Some weeks the Five Favorites write themselves and this week was one of them. I think it’s because so many of the articles hit right dead center on issues I have litigated or counseled on over the years, including disputes between excess and primary insurers, whether forfeiture under a 401(k) plan is appropriate, withdrawal liability for union pension obligations, fiduciary best practices, and attorney fee awards in ERISA class actions. So here are my five favorites for the last Friday in February.
- I don’t think many insureds really or fully grasp the endless friction points between their primary and excess insurers, which can negatively impact the resolution of claims, although that’s usually not the case and the times it occurs are outliers. Still, the clashes in interest between primary and excess carriers can disrupt the handling of claims and lead to litigation. Here’s one good example from my own practice, which I discussed in the context of the attorney client privilege and the current hot topic of the moment, which is when does the use of AI destroy the attorney client privilege. In a similar vein, the Nevada Supreme Court recently decided that an excess carrier can bring a subrogation claim against a primary carrier for failing to settle a claim when the primary carrier should have done so. I have litigated, including trying to verdict, this exact cause of action multiple times (although obviously not in Nevada, given that they just adopted it). While the rule is a good one for many reasons, it doesn’t reduce the possible points of contention between a primary and an excess carrier over a claim and can also have the unintended effect of increasing them, based on my experience litigating that type of a case. All of this is a preview to one of my favorite though short articles of the week, this missive from Wiley on a new Seventh Circuit decision addressing the question of whether an excess carrier should attend a mediation of a claim. It’s a great article and case, partly because, believe it or not, this exact argument happens a lot, with a primary carrier or an insured or a plaintiff demanding the excess carrier attend, and the excess carrier not doing so.
- I am an evidence-based skeptic. As a result, I am not always convinced by the rush to judgment on whether new theories of ERISA liability pressed in class action cases are legitimate, credible, viable or something else entirely. For instance, although there are reasons to doubt the ultimate viability of class actions challenging forfeitures under 401(k) plans, I am not close to convinced that the theory has been sufficiently vetted yet to make that call. I think the question of whether this is an appropriate liability theory to press against plan fiduciaries probably requires some factual development in discovery in a few cases before a consensus on the legitimacy of these types of claims can be legitimately formed. Thus, I had no problem whatsoever with Massachusetts federal District Court Judge Young allowing a forfeiture class action to move into discovery, rather than dismissing it outright, which was the point I made in this Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly article on this decision in which I was quoted.
- Withdrawal liability, which is the statutorily created funding obligation for union pension plans faced by employers who stop using union labor, can be a lot of fun! At least if you are the lawyer litigating a dispute, but not, given the scale of the potential liability at issue, if you are the former employer of union labor seeking to avoid a large bill for the future pension costs of a union pension plan. I have litigated this issue multiple times and the key for employers seeking to get out from under the exposure is to find a leverage point for pushing back on the amount demanded. I once did it by focusing on a break in the history of the union contracts executed over decades by the employer at issue, but typically it has been by arguing the legal meaning of certain contractual or statutory terms or of certain events. This is a great story of using Loper Bright and the question of whether regulatory action misinterpreted the statutory language as the lever.
- More than a few years back, when the excessive fee litigation boom was just getting underway, I used to include a slide in my PowerPoint decks at presentations on fiduciary liability that stole a line from football, namely that the best offense was a good defense. The point I then made when I hit that slide was that the best way to avoid getting sued and the best defense if sued was to have followed a sound fiduciary practice in reviewing and selecting investment options, along with contemporaneously documenting that this had occurred. Over the past few years, class action defense of fiduciaries in ERISA has moved away from this type of a granular fact-based defense to a focus on legal and doctrinal arguments, such as standing and injury. Now, with attention turning to how the plaintiffs’ theories of the 401(k) class action era are being remodeled for use against health plans and other welfare benefits, attention seems to be returning to the old-fashioned fiduciary virtues of “documented process[,] active oversight, prudent benchmarking, and disciplined decision-making.” No matter what new theories come down the road against what types of plans, running a plan using that model is the best preparation for the unknown.
- I am as guilty as the next ERISA observer of criticizing class action settlements and recoveries where the lawyers make bank but the average class member recovers just a few bucks. However, I have defended multiple class actions, been personal counsel to a senior executive implicated in a major class action, represented the class in a successful ERISA class action and represented multiple employees through joinder in a 401(k) action that perhaps could alternatively have been structured as a small class. What I can tell you from that experience is that the lawyers on the defense side of an ERISA class action are always good and sometimes very good – and that any class and their lawyers who win big, earned that win the hard way. So I don’t really have a problem with or even a criticism of an award of “$96.28 million in attorneys’ fees, which was 29% of the $332 million common fund” recovered in settlement, and which in turn “represented nearly 98% of the total [losses] claimed by the class.” Give this summary of the case and this article about the fee award a quick read, and I don’t think you will either.








