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May 27, 2008

Comments

FRANK CUMMINGS

A REJOINDER FROM FRANK CUMMINGS -

I never suggested that the no-estoppel result is "fair" or nice to the person claiming estoppel. My point is simply that the structure of ERISA is distorted and damaged by sustaining estoppel-based claims. That structure is not just something to be tossed aside whenever an appealing exception is found.

Les Baker

I see no reason why the doctrine of equitable estoppel, properly understood, should not be applied in cases arising under ERISA section 502(a). Recalling the admonition that ERISA was enacted to ensure that "if a participant has been promised a contractually defined benefit, and satisfied the conditions to receive it, the participant will actually receive the benefit," the doctrine can apply when the factual determination, whether the participant has satisfied the conditions to obtain a benefit, is at issue. I agree the doctrine of equitable estoppel properly applies to misrepresentations of fact, and the question of whether a participant has satisfied a condition is purely a question of fact, since a condition is an event that may or may not have occurred. So the doctrine can properly apply when a participant asks for a determination concerrning whether the conditons to obtain a benefit have been satisfied, the plan administrator takes the position that they have; the participant changes position after having that assurance, and then, when the participant later applies for the benefit, the plan administrator changes its position on the facts and asserts that the conditions have not been satisfied after all. If the courts actually followed the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in ERISA cases, the participant could allege generally that all conditions to obtain the benefit have been satsified and then raise the bar of estoppel to preculde the plan administrator from unjustly offering evidence that the conditions were not satisfied. I do not agree that the doctrine of estoppel is "basically a contract doctrine"; legal obligations may be just as conditional as contractual obligations, and the bar of estoppel may be raised just was well when a defendant changes position concerning whether a the conditions of a legal obligation or right have been satisfied, as when it changes its position concerninig conditions of a contractual obligation. In my state, California, the doctrine is codified in the Evidence Code, not in the Civil Code provisions dealing with obligations arising under contract or under law.

Ron Dean

I agree where the issue is the meaning of certain ambiguous langauge -- that parol evidence rather than estoppel is the better choice. Except that it doesn't do the same job of undercutting the abuse of discretion standard of review.

But what of the non-ambiguous plan language cases? I understand that the law is more consistent if we assume that participants can read and understand an unambiguous plan document, and should do so even if the face of clear written statements alleging the plan says something else, but is that really where we want to go as a society?

I think the law does a better job if it's willing to get down and dirty.

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