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Employee Ownership Legal Digest
Corey Rosen (17)

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NCEO founder and senior staff member

Corey Rosen

Settlement Reached in Unusual ESOP Case

In Foster v. Adams & Assocs., Inc., No. 3:18-cv-02723-JSC (N.D. Cal. Sept. 26, 2021), a class of current and former employees agreed to pay $3 million to settle allegations that trustees and board members of Adams & Associates, a Job Corps contractor, participated in prohibited transactions, failed to make required disclosures, and improperly agreed to indemnification. The trustee (now deceased) had pled guilty to embezzling funds from other ESOP companies. Plaintiffs said the board of director defendants failed to tell the trustee that when the company became a 100% ESOP, it would lose its DOL set-aside status, and failed to disclose falling student revenue, all of which led to the ESOP overpaying for the shares.


Corey Rosen

Seventh Circuit Upholds Ruling That Arbitration in ESOP Case Inapplicable

In Smith v. Greatbanc Trust, No. 20 C 2350 (7th Cir., Sept. Sept. 10, 2021), the Seventh Circuit upheld a lower court ruling that an arbitration clause in a plan document could not be used to prevent a former participant from pursuing a claim that the ESOP had overpaid for shares in a valuation case involving Triad Manufacturing. Defendants argued that an arbitration clause had been added to the plan after the employee terminated but before the employee received a distribution. The employee contended he had not seen or consented to the clause and could not forfeit his right to sue the plan on behalf of other participants in the plan. The Seventh Circuit agreed, noting that ERISA provides that participants can seek relief individually and as a class. The language of the decision provided some guidance on how an arbitration agreement could be made acceptable.


Corey Rosen

Appeals Court Says Chubb Ltd. Not Liable for Insurance Payments to ESOP Trustee

In Martin Resource Management Corp. v. Federal Insurance Co. (5th Cir., Aug. 6, 2021), the Fifth Circuit ruled that Chubb Ltd. did not have to cover Martin Resource Management for its reimbursement to Wilmington Trust, its ESOP trustee, for payments it made in an ESOP valuation case settled in 2020. Martin filed suit when the insurance company said it was not liable under the terms of its policy to cover the ESOP trustee because “the demands, as they appear from Wilmington, are facially insufficient to trigger the insuring clause, which requires the assertion of a ‘Fiduciary Claim … made against (Martin) … for a Wrongful Act committed … by (Martin).’” Martin was not named as a fiduciary in the complaints and there were no allegations made against Martin, only Wilmington, so Martin had no recourse against the insurer.


Corey Rosen

Court Rules Former ESOP Company CEO Must Pay Back Misappropriated Funds

In Rael & Letson v. Clark (Cal. Appeals Court, Unpublished, Apr. 14, 2021), a California court ruled that Michael Clark was liable as former CEO for misappropriating over $3 million from the company for his personal use by having the company pay personal credit card bills, charges for his home utilities, private airplanes, country club dues at four clubs, a car, and other items for his personal use.




Corey Rosen

Seventh Circuit Says ERISA Does Not Preempt Certain Bankruptcy Law Claims

In Halperin v. Richards, No. 20-2793, WL 3184305 (7th Cir. July 28, 2021), the Seventh Circuit considered whether ERISA “preempts certain state-law claims brought by bankruptcy creditors on behalf of a company against its directors and officers and others alleged to have inflated the company’s stock value to conceal the company’s decline and to benefit corporate insiders.” The plaintiffs, who are co-trustees of the Appvion Liquidating Trust, argued that the defendants (the ESOP trustee, the appraisal firms, and the directors and officers of Appvion) overvalued the shares bought by the company’s ESOP, causing the company to eventually go bankrupt. An ERISA lawsuit in the case (Appvion v. Buth) over similar issues had been dismissed.


Corey Rosen

Plaintiffs Lose Another Stock-Drop Case

In Osborne et al. v. Employee Benefits Administration Board of Kraft Heinz et al., No. 1:20-cv-02256 (N.D. Ill., Aug. 23, 2021), plaintiffs in Kraft Heinz’s retirement plan failed to convince a court that a drop in the price of their company’s stock was a fiduciary violation. Plaintiffs alleged that fiduciaries knew or should have known that Kraft Heinz was recording inaccurate amounts of goodwill and intangible assets and should have disclosed that information to prevent the company’s stock price from being artificially inflated. The court ruled that “the amended complaint does not adequately allege that some earlier disclosure was so clearly beneficial that a prudent fiduciary could not conclude it would be more likely to harm the Plan than to help it” and thus the suit failed under the Dudenhoeffer doctrine that fiduciary actions must be shown to have likely done more good than harm.


Corey Rosen

Arbitration Clause Upheld in GM Stock Drop Case

In Webb v. Fid. Brokerage Servs., No. 354691 (Mich. Ct. App., 354691, July 29, 2021), a retired employee lost claim for a breach of fiduciary duty after his GM stock dropped within a rollover IRA managed by Fidelity. The retiree, Moses Webb, claimed that in 2009 Fidelity did not adequately respond to his questions about GM’s then-impending bankruptcy, which resulted in him losing all of the $79,000 he had invested. Webb argued that the GM stock he’d purchased throughout his long career at the company was part of an ESOP, and thus subject to the arbitration requirements enforced by ERISA. The trial court could not find evidence to back up this claim because his Fidelity account was a rollover IRA, making it impossible to prove that he purchased the shares outside an ERISA plan. The court did not address this, ruling that an arbitration clause governed his Fidelity IRA and stating that “all parties to this agreement are giving up the right to sue.” The court also noted that Webb needs to file ERISA claims in federal court, not state court.


Corey Rosen

Class Certified in Segerdahl ESOP Sale

In Rush v. GreatBanc, No. 19-cv-00738 (N.D. Ill., June 16, 2021), a district court granted class status to the plaintiff, saying that he could represent the class of participants in an ESOP at Segerdahl Corporation. The company was 100% ESOP owned until sold in 2016. Rush, who was a vice president at the time, contends that the board should have sought a higher bid. The defendants claim that Rush had a conflict of interest in that he sold $1.8 million in stock appreciation rights in the sale, knew about the proposed transaction, and was not typical of the class of plan participants. The court ruled that there were sufficient common interests of the class relative to how much the company was sold for to allow the case to continue.