Is Anyone Left Standing?
Today the Ninth Circuit decided Glanton v. AdvancePCS Inc. http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data2/circs/9th/0415328p.pdf
Plaintiff participants sued the Plan's Pharmacy benefits management company (PBM) saying the PBM was buying prescriptions for less than it was selling them to the plan and the PBM was making an inappropriate bundle. The court held that while defendant PBM was a fiduciary, plaintiffs had no Article III constitutional standing to bring the claim.
Interestingly, the court never mentions either 502(a)(2) or (a)(3) of ERISA - the two possible bases for ERISA standing. However, the court, by implication, appears to reject both bases as conferring Art. III standing.
First, the court notes that if plaintiffs are successful, the money will go to the plan. The plan, in turn, may lower the co-pays and deductibles for plaintiffs, redounding directly to the benefit of the participants & beneficiaries, or it may reduce employer contributions. However, for a benefit from the litigation to depend on the acts of an independent third party is not sufficient to confer Art. III standing because it is insufficient evidence of the required "harm." I presume this is the discussion of the (a)(3) claim.
Here's the really interesting part. As for the stealth (a)(2) claim, the court held that the plaintiffs don't have standing to sue on behalf of the Plan because, while the Plan has suffered harm, the plaintiffs have not. For example, sayeth the court, in Kayes v. Pacific Lumber, where plaintiffs sued saying the fiduciary's selection of an annuity provider resulted in a reduction of the plaintiffs' annuities, there was a sufficient allegation of the participant's direct harm. Not so here, as the plaintiffs cannot show a direct harm to themselves.
This is, of course, a completely new twist on representational standing under (a)(2). Not only must the Plan suffer harm, but the plan participant who seeks to recover on behalf of the plan must have suffered direct harm because of the plan's harm. So let's say that a plan fiduciary steals some of the DB's plan money. If a participant sues on behalf of the plan to recover it, the defendants will argue, under Glanton, that the participant's benefit has not been reduced because of the theft (after all, not only is there the good ol' PBGC, but there's the employer who now has to contribute more in light of the theft) (Shades of Harley v 3M).
The court noted that "associational" standing worked only one way - that the association may sometimes represent the individual. However, it did not work the other way, the individual may not represent the association. But this entirely misses the 502(a)(2) point.
Here, the plan clearly suffered an injury. Are the fiduciaries of the plan the only ones allowed to sue to redress that loss if there is no individual participant or beneficiary who is directly (as is true in most cases) affected by the loss?

Don,
I think you are correct and that the plan sponsor would have an easier standing case. Of course, speaking hypothetically only, the plan sponsor's motivation to sue the PBM may be anemic depending on the degree of knowledge of the PBM billing practices and revenue-sharing.
Without having read the pleadings or briefs yet, I am not in a position to comment in depth, but my first impression is that the plaintiffs demonstrated sufficient constitutional and statutory standing to at least obtain injunctive relief related to ERISA's disclosure and fiduciary duty requirements.
Roy Harmon
Posted by: Roy Harmon | October 19, 2006 at 11:29 AM
If participants and beneficiaries have no Art III standing under 502(a)(2) & 409 neither do the DOL or other fiduciaries since they all look to the same statute for authority to sue! Therefore, no one can sue to make the Plan whole for breaches of fiduciary duty!! This obviousely cannot be correct.
Posted by: John Eggertsen | October 18, 2006 at 05:50 PM
True. It found it did not have to reach that question. Does the Plan sponsor have standing? Probably not, for the same reason that the Harley v 3M plaintiffs didn't have standing -- as of yet, there has been no demand that the employer pony up more money - an act of an independent third party. Only the plan fiduciaries (apparently) have standing, and to have 502(a)(2) standing to sue "for the plan" you have to have standing yourself. Sigh.
Posted by: Ron Dean | October 18, 2006 at 02:39 PM
Could the plan sponsor sue the PBM?
If the PBM is a fiduciary, it is responsible to keep the plan costs reasonable.
The case did not seem to grapple with the question of whether or not the PBM's profit was a reasonable one.
Don Levit,CLU,ChFC
Posted by: Don Levit | October 18, 2006 at 11:39 AM