People who work with an adviser are twice as likely to be on
track for retirement, John Hancock Retirement Plan Services found in its 2015
Financial Stress Survey. Among those who work with an adviser, 70% are on track
or are even ahead in saving for retirement, compared to 33% of those who are
not working with an adviser.
Among those who are working with an adviser, more than one
third have determined how much to save for retirement and half had contributed
to an individual retirement account (IRA). Among those who are not working with
an adviser, only 14% had calculated how much to save for retirement and only
16% contributed to an IRA.
The survey also found that 58% of people with an adviser
have money saved for an emergency, compared to 26% of those not working with a
professional. Within a 401(k) plan, 28% of those surveyed with an adviser are
contributing the maximum amount allowed, versus 13% of those not working with
an adviser.
“People need advice, not just investment advice but also
basic retirement planning guidance,” says Patrick Murphy, president of John
Hancock Retirement Plan Services. “And people need help with more holistic
financial issues such as budgeting and meeting short-term needs versus the need
to save for longer-term goals. It’s very clear that engaging a financial
adviser helps people take positive financial steps, from saving for emergencies
to saving for retirement.”
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A recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court seems to limit the
ability of ERISA plans to seek equitable relief or reimbursement of payments from
a third-party recovery—especially in cases where the money is not quickly and formally pursued.
The U.S. Supreme Court case Montanile v. Board of
Trustees of the National Elevator Industry Health Benefit Plan did not gain
much attention before reaching the top federal court, but now that the case has
been decided, ERISA attorneys are warning of significant potential impacts.
“The decision limits the ability of insurance plans to
recover money from a beneficiary in a settlement,” explains Michael Graham, a partner
with McDermott Will & Emery and
co-chair of the firm’s ERISA Litigation Affinity Group. It may sound like an
esoteric issue, but Graham and other experienced ERISA compliance professionals
say the issue comes up quite a lot across a wide variety of employee benefit
plans.
This particular case centers around one Mr. Montanile, who
was involved in a car accident caused by a drunk driver, after which his
Employee Retirement Income Security Act-covered (ERISA) health plan paid for
his immediate treatments. As was the case here, very often there is a provision
in such ERISA plans stipulating that if the plan pays in full and up front for emergency medical
treatment, but then the participant ultimately recovers those costs in full in
court—he or she must pay back the plan.
“This is pretty commonplace in employee benefit plans,
especially health coverage,” says Nancy G. Ross, a partner in Mayer Brown’s Chicago office and member of the firm’s Litigation & Dispute Resolution practice.
Under plan terms, Montanile had a fairly clear obligation to
reimburse the plan for his medical costs out of his recovery, according to Ross
and Graham, but in this case, the plan did not immediately ask him to do so nor did he eventually do so. Of critical importance here, the plan waited “a
pretty substantial period of time to formally pursue the money it was owed,”
Ross observes, so by the time the plan tried to go after the recovery that Montanile
had received, six months from the time the settlement money was paid to Montanile, he had spent the funds or had otherwise disseminated them.
So, the legal issue at hand became whether the plan’s efforts
to recover what Montanile had recovered constituted an effort to obtain legal
damages to be collected from unsegregated assets (which ERISA does not allow)
or whether it could be characterized as some kind of equitable recovery of the
plan’s rightful assets (which the terms of ERISA do allow).
NEXT: What SCOTUS
said
According to SCOTUS, important to note is that the National Elevator board of trustees
sued Montanile in federal district court under §502(a)(3) of ERISA, which
authorizes plan fiduciaries to file suit “to obtain . . . appropriate equitable
relief . . . to enforce . . . the terms of the plan, per 29 U. S. C.
§1132(a)(3).”
As the Supreme Court decision explains, the board sought an
equitable lien on any settlement funds or property in Montanile’s possession
and an order enjoining Montanile from dissipating any such funds. Montanile
argued that because he had already spent almost all of the settlement, no
identifiable fund existed against which to enforce the lien. The district court
rejected Montanile’s argument, and the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that “even
if Montanile had completely dissipated the fund, the plan was entitled to re-imbursement
from Montanile’s general assets.”
Both courts erred, according to SCOTUS: “When an ERISA plan
participant wholly dissipates a third-party settlement on non-traceable items,
the plan fiduciary may not bring suit under §502(a)(3) to attach the
participant’s separate assets. Pp. 5–15. (a) Plan fiduciaries are limited by
§502(a)(3) to filing suits ‘to obtain . . . equitable relief.’ Whether the
relief requested ‘is legal or equitable depends on [1] the basis for [the
plaintiff’s] claim and [2] the nature of the underlying remedies sought.’”
Complicating the matter, the Supreme Court points to an earlier case, Sereboff v. Mid Atlantic Medical Services,
Inc., in which it actually established precedents that “the basis for the board’s
claim—the enforcement of a lien created by an agreement to convey a particular
fund to another party—is equitable.” Further, the Supreme Court’s precedents
also establish that the nature of the National Elevator board’s underlying remedy—enforcement of
a lien against specifically identifiable funds that were within Montanile’s possession and control—would also have been equitable, “had the board immediately
sued to enforce the lien against the fund.”
“But those propositions do not resolve the question here,”
SCOTUS concludes, “whether a plan is still seeking an equitable remedy when the
defendant has dissipated all of a separate settlement fund, and the plan then
seeks to recover out of the defendant’s general assets. This court holds today
that a plan is not seeking equitable relief under those circumstances. In
premerger equity courts, a plaintiff could ordinarily enforce an equitable
lien, including, as here, an equitable lien by agreement, only against
specifically identified funds that remained in the defendant’s possession or
against traceable items that the defendant purchased with the funds … If a
defendant dissipated the entire fund on non-traceable items, the lien was
eliminated and the plaintiff could not attach the defendant’s general assets
instead.”
NEXT: What it all
means for ERISA plans
It’s a particular feature of big-impact Supreme Court
decisions that they can have such wide-ranging implications while actually
settling very little for the parties involved. That seems to be the case here,
as SCOTUS remanded the suit all the way back to the district court to
determine, in the first instance, whether Montanile even kept his settlement
fund separate from his general assets and whether he dissipated the entirety of
the potentially collectable funds on non-traceable assets.
Reading into the SCOTUS decision, Graham says the court
clearly held that a plan fiduciary “may seek equitable relief from a third-party
recovery only when it can identify a traceable fund into which the third party
settlement or judgment was deposited.” Perhaps less important for retirement
plans, but of critical importance to plan sponsors and financial officers, the Supreme
Court justices also firmly held that a plan fiduciary “cannot seek equitable
relief for medical benefits previously paid from a participant’s or
beneficiary’s general assets when the third party settlement has been
dissipated.”
Noting one silver lining for employers, Graham feels the
court has also ruled that, from an ERISA §502(a)(3) perspective, equitable
relief may still be asserted against a plan participant or beneficiary that
co-mingles a third-party settlement or judgment with other assets in a combined
account, or when the funds from a third-party settlement or judgment are used to
pay for traceable assets (i.e., a house or a car).
Ross warns that the
details of this case happened to be related to a health plan, “but retirement
plans find themselves in fairly similar situations all the time.”
“Overpayments by
benefit plans are a huge issue,” she concludes. “It’s somewhat commonplace, in
fact, just given the complexity of calculations and the fact that mistakes
happen. There has, frankly, been an increase in these kinds of cases all up and
down the court system and they’re going through similar arguments.”