I say annoying because they are inevitably long and “lawyerly”; there’s no way that they can readily be read (much less absorbed) in the medium in which they are presented; and the alternative to not accepting the conditions presented would seem to be to forego the update that you’ve been encouraged to accept, and that, at some point in the future would seem to have its own dire consequences. And so, probably like many, if not most, if not all, of you, means that I accept the terms, and acknowledge the disclaimers basically sight unseen (or at least unread).
Last week the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in on a case involving participant disclosures, specifically the issue of whether certain plan disclosures were sufficient to establish a participant’s “actual knowledge” of the design of Intel’s custom target-date series, which had been built including an allocation to hedge funds and other alternative investments, including private equity. The participant-plaintiff here alleged that, despite “annual notices, quarterly Fund Fact Sheets, targeted emails, and two separate websites”—and tracking that indicated that he had actually visited the web sites “repeatedly”[i] during his employment, he did not “remember reviewing” the disclosures.
SOL ‘Stance’
The difference is one of timing, because of ERISA’s statute of limitations. Those injured by an ERISA breach have three-years to file suit from when the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the violation. Without that knowledge, an alternative 6-year statute of limitations applies, running from the date of the last action which constituted a part of the violation. The suit, filed in 2015, challenged actions that occurred between 2009 and 2014.
The Intel defendants argued—and the district court agreed—that the notices established knowledge well beyond the 6-year statute of limitations. However, the appellate court disagreed, explaining that if (as claimed) “Sulyma in fact never looked at the documents Intel provided, he cannot have had ‘actual knowledge of the breach.’”
The nation’s highest court—unanimously—agreed with the appellate court, commenting that while “…relevant information disclosed to the plaintiff is no doubt relevant in judging whether he gained knowledge of that information”… to meet the “actual knowledge” criteria imposed by the legislation, “…the plaintiff must in fact have become aware of that information.”
Now, as someone who appreciates a reliance upon the black letter of the law, the decision’s clarity is somewhat reassuring. If, on the other hand, you’ve spent time and money producing and distributing the plethora of disclosures mandated by the law, you could hardly be faulted for wondering… what’s the point?
Foreclosure ‘Notice’
Doubtless anticipating the clamor of plan fiduciary jaws slamming onto desktops across the nation, Justice Alito (who authored the court’s opinion) threw a (small) bone to what seems likely to be a rapidly expanding class of plan fiduciary litigants.
“Nothing in this opinion,” he cautions, “forecloses any of the ‘usual ways’ to prove actual knowledge at any stage in the litigation. … Plaintiffs who recall reading particular disclosures will of course be bound by oath to say so in their depositions. On top of that, actual knowledge can be proved through ‘inference from circumstantial evidence.’ … Evidence of disclosure would no doubt be relevant, as would electronic records showing that a plaintiff viewed the relevant disclosures and evidence suggesting that the plaintiff took action in response to the information contained in them…”. He also noted that, “Today’s opinion also does not preclude defendants from contending that evidence of ‘willful blindness’ supports a finding of ‘actual knowledge.’”
The Impact
There’s little question that the ruling will make it harder for plan fiduciaries to claim that effective notice has been provided by the series of disclosures, mandated and otherwise. Indeed, this particular plaintiff’s ability to basically disclaim awareness despite evidence that he had spent a lot of time on the site(s) where the disclosures were housed was, to this observer, anyway, a bit of a head scratcher, to say the least.
In response, employers will almost certainly pursue technologies (or be counseled to do so) that provide a more specific acknowledgement by participants that they have seen—and read—specific plan information before proceeding to the information they really want to see (like account balance).
Now if only the lawyers (and regulators) would craft disclosures that, if not more memorable, were at least (more) readable.
- Nevin E. Adams, JD
[i]In
their filing with the Supreme Court, Intel noted that, “during his
brief tenure with Intel, respondent regularly accessed the website for
those materials,” clicking on more than 1,000 web pages within that
site; it was undisputed that respondent “accessed some of th[e]
information” that disclosed the disputed investment decisions “on the
websites.”
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