determines that such action is
12 required in order to comply with the
13 fiduciary duty rules of section 404(a)(1)
14 of ERISA, as modified by section
15 404(a)(2) of ERISA.
16
17 Id. at 433.
18 The Benefit Committee Defendants continued to offer the
19 LSF as an investment option throughout the spring and summer
20 of 2008, when Lehman’s stock price fluctuated before falling
21 to less than $4.00 per share on the last trading day before
22 the company declared bankruptcy on September 15, 2008 – 158
23 years after its founding in 1850. Two days later, NYSE
24 Regulation, Inc. suspended trading of Lehman stock on the
25 New York Stock Exchange.
26 II. Procedural History
27 Plaintiffs filed a Consolidated Amended Complaint (the
28 “CAC”) on October 27, 2008. The CAC alleged that the
6
1 Director Defendants, along with Wendy Uvino, the chair of
2 the Benefit Committee, breached their ERISA fiduciary
3 duties. Plaintiffs premised this claim on Defendants’
4 failure to limit or divest Plaintiffs’ allegedly imprudent
5 investment in the LSF during the class period, which ran
6 from September 13, 2006 through October 27, 2008.
7 Plaintiffs lodged three counts against Defendants: (1)
8 breach of the duties of prudence and loyalty (including
9 disclosure obligations); (2) breach of the duty to avoid
10 conflicts of interest; and (3) breach of the duties to
11 monitor other fiduciaries and to provide them with accurate
12 information (solely against the Director Defendants).
13 On February 2, 2010, the district court granted
14 Defendants’ Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) motion
15 for failure to state a claim and dismissed the CAC in its
16 entirety. In re Lehman Bros. Sec. & ERISA Litig., 683 F.
17 Supp. 2d 294 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (Lehman I). The district court
18 subsequently granted Plaintiffs leave to amend; Plaintiffs
19 filed a Second Consolidated Amended Complaint (the “SCAC”)
20 on September 22, 2010.
21 Plaintiffs made three key changes. First, in addition
22 to Wendy Uvino, Plaintiffs named the rest of the Benefit
7
1 Committee members as Defendants. Second, Plaintiffs
2 narrowed the class period to March 16, 2008 through June 10,
3 2009. These dates respectively represent the date that Bear
4 Stearns was acquired by JPMorgan Chase (in lieu of total
5 collapse) and the date that the Benefit Committee liquidated
6 shares of Lehman stock in the LSF. Third, the SCAC included
7 additional facts purporting to show that the Benefit
8 Committee Defendants knew or should have known that Lehman
9 stock was an imprudent investment for Plaintiffs.
10 The 496-paragraph SCAC provides a thorough recitation
11 of the 2008 financial crisis with a focus on Lehman’s ill-
12 fated involvement with mortgage-backed securities.
13 Plaintiffs claim that “by no later than the collapse of Bear
14 Stearns, Defendants knew or should have known that the
15 Plan’s heavy investment in [Lehman] Stock was imprudent”
16 because of, inter alia: Lehman’s alleged leverage ratio of
17 more than 30:1; Lehman’s use of questionable accounting
18 tactics (including Repo 105);3 the extent of Lehman’s
3
Ordinary repo transactions involve entering into sale and
repurchase agreements to satisfy short-term cash needs. Repo 105
transactions, however, entail removing the asset collateralizing
the loan from the company’s balance sheet (as if it has been
sold) and then using the cash from the transaction to pay down
other existing liabilities. The result of this transaction is to
temporarily reduce a company’s net leverage ratio. Shortly after
the quarter ends (and reports are submitted), the company then
8
1 potential losses from trading in subprime mortgage-backed
2 derivatives; and Lehman’s inadequate reserves to cover its
3 exposure. SCAC ¶¶ 162-63.
4 Plaintiffs allege that the Benefit Committee Defendants
5 should have been aware of these risks to Lehman’s financial
6 stability as a result of their positions within the
7 company,4 presentations by an outside investment consulting
8 firm, and the numerous published articles and reports that
9 questioned Lehman’s profits and long-term viability during
10 the spring and summer of 2008. Plaintiffs also claim that a
11 reasonable investigation by the Benefit Committee Defendants
12 would have revealed probative information, including, for
13 example, the frantic but ultimately unsuccessful efforts
14 made by Lehman management, in conjunction with government
15 officials, to seek an outside capital infusion or to arrange
16 a sale of Lehman in the weeks prior to bankruptcy.
repays the Repo 105 counter-party and the collateralized assets
reappear on the company’s balance sheet. See generally In re
Lehman Bros. Sec. & ERISA Litig., 799 F. Supp. 2d 258, 268-69
(S.D.N.Y. 2011).
4
For example, Plaintiffs claim that Benefit Committee
Defendant Amitabh Arora, who allegedly served as Lehman’s Global
Head of Rates Strategy during the class period and who had
previously been the Chief of Mortgage Research at Morgan Stanley,
should have recognized “Lehman’s exposure to catastrophic
losses,” given his “background and expertise in the mortgage
industry.” SCAC ¶ 63.
9
1 The district court dismissed the SCAC pursuant to Rule
2 12(b)(6). In re Lehman Bros. Sec. & ERISA Litig., No. 09 MD
3 02017 (LAK), 2011 WL 4632885 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 5, 2011) (Lehman
4 II). With respect to Plaintiffs’ duty of prudence claim,
5 the court determined that the complaint failed to plead
6 sufficient facts to show that the Benefit Committee
7 Defendants knew or should have known that Lehman faced a
8 dire situation when Bear Stearns was sold. Id. at *3-5.
9 The district court also dismissed Plaintiffs’ two
10 disclosure claims. Id. at *5-6. First, the court found
11 that the Benefit Committee Defendants had no affirmative
12 duty to disclose information about Plan investments –
13 specifically, the status of Lehman’s financial condition –
14 in addition to information about the Plan itself. Id. at
15 *5-6. Second, while the court recognized that fiduciaries
16 who provided information to plan-participants had an
17 obligation to provide accurate information, it determined
18 that the Benefit Committee Defendants had not breached this
19 duty by incorporating filings made with the Securities and
20 Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) into the SPD issued to plan
21 participants on January 1, 2008 because this incorporation
22 occurred outside of the class period. Id. at *6. Moreover,
10
1 the court reasoned that although the incorporation was
2 forward-looking, the Benefit Committee Defendants could not
3 be said to have intentionally connected allegedly
4 misleading, future SEC filings to the SPD. Id.
5 With respect to Plaintiffs’ claims against the Director
6 Defendants, the court accepted that the Directors were
7 properly considered fiduciaries, but only insofar as they
8 appointed the members of the Compensation Committee, which
9 in turn appointed the members of the Benefit Committee. Id.
10 at *6-7. This meant that Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of
11 the duty of prudence (and disclosure) was not properly
12 lodged against the Director Defendants. Id. at *7. The
13 court rejected Plaintiffs’ claim that the Director
14 Defendants had breached their fiduciary duty to appoint
15 qualified plan managers because it was “unsupported by even
16 the barest factual allegations.” Id. Finally, the court
17 dismissed Plaintiffs’ claim that the Director Defendants
18 breached their fiduciary duty to monitor the Benefit
19 Committee Defendants as derivative of Plaintiffs’
20 unsuccessful claim for breach of the duty of prudence. Id.
21 at *8.
22
11
1 Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the district court
2 erred by dismissing the CAC and the SCAC under Rule 12(b)(6)
3 because Plaintiffs plausibly alleged that: (1) the Benefit
4 Committee Defendants breached their fiduciary duty of
5 prudence by continuing to offer the LSF as an investment
6 option and by failing to sell Lehman stock invested in the
7 LSF; (2) the Benefit Committee Defendants breached their
8 fiduciary duty of disclosure by incorporating Lehman’s
9 allegedly inaccurate SEC filings into SPDs sent to plan-
10 participants; and (3) the Director Defendants breached their
11 fiduciary duties to monitor, appoint and inform the Benefit
12 Committee Defendants in their management of Lehman’s ERISA
13 Plan.5
14
15
16
5
Plaintiffs do not raise any arguments on appeal
challenging the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims
for: (1) all defendants’ duty to avoid conflicts of interest; (2)
the Benefit Committee Defendants’ affirmative duty to disclose
information about Lehman’s financial condition to plan-
participants; (3) the Director Defendants’ duty to manage the
Plan prudently; and (4) the Director Defendants’ duty to disclose
information directly to plan-participants. Accordingly,
Plaintiffs have waived these claims. United States v. Babwah,
972 F.2d 30, 34-35 (2d Cir. 1992).
12
1 Discussion
2 “We review de novo a district court’s dismissal under
3 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).” In re Citigroup
4 ERISA Litig., 662 F.3d 128, 135 (2d Cir. 2011). Although
5 “[w]e accept as true the facts alleged in the complaint[s],”
6 id., “[t]o survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must
7 contain sufficient factual matter . . . to ‘state a claim to
8 relief that is plausible on its face,’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
9 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v.
10 Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)).
11 I. Duty of Prudence
12 A. The Moench Presumption
13 Under ERISA, fiduciaries must discharge their duties
14 “with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the
15 circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a
16 like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in
17 the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with
18 like aims.” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B). Ordinarily, ERISA
19 fiduciaries must act prudently “by diversifying the
20 investments of the plan so as to minimize the risk of large
21 losses.” Id. § 1104(a)(1)(C). The primary purpose of an
22 ESOP, however, is investment in employer securities – and
13
1 employer securities only. See Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 137.
2 This is facially inconsistent with ERISA’s requirement that
3 fiduciaries diversify plan-participants’ investments.
4 Although “Congress has encouraged ESOP creation by, for
5 example, exempting ESOPs from ERISA’s ‘prudence
6 requirement,’” it did so “‘[]only to the extent that it
7 requires diversification[].’” Id. (quoting Moench v.
8 Robertson, 62 F.3d 553, 568 (3d Cir. 1995)); 29 U.S.C. §
9 1104(a)(2). The possibility of a serious conflict is
10 apparent; an ERISA fiduciary of an ESOP can easily become
11 torn between the duties to “protect[] retirement assets and
12 encourag[e] investment in employer stock.” Citigroup, 662
13 F.3d at 138.
14 In Moench, the Third Circuit proposed a means of
15 resolving this potential dilemma: minimal judicial review
16 for challenges to a fiduciary’s management of an ESOP. See
17 62 F.3d at 571. The Third Circuit reasoned that an ESOP is
18 “simply a trust under which the trustee is directed to
19 invest the assets primarily in the stock of a single company
20 . . . a purpose explicitly approved and encouraged by
21 Congress.” Id. at 571. The court observed that trustees
22 are under a duty to “conform to the terms of the trust,”
14
1 such that “[i]f the trust requires the fiduciary to invest
2 in a particular stock, the trustee must comply unless
3 compliance would be impossible or illegal.” Id. (internal
4 quotation marks and alteration omitted). As recently noted
5 by the Seventh Circuit, an ESOP fiduciary abuses its
6 discretion under Moench if the fiduciary permits investment
7 in employer stock when the fiduciary “‘could not have
8 [believed reasonably] that continued adherence to the ESOP’s
9 direction was in keeping with the settlor’s expectations of
10 how a prudent trustee would operate.’” White v. Marshall &
11 Ilsley Corp., 714 F.3d 980, 988 (7th Cir. 2013) (Hamilton,
12 J.) (quoting Moench, 62 F.3d at 571).
13 We recently adopted the Moench presumption in
14 Citigroup.6 662 F.3d at 138. This Court specifically
15 rejected the argument that the Moench presumption should not
16 apply at the pleading stage. Id. at 139. Because we view
17 the presumption as a standard of review, rather than an
18 evidentiary presumption, “[w]here plaintiffs do not allege
19 facts sufficient to establish that a plan fiduciary has
6
This Court noted that, at the time, “[t]he Sixth, Fifth,
and Ninth Circuits ha[d] all adopted the Moench presumption.”
Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 138 (citing Kuper v. Iovenko, 66 F.3d 1447
(6th Cir. 1995); Kirschbaum v. Reliant Energy, Inc., 526 F.3d 243
(5th Cir. 2008); and Quan v. Computer Scis. Corp., 623 F.3d 870
(9th Cir. 2010)).
15
1 abused his discretion, there is no reason not to grant a
2 motion to dismiss.” Id.; cf. Pfeil v. State Street Bank and
3 Trust Co., 671 F.3d 585, 592-93 (6th Cir. 2012).
4 Citigroup further endorsed the “‘guiding principle’”
5 discussed by the Ninth Circuit in Quan v. Computer Sciences
6 Corp., 623 F.3d 870 (9th Cir. 2010), that “judicial scrutiny
7 should increase with the degree of discretion a plan gives
8 its fiduciaries to invest.” Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 138
9 (quoting Quan, 623 F.3d at 883). “Thus a fiduciary’s
10 failure to divest from company stock is less likely to
11 constitute an abuse of discretion if the plan’s terms
12 require – rather than merely permit – investment in company
13 stock.” Id. Plans that do not give fiduciaries discretion
14 to divest from an ESOP are more heavily shielded from
15 searching judicial review. Accordingly, when an ERISA
16 fiduciary is torn between following the terms of a plan
17 requiring investment in employer stock and the provisions of
18 ERISA requiring prudent management, we will presume that the
19 fiduciary acted prudently unless the plaintiff-participant
20 pleads “facts sufficient to show that [fiduciaries] either
21 knew or should have known that [the employer] was in the
22 sort of dire situation that required them to override Plan
16
1 terms in order to limit participants’ investments in
2 [employer] stock.” Id. at 141.
3 Moench applies here. Although we had not officially
4 adopted it at the time the district court dismissed either
5 of Plaintiffs’ complaints, the court presciently employed
6 this standard of review on both occasions. See Lehman I,
7 683 F. Supp. 2d at 301; Lehman II, 2011 WL 4632885, at *3-4.
8 Plaintiffs argue that the Moench presumption is inapplicable
9 (or, in the alternative, weak) because the Plan gives the
10 Benefit Committee discretion to “eliminate or curtail”
11 investments in the LSF. Appellants’ Br. at 21. Were this
12 the case, Plaintiffs would be correct that the Moench
13 presumption should apply in limited form. However, contrary
14 to Plaintiffs’ characterization, the Plan here does not
15 provide the Benefit Committee with discretion sufficient to
16 undermine the policies requiring application of the Moench
17 presumption.
18 The LSF must “at all times be invested exclusively in
19 Lehman Stock,” with the exception of minor cash reserves,
20 Joint App’x 430, and the Trust Fund “shall consist of the
21 Lehman Stock Fund,” among others, id. at 433 (emphasis
22 added). The Plan gives the Benefit Committee the right “to
17
1 eliminate or curtail investments in Lehman Stock . . . if
2 and to the extent that the Committee determines that such
3 action is required in order to comply with the fiduciary
4 duties rules” of Section 404 of ERISA. Id. at 433 (emphasis
5 added). This does not equate to “discretion” to divest from
6 the LSF. See Taveras v. UBS AG, 708 F.3d 436, at 443-46 (2d
7 Cir. 2013) (distinguishing between plans’ differing levels
8 of discretion and finding a plan that offered fiduciaries “a
9 means by which to terminate the company’s fund as an
10 investment option if [they] so choose[]” was still covered
11 by Moench because plan language mandated offering the
12 company’s fund). The Plan here merely states the law:
13 Fiduciaries must comply with the applicable tenets of ERISA.
14 In Citigroup, we acknowledged “ERISA’s requirement that
15 fiduciaries follow plan terms only to the extent that they
16 are consistent with ERISA,” thus ensuring that even plans
17 affording zero discretion contain implicit legal limits.
18 See 662 F.3d at 139 (emphasis added). The limit here is
19 simply made explicit. The Moench presumption applies in
20 full force.
21 Before applying the Moench presumption in this case, we
22 first address two legal questions implicated by its
18
1 application. First, can Plaintiffs claim that the Benefit
2 Committee Defendants knew or should have known that Lehman
3 stock was an imprudent investment based on material,
4 nonpublic information? Second, how specific must Plaintiffs
5 be with regard to when the Benefit Committee Defendants knew
6 or should have known that Lehman was in a “dire situation”?
7 1. Inside Information
8 Many of the facts that Plaintiffs allege gave rise to
9 the Benefit Committee Defendants’ awareness (or actionable
10 ignorance) of Lehman’s “dire situation,” were not public
11 during the class period. For example, Plaintiffs claim that
12 the Benefit Committee Defendants knew or should have known
13 about private conversations between Lehman’s Chief Executive
14 Officer, Defendant Richard S. Fuld, Jr. (“CEO Fuld”), and
15 Treasury Secretary Paulson.
16 Plaintiffs argue that the Benefit Committee Defendants
17 had a duty to investigate whether Lehman was in a dire
18 situation, and that any reasonable investigation would have
19 revealed material, nonpublic information sufficient to
20 confirm that Lehman was on the verge of collapse.7 In its
7
Plaintiffs anticipate that the Benefit Committee
Defendants would have discovered material, nonpublic information
in part because Plaintiffs claim that the Director Defendants had
19
1 amicus brief supporting Plaintiffs, the Secretary of Labor
2 (the “Secretary”) asserts that “a reasonable investigation
3 of Lehman’s financial health” would have revealed such
4 nonpublic information as Lehman’s use of improper accounting
5 methods and private conversations between CEO Fuld and the
6 government about selling Lehman or obtaining a capital
7 infusion. Amicus Br. at 25-26. According to the Secretary,
8 objectively prudent fiduciaries would have uncovered this
9 type of inside information and acted upon it.8
10 Several other Circuits have confronted, and rejected,
11 similar arguments. Recently, in White, the Seventh Circuit
12 disposed of any contention that insiders should engage in
13 transactions based on material, nonpublic information, as
14 this “would violate federal securities laws.” 714 F.3d at
15 992. In Kirschbaum v. Reliant Energy, Inc., 526 F.3d 243,
16 256 (5th Cir. 2008), the Fifth Circuit confirmed that
17 “[f]iduciaries may not trade for the benefit of plan
a duty to provide it to them – a duty that we refuse to find on
these facts. See infra Part III.
8
Although the Secretary of Labor’s amicus brief implies
that the Benefit Committee Defendants should have divested the
LSF of Lehman stock, at oral argument, the attorney representing
the Department of Labor clarified the Secretary’s position as
solely that the Benefit Committee Defendants should have ceased
purchasing Lehman stock on behalf of participants who elected to
put their savings into the LSF during the class period.
20
1 participants based on material information to which the
2 general shareholding public has been denied access,” and
3 that this served to “reenforce[] . . . the conclusion that
4 the Moench presumption cannot be lightly overcome.”
5 Likewise, in Quan, the Ninth Circuit noted that one reason
6 to adopt the Moench presumption is because its high burden
7 “gives fiduciaries a safe harbor from failing to use insider
8 information to divest from employer stock.” 623 F.3d at
9 881. “We do not construe an ERISA fiduciary’s duties of
10 loyalty and prudence to include violating the law to serve a
11 plan’s beneficiaries.” Id. at 882 n.8.
12 Fiduciaries are under no obligation to either seek out9
13 or act upon inside information in the course of fulfilling
14 their duties under ERISA. The duty of a fiduciary to
15 prudently discharge his obligations “solely in the interest
16 of the participants and beneficiaries” should be read to end
17 with the words within the bounds of the law. 29 U.S.C. §
18 1104(a)(1)(B). The prudent man does not commit insider
19 trading. We recognize that, had the Benefit Committee
20 Defendants sought inside information that revealed the
9
This is not a case in which fiduciaries in charge of day-
to-day plan management already knew material, nonpublic
information by virtue of their corporate insider status.
21
1 imprudence of continued investment in Lehman stock,
2 breaching the terms of the Plan by ceasing to offer the LSF
3 as an investment option would not run afoul of federal
4 securities laws given the absence of a purchase or sale of
5 stock. See, e.g., Harris v. Amgen, Inc., – F.3d –, No. 10-
6 56014, 2013 WL 2397404, at * 14 (9th Cir. June 4, 2013).
7 Consider, however, that if plan managers are obligated
8 to conduct an investigation into the financial condition of
9 a plan asset that extends to material, nonpublic
10 information, plan managers will face a dilemma if inside
11 information shows that continued investment is imprudent.
12 On the one hand, plan managers will be able to adhere to
13 their duty of prudence by limiting further investment in the
14 improvident asset without breaching securities laws. On the
15 other hand, plan managers will not be able to comply with
16 their duty of prudence by divesting the plan of its pre-
17 existing investment without risking liability for insider
18 trading. There is no happy solution to this quandary, and –
19 particularly when ERISA plans are managed internally – it is
20 a situation that is bound to occur. Given the conflicted
21 state of the law, there seems but one reasonable approach:
22 The duty of prudence must not be construed to include an
22
1 obligation to affirmatively seek out material, nonpublic
2 information pertaining to plan investments.
3 2. Timing
4 In Lehman I, the district court dismissed Plaintiffs’
5 claim against the Benefit Committee Defendants for breach of
6 the duty of prudence because Plaintiffs failed “to allege
7 facts that permit a determination of when Lehman’s financial
8 condition” reached the point of imminent corporate collapse.
9 683 F. Supp. 2d at 302. Although Plaintiffs specified a
10 moment of clarity in the SCAC – March 16, 2008, the sale
11 date for Bear Stearns – the district court was not persuaded
12 that Plaintiffs had alleged sufficient facts to explain “why
13 those circumstances alerted or ought to have alerted Lehman
14 that it would suffer the same fate” as Bear Stearns. Lehman
15 II, 2011 WL 4632885, at *5.
16 Plaintiffs argue that “[t]he district court’s
17 unprecedented requirement that a complaint must specify the
18 precise moment in time when a company faces imminent
19 collapse or other dire circumstances imposes an impossible
20 pleading burden on a plaintiff.” Appellants’ Br. at 41.
21 While such a requirement might well be unduly onerous, see
22 Pfeil, 671 F.3d at 596 n.3, the district court here did not
23
1 reject Plaintiffs’ claims solely because Plaintiffs failed
2 either to allege any specific point in time (in the CAC) or
3 to allege the correct point in time (in the SCAC) when
4 Lehman stock became an imprudent investment. Instead, the
5 court concluded that Plaintiffs did not allege facts
6 sufficient to show that the Benefit Committee Defendants
7 knew or should have known that Lehman was in a dire
8 situation at any point within the class period. See Lehman
9 I, 683 F. Supp. 2d at 302-03; Lehman II, 2011 WL 4632885, at
10 *4-5.
11 In Lehman I, the district court noted that “[e]ven
12 assuming that the CAC sufficiently alleged that Lehman’s
13 collapse became imminent at some time materially before the
14 bankruptcy filing, it contains nothing to support the
15 inference that Ms. Uvino [the only Benefit Committee
16 Defendant] . . . knew or should have known that.” 683 F.
17 Supp 2d. at 302. In Lehman II, the district court
18 considered four allegations that Plaintiffs claimed
19 indicated the Benefit Committee Defendants’ necessary
20 knowledge. 2011 WL 4632885, at *3-5. Of these, two involve
21 events that took place after Bear Stearns collapsed, thus
22 indicating that the district court was open to considering
24
1 the sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ allegations of imprudence
2 throughout the class period. Id. at *4-5. Like the
3 district court, we will consider Plaintiffs’ allegations
4 regarding what the Benefit Committee Defendants knew or
5 should have known throughout the entire class period. We do
6 not demand any particular timing specificity – only that the
7 facts alleged, if true, lead to the conclusion that
8 Defendants knew or should have known that the company was in
9 a dire situation at some time during the class period.
10 B. Applying the Moench Presumption
11 There is no “bright-line rule” regarding how much
12 evidence is necessary to rebut the Moench presumption.
13 Quan, 623 F.3d at 883. It is clear, however, that the
14 Moench presumption is very difficult to overcome – as it is
15 designed to be. See id.; see also White, 714 F.3d at 991-
16 93; Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 140-41. “[P]roof of the
17 employer’s impending collapse may not be required,” but mere
18 stock fluctuations are insufficient to show that fiduciaries
19 acted imprudently by adhering to the terms of an ESOP. Id.
20 at 140; see also Kirschbaum, 526 F.3d at 256 n. 12 (citing
21 cases featuring approximately 75% decreases in stock price
22 that did not include facts sufficient to overcome the Moench
25
1 presumption). Whether a fiduciary knew or should have known
2 that the employer was in a “dire situation” is assessed
3 “based upon information available to the fiduciary at the
4 time of each investment decision and not ‘from the vantage
5 point of hindsight.’” Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 140 (citing 29
6 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B)).
7 Thus, the fact that Lehman ultimately declared
8 bankruptcy must not be allowed to influence our assessment
9 of whether the Benefit Committee Defendants acted prudently
10 during the class period. Armed with the information
11 available in the months preceding bankruptcy, the Benefit
12 Committee Defendants risked liability for action (violating
13 the terms of the ESOP by limiting Plaintiffs’ investment) or
14 inaction (remaining invested and exposing plan-participants
15 to what may have been unintended risk). See Summers v.
16 State Street Bank & Trust Co., 453 F.3d 404, 410 (7th Cir.
17 2006). Had the Benefit Committee Defendants10 sold Lehman
18 stock immediately after Bear Stearns was sold, for example,
19 plan-participants might have protested and claimed that the
20 fiduciaries erroneously violated the terms of the Plan and
10
The Benefit Committee Defendants are fiduciaries for
purposes of Plaintiffs’ claims because they had “complete
authority and discretion to control and manage the operation and
administration of the Plan.” Joint App’x 436.
26
1 deprived them of the subsequent increase in the value of
2 Lehman’s stock. Although Lehman’s share price exhibited a
3 downward trend overall during the spring and summer of 2008,
4 the daily price per share fluctuated widely. Immediately
5 after Bear Stearns was sold, on March 17, 2008, Lehman was
6 trading at $31.75 per share. Six weeks later, on April 28,
7 2008, Lehman’s stock price had risen to $47.52 – an
8 approximately 50% increase.11
9 During the week before Lehman filed for bankruptcy, its
10 stock price fell steadily from $14.15 per share on Monday,
11 September 8, 2008, to $3.65 per share at the close of
12 business on Friday, September 12, 2008. But even then, in
13 Lehman’s final hours, the market arguably viewed the 158-
14 year-old company as a going concern by assigning it a
15 positive expected value.12 “A [fiduciary] is not imprudent
11
As the Seventh Circuit observed in similar circumstances,
“[c]ourts can take judicial notice of public stock price
quotations without converting a motion to dismiss into one for
summary judgment.” White, 714 F.3d at 985.
12
We assume for these purposes that markets operate
efficiently. Any other assumption is incompatible with
developing a workable standard. See generally White, 714 F.3d at
992-93; see also Ronald J. Gilson & Reinier H. Kraakman, The
Mechanisms of Market Inefficiency, 70 VA. L. REV. 549 (1984); but
see Lynn A. Stout, The Mechanisms of Market Inefficiency: An
Introduction to the New Finance, 28 J. CORP. L. 635 (2003).
Although Plaintiffs did not raise the issue in either the
CAC, the SCAC or their briefs on appeal, we note two SEC Orders
from July 2008 that had the potential to affect market efficiency
27
1 to assume that a major stock market . . . provides the best
2 estimate of the value of the stocks traded on it.” Id. at
3 408. We realize, of course, that it is not quite that
4 simple. While we do not believe that fiduciaries should be
5 forced to second-guess the market’s valuation of an
6 investment, we understand that (although it is empirically
7 impossible to quantify) ERISA plan-participants have
8 interests that are distinct from market investors
9 collectively – namely, greater risk-aversion. Congress,
10 too, recognized this when it enacted ERISA. See generally
11 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a). However, Congress explicitly allows
12 (some have said encourages)13 fiduciaries to contract around
during the class period. See Emergency Order Pursuant to Section
12(k)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Taking Temporary
Action to Respond to Market Developments, Release No. 58166, July
15, 2008, available at
http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/2008/34-58166.pdf; see also
Amendment to Emergency Order Pursuant to Section 12(k)(2) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Taking Temporary Action to
Respond to Market Developments, Release No. 58190, July 18, 2008,
available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/other/2008/34-58190.pdf.
In July 2008, in order to “maintain fair and orderly securities
markets,” the SEC prohibited short selling securities of certain
large financial firms, including Lehman. Id. Because Plaintiffs
did not allege that the Benefit Committee Defendants knew or
should have known about the SEC Orders or the potential effect
they may have had on the market’s valuation of Lehman stock, we
do not consider the uncertain impact of this temporary
regulation.
13
“Congress favors ESOPs as a policy matter because they
provide a way for employers to align employee and management
interests.” White, 714 F.3d at 986 (citing Tax Reform Act of
28
1 the basic core of prudent investing: diversification. Id. §
2 1104(a)(2).
3 Here, Plaintiffs have not rebutted the Moench
4 presumption because they fail to allege facts sufficient to
5 show that the Benefit Committee Defendants knew or should
6 have known that Lehman was in a “dire situation” based on
7 information that was publicly available during the class
8 period. First, we note that the forced sale of Bear Stearns
9 alone does not show that Lehman specifically was in serious
10 danger. In fact, given that Bear Stearns was (effectively)
11 bailed out by the government,14 the events of March 16, 2008
12 could be construed to cut against Plaintiffs’ claims because
13 the Benefit Committee Defendants may have believed that
14 Lehman would be saved as well.15 Likewise, the general
1976, Pub. L. No. 94-455, § 803(h), 90 Stat. 1520, 1590 (1976)).
Indeed, to preserve and encourage ESOPs, Congress exempted
fiduciaries of ESOPs from the duty to diversify and accordingly
limited the duty of prudence. 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(2).
14
The government orchestrated Bear Stearns’ sale to JPMorgan
Chase by providing JPMorgan Chase with a non-recourse loan
collateralized only by Bear Stearns’ assets, thus, in effect,
bailing out Bear Stearns.
15
Although the SCAC alleges that in or around July 2008,
“the government announced that it would not bail out other
failing financial institutions,” SCAC ¶ 337, it also claims that
on September 11, 2008, Lehman’s CEO, “Defendant Fuld[,] was asked
to resign from the board of the New York Federal Reserve, to
avoid the appearance of impropriety in case the government was
required to front any money to find Lehman a strategic partner,”
29
1 climate for financial firms in 2008, the collective
2 information known (or knowable) to the Benefit Committee
3 Defendants by virtue of their positions at Lehman, the
4 investment consulting firm’s presentations, public articles
5 and reports, Lehman’s financial disclosures and Lehman’s
6 declining (but still positive) stock price do not counter
7 the presumption that these fiduciaries acted prudently by
8 remaining invested in Lehman stock.
9 Plaintiffs claim that the Benefit Committee Defendants
10 should have been aware of Lehman’s alleged high leverage
11 ratio, its broad exposure to the subprime mortgage market,
12 its inability to cover the extent of its potential losses
13 and its use of questionable accounting tactics (such as Repo
14 105) by virtue of their expertise and their positions at
15 Lehman. We agree with the district court that Plaintiffs’
16 allegations are “conclusory,” Lehman II, 2011 WL 4632885, at
17 *3, and that, regardless, they merely show that the members
18 of the Benefit Committee would have possessed comparable
id. ¶ 382. However, Plaintiffs also allege that on September 12,
2008, the last trading day before Lehman declared bankruptcy,
Treasury Secretary Paulson leaked to the media that the
government would not aid Lehman’s survival. Id. ¶ 389. Based on
the SCAC, the government was not Lehman’s last hope, however, as
both CEO Fuld and representatives of the Federal Reserve
continued their efforts to negotiate a sale of Lehman over the
weekend of September 13-14, 2008. Id. ¶¶ 391-92, 395-96.
30
1 knowledge to the market analysts and investors who helped
2 maintain Lehman’s substantial market capital even
3 immediately prior to the company’s bankruptcy.
4 Plaintiffs further allege that the Benefit Committee
5 Defendants knew or should have known that Lehman was an
6 imprudent investment because of presentations by an outside
7 consulting firm showing that the subprime mortgage market
8 was on the verge of collapse. The presentations to the
9 Benefit Committee Defendants, however, did not deal
10 specifically with the potential effects of a credit crunch
11 on Lehman. The majority of the investment consulting firm’s
12 analyses focused on comparing the degree of Lehman’s
13 downward spiral with the market-wide decline. Based on
14 Plaintiffs’ allegations, which we accept as true, the
15 Benefit Committee Defendants were not obligated, after
16 allegedly being told that Lehman was under-performing the
17 market, to breach the terms of the Plan by refusing to offer
18 the LSF or by divesting Lehman stock.
19 Plaintiffs argue that several published articles and
20 reports questioning Lehman’s viability should have alerted
21 the Benefit Committee Defendants to Lehman’s imprudence as
22 an investment. Even accepting the truth of Plaintiffs’
31
1 allegations, these types of statements in the financial
2 press do not give rise to a plausible assertion that the
3 Benefit Committee Defendants knew or should have known that
4 Lehman was in a “dire situation.” We agree with Plaintiffs
5 that Lehman’s increasingly frequent write-downs of losses
6 (and the media coverage thereof) should have given rise to
7 concern. However, we still cannot find that Plaintiffs
8 plausibly alleged that the Benefit Committee Defendants knew
9 or should have known that Lehman was an imprudent investment
10 given the mixed signals with which the fiduciaries grappled
11 throughout the class period. For example, Plaintiffs allege
12 in the SCAC that Lehman “materially overstated its liquidity
13 pool” when it “publicly announced that it[ ] was $41
14 billion” on September 10, 2008, just days before the company
15 filed for bankruptcy. SCAC ¶ 367. It seems that
16 Plaintiffs’ claims are improperly directed; the true objects
17 of Plaintiffs’ ire are the Lehman executives whom Plaintiffs
18 allege made material misstatements regarding the financial
19 health of the company – not the ERISA fiduciaries who relied
20 on them.
21 Still, Plaintiffs claim that even if these indicators
22 could not, standing alone, compel the Benefit Committee
32
1 Defendants to “curtail or eliminate” the LSF, the facts
2 alleged should have incited these fiduciaries to conduct an
3 investigation that would have revealed the imprudence of
4 maintaining the investment in the LSF. But Plaintiffs
5 recognize that a failure to investigate, on its own, is
6 insufficient to state a claim for breach of the duty of
7 prudence, and that “plaintiffs must allege facts that, if
8 proved, would show that an ‘adequate investigation would
9 have revealed to a reasonable fiduciary that the investment
10 at issue was improvident.’” Citigroup, 662 F.3d at 141
11 (citing Kuper v. Iovenko, 66 F.3d 1447, 1460 (6th Cir.
12 1995)) (emphasis added). Here, any reasonable investigation
13 undertaken by the Benefit Committee Defendants would not
14 have revealed additional facts sufficient to compel the
15 fiduciaries to break the terms of the Plan because they
16 could not have based “prudent” investment choices on the
17 material, nonpublic information that Plaintiffs claim showed
18 that Lehman was failing.
19 We find that the sum of Plaintiffs’ plausible
20 allegations do not overcome the Moench presumption. Market
21 fluctuations and an above-water price immediately in advance
22 of bankruptcy would not have put a prudent investor on
33
1 notice that Lehman had reached a “dire situation.” We
2 understand that the risk-tolerance of participants in an
3 ESOP may differ from the risk-tolerance of the market as a
4 whole, but single-stock portfolios are inherently risky.16
5 We cannot penalize fiduciaries who allow plan-participants
6 to invest in Congressionally-encouraged ESOPs absent very
7 strong indications that fiduciaries knew or should have
8 known that participants no longer desired to remain
9 invested.17
16
Curiously, research indicates that this is not the
public’s perception. See White, 714 F.3d at 993-94. However,
“[t]here is no doubt that it is highly risky for an individual
employee to invest heavily in the employer’s stock.” Id. (citing
numerous expert sources for proposition that single-stock
investments are exposed to greater risk than diversified
portfolios).
17
Plaintiffs’ reliance on several out-of-Circuit district
court cases is misplaced. See Appellants’ Br. at 31-34. The
facts alleged in In re YRC Worldwide, Inc. Erisa Litigation, No.
09-2593-JWL, 2010 WL 4386903 (D.Kan. 2010), for example, are
arguably more severe than those pled here; the district court
found the Moench presumption rebutted on the basis of, inter
alia, the company’s debt-for-equity exchange program that diluted
the value of existing shareholders’ shares by 95% by creating one
billion new shares. Id. at *6-7. Two of Plaintiffs’ cases did
not involve ERISA plans that required the availability of a
company stock fund. See Dann v. Lincoln Nat. Corp., 708 F. Supp.
2d 481, 489-90 (E.D.Pa. 2010) (applying the “intermediate abuse
of discretion standard as defined in Moench” but on the basis of
plans that merely “contemplate and expect that the [company]
Common Stock Fund is available as an investment option”); Carr v.
Int’l Game Tech., 770 F. Supp. 2d 1080, 1094 (D.Nev. 2011)
(finding that “Committee members were fiduciaries with the
discretion to remove [company] stock from the menu of investment
options” and that, even with the lower threshold, plaintiffs
failed to rebut the Moench presumption).
34
1 II. Duty of Disclosure
2 Plaintiffs also claim that the Benefit Committee
3 Defendants breached their duties of disclosure under ERISA
4 by incorporating Lehman’s allegedly inaccurate SEC filings
5 into SPDs sent to plan-participants. According to
6 Plaintiffs, assessing the viability of their claim requires
7 answering three questions: (1) whether the Benefit Committee
8 Defendants were acting as fiduciaries when they incorporated
9 the SEC filings; (2) whether the SPDs were sent to plan-
10 participants during the class period; and (3) whether the
11 Benefit Committee Defendants knew these SEC filings
12 contained misleading information, and, if not, whether they
13 had an obligation to investigate the possibility based on
14 “‘warning’ signs.” Appellants’ Br. at 56.
15 Using Plaintiffs’ proposed framework, first, liability
16 under ERISA can “arise[] only from actions taken or duties
17 breached in the performance of ERISA obligations.” In re
18 WorldCom, Inc., 263 F. Supp. 2d 745, 760 (S.D.N.Y. 2003)
19 (finding that SPD incorporation of SEC filings was
20 “insufficient to transform those documents into a basis for
21 ERISA claims against their signatories” – the directors).
22 In its recent decision in Dudenhoefer v. Fifth Third
35
1 Bancorp., 692 F.3d 410, 422-23 (6th Cir. 2012), the Sixth
2 Circuit addressed the previously unanswered “question of
3 whether the express incorporation of SEC filings into an
4 ERISA-mandated SPD is a fiduciary communication.” The court
5 answered this question in the affirmative because “selecting
6 the information to convey through the SPD is a fiduciary
7 activity.” Id. at 423. We agree. The Benefit Committee
8 Defendants in this case were acting as ERISA fiduciaries
9 when they incorporated Lehman’s SEC filings into the SPD
10 distributed to plan-participants.
11 Second, Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred
12 because, although the SEC filings were prepared before the
13 class period began, the SPDs were sent to plan-participants
14 during the class period. The SPDs of concern here were
15 issued on January 1, 2008; the class period began on March
16 16, 2008, as specified by the SCAC. Plaintiffs’ argument
17 depends on their claim that the SPDs were “sent to Plan
18 participants during the Class Period,” but Plaintiffs do not
19 plausibly allege this fact. Appellants’ Br. at 56 (emphasis
20 added). Still, as the district court recognized, “the
21 incorporation was forward-looking inasmuch as the SPD
22 purported to incorporate future SEC filings.” Lehman II,
36
1 2011 WL 4632885, at *6. However, Plaintiffs must still
2 articulate a viable claim that the Benefit Committee
3 Defendants knew of false statements contained in (or yet to
4 be contained in) the SEC filings incorporated in (or yet to
5 be incorporated in) the SPDs.
6 Thus, third, “a fiduciary may be held liable for false
7 or misleading statements when ‘the fiduciary knows those
8 statements are false or lack a reasonable basis in fact.’”
9 Gearren v. The McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc., 660 F.3d 605, 611 (2d
10 Cir. 2011) (quoting Flanigan v. Gen. Elec. Co., 242 F.3d 78,
11 84 (2d Cir. 2001)). Here, Plaintiffs have not identified
12 any specific portions of Lehman’s SEC filings that the
13 Benefit Committee Defendants knew were false or misleading –
14 or that even are false or misleading.18
15 Plaintiffs also argue that the Benefit Committee
16 Defendants had a duty to investigate the veracity of
17 Lehman’s SEC filings before incorporating them into the SPD
18
Plaintiffs do assert that “Lehman’s accounting treatment
for its Repo 105 transactions, and the total absence of any
disclosure about Repo 105 in . . . SEC filings . . . created a
false impression of Lehman’s business condition, violating
[Generally Accepted Accounting Principles].” SCAC ¶ 195.
Plaintiffs, do not, however, plead facts to show that the Benefit
Committee Defendants knew about Repo 105 or its allegedly
misleading omission from SEC filings incorporated into the SPD.
37
1 because they were “undoubtedly privy to multiple ‘warning’
2 signs” that these corporate documents were materially
3 misleading. Appellants’ Br. at 56-57. In Citigroup, we
4 held that Plaintiffs must “allege[] facts that, without the
5 benefit of hindsight” show that an investigation of the
6 accuracy of a company’s SEC filings was warranted. 662 F.3d
7 at 145. This Court observed that
8 requiring Plan fiduciaries to perform an
9 independent investigation of SEC filings
10 would increase the already-substantial
11 burden borne by ERISA fiduciaries and
12 would arguably contravene Congress’s
13 intent ‘to create a system that is [not]
14 so complex that administrative costs, or
15 litigation expenses, unduly discourage
16 employers from offering [ERISA] plans in
17 the first place.’
18
19 Id. (quoting Conkright v. Frommert, 130 S.Ct. 1640, 1649
20 (2010)) (alterations in original).
21 Here, the publicly-known information available to the
22 Benefit Committee Defendants did not give rise to an
23 independent duty to investigate Lehman’s SEC filings prior
24 to incorporating their content into SPDs issued to plan-
25 participants.
26 III. Duties to Appoint, Monitor and Inform
27 Plaintiffs also appeal from the district court’s
28 dismissal of several related claims lodged against the
38
1 Director Defendants. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that
2 the Director Defendants, acting in a fiduciary capacity,
3 breached their duties under ERISA in four ways: (1) failing
4 to appoint qualified plan managers; (2) failing to replace
5 the Benefit Committee Defendants; (3) failing to monitor the
6 Benefit Committee Defendants; and (4) failing to provide the
7 Benefit Committee Defendants with “crucial information about
8 Lehman’s dire situation.” Appellants’ Br. at 48-49.
9 Initially, the Director Defendants contend that not all
10 of them are ERISA fiduciaries for purposes of Plaintiffs’
11 claims because only the members of the Compensation
12 Committee were responsible for appointing and monitoring
13 plan managers.19 Because we agree with the Director
14 Defendants’ argument that the district court properly
15 dismissed Plaintiffs’ claims as either inadequately pled or
16 derivative of the failed prudence claim, we decline to reach
17 the question of which particular Directors qualified as
18 ERISA fiduciaries.
19
ERISA authorizes fiduciaries to allocate their
responsibilities to other named fiduciaries pursuant to a plan’s
express provisions. 29 U.S.C. § 1105(c). However, the
allocating fiduciaries may still be liable if their decision to
delegate their responsibilities breached ERISA’s duty of prudence
under Section 404(a)(1). Id. § 1105(c)(2)(A).
39
1 First, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of
2 Plaintiffs’ duty to appoint and duty to replace claims as
3 conclusory and unsupported. Second, we affirm the court’s
4 dismissal of Plaintiffs’ duty to monitor claim as derivative
5 of Plaintiffs’ failed duty of prudence claim. Plaintiffs
6 cannot maintain a claim for breach of the duty to monitor by
7 the Director Defendants absent an underlying breach of the
8 duties imposed under ERISA by the Benefit Committee
9 Defendants.
10 Third, we find that the district court also correctly
11 dismissed Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of the duty to inform
12 as derivative of Plaintiffs’ claims against the Benefit
13 Committee Defendants. But, even if we determined that
14 Plaintiffs adequately alleged that the Benefit Committee
15 Defendants had violated their duty of prudence, we would be
16 unlikely to conclude that the Director Defendants had a duty
17 to keep the plan managers apprised of material, nonpublic
18 information regarding the soundness of Lehman as an
19 investment. We have already declined to “create a duty to
20 provide participants with nonpublic information pertaining
21 to specific investment options.” Citigroup, 662 F.3d at
22 143; see also Lanfear v. Home Depot, Inc., 679 F.3d 1267,
40
1 1284-86 (11th Cir. 2012). Since ERISA fiduciaries have no
2 duty to disclose inside information to plan-participants so
3 that participants may act on it, Plaintiffs’ argument that
4 the Benefit Committee Defendants should have been privy to
5 inside information so that they could act on it on behalf of
6 plan-participants is simply not persuasive.
7
8 Conclusion
9 Lehman’s demise was doubtless attributable to a number
10 of identifiable causes that become apparent through the lens
11 of hindsight. We conclude, however, that Plaintiffs have
12 not adequately pled that Lehman was in a dire situation that
13 the Plan fiduciaries could or should have recognized during
14 the class period. ERISA puts those fiduciaries in an
15 unfortunately difficult position – on the proverbial
16 “razor’s edge,” White, 714 F.3d at 990 – in attempting to
17 meet their fiduciary duty of prudence while simultaneously
18 offering an undiversified investment option to employees
19 trying to save for retirement. Plaintiffs have not
20 adequately alleged that Defendants fell off of that edge.
21 For the foregoing reasons, the orders of the district
22 court are hereby AFFIRMED.
41