Legal Research AI

Rosario-Cordero v. Crowley Towing & Transportation Co.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1995-02-01
Citations: 46 F.3d 120
Copy Citations
20 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 94-1628

                 OBDULIO ROSARIO-CORDERO, ET AL.,

                     Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                                v.

               CROWLEY TOWING & TRANSPORTATION CO.,

                      Defendant - Appellee.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

          [Hon. Jos  Antonio Fust , U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     
                 Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                         
                and Boyle,* Senior District Judge.
                                                           

                                           

     Jane E. L pez, with whom Gerardo L. Santiago-Puig, Miguel A.
                                                                           
P rez-Vargas  and  Santiago Puig  Law  Office were  on  brief for
                                                       
appellants.
     Raquel M.  Dulzaides, with  whom Jim nez, Graffam  & Lausell
                                                                           
was on brief for appellee.

                                           

                         February 1, 1995
                                           

                    
                              

*  Of the District of Rhode Island, sitting by designation.


          TORRUELLA, Chief  Judge.   The issue  presented in this
                    TORRUELLA, Chief  Judge.
                                           

case is whether appellants' claims  under Mandatory Decree No. 38

of the  Minimum  Wage Board  of Puerto  Rico are  preempted by   

514(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29

U.S.C.    1001 et seq., as amended ("ERISA").  Appellants Obdulio
                               

Rosario-Cordero   and   Otilio   Mart nez-Arroyo   ("Appellants")

initiated this action  in Puerto Rico  local court against  their

former  employer,  Crowley  Towing  and   Transportation  Company

("Crowley"),  alleging  that  they  were  not  allowed  to  enjoy

vacation leave duly  owed them pursuant  to Mandatory Decree  No.

38.  The case was removed to the United States District Court for

the District of Puerto Rico on Crowley's theory  that Appellants'

claims  under Mandatory  Decree No. 38  were preempted  by ERISA.

Rosario-Cordero  v. Crowley Towing & Transp. Co., 850 F. Supp. 98
                                                          

(D.P.R. 1994).   Ruling on Crowley's motion for summary judgment,

the district court held  that the Appellants' claims  were indeed

preempted by ERISA.  Id.  at 102.  For the following  reasons, we
                                 

affirm.

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND

          Crowley  operates a  tugboat operation  covering Puerto

Rico, ports  in the continental  United States,  the U.S.  Virgin

Islands,  and some international ports.   The nature of Crowley's

operations  requires its  employees  to travel  to the  different

ports to provide tug services.

          Most   of  Crowley's  employees   are  members  of  the

Seafarers' International Union, Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and  Inland

                               -2-


Waters  District, AFL-CIO  (the  "Union").   During all  relevant

periods,  Appellants were members of the Union, and the Union was

their  exclusive  bargaining  representative.     Pursuant  to  a

Collective  Bargaining  Agreement  (the  "CBA"),  the  Union  and

Crowley  agreed to  participate in  the Seafarers'  Vacation Plan

(the "Plan"). 

          The Plan is a multiemployer employee benefit plan which

provides  vacation benefits to the employees of its members.  The

Plan is structured and governed in accordance with ERISA.   It is

administered by an Administrator.  The Administrator, in turn, is

appointed  by the Plan's twelve-member Board of Trustees.  Six of

the Trustees are appointed by the  Union and the other six by the

participating employers.

          The Plan provides for the establishment of  a fund from

contributions   from   the    participating   employers.      The

contributions are deposited in  the Plan's bank accounts.   These

funds,  which contain only Plan monies,  are held in trust, and a

portion of the assets are invested in bonds and notes.  The funds

are used  to pay vacation benefits to  the eligible participants,

and to cover  the Plan's  administrative costs.   Under the  CBA,

Crowley  was required to make periodic  contributions to the Plan

for each employee.

          The  Plan triggers  vacation pay  when an  employee has

worked seventy-five days in a  fifteen-month period, irrespective

of whether the  employee intends  to actually  take the  vacation

leave.   During their employment, both Appellants applied for and

                               -3-


received the vacation  payment due them  under the Plan's  terms,

although  they did not take  the vacation leave.   Appellants are

now retired.

          Despite their  receipt of vacation pay  under the Plan,

Appellants filed  suit against  Crowley, claiming that  they were

never  allowed to take their vacation leave as mandated by Puerto

Rico's  Mandatory  Decree No.  38, (the  "Decree").1   The Decree

provides in relevant part:

            Every  employee  shall  be   entitled  to
            vacation  leave with  full pay  to become
            effective when he begins to  enjoy it, at
            the rate of one and five twelves [sic] (1
            5/12) days for each month in which he has
            worked  at least one hundred (100) hours.
            This  leave  is  equivalent to  seventeen
            (17) workdays per year. . . .

            The employer who  does not  grant any  of
            his employees the vacation leave to which
            he  is entitled  after having  accrued it
            for two  (2) years,  shall grant  him the
            total thus far accrued, paying  him twice
            (2)  the wage corresponding to the period
            accrued in excess of  said two years. . .
            .

            Any contract whereby the employee waives,
            for  money  or  other consideration,  his
            right to actually take his vacation leave
            shall be unlawful and void.

Appellants  claim, therefore,  that Crowley  is obligated  to pay

them  a sum  equivalent to  seventeen days  of work  per year  of

                    
                              

1  The  Decree is one  of 43 decrees  promulgated by the  Minimum
Wage Board of Puerto Rico.   The Board is authorized by Section 2
of the  Minimum Wage Act of Puerto Rico, 29 L.P.R.A.   245(a), to
establish  mandatory decrees regarding  the working conditions of
particular  industries.    These  decrees  are  quasi-legislative
documents with the force  of law.  Mendoza v.  Minimum Wage Board
                                                                           
of Puerto Rico, 74 P.R.R. 695, 702 (1953).
                        

                               -4-


service, plus the double penalty provided by the Decree.

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION

          A.  Standard of Review
                    A.  Standard of Review
                                          

          Because the district court granted summary  judgment in

Crowley's favor, we review that decision de  novo.  Serrano-P rez
                                                                           

v. FMC Corp., 985 F.2d 625, 626 (1st Cir. 1993); Pagano v. Frank,
                                                                          

983 F.2d 343, 347 (1st Cir. 1993).  We must determine whether the

record,  viewed in  the light  most  favorable to  the non-moving

Appellants  and with  all  reasonable inferences  drawn in  their

favor,  presents no  genuine  issue  of  material fact  and  thus

entitles  Crowley to judgment as a matter of law.  Serrano-P rez,
                                                                          

985 F.2d at 626.

          B.  Preemption Under ERISA Generally
                    B.  Preemption Under ERISA Generally
                                                        

          As the  Appellants correctly  point out, preemption  of

state law  is generally disfavored.  McCoy v. Massachusetts Inst.
                                                                           

of Technology, 950 F.2d 13, 16 (1st Cir. 1991).  This presumption
                       

against  preemption is, however, not absolute.  When Congress has

expressly  so  provided,  federal  preemption  of  state  law  is

mandated under the Supremacy Clause.  Id.
                                                  

          ERISA preemption is, as  a general matter, expansive in

scope.   McCoy, 950  F.2d at  16.   In  formulating the  statute,
                        

Congress  included  a  sweeping   preemption  clause,     514(a),

commanding  that ERISA "shall  supersede any  and all  State laws

insofar  as  they may  now or  hereafter  relate to  any employee
                                                                           

benefit  plan."   29  U.S.C.    1144(a)  (emphasis added).    For
                       

preemption  purposes,  "State  laws"  are  "all  laws, decisions,

                               -5-


rules, regulations, or  other State action  having the effect  of

law."  29 U.S.C.   1144(c)(1).  Puerto Rico is expressly included

in the statute's definition of "State."  29 U.S.C.   1002(10).

          The   United  States   Supreme  Court   has  repeatedly

explained  that a state law "relates to" an employee benefit plan

"'if it  has a connection  with or  reference to  such a  plan.'"

District  of Columbia v. Greater Washington Bd. of Trade,    U.S.
                                                                  

  , 113  S. Ct. 580, 583 (1992) (quoting Shaw v. Delta Air Lines,
                                                                           

Inc.,  463   U.S.  85,  96-97  (1983));   Ingersoll-Rand  Co.  v.
                                                                       

McClendon, 498 U.S. 133, 139 (1990).   Moreover, a state law  may
                   

"relate to"  an employee benefit  plan and thereby  be preempted,

even  if  the law  is not  specifically  designed to  affect such

plans,  and even if its  effect is indirect.   Greater Washington
                                                                           

Bd. of Trade,    U.S. at   , 113 S. Ct. at 583 (citing Ingersoll-
                                                                           

Rand, 498 U.S. at 139).  
              

          Following the  Supreme Court's  lead, this  Circuit has

also construed the  words "relate  to" broadly; a  state law  may

relate to an employee benefit  plan even though the law  does not

conflict  with  ERISA's  own  requirements,  and  represents   an

otherwise legitimate  state effort to impose  or broaden benefits

for employees.   Simas  v. Quaker Fabric  Corp. of Fall  River, 6
                                                                        

F.3d 849, 852 (1st Cir. 1993) (citations omitted).

          Therefore, a state law with even an  indirect effect on

an ERISA-covered  benefit plan is preempted, even though ERISA by

its  terms may not necessarily  address the topic  covered by the

state law.  For example, a state law is preempted if it restricts

                               -6-


the  choices  of a  benefit  plan  regarding its  administration,

structure,  or benefits.  See,  e.g., FMC Corp.  v. Holliday, 498
                                                                      

U.S. 52, 60  (1990) (ERISA preempts Pennsylvania  antisubrogation

statute   restricting  structure  of   ERISA  plans);  Alessi  v.
                                                                       

Raybestos-Manhattan,  Inc.,  451  U.S.  504,  505  (1981)  (ERISA
                                    

preempts  New Jersey  statute insofar  as statute  prevents ERISA

plans from decreasing benefits);  United Wire, Etc. v. Morristown
                                                                           

Mem. Hosp., 995 F.2d 1179, 1193 (3d Cir. 1993) (state statute may
                    

be preempted if its effect is to "dictate or restrict the choices

of  ERISA plans  with regard to  their benefits,  structure, [or]

reporting and administration"); National Elevator  Industry, Inc.
                                                                           

v.  Calhoun, 957  F.2d  1555, 1561  (10th  Cir.) (ERISA  preempts
                     

Oklahoma  statute insofar as it "may be  used to effect change in

the administration,  structure, and benefits of  an ERISA plan"),

cert.  denied,    U.S.   ,  113 S. Ct.  406 (1992); Arkansas Blue
                                                                           

Cross &  Blue Shield v. St.  Mary's Hospital, 947 F.2d  1341 (8th
                                                      

Cir.  1991)  (ERISA  preempts  Arkansas  statute  regulating  the

assignment of  benefits to health care  providers), cert. denied,
                                                                          

   U.S.    , 112 S.  Ct. 2305  (1992).  Any  such state  laws can

avoid  ERISA preemption  only if  they have  merely a  "'tenuous,

remote, or  peripheral connection'" with a  covered benefit plan,

"'as  is  the case  with  many laws  of  general applicability.'"

Combined  Mgt. v. Superintendent  of Bur. of  Ins., 22 F.3d  1, 3
                                                            

(1st Cir. 1994) (quoting Greater Washington Bd. of Trade,    U.S.
                                                                  

at   , 113 S. Ct. at 583 n.1).

          This   broad  preemptive   effect   of  ERISA   may  be

                               -7-


surprising, given  that ERISA  was passed primarily  to safeguard

employees from  the abuse and mismanagement  of funds accumulated

in various types of employee benefit plans.  Fort Halifax Packing
                                                                           

Co. v. Coyne, 482 U.S. 1, 15 (1987).   Yet, as we have explained,
                      

"the  reason for  the broad  preemption provision  is clear:   By

preventing  states  from  imposing divergent  obligations,  ERISA

allows each employer  to create its  own uniform plan,  complying

with  only one  set  of rules  (those of  ERISA)  and capable  of

applying uniformly in all  jurisdictions where the employer might

operate."  Simas, 6 F.3d at 852.
                          

          Finally, we  address  what plans  constitute  "employee

benefit  plans" for   514(a)'s purposes.  The district court ably

set  forth the  applicable  law on  this  point in  its  opinion,

Crowley, 850 F. Supp. at 100-101, and we  follow suit here merely
                 

for  the sake  of thoroughness.   Section  3(3) of  ERISA defines

employee  benefit  plans as  plans that  are either  "an employee

welfare  benefit plan," or "an employee pension benefit plan," or

both.  29 U.S.C.   1002(3).  An employee welfare benefit plan, in

turn, is defined as:

            [A]ny  plan, fund,  or program  which was
            heretofore or is hereafter established or
            maintained  by  an   employer  or  by  an
            employee organization, or by both, to the
            extent that such  plan, fund, or  program
            was established or  is maintained for the
            purpose of providing for its participants
            or  beneficiaries, (A)  .  .  .  vacation
                                                               
            benefits. . . .
                              

29 U.S.C.    1002(1) (emphasis  added).  ERISA  does not  further

define "plan,  fund  or program"  or  "vacation benefits."    The

                               -8-


Supreme Court, however, has  clearly stated that "a multiemployer

fund created to  provide vacation benefits for  union members who

typically  work for several employers during the course of a year

. . .   undoubtedly  falls   within  the   scope  of   the  Act."

Massachusetts v. Morash,  490 U.S.  107, 114 (1989).   The  Court
                                 

distinguished such  multiemployer plans, where  vacation benefits

are paid out  of a  separate fund established  for that  purpose,

from a  single employer's  payroll practice of  awarding vacation

pay,  where the payments are  made out of  the employer's general

assets.  The latter practices, the Court held, are not covered by

ERISA.  Morash, 490 U.S. at 113-114.  The Court went on to state:
                        

            [W]e  emphasize that  the case  before us
            . . .  concern[s]  payments  by a  single
            employer out of  its general assets.   An
            entirely  different  situation  would  be
            presented if  a  separate fund  had  been
            created   by  a  group  of  employers  to
            guarantee   the   payment   of   vacation
            benefits to laborers who  regularly shift
            their  jobs from one employer to another.
            Employees who are a beneficiary of such a
            trust  face far different  risks and have
            far  greater need  for the  reporting and
            disclosure  requirements [of  ERISA] than
            those whose vacation  benefits come  from
            the  same  fund from  which  they receive
            their paychecks. 

Morash, 490 U.S. at 120.
                

          Given these  principles,  therefore, our  task  becomes

clear.   We must determine 1)  whether the Plan at  issue in this

case is an "employee benefit plan" within the scope of ERISA, and

if so, 2) whether the  Decree "relates to" the Plan.  If it does,

then  ERISA preempts the Decree and  Appellants' claims under the

Decree are foreclosed.

                               -9-


          C.  Is the Plan Covered by ERISA?
                    C.  Is the Plan Covered by ERISA?
                                                     

          As  we explained  above,  the Plan  is a  multiemployer

employee benefit plan established and governed in accordance with

ERISA.  Under the Plan, employees, including the Appellants here,

become  entitled   to  vacation  benefits   regardless  of  their

employer,  as long as they  work seventy-five days  in a fifteen-

month  period.   Employees seeking  their vacation  benefits must

apply directly to  the Plan  Administrator to obtain  them.   The

benefits are then  paid to  employees out of  a segregated  trust

fund  established solely  for that  purpose, and  not out  of the

general assets of any individual employer.

          The  employers'  participation  in  the  Plan  consists

solely  of making  the  required contributions.   The  individual

employers, including Crowley, are not involved in the application

for  or the administration of the benefits.  In fact, the payment

of vacation benefits  under the Plan  rests on contingencies  and

processes  entirely  outside  of  the individual  employers'  and

employees' control.

          It  seems clear to us  that this Plan  is precisely the

type of plan that  Congress intended to reach in  enacting ERISA.

It certainly falls squarely within the description, quoted above,

set  forth  by the  Supreme  Court in  Morash, 490  U.S.  at 120.
                                                       

Employee members of the  Plan are the beneficiaries of  the trust

established for  the payment of their vacation benefits, and thus

face the risks  of fund mismanagement  and payment failures  that

ERISA was intended to prevent.   If the Plan were not  covered by

                               -10-


ERISA, all  of the Plan's participating  employees would suddenly

be exposed to these risks.   For these reasons, we find  that the

Plan  at  issue here  is indeed  an  "employee benefit  plan" for

ERISA's   514(a) purposes.

          D.  Does the Decree "Relate to" the Plan?
                    D.  Does the Decree "Relate to" the Plan?
                                                             

          Appellants contend that the Decree does not "relate to"

the  Plan  because   1)  the   Decree  is  a   law  of   "general

applicability" not aimed at the administration of ERISA plans; 2)

the  penalty imposed by the  Decree does not  constitute a "plan"

such as ERISA is meant to regulate; and 3) if the cause of action

created by  the Decree  were preempted,  employees would  be left

without a remedy at law.  We address each of these contentions in

turn.

            1.  Is the Decree a "law of general application" with
                      1.  Is the Decree a "law of general application" with
            a connection "too tenuous, remote, or  peripheral" to
                      a connection "too tenuous, remote, or  peripheral" to
            relate to the Plan?
                      relate to the Plan?

          Appellants  claim  that  the  Decree  is  a  regulation

directed  at  all   employers  in  the  transportation   industry

regardless of whether  they maintain an ERISA-covered  plan.  The

Decree, they  explain, mandates and regulates  vacation leave and

other working  conditions for the  protection of workers  in that

industry.  As  such, it is a law of general applicability neither

directed at nor predicated  upon the existence of an  ERISA plan,

and thus does not "relate to" the Plan.

          In support of their  argument on this point, Appellants

submit an inaccurate statement  of the law.   Significantly, they

incorrectly  rely   on   the  traditional   preemption   analysis

                               -11-


applicable to  less comprehensive federal statutes,  arguing that

the  Decree here is not  preempted because it  does not interfere

with ERISA's overriding  concern of  protecting beneficiaries  of

employee benefit plans from fraud or misuse of plan funds.  As we

have  explained, however,  the broad  preemption clause  of ERISA

obliges courts to  apply ERISA's preemptive  effects expansively,

and  therefore the  preemption analysis  under ERISA  is entirely

different  than for other  federal statutes.   Thus, the narrower

preemption  analysis   offered  by   the  Appellants   is  simply

inapplicable here.2
                    
                              

2   The Appellants also erroneously  rely on two cases to support
their contentions.   First, they  cite our  decision in  Combined
                                                                           
Management, 22 F.3d at 1, for the proposition that a state law is
                    
not  preempted by  ERISA when  the law  is "a  matter  of general
application affecting all private  employers, whether or not they
have adopted an ERISA plan,  and because the law does not  affect
the structure,  administration, or  type of benefits  provided by
any ERISA plans."  For good reason, the Appellants do not provide
a  page cite or contextual  explanation.  The  quoted sentence is
indeed in the case, but in the section summarizing the holding of
the  district court,  not  in our  own  holding.   Moreover,  the
Combined  Management  decision   simply  does  not  support   the
                              
Appellants' arguments.  Although  we found in that case  that the
Maine  state  law in  question was  not  preempted by  ERISA, our
decision  rested  on  the fact  that  the  type of  state  law in
question,  a workers'  compensation  law, was  expressly excepted
                                                                           
from ERISA's preemption clause under ERISA's own terms.  Combined
                                                                           
Management, 22  F.3d at 3-4 (citing ERISA    4(b)(3), 29 U.S.C.  
                    
1003(b)(3)).   Here,  by  contrast,  the  Decree  is  not  a  law
expressly excepted from ERISA's preemptive sweep.

    Appellants also offer  Vartanian v. Monsanto Co., 14 F.3d 697
                                                              
(1st Cir.  1994), and contend  that the case  sets forth  a "two-
pronged test" for determining  whether a state law relates  to an
ERISA plan, which is not  met here.  Once again,  the Appellants'
use of case law is misguided.  Vartanian involved a plaintiff who
                                                  
brought  claims against his employer under both an ERISA cause of
action and a  cause of action  for common law  misrepresentation.
Vartanian, 14 F.3d at 699.   We found there that the state common
                   
law  cause of action was  preempted by ERISA  because the court's
inquiry was necessarily directed  to the ERISA plan.   The "test"

                               -12-


          Although  the  Decree  is   indeed  a  law  of  general

application affecting employers regardless of their participation

in plans, this does not necessarily save it  from preemption.  As

we explained, laws  of general application  will be preempted  if

they "relate to" an ERISA-covered plan, even indirectly.  Greater
                                                                           

Washington Bd. of Trade,    U.S.   , 113 S. Ct. at 583 (citations
                                 

omitted).   In the  case  at bar,  the  Decree requires  that  an

employer pay an employee the accrued vacation pay at the time the

employee  takes leave.   Any  contract allowing  the employee  to

receive payment in  lieu of leave  is null and  void.  Under  the

Decree, the employee  must work at least  one hundred hours in  a

month to accrue one and five-twelfths vacation days.  Presumably,

the employer may establish  the employee's vacation schedule, and

when the employee will receive the payment.

          In many respects,  therefore, the Decree's requirements

differ from  or conflict with the  terms of the Plan.   Under the

Decree, the employer determines  when the employee takes vacation

leave or payment; under  the Plan, the choice is  the employee's,

and  the employer is not involved in the disbursement of vacation
                    
                              

relied upon was  formulated by  the Supreme  Court in  Ingersoll-
                                                                           
Rand, for determining when a "judicially created cause of action"
              
is  preempted.   Ingersoll-Rand, 498  U.S.  at 141.  The analysis
                                         
applied  in  Vartanian is  not  the  sole,  talismanic  test  for
                                
preemption  in  all circumstances,  but  one  tailored for  cases
involving  common  law  causes  of  action,  a  circumstance  not
presently before us.  As we have already explained, this Circuit,
following Supreme  Court precedent, has held  that ERISA preempts
state laws if they relate to an ERISA plan, even indirectly.  The
inquiry into whether  a law  "relates to" a  plan is  necessarily
fact-intensive.   Here, the Decree  by its terms  interferes with
the administration,  accrual and disbursement  of benefits  under
ERISA plans, and is therefore preempted.      

                               -13-


benefits.  Under the Plan, an employee accrues vacation  benefits

after  working  at least  seventy-five  days  in a  fifteen-month

period, whereas the Decree  establishes a different timeframe for

triggering  leave.   Most  significantly,  the  Decree imposes  a

penalty on non-complying employers, and prohibits any alternative

arrangements.

          In  all these  respects, the  Decree  imposes different

requirements on  employers than  those imposed by  the Plan,  and

affects  the accrual  and  disbursement of  vacation benefits  to

employee members of the Plan.    Moreover, the manner and  degree

to which the Decree  affects the Plan is substantial,  and cannot

be  termed "tenuous, remote, or peripheral."   Indeed, the Decree

by its terms  would prohibit  a significant aspect  of the  Plan,

which  allows employees to  receive vacation payments  in lieu of

leave.  Therefore, we  find that the Decree does  "relate to" the

Plan for purposes of   514(a) of ERISA.

            2.  Appellants' remaining contentions
                      2.  Appellants' remaining contentions

          Appellants also contend that the Decree does not create

a "plan" such as ERISA is meant to regulate.   Because the Decree

is only concerned with "vacation leave" and not with the field of

"vacation  plans," they claim, the Decree is not preempted.  Once

again,  this argument seems to  rest on the Appellants' misguided

perception  of  the  applicable  preemption  principles.    ERISA

preempts state laws  that relate  to covered plans;  it does  not
                                              

require  that a  state law  establish such  a plan,  or expressly

contemplate existing plans, in order for preemption to apply.  As

                               -14-


we have explained above,  the Plan here  is a covered plan  under

the  terms of  ERISA, and  the Decree  significantly affects  its

administration  and  restricts  its  terms.   It  is,  therefore,

preempted by ERISA insofar as it affects ERISA-covered plans.

          Appellants  finally   argue  that  if   the  Decree  is

preempted, employees would be left without a remedy in law.  They

claim that Crowley seeks here to "'don the mantle  of  ERISA'" to

escape  its obligation  to comply  with Puerto  Rico's employment

practices law (quoting Combined Management, 22 F.3d at 5).
                                                    

          Although we are sympathetic to the Appellants' argument

on this point, it  unfortunately is unavailing.  As  we explained

above, one  of the primary  purposes of ERISA's  broad preemption

clause was to prevent states from imposing divergent obligations,

and to thereby allow employers to create  and administer employee

benefit  plans subject to one uniform set of regulations.  Simas,
                                                                          

6 F.3d  at 852.  The  additional burdens and penalties  placed on

employers  by  these   divergent,  preempted   state  laws   are,

therefore,  the necessary casualties  of the otherwise beneficial

effects of ERISA.  Unlike some other federal laws, ERISA does not

merely establish a  "floor" of employee benefits  or rights below

which states cannot  fall.   It sweepingly preempts  any and  all

state  laws that "relate to" a plan within ERISA's coverage, even

those laws which provide stronger protections for employees.  The

double penalty mandated by  the Decree here is a  perfect example

of  the type  of problem  at which  ERISA's preemption  clause is

directed.  The preemption clause of ERISA would be meaningless if

                               -15-


employers such as Crowley could enter, by a collective bargaining

agreement, into a multiemployer vacation benefit plan, and comply

with that plan, yet still be held liable under the Decree because

the plan terms differ from the Decree.

          Finally, we point out that  if the Appellants had  been

improperly denied  benefits, which  is not  the  case here,  they

would  have a cause of  action under ERISA.   Therefore, although

they lose their legal remedy under the Decree through preemption,

they  gain the protections of ERISA by participating in an ERISA-

covered plan.

                               -16-


                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION

          For the foregoing reasons,  we find that ERISA preempts

Mandatory Decree  No. 38 insofar  as it relates  to ERISA-covered

employee benefit plans.   The district court's order is therefore

affirmed.
                  

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