Smart v. The Gillette Company

USCA1 Opinion









UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

_________________________

No. 95-1705

SHARON M. SMART,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

THE GILLETTE COMPANY LONG-TERM DISABILITY PLAN,

Defendant, Appellee.

_________________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

_________________________

Before

Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

_________________________


Richard L. Burpee, with whom Burpee & DeMoura was on brief, __________________ ________________
for appellant.
John H. Mason, with whom Richard P. Ward, David T. Lyons, ______________ _______________ ______________
and Ropes & Gray were on brief, for appellee. ____________

_________________________

November 22, 1995

_________________________



















SELYA, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Sharon Smart SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

sued The Gillette Company Long-Term Disability Plan (Plan or LTD

Plan) for benefits she asserts were wrongfully denied her. The

district court ruled that Smart had waived her claim. See Smart ___ _____

v. The Gillette Co. Long-Term Disability Plan, 887 F. Supp. 383 ___________________________________________

(D. Mass. 1995). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

We take the underlying facts principally from the

parties' pretrial stipulations. The Gillette Company (Gillette)

hired appellant in 1976. In time, she became a senior product

analyst. Her job involved travel in connection with the testing

of Gillette products. In 1986, appellant injured her left knee

in a work-connected automobile accident. Between 1986 and 1990,

she underwent four surgical procedures in hopes of repairing the

damage to her knee. She worked sporadically during the first

half of this period, but not at all after September 8, 1988.

On September 7, 1988, Gillette, bent on terminating

appellant's at-will employment at year's end as part of a

reduction in force, sent her a letter that outlined a proposed

severance arrangement. Under it, appellant for a time would

receive severance pay and assorted benefits to which she would

not otherwise be entitled, but would go quietly into

unemployment's dark night, releasing any and all federal and

state claims she might have against Gillette. The September 7

letter listed the LTD Plan among the extended benefits that

appellant would enjoy if she accepted the proposal.


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Apparently concerned about her injured knee, appellant

did not immediately embrace the suggested severance terms, but,

rather, began a negotiation aimed at excluding workers'

compensation claims from the sweep of the requested release.

Gillette eventually acquiesced and, on December 16, 1988, sent

appellant a new letter that differed from the September 7 letter

in two important respects. First, it expressly excluded workers'

compensation claims from the general release. Second, it did not

mention the LTD Plan (an omission that had the effect of dropping

the Plan from the list of benefits that would continue during the

severance period).

Appellant reviewed the December 16 letter with her

lawyer and signed it on December 29. Gillette terminated her

employment effective December 31. As per the agreement,

appellant collected severance pay until November 4, 1989, and

received the other benefits listed in the December 16 letter

throughout the severance period (i.e., January 1 through November

4, 1989). During that same time frame, she settled her workers'

compensation claim for $43,750 and began collecting $887 per

month in social security disability payments.

On October 2, 1991, appellant filed an application for

benefits under the Plan, alleging that she had become

"permanently and totally disabled" during the severance period.

Gillette's corporate counsel denied the application out of hand.

After a series of fruitless requests for reconsideration,

appellant sued.


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The district court did not reach any of the variegated

issues associated with whether appellant did (or did not) display

a total and permanent disability as defined by the LTD Plan while

still a participant in it. The court instead found in effect,

after an evidentiary hearing replete with stipulated facts, that

appellant's Plan participation ended when her employment ended

(December 31, 1988), and that, therefore, she had no cognizable

claim in respect to a disability that did not materialize until

sometime in 1989 at the earliest.

II. DISCUSSION II. DISCUSSION

After careful examination of the record, the briefs,

and the applicable law, we hold that the severance agreement made

no provision for extended participation in the LTD Plan.

Consequently, Smart's appeal fails. For ease in explanation, we

divide our analysis into moieties.

A. The Severance Agreement. A. The Severance Agreement. _______________________

Appellant argues that the terms of the severance

agreement did not include a surrender of Plan benefits, but that,

to the exact contrary, the parties intended to permit appellant

to enjoy such benefits as part of the consideration tendered by

Gillette for the release. We approach this contention mindful

that the December 16 letter agreement, signed by both parties,

represents a contract between Smart and Gillette that potentially

affects rights protected by the Employee Retirement Income

Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. 1001-1461 (1988), and, thus,

is likely subject to interpretation in accordance with tenets of


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federal common law.1 See Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Dedeaux, 481 ___ ____________________ _______

U.S. 41, 56 (1987).

In construing the terms of contracts that are governed

by federal common law, we are guided by "common-sense canons of

contract interpretation." Burnham v. Guardian Life Ins. Co., 873 _______ ______________________

F.2d 486, 489 (1st Cir. 1989). One such canon teaches that

contracts containing unambiguous language must be construed

according to their plain and natural meaning. See id. "Contract ___ ___

language is usually considered ambiguous where an agreement's

terms are inconsistent on their face or where the phraseology can

support reasonable differences of opinion as to the meaning of

the words employed and obligations undertaken." Fashion House, ______________

Inc. v. K mart Corp., 892 F.2d 1076, 1083 (1st Cir. 1989). ____ _____________

Interpreting unambiguous terms is an activity that requires

judges to expound the law rather than to find the facts, and,

therefore, a trial court's interpretive determinations are

subject to plenary review. See, e.g., Allen v. Adage, Inc., 967 ___ ____ _____ ___________

F.2d 695, 698 (1st Cir. 1992). In most cases, the question of

whether a contract term is ambiguous also presents a question of

law subject to plenary review. See id.; see also RCI Northeast ___ ___ ___ ____ _____________

Servs. Div. v. Boston Edison Co., 822 F.2d 199, 202 (1st Cir. ___________ __________________

1987).

____________________

1We need not probe this point too deeply. Because the
result here is unaffected by choice of law, we can simply assume
(as have the litigants and the lower court) that federal
statutory and common law supply the rules of decision. See ___
Fashion House, Inc. v. K mart Corp., 892 F.2d 1076, 1092 (1st ____________________ _____________
Cir. 1989).

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If an inquiring court concludes that an ambiguity

exists in a contract, the ultimate resolution of it typically

will turn on the parties' intent. Exploring the intent of

contracting parties often (but not always) involves marshalling

facts extrinsic to the language of the contract documents. When

this need arises, these facts, together with the reasonable

inferences extractable therefrom, are together superimposed on

the ambiguous words to reveal the parties' discerned intent.

This construct ordinarily requires the judge in a non-jury case

to resolve questions of fact rather than questions of law. See ___

In re Newport Plaza Assocs., 985 F.2d 640, 645 (1st Cir. 1993) ____________________________

(stating that "the interpretation of [ambiguous] contract

language, itself acknowledged, becomes a question of fact for the

jury rather than a question of law for the judge"); RCI ___

Northeast, 822 F.2d at 202 (explaining that when "the plain _________

meaning of a contract phrase does not spring unambiguously from

the page or from the context, its proper direction becomes one

for the factfinder, who must ferret out the intent of the

parties"). In such circumstances, a reviewing court will uphold

the factfinder's resolution of the question unless it is clearly

erroneous. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a); see also In re Navigation ___ ___ ____ ________________

Technology Corp., 880 F.2d 1491, 1495 (1st Cir. 1989). ________________

In this case, appellant's assault focuses on the

following language in the severance agreement:

In consideration of the severance pay and ___
other benefits to be provided you as part of ______________________________
The Gillette Company's Restructuring Program,
you do hereby . . . release and agree to

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indemnify and hold harmless [Gillette] . . .
from any and all claims, charges, complaints,
or causes of action, now existing, both known
and unknown or arising in the future,
including but not limited to, all claims of
breach of contract . . ., or [claims] arising
from alleged violations of . . . any . . .
local, state, or federal law, regulation or
policy or any other claim relating to or
arising out of your employment with
[Gillette] or termination thereof . . . .
(Emphasis supplied.)

According to appellant, the underscored phrase is ambiguous

because the agreement makes no reference to the LTD Plan, leaving

up in the air whether Smart will retain coverage during the

severance period as a part of the consideration ("severance pay

and other benefits") for the general release. Thus, appellant's

thesis runs, the trial court should have mulled extrinsic

evidence including the September 7 letter to resolve the

uncertainty, and, had it done so, would perforce have concluded

that the phrase "other benefits" in the December 16 letter

encompassed extended coverage under the LTD Plan.

Appellant's mental gymnastics are nimble, but they

score low marks for substance. Accepted canons of construction

forbid the balkanization of contracts for interpretive purposes.

See Fashion House, 892 F.2d at 1084 (examining agreement as a ___ _____________

whole to interpret one part); see also Restatement (Second) of ___ ____ _______________________

Contracts 202 cmt. d (1981) (explaining that "[w]here the whole _________

can be read to give significance to each part, that reading is

preferred"). Here, when the phrase "other benefits" is read in

the full context of the document, the language is not ambiguous

at all. The preceding paragraphs of the letter agreement spell

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out precisely which benefits, in addition to severance pay,

appellant will receive in exchange for the release. They

include, with various qualifications, extended participation in

employee health and dental plans, life insurance, a savings plan,

and an employee stock ownership plan. Viewed against this

backdrop, it is pellucid that the later use of the "other

benefits" terminology refers to the benefits enumerated in the ______

text of the document itself. ___________________________

We think that this case is a classic example of a

situation in which the hoary maxim expressio unius est exclusio _____________________________

alterius is helpful. The maxim instructs that, when parties list ________

specific items in a document, any item not so listed is typically

thought to be excluded. See, e.g., FDIC v. Singh, 977 F.2d 18, ___ ____ ____ _____

22-23 (1st Cir. 1992) (applying expressio unius rule). While ________________

this interpretive maxim is not always dispositive, it carries

weight; and when, as now, there is absolutely nothing in the

agreement's text that hints at some additional item lurking

beyond the enumerated list, we see no reason why the maxim should

not be controlling. We conclude from what is written within the

four corners of the severance agreement, therefore, that the

phrase "other benefits" simply and unambiguously describes the

benefits enumerated in the agreement itself (and, hence, does not

include continued coverage under the Plan).

Appellant has a fallback position. She doggedly

insists that, regardless of the language of the December 16

letter, evidence from the parties' negotiations and "course of


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performance" reveals that they actually intended to include

extended coverage under the Plan as part of the consideration for

the release. This insistence is misplaced.

As a general rule, a court should not consider

extrinsic evidence to give meaning to a contract unless the

contract's terms are vague or ambiguous. See Rodriguez-Abreu v. ___ _______________

Chase Manhattan Bank, 986 F.2d 580, 586 (1st Cir. 1993); Bellino _____________________ _______

v. Schlumberger Technologies, Inc., 944 F.2d 26, 32 (1st Cir. ________________________________

1991). However, if the evidence is not offered to infuse the

contract with meaning, but only to demonstrate that a term is

vague or ambiguous in the first place, then the situation may be

different; courts sometimes may ponder extrinsic evidence to

determine whether an apparently clear term is actually

uncertain.2 See Restatement (Second), supra, 212 cmt. b ___ _____________________ _____

(suggesting that determinations of ambiguity are best "made in

the light of the relevant evidence of the situation and relations

of the parties, the subject matter of the transaction,

preliminary negotiations and statements made therein, usages of

trade, and the course of dealing between the parties"); E. Allan

Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts 7.12, at 277-78 (1990) ________________________

(approving this view); see also Arthur L. Corbin, Contracts 579 ___ ____ _________

(1960) (to like effect). But this exception is narrow at best,

and is inapposite here. In the most permissive of jurisdictions,

extrinsic evidence will be considered for the purpose of
____________________

2In our view, this possibility should not alter or affect
the rule that the determination of ambiguity is, in the first
instance, a question of law for the judge.

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determining whether an ambiguity exists only if it suggests a

meaning to which the challenged language is reasonably

susceptible. See Farnsworth, supra, 7.12, at 278. In no event ___ _____

may extrinsic evidence be employed to contradict explicit

contract language or to drain an agreement's text of all content

save ink and paper. See Burnham, 873 F.2d at 489 (admonishing ___ _______

that "courts have no right to torture language in an attempt to

force particular results or to convey delitescent nuances the

contracting parties neither intended or imagined").

In this case, the extrinsic evidence to which appellant

points reveals nothing remotely resembling an amphiboly in the

contextual meaning of "other benefits." That evidence falls into

two categories. The first category juxtaposes the September 7

and December 16 letters, and asks us to remark the fact that

extended Plan participation was included as part of the first

offer, and then deleted without special mention from the offer

which appellant actually accepted. But even if remarked this

fact confirms, rather than refutes, that LTD Plan benefits were

intended to be outside the "other benefits" explicitly promised

in the December 16 agreement. Put another way, Gillette's

deletion of the Plan from the list of preserved benefits bolsters

the applicability of the expressio unius maxim. _______________

The second category of extrinsic evidence to which

appellant adverts is cobbled together from a series of letters

written by Gillette's counsel in the process of denying

appellant's claim for LTD Plan benefits on its merits. Appellant


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maintains that these missives prove that, in the course of

performing the terms of the severance agreement, the Plan

administrator interpreted the agreement as commemorating

appellant's potential eligibility for benefits. Although courts

sometimes rely on such "course of performance" evidence to

interpret ambiguous contract terms, see, e.g., Agathos v. ___ ____ _______

Starlite Motel, 977 F.2d 1500, 1509 (3d Cir. 1992); Schultz v. _______________ _______

Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 872 F.2d 676, 679 (5th Cir. 1989), we __________________________

do not find appellant's evidence useful here.

For one thing, the correspondence in question postdates

the accrual of the dispute between the parties indeed, it came

into being only after the severance agreement itself had expired

whereas course-of-performance evidence typically involves "the

conduct of the parties before the advent of a controversy." ______

Schultz, 872 F.2d at 679 (emphasis supplied). For another thing, _______

the targeted correspondence, which seems to assume appellant's

eligibility under the Plan in September of 1989, involves only a

single claim for benefits. These communiques, whether read

singly or in the ensemble, do not affirmatively acknowledge

either an extension of coverage or appellant's generic

entitlement to benefits. On the whole, therefore, the

correspondence falls short of evincing the repeated dealings that

might constitute a course of performance between the parties

sufficient to indicate that "other benefits" means something

different than what the contract itself discloses. See generally ___ _________

Restatement (Second), supra, 202(4) (explaining that "course of ____________________ _____


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performance" is relevant "[w]here an agreement involves repeated

occasions for performance"); id. cmt. g (noting that course of ___

performance "is not conclusive of meaning," and that such conduct

"must be weighed in the light of the terms of the agreement and

their possible meanings").

To sum up, whether or not we refer to extrinsic

evidence, the severance agreement is free from ambiguity. That

agreement effectively extinguishes appellant's claim in that,

contrary to appellant's advertisement, it does not include a

promise to extend Plan coverage. The remaining issue, then,

concerns the validity of the severance agreement.

B. The Putative Waiver. B. The Putative Waiver. ___________________

Appellant labors to convince us that the agreement she

signed was invalid because it amounted to a waiver, and the

waiver, in turn, was unenforceable under ERISA. We think that

this formulation misconstrues the issue. As we see it, no waiver

is in play here. Appellant signed a severance agreement under

which Gillette promised her some extended benefits (but not LTD

Plan benefits). That agreement could not have waived her right

to participate in the Plan during the severance period because

she had no such right unless the employer affirmatively agreed to ___________________________________________

enlarge her eligibility under the Plan. As we have ascertained, _______________________________________

see supra Part II(A), Gillette did no such thing. ___ _____

To be sure, the waiver argument can be recast in terms

of appellant's release of all claims she might have against

Gillette a release that purportedly surrenders claims under


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ERISA for the wrongful denial of benefits. This is at best a

bootstrap approach to creating a justiciable waiver issue, for

one can scarcely release claims that one does not possess. And,

moreover, we are at loss to see how an employer can "wrongfully"

deny benefits to which an employee (or, more precisely put, an

ex-employee) is not entitled in the first place. See Ronald J. ___

Cooke, ERISA Practice and Procedure 2.08, at 2-28 (1995) ______________________________

(emphasizing that "ERISA affords no rights or protections to

those who are not participants" in a benefit plan).

At any rate, even if we assume that we are dealing with

an actual rather than an ersatz waiver, the waiver is

permissible. Congress passed ERISA in part to protect the rights

of employees who choose to participate in welfare benefit plans.

See 29 U.S.C. 1001; see also Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. ___ ___ ____ ____________________________

Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 113 (1989). To achieve that end, the _____

statute establishes a private right of action for employees who

allege that a plan administrator wrongfully denied a claim for

benefits due under the provisions of the plan. See 29 U.S.C. ___

1132(a). But Congress did not go so far as to prohibit an

employee from waiving her right to participate in an employee

welfare benefit plan. See Rodriguez-Abreu, 986 F.2d at 587; Finz ___ _______________ ____

v. Schlesinger, 957 F.2d 78, 81 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S. ___________ _____ ______

Ct. 72 (1992); Laniok v. Advisory Comm. of the Brainerd Mfg. Co. ______ ________________________________________

Pension Plan, 935 F.2d 1360, 1364-66 (2d Cir. 1991); Lumpkin v. ____________ _______

Envirodyne Indus., Inc., 933 F.2d 449, 455 (7th Cir.), cert. _________________________ _____

denied, 502 U.S. 939 (1991); Leavitt v. Northwestern Bell Tel. ______ _______ ______________________


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Co., 921 F.2d 160, 161-62 (8th Cir. 1990). ___

Of course, despite the fact that employee waivers are

not forbidden, ERISA evinces Congress's intent to preserve

employee pension and benefit rights. See, e.g., Laniok, 935 F.2d ___ ____ ______

at 1367. In ERISA cases, therefore, courts should scrutinize an

ostensible waiver with care in order to ensure that it reflects

the purposeful relinquishment of an employee's rights. See Finz, ___ ____

957 F.2d at 81; In re Heci Exploration Co., 862 F.2d 513, 523 ___________________________

(5th Cir. 1988). At a minimum, such waivers, to be effective,

must be "knowing and voluntary." Rodriguez-Abreu, 986 F.2d at _______________

587.

In Finz, building on Laniok, the Second Circuit crafted ____ ______

a compendium of six factors that are often relevant to this

inquiry.3 We find this list helpful rather than conclusive.

Generally, no single fact or circumstance is entitled to

talismanic significance on the question of waiver. Only an

inquiry into the totality of the circumstances can determine

whether there has been a knowing and voluntary relinquishment of

an ERISA-protected benefit. See, e.g., Leavitt, 921 F.2d at 162. ___ ____ _______




____________________

3These six factors include: (1) the plaintiff's education,
business experience, and sophistication; (2) the parties'
respective roles in deciding the final terms of the arrangement;
(3) the agreement's clarity; (4) the amount of time available to
the plaintiff to study the agreement before acting on it; (5)
whether the plaintiff had independent advice such as the advice
of counsel when she signed the agreement; and (6) the nature of
the consideration tendered in exchange for the waiver. See Finz, ___ ____
957 F.2d at 82; Laniok, 935 F.2d at 1368. ______

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For that reason, every case is sui generis.4 ___ _______

The inquiry into waiver consists of two questions:

whether a party actually knew she was relinquishing a benefit,

and whether she acted voluntarily in doing so. Answering these

companion questions is a fact-intensive exercise, and the trier's

factfinding is entitled to deference (unless it is tainted by a

mistake of law). See Irons v. FBI, 811 F.2d 681, 684 (1st Cir. ___ _____ ___

1987) ("Where the conclusions of the trial court depend on its

election among conflicting facts or its choice of which competing

inferences to draw from undisputed basic facts, appellate courts

should defer to such fact-intensive findings, absent clear

error.").

Measured against this standard, the lower court's

findings are irreproachable. The court correctly synthesized the

law. It then surveyed, inter alia, the six Finz factors. See _____ ____ ____ ___

Smart, 887 F. Supp. at 386. It found appellant to be well- _____

educated and commercially sophisticated (she had a college

degree, some postgraduate business courses, and over ten years of

professional experience at Gillette), and to have negotiated the

specific terms of the severance agreement. Those terms provided

her with benefits that Gillette was not otherwise obligated to

____________________

4In Rodriguez-Abreu, for example, the plaintiff was a _______________
manager who knew that he could not accept the severance package
while at the same time retaining long-term disability benefits,
and who had consulted with an accountant before making his
decision. We upheld a finding that he had validly waived
continued participation in a long-term disability plan as part of
his acceptance of a voluntary severance package. See Rodriguez- ___ __________
Abreu, 986 F.2d at 588. _____

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furnish. The final version of the agreement was very clear, and

appellant reviewed it with an attorney of her choosing before

signing it. Without exception, these findings which cover five

of the six Finz factors are supportable. ____

The court's remaining finding that appellant had

adequate time to review the severance agreement before she

executed it is not quite so clear-cut. Nevertheless, it

implicates only one of several factors that are involved in the

decisional calculus, and, in any event, we do not think that the

court committed clear error in determining that the time

available to Smart was sufficient to permit a complete,

thoughtful perscrutation of the operative version of the

agreement. We explain briefly.

The lower court rested the controverted finding on the

notion that appellant had over three months to review the

agreement before signing it. See id. This temporal computation ___ ___

assumes that the relevant interval began with appellant's receipt

of the September 7 letter. Appellant attacks the court's

underlying premise on the ground that the relevant interval began

with her receipt of the December 16 agreement, leaving her less

than two weeks in which to review the proposal.

This is a case of the glass being half-empty or half-

full, depending on how the observer opts to characterize it.

Appellant did have more than three months within which to

consider the prospect of early, forced retirement and to mull

those provisions peculiarly important to her condition (like


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workers' compensation and LTD Plan benefits). One could

reasonably expect her to have been especially attentive to such

provisions in reading the revised version of the document. What

is more, a twelve-day period seems ample to permit a

sophisticated businesswoman and her lawyer carefully to review

the terms of a fairly straightforward severance agreement even if

the review had to proceed from scratch.

In fine, taking into account the total complex of

events, the district court's fact-based finding that appellant

knowingly and voluntarily waived her claim to benefits under the

Plan is supportable.5

III. CONCLUSION III. CONCLUSION

We need go no further. Appellant negotiated and signed

a contract that unambiguously excluded her from extended

participation in Gillette's LTD Plan. In so doing she

simultaneously relinquished any ERISA-protected claims. The

trial court found that her actions were both knowing and

voluntary. Discerning no error, we will not disturb the

judgment.
____________________

5Although appellant admitted that she understood when she
signed the severance agreement that she was waiving all claims
under both federal and state law, she also testified that she
"did not know what ERISA was when she signed the release; that
she did not know that she was releasing any rights under ERISA;
and that she did not intend to release any rights under ERISA."
This testimony does not diminish our respect for the district
court's finding of waiver. An employee does not need to know
about her rights under ERISA to know that she is waiving her ____________
rights under a benefit plan that ERISA happens to protect. Once ____________________
appellant intentionally let slip her opportunity to participate
in the benefit plan, she no longer possessed a substantive
"right" protected by ERISA.

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Affirmed. ________




















































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