
Your ERISA Watch would like to take this opportunity to wish a happy 250th birthday to the United States of America. This year’s celebration was unfortunately not as unifying and good-natured as our 200th, but your editor is optimistic that by 2076 American patriots of all political stripes will have resolved their differences and we will be living in peace and harmony. After all, ERISA will be 100 years old by then and surely all of its issues will have been ironed out as well. Maybe the U.S. will even win a World Cup by then. (I will leave it up to the reader to decide which of these is most unlikely.)
Until then, we must trudge on. It was a light week for the federal courts, but keep reading to learn about (1) ERISA’s preemption of California state and local laws regulating sick pay in the dockworker context (Hill v. Pacific Maritime Ass’n), (2) the dismissal of a class action alleging mismanagement of Molson Coors’ 401(k) plan (Hensley v. Molson Coors), (3) the settlement of a complex class action involving the alleged dilution of shares in an employee stock ownership plan (Howell v. Argent Trust), and last, but certainly not least, (4) the end of a case that was originally filed in 1992(!), just after the country’s quasquibicentennial (Breidenbach v. IBEW).
Below is a summary of this past week’s notable ERISA decisions by subject matter and jurisdiction.
Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Seventh Circuit
Hensley v. Molson Coors Beverage Co. USA LLC Governance Committee, No. 25-C-1371, 2026 WL 1878633 (E.D. Wis. June 30, 2026) (Judge William C. Griesbach). This case revolves around the 401(k) retirement plan established by Molson Coors Beverage Company USA LLC for its employees. The plan is a huge one, with more than $1.5 billion in assets and 9,700+ participants. The plaintiff is Winston Hensley, a plan participant and former employee, who accuses the company, its governance committee, and the plan investment subcommittee of mismanaging the plan by maintaining the Fidelity Stable Value Fund (SVF) as an investment option in the plan. Hensley contends that the SVF “is a ‘synthetic investment contract’ that carried significantly more risk and provided a significantly lower rate of return than other comparable funds that Defendants could have made available to Plan participants.” Hensley’s complaint asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, failure to monitor fiduciaries, and engaging in transactions prohibited by ERISA. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Addressing the claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence first, the court agreed with defendants that “Plaintiff improperly relies upon hindsight and a cherry-picked assortment of comparators in the [complaint].” The court found that Hensley’s exemplar funds were not “meaningful benchmarks” when compared with the Fidelity SVF. While Hensley did provide other SVFs for comparison, “the mere fact that a fund falls in the SVF category is not enough to show it is comparable to other SVF investments.” Indeed, “[s]ynthetic stable value funds are generally the least risky because principal is guaranteed by multiple wrap providers and plan participants own the assets of the underlying funds.” This was by design, because “[t]he principal objective of an SVF is capital preservation, not maximization of returns.” The court found that Hensley’s comparator SVFs did not reflect similar investment strategies, risk profiles, or potential rewards. Furthermore, “out of the fourteen putative comparator funds in the [complaint], Plaintiff only cited one other SVF…that he alleges outperformed the Fidelity SVF in each year of the putative class period. And even that fund is sufficiently dissimilar to belie any fair comparison[.]” As a result, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss Hensley’s duty of prudence claim. Because this claim failed, his derivative claim for breach of the duty to monitor was also dismissed. Finally, the court agreed with defendants that Hensley lacked standing to bring his prohibited transaction claim. “Plaintiff’s bare allegation that Defendants violated ERISA by allowing contractual payments by plan fiduciaries to third parties in exchange for plan services may be enough to state a claim, but it does not establish the injury necessary to satisfy the Article III requirement of standing.” The court ruled that Hensley did not show that “the fees paid to Fidelity were unreasonably high or more than it would have had to pay a non-party in interest.” As a result, defendants’ motion was granted. Moreover, because Hensley had already amended his complaint once and had not indicated how he would overcome the identified defects, the dismissal was with prejudice. “Considering the high costs of litigation, such ‘cat and mouse game[s] of motions to dismiss followed by a motion to amend,’ need not be allowed.”
Class Actions
Sixth Circuit
Breidenbach v. IBEW Local No. 82, No. 3:92-CV-184, 2026 WL 1894213 (S.D. Ohio July 1, 2026) (Judge Walter H. Rice). No, that case number is not a typo – this case originated in 1992. As a result, it was no surprise that the court opened this order by “first acknowledg[ing] the unconscionable length of time which this case has been pending. The Court extends its deepest appreciation to parties and counsel for their efforts in achieving final resolution.” The case is a class action by Fredric S. Breidenbach and others similarly situated against IBEW Local No. 82 and associated defendants. The court held an initial fairness hearing on a settlement agreement in 2008, which required defendants to deposit $232,000 with the clerk of the court, to be paid to Breidenbach with interest upon final regulatory approval. The trustee for the pension fund was to hold contributions made by the class members in escrow, to be transferred from a defined benefit plan to a defined contribution plan upon ultimate approval of the settlement agreement. A letter requesting a private letter ruling from the IRS was submitted in 2010, but the IRS did not give final approval until 2020. Meanwhile, Breidenbach passed away. The settlement agreement included a “clawback” provision to prevent participants from receiving duplicate benefits from both of the plans at issue. In this ruling the court addressed multiple motions, including a motion for release of funds to the estate of Breidenbach, a motion for attorney’s fees, and a joint motion for approval of class action settlement agreement. The court granted all three motions and overruled objections to the proposed settlement agreement. The court found that the clawback provision was part of the agreement from the start, as evidenced by testimony and documentation, and was necessary to prevent “double-dipping” by class plaintiffs. The court further determined that the settlement agreement was fair, reasonable, and adequate, considering the costs, risks, and delay of trial and appeal. “[T]he alternative to settlement is for this matter to continue for several more years, during which time even more class members will likely pass away without ever getting the option to move from the DB to DC Plan. The best and most comprehensive relief available to the Plaintiff class is the submitted settlement agreement.” The court commended counsel for effectively providing notice of the settlement and deadlines for election to class members. The court also found that the requested attorney’s fees (which only totaled $25,000 because the attorney had only “been on the case for less than a year”) were reasonable given his work in finalizing the settlement. The court concluded that the class representatives adequately represented the class and that the proposal was the product of an arm’s-length negotiation. The court thus approved the settlement agreement and directed the court clerk to disburse the $232,000 in the escrow account, plus (presumably significant) interest, to the administrator of Breidenbach’s estate.
Eleventh Circuit
Howell v. Argent Trust Co., No. 1:22-CV-03959-SDG, 2026 WL 1876784 (N.D. Ga. June 29, 2026) (Judge Steven D. Grimberg). This is a complicated class action concerning The North Highland Company Employee Stock Ownership Plan. The plaintiffs are plan participants and beneficiaries who alleged that a corporate reorganization significantly diluted plan equity to their detriment. They alleged 17 causes of action against various defendants under ERISA. In 2024, the court granted in part and denied in part defendants’ motion to dismiss and to compel arbitration, holding that certain claims were time-barred but that defendants could not compel arbitration of the remaining claims. (Your ERISA Watch covered this ruling in our October 9, 2024 edition.) Defendants appealed, and the appeal was held in abeyance while the Eleventh Circuit decided a case with similar arbitration issues. (That case was Williams v. Shapiro, which adopted the effective vindication doctrine in the ERISA context and was one of our cases of the week in our December 24, 2025 edition.) Meanwhile, the parties continued to discuss settlement and eventually reached an agreement. The parties stipulated to a limited remand from the Eleventh Circuit so that the district court could enter an order granting plaintiffs’ unopposed motion for preliminary approval of class settlement and certification of a settlement class. In this order the court granted plaintiffs’ motion. The court found that the proposed settlement (the details of which were not itemized, but apparently totals $2.375 million) was fair, reasonable, and adequate, meeting the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e)(2). The court further found that the settlement was negotiated in good faith at arm’s length between experienced attorneys and facilitated by an experienced mediator. The court certified a class under Rule 23(b)(1) composed of all participants in the plan who held vested shares in North Highland ESOP Holdings, Inc. between dates in 2016 and 2025. The court appointed the three named plaintiffs as class representatives and Bailey & Glasser LLP as class counsel. The plan of allocation was deemed fair, reasonable, and adequate, “as it proposes to compensate each class member based on the number of shares held in [the ESOP] over the Class Period, which is a fair proxy for the harm alleged, which was based on the number of shares held in the ESOP when shares were diluted[.]” The Court also approved the notice of settlement as reasonable. Simpluris was appointed as the settlement administrator and will be responsible for the duties in the settlement agreement, including establishing a qualified settlement fund. The court scheduled a fairness hearing for November of this year to determine final approval of the settlement and any applications for attorneys’ fees and costs.
Disability Benefit Claims
Sixth Circuit
Smith v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., No. 1:21-CV-294-KAC-CHS, 2026 WL 1949312 (E.D. Tenn. July 6, 2026) (Judge Katherine A. Crytzer). Jeffrey Scott Smith was a senior software engineer for Silicon Graphics International Corporation when he became disabled in 2015. Unum Life Insurance Company of America, the administrator of the company’s ERISA-governed employee long-term disability benefit plan, approved his claim based on cervical and lumbar radiculopathy and memory loss. However, in 2020 Unum changed its mind and concluded that Smith could return to the duties of his old occupation. Smith unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action against Unum and its corporate parent, alleging that their termination of his claim was arbitrary and capricious. The parties filed cross-motions for judgment, and Smith also filed a motion to determine the extent of deference that should be given to Unum’s decision, arguing that defendants’ financial interests tainted their decision-making process. The motions were referred to the assigned magistrate judge, who issued a report and recommendation. The report recommended denying Smith’s motion regarding deference, but “still considers Defendants’ financial interests in assessing whether Defendants’ denial was supported[.]” The report further recommended that the court grant Unum’s motion for judgment and deny Smith’s. Smith filed an objection to the recommendation, making three arguments: (1) defendants’ denial was unreasonable because “because it ‘relied on inconsistent file reviewing physicians’ and, in any event, ‘the weight of the evidence shows’ that he ‘is disabled due to cognitive deficits’”; (2) the report “erred ‘[i]n finding Unum’s reliance on file review credibility determinations appropriate’ and ‘granting no weight to Unum’s failure to physically examine’ Plaintiff”; and (3) the report did not adequately consider defendants’ bias. First, the court found that defendants did not abuse their discretion in terminating Smith’s claim, concluding that new evidence in the form of updated neuropsychological testing justified their changed position. The court also found that defendants adequately accounted for other testing which may have supported Smith’s claim. Specifically, that evidence was sufficiently countered by Unum’s reviewing physicians, who determined that the results “do[] not reflect a significant function deficit,” and that Smith’s “mild relative weakness” did not prevent him “from performing his own occupation.” The court stated that defendants’ decision was not unreasonable “just because the administrator ‘chooses to rely upon the medical opinion of one doctor over that of another.’” Second, the court concluded that defendants acted within their discretion in relying on file review physicians and the available record, and they were not required to conduct a physical examination. The court did not agree with Smith that Unum’s doctors were making “credibility determinations”; instead, those doctors relied on the same testing as Smith’s physicians but “just reached different conclusions from the testing.” Third, the court determined that there was insufficient evidence of bias affecting defendants’ decision-making process. The court agreed that defendants had a structural conflict of interest, but rejected the idea that bias was proven by (1) tracking reports showing monthly termination goals, (2) bonuses for which defendants’ on-site physicians might be eligible “if the Company succeeds,” or (3) Unum’s regulatory settlement agreement from 2004 and subsequent jury verdicts against them. None of these facts showed that defendants’ conflict “materialized in a concrete way to influence the administrator’s decisional process” in this particular case. As a result, the court overruled Smith’s objections, adopted the conclusions of the magistrate’s report and recommendation, and entered judgment in defendants’ favor.
ERISA Preemption
Ninth Circuit
Hill v. Pacific Maritime Ass’n, No. 24-CV-00336-JSC, 2026 WL 1909997 (N.D. Cal. July 2, 2026) (Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley). This is an action by unionized California dockworkers who “allege Defendants violated California law and several local ordinances by failing to pay them and the putative class sick pay.” The defendants are the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) and its more than 50 member companies, which consist of marine terminal operators, cargo-handling specialists, and other related port businesses. As the court explained, West Coast port operations are “unique”; dockworkers do not work for any specific PMA member company, but instead are dispatched to jobs for multiple employers based on collective bargaining agreements and local rules. They can choose when to seek work and can decline jobs offered through dispatch. PMA functions as a centralized payroll agent, collecting funds from member companies to pay dockworkers. PMA also administers certain benefits through several ERISA-governed trust funds. In this action plaintiffs have asserted claims under California’s Healthy Workforce Healthy Families Act (HWHFA) and local sick leave ordinances enacted in the cities of Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, and San Diego. They contend that these laws require defendants to implement a sick pay policy; they request an injunction to that effect and restitution for past sick pay owed. Plaintiffs also added a claim for retaliation based on allegations that defendants excluded Local 26 Watchmen from a $70 million Pandemic Appreciation Pay fund. Plaintiffs contend that this was done to punish Local 26 for filing complaints with the California Labor Commission regarding the lack of sick leave. Before the court was defendants’ motion for summary judgment, which asserted that ERISA preempts all of plaintiffs’ claims. The court was sympathetic because plaintiffs were contending that “California state and local laws require Defendants to adopt a paid sick leave plan, that is, an employee welfare plan within the meaning of ERISA. As a result, their sick leave claims are related to an ERISA plan [] are preempted.” Indeed, the court noted that the other benefit plans in which plaintiffs participated were ERISA-governed, strongly suggesting that any new plan established by defendants would have to be also. Plaintiffs contended that defendants “could adopt a sick leave plan that falls within ERISA’s payroll practice exemption,” but the court found this argument “unpersuasive” for two reasons. First, “the record does not include evidence that supports a finding any defendant could pay sick leave out of its general assets.” The court emphasized that the benefits plaintiffs already received were not paid from PMA’s “general assets,” and neither would the benefits they sought in this action. Instead, all benefits originate from the member companies. Second, because of the unusual nature of employment assignments, any proposed plan would have to consider which workers were taking leave from which assignments, and “how to allocate paid sick leave payments when a dockworker does not make herself available to dispatch due to sickness.” For these complicated logistical reasons, “It is thus unsurprising Plaintiffs cannot cite a single case – or even an actual example – of dockworker benefits being paid from anything other than an ERISA plan.” Thus, defendants’ motion was granted as to plaintiffs’ sick-leave claims. The court also denied plaintiffs’ request for additional discovery, finding it untimely and unsupported by a sufficient explanation for the delay. However, the court denied defendants’ motion regarding plaintiffs’ Pandemic Pay retaliation claims. “Unlike sick leave, Defendants have not shown that pay – including bonuses – falls within ERISA’s definition of an employee benefit plan… So, even though the record shows that to make such payments Defendants would have to adopt a plan and separate fund to allocate payments among them to the excluded watchmen, Defendants have not shown that plan would fall within ERISA.” The court thus only granted defendants’ summary judgment motion in part.
Medical Benefit Claims
Tenth Circuit
E.O. v. Premera Blue Cross, No. 2:23-CV-00443-TS-JCB, 2026 WL 1875695 (D. Utah June 30, 2026) (Judge Ted Stewart). E.O. is a participant in an ERISA-governed medical benefit plan, and his son, E.L., is a beneficiary of the plan, which is insured by Premera Blue Cross. E.L. was diagnosed with ADHD and dysgraphia in third grade and experienced significant mental health issues which only grew worse as he progressed to high school. E.L. began to have severe panic attacks and thoughts of suicide, and was sometimes violent and aggressive. His treating physicians stated that “outpatient treatment would be unsuccessful given the severity of E.L.’s condition” and recommended residential treatment. In 2022 E.L. attended blueFire, an outdoor behavioral health program, after which he was admitted to Gateway, a residential treatment center. However, Premera denied E.O.’s claim for benefits for E.L.’s treatment at Gateway, contending that his treatment there was not medically necessary. E.O. unsuccessfully appealed and then brought this action against Premera, asserting two claims: (1) for recovery of benefits under 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B), and (2) under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008. The case proceeded to cross-motions for summary judgment, where the court applied the arbitrary and capricious standard of review. The court identified numerous procedural violations by Premera. Premera’s denial letters did not reference specific plan provisions or adequately explain the basis for the denial. “[H]ere, any discussion of or citation to the Plan is entirely absent. Premera provides no explanation as to how the referenced admission guidelines, including the InterQual criteria and Premera’s internal policy, apply to the terms of the Plan.” The court also noted that “any citation to the record to support [its] conclusions is entirely absent. Likewise, Premera offers no explanation of clinical judgment regarding how it applied the terms of the Plan and InterQual criteria to those health conclusions such that denial was warranted.” Premera further “mischaracterized and unreasonably applied the InterQual criteria.” Premera did not consider all of the relevant criteria, misinterpreted the criteria, and limited its review to evidence as of a specific date, thereby excluding relevant evidence. Finally, and “[p]erhaps most egregiously, the Court finds that Premera blatantly failed to consider, engage with, or even acknowledge the letters from E.L.’s clinicians who opined that residential mental health treatment was medically necessary.” Premera conceded that it did not engage with the provider opinions, but argued that an “administrator is not required to engage provider opinions that do not contain information relevant to medical necessity of benefit claimed.” The court found Premera’s arguments “misplaced and reflect Premera’s failure to even consider the provider opinions,” which contained relevant evidence supporting medical necessity. The court emphasized that while an administrator is not required to defer to the opinions of a treating physician, it must address medical opinions, particularly those that may contradict its findings. In the end, the court found an “overwhelming amount of evidence supporting” severe functional impairment, an inadequate support system, E.L.’s inability to be managed safely in the community, and a lack of success at lower intensity treatment levels. In its briefing Premera attempted to rectify its errors, offering arguments to counter E.L.’s treatment providers, but “[t]hese rationales were never communicated to Plaintiff and thus are late and will not be considered in determining whether Defendant properly provided Plaintiff with a full and fair review.” The court addressed them anyway and found them unpersuasive. As a result, the court ruled that Premera acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying benefits for E.L.’s treatment and issued judgment in E.O.’s favor. As for a remedy, the court awarded retroactive benefits. The court stated, “Not only did Premera admit to not performing its core duty to provide a full and fair review, the reasons articulated for not doing so are egregious.” Remand was inappropriate for this reason and because it would give Premera a second “bite at the apple” to re-evaluate the claim based on rationales not raised in the administrative record. The court denied E.O.’s Parity Act claim as moot and ordered additional briefing regarding interest, attorney’s fees, and costs.
Retaliation Claims
Fifth Circuit
Engler v. Paycom Payroll, LLC, No. CV 25-145, 2026 WL 1872309 (E.D. La. June 30, 2026) (Judge William J. Crain). Kaitlin Gates Engler was employed as a sales representative at Paycom Payroll LLC in 2022 when she accepted a promotion to sales manager. As part of the promotion, Engler moved from St. Louis to New Orleans and received unvested shares of company stock under its long-term incentive plan. At the time, the company knew Engler was pregnant and would require medical leave. Engler went on approved leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) after her daughter was born in December of that year. However, while she was out, one of Engler’s subordinate sales representatives at Paycom resigned and accused Engler of directing sales representatives to falsify records. After an investigation (which Engler claims was incomplete and biased), Engler was terminated in March of 2023, shortly after returning from leave. Engler filed this action, asserting three claims: (1) retaliation under the FMLA; (2) retaliation under section 510 of ERISA; and (3) detrimental reliance under Louisiana Civil Code article 1967. Paycom filed a motion for summary judgment. The court denied Paycom summary judgment on Engler’s FMLA claim. The court found that Engler had established a prima facie case of retaliation by showing temporal proximity between her FMLA leave and termination, which was sufficient to establish a “causal link.” The court accepted that Paycom had provided a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for termination, citing violations of its ethics code, and thus the burden shifted to Engler to show that the reason was pretextual. Engler offered evidence that “(1) no one else was ever fired for falsifying time and attendance records; (2) Paycom did not follow its usual practice of progressive discipline before the ultimate act of firing her; and (3) Engler was fired without an opportunity to defend herself.” Paycom disputed these allegations, but “[t]he court cannot resolve such conflicts without weighing credibility, which cannot be done on summary judgment.” Paycom had better luck on Engler’s remaining two claims. The court found that the stock awards Engler received with her promotion “neither provide retirement income nor defer income beyond termination.” As a result, the awards were not part of any ERISA-governed plan, and thus Engler could not bring a claim under ERISA for retaliation. Finally, the court granted Paycom summary judgment on Engler’s detrimental reliance claim. Her claim failed because the promise on which she relied was fulfilled: she was awarded shares under the incentive plan as promised, even if they did not vest right away. The court found no clear and unambiguous promise that they would vest regardless of her employment status. “A detrimental reliance claim cannot rest on something Paycom never promised.” As a result, the case will proceed, but only on Engler’s FMLA claim.
Reyna v. Walmart Inc., No. 1:25-CV-02159-ABD-SH, 2026 WL 1920919 (W.D. Tex. July 2, 2026) (Magistrate Judge Susan Hightower). This order begins, “Reyna is a vexatious litigant,” and it goes downhill for plaintiff Joseph Anthony Reyna from there. Reyna is subject to a Pre-Filing Injunction in the Western District of Texas, where he has been “BARRED from filing future complaints…without obtaining prior approval from a district or magistrate judge” because he “has filed more than two dozen lawsuits in federal courts across Texas since June 2025,” almost all of which have been dismissed. As for this action, it is an employment discrimination suit against Walmart which was originally filed in two different places: the federal Southern District of New York and Travis County state court in Texas. The two cases were transferred and consolidated in the Western District of Texas, after which Walmart filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) for Reyna’s failure to comply with the court’s Pre-Filing Injunction and under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Reyna opposed the motion “and brings a litany of frivolous and duplicative motions and notices in response.” The assigned magistrate judge recommended granting Walmart’s motion on multiple grounds. First, the court found that Reyna violated the Pre-Filing Injunction by bringing the lawsuits without obtaining prior approval. The court stated that the injunction applied to transferred and removed cases; “To find otherwise would defeat the purpose of the sanction.” Second, although Reyna was granted in forma pauperis status based on his financial status, the court found his suit to be “malicious” because it violated the Pre-Filing Injunction. The court thus recommended dismissal under § 1915(e)(2)(B)(i). Third, the court found that Reyna failed to state a plausible claim for relief under the ADA and ERISA. Under his ADA claims, Reyna “fails to allege sufficient facts that he was qualified for the job or subject to an adverse employment action because of his purported disability.” His allegations were instead vague and conclusory. Similarly, on his ERISA claims, Reyna “alleges no facts showing that Walmart took any adverse employment action against him for exercising his rights under ERISA.” Reyna also alleged that Walmart did not give him plan documents upon request, but he did not adequately plead “that Walmart was the plan administrator or that he was denied any records. Walmart points out that it was not the plan administrator and that Reyna’s own allegations show he received the requested documents in November 2025.” Because these rulings disposed of Reyna’s federal claims, the court recommended declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his remaining state law claims. Finally, the magistrate recommended dismissing Reyna’s “thirteen non-dispositive motions and recommends that the District Court dismiss his two dispositive motions.” She further recommended that the Pre-Filing Injunction be amended “to specifically state that he is barred from proceeding as a plaintiff in this Court, including in removed and transferred cases, without prior leave.”
