Payne v. Hormel Foods Corp.

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Payne v. Hormel Foods Corp.

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Scott Payne,                        Case No. 24-cv-545 (SRN/DTS)         

          Plaintiff,                                                     

v.                                          ORDER                        

Hormel Foods Corp.,                                                      
The Board of Directors of Hormel Foods                                   
Corp., and                                                               
John Does 1–40,                                                          

          Defendants.                                                    


Katherine Rollins, Scott Moriarity, and Shawn Wanta, Wanta Thome PLC, 100 South 
Fifth Street, Suite 1200, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for the Plaintiff.      

Andrew Holly and Brock Huebner, Dorsey & Whitney LLP, 50 South Sixth Street, Suite 
1500, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for the Defendants.                         


SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge                        
    This matter is before the Court on the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [Doc. No. 
10]. Based on a review of the files, submissions, and proceedings herein, and for the 
reasons stated below, the Court denies the Defendants’ motion.            
I.   BACKGROUND                                                           
    A.   Facts                                                           
    Defendants Hormel Foods Corporation, the Hormel Foods Corporation Board of 
Directors (“the Board”), and the John Doe officers, employees, and contractors of the 
Hormel Foods Corporation (collectively, “the Defendants” or “Hormel”), sponsor and 
operate two retirement plans for Hormel employees: the Hormel Foods Corporation Tax 
Deferred Investment Plan A (“Plan A”), and the Hormel Foods Corporation Joint Earnings 

Profit Sharing Trust (“JEPST Plan”) (collectively, “the Plans”). (Compl. [Doc. No. 1] ¶¶ 
1, 7, 9, 11.) Together, the Plans hold at least $1.2 billion in assets under management. (Id. 
¶ 18.) The Plans each offer several different investment options, with varying risk levels, 
which  participants  may  elect.  (See  Plan  A  Prospectus  [Doc.  No.  17];  JEPST  Plan 
Prospectus [Doc. No. 17].)1 The majority of these investment options are not at issue here. 
(See generally Compl.)                                                    

    Mr. Payne is a participant in the Plans, and has been since at least 2017. (Id. ¶¶ 6, 
42.) In this putative class action lawsuit, he directs his claims towards two aspects of the 
Plans: (1) the stable value investment option; and (2) the share classes selected for certain 
mutual funds. (Id. ¶¶ 20, 39.)                                            
         1.   The Stable Value Investment Option                         

    Insurance companies regularly issue single entity guaranteed investment contracts 
(“GICs”) to retirement benefit plans in the form of fixed-annuity contracts. (Id. ¶ 22.) 
Under the terms of the contracts, the GICs provide for a guaranteed rate of return (the 
“crediting rate”) during a specified period. (Id.) GICs can be structured in a number of 
different ways, depending on the account or accounts backing the guaranty, including as 

“general account” GICs or “separate account” GICs. (Id. ¶¶ 22–24.)        

1    Relevant fund prospectuses are “embraced by the pleadings” and may be considered 
by a district court on a motion to dismiss. See Davis v. Washington University in St. Louis, 
960 F.3d 478
, 484 n.3 (8th Cir. 2020); Meiners v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
898 F.3d 820, 823
 
(8th Cir. 2018).                                                          
    One of the investment options offered by the Plans is a MassMutual general account 
GIC. (Id. ¶ 20.) The GIC is offered to plan participants as a stable value investment option, 

and is intended to provide an option that prioritizes the protection of principal over long-
term growth. (Id. ¶¶ 20–21; Plan A Prospectus at 3; JEPST Plan Prospectus at 3.) The Plans 
do not offer any other stable value investment option. (See Plan A Prospectus; JEPST Plan 
Prospectus).                                                              
    General account GICs, like the one offered in the Plans, are backed by the issuing 
entity’s unrestricted general investment accounts. (Compl. ¶ 23.) Accordingly, the Plans’ 

GICs are subject to any claims and liabilities asserted against MassMutual, and the risk 
that, if MassMutual fails, no other entity will satisfy the loss to the Plans. (Id.) Because the 
GICs  are  backed  by  assets  within  MassMutual’s  unrestricted  general  accounts, 
MassMutual earns a “spread” equal to the difference between returns from its general 
accounts and the GIC’s crediting rate. (Id. ¶ 25.)                        

    Separate account GICs, by contrast, are structured with backing from a separate 
investment account, established by the entity issuing the GIC. (Id. ¶ 24.) The separation 
serves to insulate the assets from claims and liabilities against the insurance company. (Id.) 
Separate account GICs, therefore, are considered lower risk than general account GICs, 
and  typically  have  correspondingly  lower  crediting  rates.  (Id.  ¶  26.)  MassMutual 

establishes the crediting rates for its GICs, and offers both general account GIC and 
separate account GIC investment options for retirement plans. (Id. ¶¶ 25–28.)  
    Mr. Payne alleges that the MassMutual general account GIC offered by the Plans 
consistently underperformed over a period of six years, when measured against other 
comparable stable value funds. (Id. ¶¶ 27–29.) He specifically identifies two comparators: 
(1) the typical crediting rates offered by MassMutual for its separate account GICs over 

the same period, and (2) the crediting rate for a different entity’s general account fixed-
annuity contract over the same period. (Id.)                              
    From  the  first  calendar  quarter  of  2017  through  the  end  of  2023,  the  Plans’ 
MassMutual general account GIC’s crediting rate ranged from 3.00% to 3.20%. (Id. ¶ 28.) 
Over that same period, comparable plans received consistently higher crediting rates from 
MassMutual for separate account GICs. (Id. ¶ 27.) MassMutual’s typical crediting rate for 

its separate account GICs, from the start of 2017 through the end of 2023, ranged from 
3.81% to 4.68%. (Id. ¶ 28.) Except for four calendar quarters for which no data is available, 
MassMutual’s typical crediting rate for its separate account GICs exceeded its rate for the 
Plans’ general account GIC in every calendar quarter over the relevant period, by a rate of 
0.71% to 1.58%. (Id.)                                                     

    Over  that  same  period,  the  Plans’  MassMutual  general  account  GICs  also 
underperformed when compared to the crediting rates of other general account fixed-
annuity contracts. (Id. ¶ 29.) For example, from the start of 2017 through December of 
2023, the crediting rates for the TIAA-CREF traditional general account annuity ranged 
from 4.25% to 7.00%. (Id.) The TIAA-CREF annuity crediting rate exceeded the crediting 

rate for the Plans’ GIC in every calendar quarter over the relevant period, by a rate of 1.25% 
to 4.00%. (Id.)                                                           
         2.   The Mutual Fund Share Classes                              
    In addition to the stable value investment option, the Plans offer a number of mutual 
funds into which participants may direct their investments, including the DFA US Large 

Cap Value Fund (“DFA Fund”) and the Harbor Capital Appreciation Fund (“Harbor 
Fund”). (Plan A Prospectus at 4; JEPST Plan Prospectus at 4.) Each mutual fund offers 
multiple share class options for individual investors or investment plans. (Compl. ¶ 35.) 
Since the investment portfolio and management of a mutual fund does not change across 
share classes, the sole difference between share classes is the cost of the shares. (Id. ¶¶ 35, 

40.) Larger plans will typically qualify for less expensive share classes than smaller plans 
or individual investors, and large plans have more leverage to bargain and reduce costs 
further. (Id. ¶¶ 35–36.) In this case, the Plans are of a size that would typically qualify for 
less expensive share classes. (Id. ¶ 37.)                                 
    For every year from 2017 through 2021, Hormel selected an institutional share class 

of the DFA Fund with a net expense ratio ranging from 0.22% to 0.27%. (Id. ¶ 39.) In each 
of those years, the Plans likely could have qualified for a less expensive share class of the 
DFA Fund. (Id.) Moreover, for each year, the cost of the DFA Fund share class Hormel 
selected exceeded that of a less expensive available share class by between 0.08% and 
0.14%. (Id.)                                                              

    With respect to the Harbor Fund, from 2017 through 2021, Hormel selected an 
institutional share class with a net expense ratio ranging from 0.65% to 0.67%. (Id.) In each 
of those years, the Plans likely could have qualified for the Harbor Fund’s less expensive 
retirement share class. (Id.) For every year at issue, the Harbor Fund’s retirement share 
class was 0.08% less expensive than the share class selected by Hormel. (Id.) 

    Mr. Payne alleges that even fractions of a percent increase in expense ratios can 
have a significant impact on the long-term performance of plan participants’ investments, 
because returns, not lost to share class fees, can be reinvested in the mutual fund and grow 
over time. (Id. ¶ 38.)                                                    
II.  PROCEDURAL POSTURE                                                   
    Mr. Payne initiated this putative class action lawsuit on February 21, 2024, on behalf 

of himself and all persons who were participants or beneficiaries of the Plans during the 
relevant period. (Compl. ¶ 42.) He alleges that Hormel breached its duty of care, skill, 
prudence, and diligence under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 
(“ERISA”), 
29 U.S.C. §§ 1001
 et seq., by selecting the underperforming stable value 
investment option, and by retaining more expensive share classes in certain mutual funds 

when less expensive share classes were available.                         
    Hormel moves to dismiss the Complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 
12(b)(6), arguing that Mr. Payne fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. 
Hormel argues that Mr. Payne fails to plausibly allege a breach of fiduciary duty with 
respect to either the stable value investment option or the retention of more expensive 

mutual fund share classes, and that he fails to plausibly allege that the Board is a fiduciary 
within the meaning of ERISA. (Def. Mem. in Support [Doc. No. 13].)        
III.  ANALYSIS                                                            
    A.   Legal Standard                                                  
    When considering a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 
12(b)(6), the Court accepts the facts alleged in the complaint as true, reading the complaint 

“in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, [and] making all reasonable inferences of fact 
in the plaintiff’s favor.” Glow in One Mini Golf, LLC v. Walz, 
37 F.4th 1365, 1370
 (8th 
Cir. 2022). On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court “generally must ignore materials outside 
the pleadings, but it may consider some materials that are part of the public record or do 
not contradict the complaint, as well as materials that are necessarily embraced by the 

pleadings.” 
Id.
 Materials embraced by the complaint include “documents whose contents 
are alleged in a complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not 
physically attached to the pleadings.” Zean v. Fairview Health Services, 
858 F.3d 520, 526
 
(8th Cir. 2017).                                                          
    To survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, “a complaint must contain sufficient factual 

matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. 
Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 678
 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 
(2007)). The facts alleged must have enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above the 
speculative level.” Bell Atl. Corp., 
550 U.S. at 555
. The Court reads the complaint as a 
whole, “not parsed piece by piece to determine whether each allegation, in isolation, is 

plausible.” Braden v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
588 F.3d 585, 594
 (8th Cir. 2009). Evaluation 
of a complaint upon a motion to dismiss is “a context-specific task that requires the 
reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.” 
Id.
 
    B.   ERISA                                                           
    ERISA imposes two primary duties on plan fiduciaries: loyalty and prudence. 
Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
. “[A] fiduciary shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan 

solely in the interests of the participants and beneficiaries . . . with the care, skill, prudence, 
and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like 
capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like 
character and with like aims.” 
29 U.S.C. § 1104
(a)(1). To plausibly allege a claim of breach 
of fiduciary duty under ERISA, a plaintiff “must make a prima facie showing that a 

defendant acted as a fiduciary, breached his fiduciary duties, and thereby caused a loss to 
the plan.” Dormani v. Target Corp., 
970 F.3d 910, 914
 (8th Cir. 2020).    
    ERISA’s duty of prudence imposes upon fiduciaries a continuing duty to “monitor 
investments and remove imprudent ones.” Hughes v. Northwestern University, 
595 U.S. 170, 175
 (2022). It is not enough for a fiduciary to simply offer plan participants a menu 

of investment options, some of which may perform better than others. When a plaintiff 
plausibly identifies an imprudent investment option in a plan, that is sufficient to state a 
claim for a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. 
Id.
                     
    In the context of an ERISA claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence, a 
plaintiff clears the pleading bar by alleging sufficient facts for the Court to reasonably infer 

that the process by which the fiduciary selected the challenged fund was flawed. Matousek 
v. MidAmerican Energy Co., 
51 F.4th 274, 278
 (8th Cir. 2022). The Court must take into 
account the practical reality that ERISA plaintiffs “generally lack the inside information 
necessary to make out their claims in detail unless and until discovery commences,” and 
will  not  require  plaintiffs  to  plead  facts  “which  tend  systemically  to  be  in  the  sole 
possession of defendants” if the facts alleged are sufficient to demonstrate that the plaintiff 

“is not merely engaged in a fishing expedition.” Braden, 
588 F.3d at 598
. The challenge 
for ERISA plaintiffs is to use the data available to them about the selected funds, and some 
circumstantial  allegations  about  methods,  “to  show  that  a  prudent  fiduciary  in  like 
circumstances would have acted differently.” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
.    
    To show that a prudent fiduciary in like circumstances would have selected a 
different fund, based on the cost or performance of the challenged fund, “[t]he key to 

nudging an inference of imprudence from possible to plausible is providing a sound basis 
for comparison—a meaningful benchmark—not just alleging that costs are too high, or 
returns are too low.” Matousek, 
51 F.4th at 278
 (quoting Davis, 
960 F.3d at 484
). “No 
authority requires a fiduciary to pick the best performing fund,” and bare allegations that a 
less expensive or better performing alternative investment exists in the marketplace do not 

raise  a  plausible  inference  of  imprudence.  Meiners,  898  F.3d  at  822–23.  Whether  a 
comparator  fund  serves  as  a  meaningful  benchmark  by  which  to  judge  the  cost  or 
performance of a challenged investment rests on the totality of the specific allegations in a 
case. Braden, 
588 F.3d at 596
, 596 n.7.                                   
    C.   The Stable Value Investment Option                              

    Hormel argues that Mr. Payne’s allegations regarding the MassMutual general 
account GIC investment option fail because he does not plausibly allege a meaningful 
benchmark against which to judge the investment’s underperformance, and that the degree 
and duration of that alleged underperformance is insufficient to plausibly infer a flawed 
fiduciary process.2 The Court considers each argument in turn.            

         1.   Eighth Circuit Law on Meaningful Benchmarks                
    The Eighth Circuit provided important guidance on what a plaintiff must plausibly 
allege to identify a meaningful benchmark in Meiners v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
898 F.3d at 821
. In  that case,  a  participant  in  Wells  Fargo’s  employee retirement  plan  sued  the 
company, alleging that retaining Wells Fargo’s proprietary investment funds as options in 
its plan, and defaulting to those proprietary funds for plan participants who did not elect 

other options, was a breach of its fiduciary duties under ERISA. The plaintiff alleged that 
these Wells Fargo funds were more expensive than comparable Vanguard and Fidelity 
funds, and that they underperformed the Vanguard funds.                   
    The Eighth Circuit, affirming the lower court’s dismissal of the complaint, held that 
the plaintiff failed to state a plausible claim of imprudence, because the plaintiff failed to 

plausibly  identify  a  meaningful  benchmark  against  which  to  judge  the  cost  and 

2    Hormel also argues that Mr. Payne fails to allege that either the TIAA-CREF 
traditional annuity fund or any higher performing separate account GICs were actually 
available to the Plans. The Eighth Circuit, however, does not require a plaintiff to plead 
that a comparator is available to a plan to support an inference of imprudence. In Matousek, 
cited by Hormel, the Eighth Circuit found the plaintiffs’ claims insufficient, not because 
the plaintiffs failed to allege that their comparators were available to the plan at issue, but 
because the plaintiffs did not plead facts sufficient to allege that their comparators were 
meaningful benchmarks. 
51 F.4th at 280
. Which investment options were available to the 
Plans is a question of fact. See Hughes v. Northwestern University, 
63 F.4th 615
, 630 (7th 
Cir. 2023) (holding that the availability of a prudent course of action is a fact issue 
inappropriate  to  resolve  on  a  motion  to  dismiss);  Coppel  v.  SeaWorld  Parks  & 
Entertainment, Inc., No. 21-cv-1430, 
2024 WL 3086702
 (S.D. Cal. Jan. 31, 2024) (finding 
that whether the TIAA-CREF fund was available to the plan was a fact issue that could not 
be resolved at the pleading stage).                                       
performance of the funds at issue. The court noted that the “fact that one fund with a 
different investment strategy ultimately performed better does not establish anything about 

whether the [challenged funds] were an imprudent choice at the outset.” 
Id. at 823
.  
    The Meiners court contrasted the allegations before it to those considered in Braden, 
a case in which the plaintiff alleged, as meaningful benchmarks, the market index and other 
shares of the same fund. 
Id.
 (discussing Braden, 588 F.3d at 595–96). It further noted that, 
in Braden, the court warned that its decision was based on the specific allegations before 
it, and that merely alleging the existence of a preferable alternative fund in the marketplace 

would be insufficient to state a claim. Braden, 
588 F.3d at 596
 n.7. The Meiners court 
underscored the fact that ERISA does not require fiduciaries to select the best performing 
fund.                                                                     
    In Davis v. Washington University in St. Louis, three employee retirement plan 
participants sued Washington University in St. Louis for breaching its fiduciary duties 

under ERISA, alleging in part that the university kept three underperforming investments 
in the plan for too long. 
960 F.3d at 484
. The district court dismissed the complaint, noting 
that the plaintiffs had failed to plausibly allege a meaningful benchmark against which to 
judge the performance of those investment options.                        
    The Eighth Circuit agreed and affirmed the lower court’s dismissal. The Court noted 

that, as to the first investment fund option, although both that option and the comparator 
were focused on real estate, it was evident from the documents embraced by the pleadings 
that the option in the plan was actively managed and purchased direct ownership stakes in 
income-producing real estate, whereas the comparator fund was set up to passively track 
an index of stocks in publicly traded real estate trusts. Thus, the court found that the funds 
had “different aims, different risks, and different potential rewards,” and comparing them 

was like “comparing apples and oranges.” 
Id. at 485
.                      
    As to the second fund option, the court noted that the fund in the plan had 30% of 
its portfolio invested in international securities, offering investors broad exposure to both 
domestic and international stocks, while the alleged comparators had significantly lower 
percentages of international stocks. Thus, the court found that the funds were too different 
in composition to serve as meaningful benchmarks. 
Id.
 at 485–86.          

    The final investment at issue was a fixed-annuity contract. The court agreed that the 
plaintiffs  failed  to  plausibly  allege  a  meaningful  benchmark,  because  they  had  not 
identified any other fixed-annuity contract that had performed better than the one at issue. 
Id.
 at 486–87.                                                            
    In Matousek v. MidAmerican Energy Co., the court considered an action brought by 

participants in an energy company’s employee retirement plan, alleging in part that certain 
plan  investment  funds  consistently  underperformed.  
51 F.4th at 280
.  The  plaintiffs 
compared: (1) the performance of the funds at issue to the average performance of funds 
in their “peer groups”; (2) the expense ratios of those same funds to the expense ratios of 
funds in their “peer groups,” and; (3) the performance of two of the funds at issue to 

alternative investments. 
Id. at 281
.                                      
    First,  the  court  noted  that  the  plaintiffs  had  failed  to  adequately  allege  the 
similarities between funds in each “peer group.” For instance, there were no allegations 
that the comparators in a “peer group” had similar risk profiles, return objectives, or 
management  approaches.  With  respect  to  the  two  less  expensive,  better  performing 
alternative investments identified by the plaintiffs, the Matousek court noted that they too 

had different investment strategies, different risk profiles, and different potential rewards. 
Accordingly, the court found that the plaintiffs failed to adequately plead meaningful 
benchmarks  for  the  funds  at  issue,  and  affirmed  the  lower  court’s  dismissal  of  the 
complaint. 
Id. at 282
.                                                    
    Together, Meiners, Davis, and Matousek are instructive as to what investment 
comparators can function as a meaningful benchmark. Plaintiffs must not only identify less 

expensive or better performing investment options as comparators, but those alternative 
options must also be similar enough to raise a plausible inference that a prudent investor in 
like circumstances would not have selected the challenged investment. When determining 
whether a comparator is sufficiently similar to the fund at issue, courts may look to its 
structure, objectives, strategy, and risk profile. As the court repeatedly observed, however, 

this requirement is not intended to be such a barrier that plaintiffs cannot bring potentially 
meritorious ERISA claims. See Matousek, 
51 F.4th at 281
 (noting that there is no “one size 
fits all approach” to pleading a meaningful benchmark, and that trial courts should consider 
the totality of the specific allegations before dismissing a complaint).  
         2.   The Plausibility of the Meaningful Benchmarks Pled for the 
              General Account GIC                                        
    In this case, the investment option at issue is the MassMutual general account 
GIC—a stable value investment option. Stable value investment options, by nature, are 

different from other types of investment options typically offered in a retirement plan. They 
are defined by their predictability, they offer a set return on investment, and their associated 
risk level is a creature of their structural design rather than their investment strategy. The 

Eighth Circuit has only once considered the plausibility of claims alleging imprudence in 
the selection or retention of a stable value investment. See Davis, 
960 F.3d at 486
 (noting 
that the complaint did not allege a single comparator for the fixed-annuity contract at issue). 
    However, a sister court in this circuit recently considered whether a similar claim 
involving a stable value investment option could survive a motion to dismiss. See Lacross 
v. Jack Henry & Assocs., Inc., No. 23-cv-5088, 
2024 WL 3564575
 (W.D. Mo. July 11, 

2024) (Bough, J.). In Lacross, the plaintiff sought to amend the complaint to add a claim 
alleging a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA with respect to the plan’s stable value 
fund investment option. The fund at issue was a general account GIC owned by Prudential. 
The plaintiff alleged that the GIC underperformed as compared to (1) the TIAA Traditional 
Annuity Fund and (2) the average crediting rates of MassMutual separate account GICs. 

The  defendant  argued  that  neither  comparator  was  sufficiently  similar  to  serve  as  a 
meaningful benchmark.                                                     
    The Lacross court, guided by Eighth Circuit authority, rejected the defendant’s 
arguments as to both comparators. With respect to the TIAA fund, the court observed that 
both the TIAA fund and the GIC at issue operate as fixed-annuity products. Even if 

unavailable to the plan, the court noted that the TIAA fund could still serve as a meaningful 
benchmark. As to the MassMutual separate account GICs, the court observed that, taking 
the facts alleged as true, “they only differ insofar as, being separate account GICs, they 
allegedly carry less risk. From the perspective of a plan participant or investor, they 
allegedly provide the same benefit.” 
Id. at *3
. Consequently, the court found that the 
plaintiff had plausibly alleged that both the TIAA fund and the MassMutual separate 

account GICs were meaningful benchmarks.                                  
    Here, taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s 
favor, the Court finds that Mr. Payne has plausibly pled meaningful benchmarks against 
which to judge whether the MassMutual general account GIC underperformed. As to the 
TIAA-CREF fund, he alleges that this is a fixed-annuity general account investment like 
the MassMutual general account GIC, with the same structure, purpose, and risk profile. 

See Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
 (a plaintiff must provide “a sound basis for comparison”); 
Lacross, 
2024 WL 3564575
 at *3.                                           
    The Court further finds that the Plaintiff plausibly alleges that the MassMutual 
separate account GICs are a meaningful benchmark. Based on the pleadings and the 
documents embraced by the pleadings, these accounts are owned, operated, and managed 

by the same insurer. As stable value GICs, they share the same goal of offering investors 
an option that guarantees a return of their principal, in exchange for low crediting rates. 
While it is true, as Mr. Payne alleges, that general account GICs and separate account GICs 
have  different  risk  profiles,  they  are  sufficiently  similar  to  serve  as  meaningful 
benchmarks.  See  Disselkamp  v.  Norton  Healthcare,  Inc.,  No.  3:18-cv-48,  2019 

WL3536038, at *6 (W.D. Ky. Aug. 2, 2019) (discussing the evolution of various GIC 
structures  and  denying  a  motion  to  dismiss  a  claim  comparing  an  allegedly 
underperforming general account GIC to the TIAA fund and separate account GICs). 
Unlike  the  comparators  pleaded  in  Matousek,  Davis,  and  Meiners—funds  that  were 
managed by different investment companies with different objectives and portfolios—
stable value GICs provide the same benefits and expectation of returns.   

    Here,  a  reasonable  inference  to  draw  is  that  “a  prudent  fiduciary  in  like 
circumstances would have selected a different fund.” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
. Taking the 
facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in Mr. Payne’s favor, the Court finds 
that  he  has  plausibly  alleged  that  MassMutual’s  separate  account  GICs  are  also  a 
meaningful benchmark.                                                     

         3.   Duration and Degree of Underperformance                    
    Hormel next argues that, even if Mr. Payne’s alleged comparators were meaningful 
benchmarks, the duration of the GIC’s underperformance is not long enough to plausibly 
plead a flawed fiduciary process. Hormel further argues that the underperformance of a 
stable value investment option should not give rise to an inference of imprudence, because 
stable value funds are designed to protect principal rather than chase returns. 

    In support of its position, Hormel relies on several out-of-circuit district court cases. 
In those cases, the courts found that a stable value fund’s underperformance over a similar 
period was insufficient to support an inference of a breach of fiduciary duty. See, e.g., 
Lalonde v. Mass. Mutual Ins. Co., —F. Supp. 3d—, 
2024 WL 1346027
, at *9 (D. Mass. 
Mar. 29, 2024) (a fund’s alleged underperformance when compared to a benchmark over 

a seven-year period is a “hindsight-based allegation” insufficient to support a plausible 
inference of a flawed process); England v. DENSO Int’l Am., Inc., No. 22-cv-11129, 
2023 WL 4851878
,  at  *8–9  (E.D.  Mich.  July  28,  2023)  (a  “two-year  snapshot  of 
underperformance” is insufficient to plausibly plead a breach of fiduciary duty). The courts 
in other out-of-circuit cases, however, have reached the opposite conclusion. See, e.g., 
Miller v. Autozone, Inc., No. 2:19-cv-2779, 
2020 WL 6479564
 (W.D. Tenn. Sept. 18, 2020) 

(observing that consistent underperformance of a stable value product over time supports 
an inference of imprudence); Terraza v. Safeway, Inc., 
241 F. Supp. 3d 1057
, 1075–77 
(N.D. Cal. 2017) (finding an allegation that a stable value fund underperformed when 
measured against a comparable option over a period of six years sufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss).                                                       
    In this case, Mr. Payne claims that Hormel breached its duty to monitor the Plans’ 

investment options and remove imprudent ones, by failing to remove and replace the 
MassMutual general account GIC with a safer stable value option, or an option with a better 
crediting rate. In support, Mr. Payne alleges that the GIC at issue received a lower crediting 
rate than a comparable fund of the same structure over a period of six years. He alleges that 
a prudent fiduciary would have leveraged the size of the plan to either negotiate a better 

deal with MassMutual or to remove the underperforming option from the Plans and replace 
it with a safer or higher performing one.                                 
    Moreover, it is alleged that the general account GIC chronically provided lower 
crediting rates than the safer separate account GICs offered by the same insurer. (Compl. 
¶¶ 27–28.) Further, unlike other types of investments, stable value funds are intended to 

perform consistently over time. Drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Mr. Payne, 
the Court finds it plausible that a prudent fiduciary in the circumstances alleged “would 
have acted differently,” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
, and denies the motion to dismiss on this 
basis.                                                                    
    D.   The Mutual Fund Share Classes                                   
    Hormel argues that the Court should dismiss Mr. Payne’s claims regarding the 
Plans’ mutual fund share classes, because he has not sufficiently alleged that the alternative 

share classes he identifies were available to the Plans or were less expensive on net than 
the share classes offered by the Plans. To support these arguments, Hormel largely relies 
on documents, outside of the pleadings, that it claims are embraced by the Complaint. The 
Court first addresses what materials it may consider and then turns to the sufficiency of 
Mr. Payne’s allegations.                                                  

         1.   Materials Embraced by the Pleadings                        
    This Court recently addressed what materials it may consider at the pleadings stage 
in the context of an ERISA putative class action. See Parmer v. Land O’Lakes, Inc., 
518 F. Supp. 3d 1293
 (D. Minn. 2021) (Doty, J.). In Parmer, the Court reasoned that publicly 
available fund prospectuses and Form 5500 reports for the plans at issue were documents 
necessarily embraced by the complaint. 
Id.
 at 1302 (citing Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 823
). The 

defendants in Parmer attached other documents, however, including certain disclosures 
made by service providers to the plan’s fiduciaries pursuant to ERISA § 408(b)(2) (see 
29 U.S.C. § 1108
(b)(2)(iii)). The defendants’ purpose in submitting these disclosures, not 
previously available to plan participants, was to dispute the truth of facts alleged in the 
complaint. Because these disclosures raised factual disputes inappropriate for resolution at 

the pleadings stage, the Court ruled that it was improper to consider them. 
Id. at 1302, n.5
. 
    Hormel asks the Court to consider the Plan A and JEPST Plan Form 5500 reports, 
obtained from the Department of Labor’s website, and the publicly filed prospectuses for 
the DFA Fund and the Harbor Fund, obtained from the U.S. Securities and Exchange 
Commission’s website [Doc. No. 14], to which Mr. Payne does not object. As part of the 

public record and necessarily embraced by the Complaint, the Court considers these 
documents for the purpose of evaluating the sufficiency of Mr. Payne’s pleadings with 
respect to the mutual fund share claims.                                  
    Hormel also asks the Court to consider certain fee disclosure documents shared by 
service providers with the Plans’ fiduciaries pursuant to ERISA § 408(b)(2) [Doc. No. 17]. 
Mr. Payne objects to the Court’s consideration of these documents, noting that they are not 

cited or referred to in the Complaint. Further, both documents clearly state that they are 
“for sponsor use only” and are “not intended for distribution to plan participants” [Doc. 
No. 17 at 113–132]. Hormel cites to these documents to dispute the facts alleged—to argue 
that, despite the data alleged in the Complaint, the Harbor Fund’s share class was less 
expensive on net than the alternative fund identified, after accounting for revenue sharing. 

The Court finds that since these documents, previously unavailable to Mr. Payne, are being 
introduced to dispute the truth of the facts alleged, they are clearly not embraced by the 
pleadings, and it would be inappropriate for the Court to consider them at the pleadings 
stage of the case. See Parmer, 518 F. Supp. 3d at 1302.                   
    Finally, Hormel asks the Court to consider a 2016 Investment Change Brochure 

[Doc. No. 17] (referred to by Hormel as a “2016 Plan Comm’n”), which was distributed to 
plan participants. The Court finds that this communication, which predates the relevant 
period alleged in the Complaint by two years, is also not “necessarily embraced by the 
pleadings.” Like the § 408(b)(2) disclosures, Hormel submits this document to dispute the 
factual allegation that the Harbor Fund share classes in the Plans were more expensive than 
the alternative ones alleged by Mr. Payne. The Court again finds it inappropriate for the 

Court to consider this disputed evidence at this stage of the proceedings. 
         2.   Sufficiency of the Complaint                               
    The Court now turns to the allegations in the Complaint itself. Mr. Payne alleges: 
(1) that the Plans have a large pool of assets; (2) that the size of the Plans enables them to 
obtain or negotiate for cheaper share classes of mutual funds; (3) that the Plans selected 
share classes which were more expensive than others available from the same funds, and; 

(4) that because there is no difference between share classes of the same mutual fund other 
than  price,  a  prudent  fiduciary  should  always  select  the  least  expensive  share  class 
available.                                                                
    The Eighth Circuit has consistently found similar allegations sufficient to state a 
claim for breach of fiduciary duty. For example, in Davis, the complaint alleged that 

retirement plans exist in a competitive marketplace, that the plan at issue had a large pool 
of assets enabling it to negotiate for institutional class shares of a certain fund, and that, 
nevertheless, the plan offered participants more expensive retail shares of the same fund. 
960 F.3d at 483
. The Eighth Circuit found that these facts gave rise to at least two plausible 
inferences of mismanagement: one, that the defendants did not negotiate aggressively 

enough; or two, that the defendants were “asleep at the wheel” and failed to recognize the 
availability of lower cost alternatives. Thus, the facts alleged were sufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss, and the Eighth Circuit reversed the district court’s dismissal of the 
mutual fund shares claim. 
Id.
 at 483–84, 487.                             
    Similarly, the complaint in Braden alleged that the plan had a large pool of assets, 
the  leverage  to  negotiate  for  institutional  class  shares  of  mutual  funds,  and  that, 

nevertheless, the plan offered only more expensive retail class shares to participants. 
588 F.3d at 595
. The Eighth Circuit found that these facts gave rise to the reasonable inference 
that the process by which the funds were selected and managed was tainted by a failure of 
effort, competence, or loyalty. 
Id.
 Accordingly, the court held that the complaint plausibly 
stated a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, and reversed the dismissal below. 
Id.
 at 595–
96.                                                                       

    The facts alleged in this case are strikingly similar to the allegations considered by 
the Davis and Braden courts. Nevertheless, Hormel argues that this case is different 
because Mr. Payne failed to allege that the Plans could have obtained the alternative DFA 
Fund share classes.                                                       
    Hormel’s argument relies on its observation that, according to the DFA Fund’s 

prospectuses, the alternative share class is only available to institutional plans with the 
approval of the DFA Fund Advisor. While this may or may not be true, it may also be true 
for both share classes at issue. The 2021 prospectus summary for both funds state that “[a]ll 
investments are subject to approval of the Advisor” [Doc. No. 17 at 82, 93]. Neither the 
pleadings, nor any documents embraced by them, shed further light on the approval process 

involved. Accordingly, whether the Plans were foreclosed from approval for the cheaper 
fund is a factual dispute, inappropriate for resolution at the pleadings stage. 
    Hormel also argues that there can be no plausible inference of imprudence because 
the Harbor Fund’s institutional share classes were less expensive on net than the retirement 
share classes, after accounting for revenue sharing. This argument, however, relies on 
materials not embraced by the pleadings, which the Court cannot consider. Mr. Payne has 

alleged that the retirement share classes were less expensive than the investor share classes, 
and that selecting the more expensive share class did not provide any discernable benefit 
to participants of the Plans. Taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences 
in the plaintiff’s favor, the Court finds that he has plausibly alleged a breach of fiduciary 
duty with respect to the Harbor Fund share classes.                       
    On  this basis,  the  Court  finds that  the  Plaintiff  has plausibly  alleged  that  the 

Defendants’ fiduciary process with respect to the Plans was flawed in these respects. 
Accordingly, the motion to dismiss on this basis is denied.               
    E.   Fiduciary Status of the Board                                   
    Under ERISA,                                                         
    [A] person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent (i) he exercises 
    any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management 
    of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or 
    disposition of its assets, (ii) he renders investment advice for a fee or other 
    compensation,  direct  or  indirect,  with  respect  to  any  moneys  or  other 
    property of such plan, or has any authority or responsibility to do so,  or (iii) 
    he  has  any  discretionary  authority  or  discretionary  responsibility  in  the 
    administration of such plan.                                         

29 U.S.C. § 1002
(21)(A).                                                  
    Fiduciary  status  under  ERISA  is  ‘not  an  all  or  nothing  concept.”  McCaffree 
Financial Corp. v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 
811 F.3d 998, 1002
 (8th Cir. 2016). Courts must 
ask “whether a person was acting as a fiduciary when taking the action subject to the 
complaint.” 
Id.
 In other words, there must be a “nexus” between the alleged fiduciary duty 
and the wrongdoing alleged in the complaint. 
Id.
                          

    In this case, Mr. Payne alleges that the Board “consists of persons authorized or 
otherwise entrusted to make discretionary decisions with regard to the Plans’ investments,” 
and that at all times relevant to the Complaint, the Board “had discretion to select or reject 
the  Plans’  investments.”  (Compl.  ¶¶  9–10.)  Hormel  argues,  in  response,  that  these 
allegations are not sufficiently specific to  plausibly allege that the Board acted as a 
fiduciary in this case. However, as several courts have held, the role of corporate officers 

and directors with regard to the internal decisions of a company is the type of fact that tends 
to be in the sole possession of a defendant. See Placht v. Argent Trust Co., No. 21-cv-5783, 
2022 WL 3226809
, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 10, 2022) (citing cases); Braden, 
588 F.3d at 598
 
(courts “must take account” of plaintiffs’ “limited access to crucial information”); In re 
Polaroid ERISA Litig., 
362 F. Supp. 2d 461, 473
 (S.D.N.Y. 2005) (finding that an assertion 

“echoing the ERISA definition” is sufficient at the pleading stage, even against some 
contradictory plan documents, to allow discovery to proceed).             
    Hormel cites to excerpts from two “official plan documents” (one for each of the 
Plans) [Doc. No. 17 at 5–25], which purport to establish that the Board does not act as a 
fiduciary for the Plans. These documents, which are not provided to plan participants, are 

presented  for the  purpose  of  contradicting  the  truth  of  the  factual  allegations  in  the 
Complaint. Further, they clearly state that they are “working copies” which have “not been 
approved, ratified or executed by the company, its board, its officers or any committee,” 
and accordingly are “not, therefore, an official legal document under which the Plan is 
maintained” [Doc. No. 17 at 5, 16]. The Court finds that, for all these reasons, these 
documents are not appropriately considered at this stage of the proceedings. 

    Accordingly, taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the 
plaintiff’s favor, the Court finds that Mr. Payne has plausibly alleged that the Board acted 
as a fiduciary during the relevant period.                                
IV.  ORDER                                                                
    Based  on  the  submissions  and  the  entire  file  and  proceedings  herein,  IT  IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [Doc. No. 10] is DENIED. 


IT IS SO ORDERED.                                                         


Dated: September 18, 2024            /s/ Susan Richard Nelson             
                                    SUSAN RICHARD NELSON                 
                                    United States District Judge         

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Scott Payne,                        Case No. 24-cv-545 (SRN/DTS)         

          Plaintiff,                                                     

v.                                          ORDER                        

Hormel Foods Corp.,                                                      
The Board of Directors of Hormel Foods                                   
Corp., and                                                               
John Does 1–40,                                                          

          Defendants.                                                    


Katherine Rollins, Scott Moriarity, and Shawn Wanta, Wanta Thome PLC, 100 South 
Fifth Street, Suite 1200, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for the Plaintiff.      

Andrew Holly and Brock Huebner, Dorsey & Whitney LLP, 50 South Sixth Street, Suite 
1500, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for the Defendants.                         


SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge                        
    This matter is before the Court on the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [Doc. No. 
10]. Based on a review of the files, submissions, and proceedings herein, and for the 
reasons stated below, the Court denies the Defendants’ motion.            
I.   BACKGROUND                                                           
    A.   Facts                                                           
    Defendants Hormel Foods Corporation, the Hormel Foods Corporation Board of 
Directors (“the Board”), and the John Doe officers, employees, and contractors of the 
Hormel Foods Corporation (collectively, “the Defendants” or “Hormel”), sponsor and 
operate two retirement plans for Hormel employees: the Hormel Foods Corporation Tax 
Deferred Investment Plan A (“Plan A”), and the Hormel Foods Corporation Joint Earnings 

Profit Sharing Trust (“JEPST Plan”) (collectively, “the Plans”). (Compl. [Doc. No. 1] ¶¶ 
1, 7, 9, 11.) Together, the Plans hold at least $1.2 billion in assets under management. (Id. 
¶ 18.) The Plans each offer several different investment options, with varying risk levels, 
which  participants  may  elect.  (See  Plan  A  Prospectus  [Doc.  No.  17];  JEPST  Plan 
Prospectus [Doc. No. 17].)1 The majority of these investment options are not at issue here. 
(See generally Compl.)                                                    

    Mr. Payne is a participant in the Plans, and has been since at least 2017. (Id. ¶¶ 6, 
42.) In this putative class action lawsuit, he directs his claims towards two aspects of the 
Plans: (1) the stable value investment option; and (2) the share classes selected for certain 
mutual funds. (Id. ¶¶ 20, 39.)                                            
         1.   The Stable Value Investment Option                         

    Insurance companies regularly issue single entity guaranteed investment contracts 
(“GICs”) to retirement benefit plans in the form of fixed-annuity contracts. (Id. ¶ 22.) 
Under the terms of the contracts, the GICs provide for a guaranteed rate of return (the 
“crediting rate”) during a specified period. (Id.) GICs can be structured in a number of 
different ways, depending on the account or accounts backing the guaranty, including as 

“general account” GICs or “separate account” GICs. (Id. ¶¶ 22–24.)        

1    Relevant fund prospectuses are “embraced by the pleadings” and may be considered 
by a district court on a motion to dismiss. See Davis v. Washington University in St. Louis, 
960 F.3d 478
, 484 n.3 (8th Cir. 2020); Meiners v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
898 F.3d 820, 823
 
(8th Cir. 2018).                                                          
    One of the investment options offered by the Plans is a MassMutual general account 
GIC. (Id. ¶ 20.) The GIC is offered to plan participants as a stable value investment option, 

and is intended to provide an option that prioritizes the protection of principal over long-
term growth. (Id. ¶¶ 20–21; Plan A Prospectus at 3; JEPST Plan Prospectus at 3.) The Plans 
do not offer any other stable value investment option. (See Plan A Prospectus; JEPST Plan 
Prospectus).                                                              
    General account GICs, like the one offered in the Plans, are backed by the issuing 
entity’s unrestricted general investment accounts. (Compl. ¶ 23.) Accordingly, the Plans’ 

GICs are subject to any claims and liabilities asserted against MassMutual, and the risk 
that, if MassMutual fails, no other entity will satisfy the loss to the Plans. (Id.) Because the 
GICs  are  backed  by  assets  within  MassMutual’s  unrestricted  general  accounts, 
MassMutual earns a “spread” equal to the difference between returns from its general 
accounts and the GIC’s crediting rate. (Id. ¶ 25.)                        

    Separate account GICs, by contrast, are structured with backing from a separate 
investment account, established by the entity issuing the GIC. (Id. ¶ 24.) The separation 
serves to insulate the assets from claims and liabilities against the insurance company. (Id.) 
Separate account GICs, therefore, are considered lower risk than general account GICs, 
and  typically  have  correspondingly  lower  crediting  rates.  (Id.  ¶  26.)  MassMutual 

establishes the crediting rates for its GICs, and offers both general account GIC and 
separate account GIC investment options for retirement plans. (Id. ¶¶ 25–28.)  
    Mr. Payne alleges that the MassMutual general account GIC offered by the Plans 
consistently underperformed over a period of six years, when measured against other 
comparable stable value funds. (Id. ¶¶ 27–29.) He specifically identifies two comparators: 
(1) the typical crediting rates offered by MassMutual for its separate account GICs over 

the same period, and (2) the crediting rate for a different entity’s general account fixed-
annuity contract over the same period. (Id.)                              
    From  the  first  calendar  quarter  of  2017  through  the  end  of  2023,  the  Plans’ 
MassMutual general account GIC’s crediting rate ranged from 3.00% to 3.20%. (Id. ¶ 28.) 
Over that same period, comparable plans received consistently higher crediting rates from 
MassMutual for separate account GICs. (Id. ¶ 27.) MassMutual’s typical crediting rate for 

its separate account GICs, from the start of 2017 through the end of 2023, ranged from 
3.81% to 4.68%. (Id. ¶ 28.) Except for four calendar quarters for which no data is available, 
MassMutual’s typical crediting rate for its separate account GICs exceeded its rate for the 
Plans’ general account GIC in every calendar quarter over the relevant period, by a rate of 
0.71% to 1.58%. (Id.)                                                     

    Over  that  same  period,  the  Plans’  MassMutual  general  account  GICs  also 
underperformed when compared to the crediting rates of other general account fixed-
annuity contracts. (Id. ¶ 29.) For example, from the start of 2017 through December of 
2023, the crediting rates for the TIAA-CREF traditional general account annuity ranged 
from 4.25% to 7.00%. (Id.) The TIAA-CREF annuity crediting rate exceeded the crediting 

rate for the Plans’ GIC in every calendar quarter over the relevant period, by a rate of 1.25% 
to 4.00%. (Id.)                                                           
         2.   The Mutual Fund Share Classes                              
    In addition to the stable value investment option, the Plans offer a number of mutual 
funds into which participants may direct their investments, including the DFA US Large 

Cap Value Fund (“DFA Fund”) and the Harbor Capital Appreciation Fund (“Harbor 
Fund”). (Plan A Prospectus at 4; JEPST Plan Prospectus at 4.) Each mutual fund offers 
multiple share class options for individual investors or investment plans. (Compl. ¶ 35.) 
Since the investment portfolio and management of a mutual fund does not change across 
share classes, the sole difference between share classes is the cost of the shares. (Id. ¶¶ 35, 

40.) Larger plans will typically qualify for less expensive share classes than smaller plans 
or individual investors, and large plans have more leverage to bargain and reduce costs 
further. (Id. ¶¶ 35–36.) In this case, the Plans are of a size that would typically qualify for 
less expensive share classes. (Id. ¶ 37.)                                 
    For every year from 2017 through 2021, Hormel selected an institutional share class 

of the DFA Fund with a net expense ratio ranging from 0.22% to 0.27%. (Id. ¶ 39.) In each 
of those years, the Plans likely could have qualified for a less expensive share class of the 
DFA Fund. (Id.) Moreover, for each year, the cost of the DFA Fund share class Hormel 
selected exceeded that of a less expensive available share class by between 0.08% and 
0.14%. (Id.)                                                              

    With respect to the Harbor Fund, from 2017 through 2021, Hormel selected an 
institutional share class with a net expense ratio ranging from 0.65% to 0.67%. (Id.) In each 
of those years, the Plans likely could have qualified for the Harbor Fund’s less expensive 
retirement share class. (Id.) For every year at issue, the Harbor Fund’s retirement share 
class was 0.08% less expensive than the share class selected by Hormel. (Id.) 

    Mr. Payne alleges that even fractions of a percent increase in expense ratios can 
have a significant impact on the long-term performance of plan participants’ investments, 
because returns, not lost to share class fees, can be reinvested in the mutual fund and grow 
over time. (Id. ¶ 38.)                                                    
II.  PROCEDURAL POSTURE                                                   
    Mr. Payne initiated this putative class action lawsuit on February 21, 2024, on behalf 

of himself and all persons who were participants or beneficiaries of the Plans during the 
relevant period. (Compl. ¶ 42.) He alleges that Hormel breached its duty of care, skill, 
prudence, and diligence under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 
(“ERISA”), 
29 U.S.C. §§ 1001
 et seq., by selecting the underperforming stable value 
investment option, and by retaining more expensive share classes in certain mutual funds 

when less expensive share classes were available.                         
    Hormel moves to dismiss the Complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 
12(b)(6), arguing that Mr. Payne fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. 
Hormel argues that Mr. Payne fails to plausibly allege a breach of fiduciary duty with 
respect to either the stable value investment option or the retention of more expensive 

mutual fund share classes, and that he fails to plausibly allege that the Board is a fiduciary 
within the meaning of ERISA. (Def. Mem. in Support [Doc. No. 13].)        
III.  ANALYSIS                                                            
    A.   Legal Standard                                                  
    When considering a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 
12(b)(6), the Court accepts the facts alleged in the complaint as true, reading the complaint 

“in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, [and] making all reasonable inferences of fact 
in the plaintiff’s favor.” Glow in One Mini Golf, LLC v. Walz, 
37 F.4th 1365, 1370
 (8th 
Cir. 2022). On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court “generally must ignore materials outside 
the pleadings, but it may consider some materials that are part of the public record or do 
not contradict the complaint, as well as materials that are necessarily embraced by the 

pleadings.” 
Id.
 Materials embraced by the complaint include “documents whose contents 
are alleged in a complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not 
physically attached to the pleadings.” Zean v. Fairview Health Services, 
858 F.3d 520, 526
 
(8th Cir. 2017).                                                          
    To survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, “a complaint must contain sufficient factual 

matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. 
Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 678
 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 
(2007)). The facts alleged must have enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above the 
speculative level.” Bell Atl. Corp., 
550 U.S. at 555
. The Court reads the complaint as a 
whole, “not parsed piece by piece to determine whether each allegation, in isolation, is 

plausible.” Braden v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
588 F.3d 585, 594
 (8th Cir. 2009). Evaluation 
of a complaint upon a motion to dismiss is “a context-specific task that requires the 
reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.” 
Id.
 
    B.   ERISA                                                           
    ERISA imposes two primary duties on plan fiduciaries: loyalty and prudence. 
Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
. “[A] fiduciary shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan 

solely in the interests of the participants and beneficiaries . . . with the care, skill, prudence, 
and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like 
capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like 
character and with like aims.” 
29 U.S.C. § 1104
(a)(1). To plausibly allege a claim of breach 
of fiduciary duty under ERISA, a plaintiff “must make a prima facie showing that a 

defendant acted as a fiduciary, breached his fiduciary duties, and thereby caused a loss to 
the plan.” Dormani v. Target Corp., 
970 F.3d 910, 914
 (8th Cir. 2020).    
    ERISA’s duty of prudence imposes upon fiduciaries a continuing duty to “monitor 
investments and remove imprudent ones.” Hughes v. Northwestern University, 
595 U.S. 170, 175
 (2022). It is not enough for a fiduciary to simply offer plan participants a menu 

of investment options, some of which may perform better than others. When a plaintiff 
plausibly identifies an imprudent investment option in a plan, that is sufficient to state a 
claim for a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA. 
Id.
                     
    In the context of an ERISA claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of prudence, a 
plaintiff clears the pleading bar by alleging sufficient facts for the Court to reasonably infer 

that the process by which the fiduciary selected the challenged fund was flawed. Matousek 
v. MidAmerican Energy Co., 
51 F.4th 274, 278
 (8th Cir. 2022). The Court must take into 
account the practical reality that ERISA plaintiffs “generally lack the inside information 
necessary to make out their claims in detail unless and until discovery commences,” and 
will  not  require  plaintiffs  to  plead  facts  “which  tend  systemically  to  be  in  the  sole 
possession of defendants” if the facts alleged are sufficient to demonstrate that the plaintiff 

“is not merely engaged in a fishing expedition.” Braden, 
588 F.3d at 598
. The challenge 
for ERISA plaintiffs is to use the data available to them about the selected funds, and some 
circumstantial  allegations  about  methods,  “to  show  that  a  prudent  fiduciary  in  like 
circumstances would have acted differently.” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
.    
    To show that a prudent fiduciary in like circumstances would have selected a 
different fund, based on the cost or performance of the challenged fund, “[t]he key to 

nudging an inference of imprudence from possible to plausible is providing a sound basis 
for comparison—a meaningful benchmark—not just alleging that costs are too high, or 
returns are too low.” Matousek, 
51 F.4th at 278
 (quoting Davis, 
960 F.3d at 484
). “No 
authority requires a fiduciary to pick the best performing fund,” and bare allegations that a 
less expensive or better performing alternative investment exists in the marketplace do not 

raise  a  plausible  inference  of  imprudence.  Meiners,  898  F.3d  at  822–23.  Whether  a 
comparator  fund  serves  as  a  meaningful  benchmark  by  which  to  judge  the  cost  or 
performance of a challenged investment rests on the totality of the specific allegations in a 
case. Braden, 
588 F.3d at 596
, 596 n.7.                                   
    C.   The Stable Value Investment Option                              

    Hormel argues that Mr. Payne’s allegations regarding the MassMutual general 
account GIC investment option fail because he does not plausibly allege a meaningful 
benchmark against which to judge the investment’s underperformance, and that the degree 
and duration of that alleged underperformance is insufficient to plausibly infer a flawed 
fiduciary process.2 The Court considers each argument in turn.            

         1.   Eighth Circuit Law on Meaningful Benchmarks                
    The Eighth Circuit provided important guidance on what a plaintiff must plausibly 
allege to identify a meaningful benchmark in Meiners v. Wells Fargo & Co., 
898 F.3d at 821
. In  that case,  a  participant  in  Wells  Fargo’s  employee retirement  plan  sued  the 
company, alleging that retaining Wells Fargo’s proprietary investment funds as options in 
its plan, and defaulting to those proprietary funds for plan participants who did not elect 

other options, was a breach of its fiduciary duties under ERISA. The plaintiff alleged that 
these Wells Fargo funds were more expensive than comparable Vanguard and Fidelity 
funds, and that they underperformed the Vanguard funds.                   
    The Eighth Circuit, affirming the lower court’s dismissal of the complaint, held that 
the plaintiff failed to state a plausible claim of imprudence, because the plaintiff failed to 

plausibly  identify  a  meaningful  benchmark  against  which  to  judge  the  cost  and 

2    Hormel also argues that Mr. Payne fails to allege that either the TIAA-CREF 
traditional annuity fund or any higher performing separate account GICs were actually 
available to the Plans. The Eighth Circuit, however, does not require a plaintiff to plead 
that a comparator is available to a plan to support an inference of imprudence. In Matousek, 
cited by Hormel, the Eighth Circuit found the plaintiffs’ claims insufficient, not because 
the plaintiffs failed to allege that their comparators were available to the plan at issue, but 
because the plaintiffs did not plead facts sufficient to allege that their comparators were 
meaningful benchmarks. 
51 F.4th at 280
. Which investment options were available to the 
Plans is a question of fact. See Hughes v. Northwestern University, 
63 F.4th 615
, 630 (7th 
Cir. 2023) (holding that the availability of a prudent course of action is a fact issue 
inappropriate  to  resolve  on  a  motion  to  dismiss);  Coppel  v.  SeaWorld  Parks  & 
Entertainment, Inc., No. 21-cv-1430, 
2024 WL 3086702
 (S.D. Cal. Jan. 31, 2024) (finding 
that whether the TIAA-CREF fund was available to the plan was a fact issue that could not 
be resolved at the pleading stage).                                       
performance of the funds at issue. The court noted that the “fact that one fund with a 
different investment strategy ultimately performed better does not establish anything about 

whether the [challenged funds] were an imprudent choice at the outset.” 
Id. at 823
.  
    The Meiners court contrasted the allegations before it to those considered in Braden, 
a case in which the plaintiff alleged, as meaningful benchmarks, the market index and other 
shares of the same fund. 
Id.
 (discussing Braden, 588 F.3d at 595–96). It further noted that, 
in Braden, the court warned that its decision was based on the specific allegations before 
it, and that merely alleging the existence of a preferable alternative fund in the marketplace 

would be insufficient to state a claim. Braden, 
588 F.3d at 596
 n.7. The Meiners court 
underscored the fact that ERISA does not require fiduciaries to select the best performing 
fund.                                                                     
    In Davis v. Washington University in St. Louis, three employee retirement plan 
participants sued Washington University in St. Louis for breaching its fiduciary duties 

under ERISA, alleging in part that the university kept three underperforming investments 
in the plan for too long. 
960 F.3d at 484
. The district court dismissed the complaint, noting 
that the plaintiffs had failed to plausibly allege a meaningful benchmark against which to 
judge the performance of those investment options.                        
    The Eighth Circuit agreed and affirmed the lower court’s dismissal. The Court noted 

that, as to the first investment fund option, although both that option and the comparator 
were focused on real estate, it was evident from the documents embraced by the pleadings 
that the option in the plan was actively managed and purchased direct ownership stakes in 
income-producing real estate, whereas the comparator fund was set up to passively track 
an index of stocks in publicly traded real estate trusts. Thus, the court found that the funds 
had “different aims, different risks, and different potential rewards,” and comparing them 

was like “comparing apples and oranges.” 
Id. at 485
.                      
    As to the second fund option, the court noted that the fund in the plan had 30% of 
its portfolio invested in international securities, offering investors broad exposure to both 
domestic and international stocks, while the alleged comparators had significantly lower 
percentages of international stocks. Thus, the court found that the funds were too different 
in composition to serve as meaningful benchmarks. 
Id.
 at 485–86.          

    The final investment at issue was a fixed-annuity contract. The court agreed that the 
plaintiffs  failed  to  plausibly  allege  a  meaningful  benchmark,  because  they  had  not 
identified any other fixed-annuity contract that had performed better than the one at issue. 
Id.
 at 486–87.                                                            
    In Matousek v. MidAmerican Energy Co., the court considered an action brought by 

participants in an energy company’s employee retirement plan, alleging in part that certain 
plan  investment  funds  consistently  underperformed.  
51 F.4th at 280
.  The  plaintiffs 
compared: (1) the performance of the funds at issue to the average performance of funds 
in their “peer groups”; (2) the expense ratios of those same funds to the expense ratios of 
funds in their “peer groups,” and; (3) the performance of two of the funds at issue to 

alternative investments. 
Id. at 281
.                                      
    First,  the  court  noted  that  the  plaintiffs  had  failed  to  adequately  allege  the 
similarities between funds in each “peer group.” For instance, there were no allegations 
that the comparators in a “peer group” had similar risk profiles, return objectives, or 
management  approaches.  With  respect  to  the  two  less  expensive,  better  performing 
alternative investments identified by the plaintiffs, the Matousek court noted that they too 

had different investment strategies, different risk profiles, and different potential rewards. 
Accordingly, the court found that the plaintiffs failed to adequately plead meaningful 
benchmarks  for  the  funds  at  issue,  and  affirmed  the  lower  court’s  dismissal  of  the 
complaint. 
Id. at 282
.                                                    
    Together, Meiners, Davis, and Matousek are instructive as to what investment 
comparators can function as a meaningful benchmark. Plaintiffs must not only identify less 

expensive or better performing investment options as comparators, but those alternative 
options must also be similar enough to raise a plausible inference that a prudent investor in 
like circumstances would not have selected the challenged investment. When determining 
whether a comparator is sufficiently similar to the fund at issue, courts may look to its 
structure, objectives, strategy, and risk profile. As the court repeatedly observed, however, 

this requirement is not intended to be such a barrier that plaintiffs cannot bring potentially 
meritorious ERISA claims. See Matousek, 
51 F.4th at 281
 (noting that there is no “one size 
fits all approach” to pleading a meaningful benchmark, and that trial courts should consider 
the totality of the specific allegations before dismissing a complaint).  
         2.   The Plausibility of the Meaningful Benchmarks Pled for the 
              General Account GIC                                        
    In this case, the investment option at issue is the MassMutual general account 
GIC—a stable value investment option. Stable value investment options, by nature, are 

different from other types of investment options typically offered in a retirement plan. They 
are defined by their predictability, they offer a set return on investment, and their associated 
risk level is a creature of their structural design rather than their investment strategy. The 

Eighth Circuit has only once considered the plausibility of claims alleging imprudence in 
the selection or retention of a stable value investment. See Davis, 
960 F.3d at 486
 (noting 
that the complaint did not allege a single comparator for the fixed-annuity contract at issue). 
    However, a sister court in this circuit recently considered whether a similar claim 
involving a stable value investment option could survive a motion to dismiss. See Lacross 
v. Jack Henry & Assocs., Inc., No. 23-cv-5088, 
2024 WL 3564575
 (W.D. Mo. July 11, 

2024) (Bough, J.). In Lacross, the plaintiff sought to amend the complaint to add a claim 
alleging a breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA with respect to the plan’s stable value 
fund investment option. The fund at issue was a general account GIC owned by Prudential. 
The plaintiff alleged that the GIC underperformed as compared to (1) the TIAA Traditional 
Annuity Fund and (2) the average crediting rates of MassMutual separate account GICs. 

The  defendant  argued  that  neither  comparator  was  sufficiently  similar  to  serve  as  a 
meaningful benchmark.                                                     
    The Lacross court, guided by Eighth Circuit authority, rejected the defendant’s 
arguments as to both comparators. With respect to the TIAA fund, the court observed that 
both the TIAA fund and the GIC at issue operate as fixed-annuity products. Even if 

unavailable to the plan, the court noted that the TIAA fund could still serve as a meaningful 
benchmark. As to the MassMutual separate account GICs, the court observed that, taking 
the facts alleged as true, “they only differ insofar as, being separate account GICs, they 
allegedly carry less risk. From the perspective of a plan participant or investor, they 
allegedly provide the same benefit.” 
Id. at *3
. Consequently, the court found that the 
plaintiff had plausibly alleged that both the TIAA fund and the MassMutual separate 

account GICs were meaningful benchmarks.                                  
    Here, taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s 
favor, the Court finds that Mr. Payne has plausibly pled meaningful benchmarks against 
which to judge whether the MassMutual general account GIC underperformed. As to the 
TIAA-CREF fund, he alleges that this is a fixed-annuity general account investment like 
the MassMutual general account GIC, with the same structure, purpose, and risk profile. 

See Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
 (a plaintiff must provide “a sound basis for comparison”); 
Lacross, 
2024 WL 3564575
 at *3.                                           
    The Court further finds that the Plaintiff plausibly alleges that the MassMutual 
separate account GICs are a meaningful benchmark. Based on the pleadings and the 
documents embraced by the pleadings, these accounts are owned, operated, and managed 

by the same insurer. As stable value GICs, they share the same goal of offering investors 
an option that guarantees a return of their principal, in exchange for low crediting rates. 
While it is true, as Mr. Payne alleges, that general account GICs and separate account GICs 
have  different  risk  profiles,  they  are  sufficiently  similar  to  serve  as  meaningful 
benchmarks.  See  Disselkamp  v.  Norton  Healthcare,  Inc.,  No.  3:18-cv-48,  2019 

WL3536038, at *6 (W.D. Ky. Aug. 2, 2019) (discussing the evolution of various GIC 
structures  and  denying  a  motion  to  dismiss  a  claim  comparing  an  allegedly 
underperforming general account GIC to the TIAA fund and separate account GICs). 
Unlike  the  comparators  pleaded  in  Matousek,  Davis,  and  Meiners—funds  that  were 
managed by different investment companies with different objectives and portfolios—
stable value GICs provide the same benefits and expectation of returns.   

    Here,  a  reasonable  inference  to  draw  is  that  “a  prudent  fiduciary  in  like 
circumstances would have selected a different fund.” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
. Taking the 
facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in Mr. Payne’s favor, the Court finds 
that  he  has  plausibly  alleged  that  MassMutual’s  separate  account  GICs  are  also  a 
meaningful benchmark.                                                     

         3.   Duration and Degree of Underperformance                    
    Hormel next argues that, even if Mr. Payne’s alleged comparators were meaningful 
benchmarks, the duration of the GIC’s underperformance is not long enough to plausibly 
plead a flawed fiduciary process. Hormel further argues that the underperformance of a 
stable value investment option should not give rise to an inference of imprudence, because 
stable value funds are designed to protect principal rather than chase returns. 

    In support of its position, Hormel relies on several out-of-circuit district court cases. 
In those cases, the courts found that a stable value fund’s underperformance over a similar 
period was insufficient to support an inference of a breach of fiduciary duty. See, e.g., 
Lalonde v. Mass. Mutual Ins. Co., —F. Supp. 3d—, 
2024 WL 1346027
, at *9 (D. Mass. 
Mar. 29, 2024) (a fund’s alleged underperformance when compared to a benchmark over 

a seven-year period is a “hindsight-based allegation” insufficient to support a plausible 
inference of a flawed process); England v. DENSO Int’l Am., Inc., No. 22-cv-11129, 
2023 WL 4851878
,  at  *8–9  (E.D.  Mich.  July  28,  2023)  (a  “two-year  snapshot  of 
underperformance” is insufficient to plausibly plead a breach of fiduciary duty). The courts 
in other out-of-circuit cases, however, have reached the opposite conclusion. See, e.g., 
Miller v. Autozone, Inc., No. 2:19-cv-2779, 
2020 WL 6479564
 (W.D. Tenn. Sept. 18, 2020) 

(observing that consistent underperformance of a stable value product over time supports 
an inference of imprudence); Terraza v. Safeway, Inc., 
241 F. Supp. 3d 1057
, 1075–77 
(N.D. Cal. 2017) (finding an allegation that a stable value fund underperformed when 
measured against a comparable option over a period of six years sufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss).                                                       
    In this case, Mr. Payne claims that Hormel breached its duty to monitor the Plans’ 

investment options and remove imprudent ones, by failing to remove and replace the 
MassMutual general account GIC with a safer stable value option, or an option with a better 
crediting rate. In support, Mr. Payne alleges that the GIC at issue received a lower crediting 
rate than a comparable fund of the same structure over a period of six years. He alleges that 
a prudent fiduciary would have leveraged the size of the plan to either negotiate a better 

deal with MassMutual or to remove the underperforming option from the Plans and replace 
it with a safer or higher performing one.                                 
    Moreover, it is alleged that the general account GIC chronically provided lower 
crediting rates than the safer separate account GICs offered by the same insurer. (Compl. 
¶¶ 27–28.) Further, unlike other types of investments, stable value funds are intended to 

perform consistently over time. Drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Mr. Payne, 
the Court finds it plausible that a prudent fiduciary in the circumstances alleged “would 
have acted differently,” Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 822
, and denies the motion to dismiss on this 
basis.                                                                    
    D.   The Mutual Fund Share Classes                                   
    Hormel argues that the Court should dismiss Mr. Payne’s claims regarding the 
Plans’ mutual fund share classes, because he has not sufficiently alleged that the alternative 

share classes he identifies were available to the Plans or were less expensive on net than 
the share classes offered by the Plans. To support these arguments, Hormel largely relies 
on documents, outside of the pleadings, that it claims are embraced by the Complaint. The 
Court first addresses what materials it may consider and then turns to the sufficiency of 
Mr. Payne’s allegations.                                                  

         1.   Materials Embraced by the Pleadings                        
    This Court recently addressed what materials it may consider at the pleadings stage 
in the context of an ERISA putative class action. See Parmer v. Land O’Lakes, Inc., 
518 F. Supp. 3d 1293
 (D. Minn. 2021) (Doty, J.). In Parmer, the Court reasoned that publicly 
available fund prospectuses and Form 5500 reports for the plans at issue were documents 
necessarily embraced by the complaint. 
Id.
 at 1302 (citing Meiners, 
898 F.3d at 823
). The 

defendants in Parmer attached other documents, however, including certain disclosures 
made by service providers to the plan’s fiduciaries pursuant to ERISA § 408(b)(2) (see 
29 U.S.C. § 1108
(b)(2)(iii)). The defendants’ purpose in submitting these disclosures, not 
previously available to plan participants, was to dispute the truth of facts alleged in the 
complaint. Because these disclosures raised factual disputes inappropriate for resolution at 

the pleadings stage, the Court ruled that it was improper to consider them. 
Id. at 1302, n.5
. 
    Hormel asks the Court to consider the Plan A and JEPST Plan Form 5500 reports, 
obtained from the Department of Labor’s website, and the publicly filed prospectuses for 
the DFA Fund and the Harbor Fund, obtained from the U.S. Securities and Exchange 
Commission’s website [Doc. No. 14], to which Mr. Payne does not object. As part of the 

public record and necessarily embraced by the Complaint, the Court considers these 
documents for the purpose of evaluating the sufficiency of Mr. Payne’s pleadings with 
respect to the mutual fund share claims.                                  
    Hormel also asks the Court to consider certain fee disclosure documents shared by 
service providers with the Plans’ fiduciaries pursuant to ERISA § 408(b)(2) [Doc. No. 17]. 
Mr. Payne objects to the Court’s consideration of these documents, noting that they are not 

cited or referred to in the Complaint. Further, both documents clearly state that they are 
“for sponsor use only” and are “not intended for distribution to plan participants” [Doc. 
No. 17 at 113–132]. Hormel cites to these documents to dispute the facts alleged—to argue 
that, despite the data alleged in the Complaint, the Harbor Fund’s share class was less 
expensive on net than the alternative fund identified, after accounting for revenue sharing. 

The Court finds that since these documents, previously unavailable to Mr. Payne, are being 
introduced to dispute the truth of the facts alleged, they are clearly not embraced by the 
pleadings, and it would be inappropriate for the Court to consider them at the pleadings 
stage of the case. See Parmer, 518 F. Supp. 3d at 1302.                   
    Finally, Hormel asks the Court to consider a 2016 Investment Change Brochure 

[Doc. No. 17] (referred to by Hormel as a “2016 Plan Comm’n”), which was distributed to 
plan participants. The Court finds that this communication, which predates the relevant 
period alleged in the Complaint by two years, is also not “necessarily embraced by the 
pleadings.” Like the § 408(b)(2) disclosures, Hormel submits this document to dispute the 
factual allegation that the Harbor Fund share classes in the Plans were more expensive than 
the alternative ones alleged by Mr. Payne. The Court again finds it inappropriate for the 

Court to consider this disputed evidence at this stage of the proceedings. 
         2.   Sufficiency of the Complaint                               
    The Court now turns to the allegations in the Complaint itself. Mr. Payne alleges: 
(1) that the Plans have a large pool of assets; (2) that the size of the Plans enables them to 
obtain or negotiate for cheaper share classes of mutual funds; (3) that the Plans selected 
share classes which were more expensive than others available from the same funds, and; 

(4) that because there is no difference between share classes of the same mutual fund other 
than  price,  a  prudent  fiduciary  should  always  select  the  least  expensive  share  class 
available.                                                                
    The Eighth Circuit has consistently found similar allegations sufficient to state a 
claim for breach of fiduciary duty. For example, in Davis, the complaint alleged that 

retirement plans exist in a competitive marketplace, that the plan at issue had a large pool 
of assets enabling it to negotiate for institutional class shares of a certain fund, and that, 
nevertheless, the plan offered participants more expensive retail shares of the same fund. 
960 F.3d at 483
. The Eighth Circuit found that these facts gave rise to at least two plausible 
inferences of mismanagement: one, that the defendants did not negotiate aggressively 

enough; or two, that the defendants were “asleep at the wheel” and failed to recognize the 
availability of lower cost alternatives. Thus, the facts alleged were sufficient to survive a 
motion to dismiss, and the Eighth Circuit reversed the district court’s dismissal of the 
mutual fund shares claim. 
Id.
 at 483–84, 487.                             
    Similarly, the complaint in Braden alleged that the plan had a large pool of assets, 
the  leverage  to  negotiate  for  institutional  class  shares  of  mutual  funds,  and  that, 

nevertheless, the plan offered only more expensive retail class shares to participants. 
588 F.3d at 595
. The Eighth Circuit found that these facts gave rise to the reasonable inference 
that the process by which the funds were selected and managed was tainted by a failure of 
effort, competence, or loyalty. 
Id.
 Accordingly, the court held that the complaint plausibly 
stated a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, and reversed the dismissal below. 
Id.
 at 595–
96.                                                                       

    The facts alleged in this case are strikingly similar to the allegations considered by 
the Davis and Braden courts. Nevertheless, Hormel argues that this case is different 
because Mr. Payne failed to allege that the Plans could have obtained the alternative DFA 
Fund share classes.                                                       
    Hormel’s argument relies on its observation that, according to the DFA Fund’s 

prospectuses, the alternative share class is only available to institutional plans with the 
approval of the DFA Fund Advisor. While this may or may not be true, it may also be true 
for both share classes at issue. The 2021 prospectus summary for both funds state that “[a]ll 
investments are subject to approval of the Advisor” [Doc. No. 17 at 82, 93]. Neither the 
pleadings, nor any documents embraced by them, shed further light on the approval process 

involved. Accordingly, whether the Plans were foreclosed from approval for the cheaper 
fund is a factual dispute, inappropriate for resolution at the pleadings stage. 
    Hormel also argues that there can be no plausible inference of imprudence because 
the Harbor Fund’s institutional share classes were less expensive on net than the retirement 
share classes, after accounting for revenue sharing. This argument, however, relies on 
materials not embraced by the pleadings, which the Court cannot consider. Mr. Payne has 

alleged that the retirement share classes were less expensive than the investor share classes, 
and that selecting the more expensive share class did not provide any discernable benefit 
to participants of the Plans. Taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences 
in the plaintiff’s favor, the Court finds that he has plausibly alleged a breach of fiduciary 
duty with respect to the Harbor Fund share classes.                       
    On  this basis,  the  Court  finds that  the  Plaintiff  has plausibly  alleged  that  the 

Defendants’ fiduciary process with respect to the Plans was flawed in these respects. 
Accordingly, the motion to dismiss on this basis is denied.               
    E.   Fiduciary Status of the Board                                   
    Under ERISA,                                                         
    [A] person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent (i) he exercises 
    any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management 
    of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or 
    disposition of its assets, (ii) he renders investment advice for a fee or other 
    compensation,  direct  or  indirect,  with  respect  to  any  moneys  or  other 
    property of such plan, or has any authority or responsibility to do so,  or (iii) 
    he  has  any  discretionary  authority  or  discretionary  responsibility  in  the 
    administration of such plan.                                         

29 U.S.C. § 1002
(21)(A).                                                  
    Fiduciary  status  under  ERISA  is  ‘not  an  all  or  nothing  concept.”  McCaffree 
Financial Corp. v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 
811 F.3d 998, 1002
 (8th Cir. 2016). Courts must 
ask “whether a person was acting as a fiduciary when taking the action subject to the 
complaint.” 
Id.
 In other words, there must be a “nexus” between the alleged fiduciary duty 
and the wrongdoing alleged in the complaint. 
Id.
                          

    In this case, Mr. Payne alleges that the Board “consists of persons authorized or 
otherwise entrusted to make discretionary decisions with regard to the Plans’ investments,” 
and that at all times relevant to the Complaint, the Board “had discretion to select or reject 
the  Plans’  investments.”  (Compl.  ¶¶  9–10.)  Hormel  argues,  in  response,  that  these 
allegations are not sufficiently specific to  plausibly allege that the Board acted as a 
fiduciary in this case. However, as several courts have held, the role of corporate officers 

and directors with regard to the internal decisions of a company is the type of fact that tends 
to be in the sole possession of a defendant. See Placht v. Argent Trust Co., No. 21-cv-5783, 
2022 WL 3226809
, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 10, 2022) (citing cases); Braden, 
588 F.3d at 598
 
(courts “must take account” of plaintiffs’ “limited access to crucial information”); In re 
Polaroid ERISA Litig., 
362 F. Supp. 2d 461, 473
 (S.D.N.Y. 2005) (finding that an assertion 

“echoing the ERISA definition” is sufficient at the pleading stage, even against some 
contradictory plan documents, to allow discovery to proceed).             
    Hormel cites to excerpts from two “official plan documents” (one for each of the 
Plans) [Doc. No. 17 at 5–25], which purport to establish that the Board does not act as a 
fiduciary for the Plans. These documents, which are not provided to plan participants, are 

presented  for the  purpose  of  contradicting  the  truth  of  the  factual  allegations  in  the 
Complaint. Further, they clearly state that they are “working copies” which have “not been 
approved, ratified or executed by the company, its board, its officers or any committee,” 
and accordingly are “not, therefore, an official legal document under which the Plan is 
maintained” [Doc. No. 17 at 5, 16]. The Court finds that, for all these reasons, these 
documents are not appropriately considered at this stage of the proceedings. 

    Accordingly, taking the facts as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the 
plaintiff’s favor, the Court finds that Mr. Payne has plausibly alleged that the Board acted 
as a fiduciary during the relevant period.                                
IV.  ORDER                                                                
    Based  on  the  submissions  and  the  entire  file  and  proceedings  herein,  IT  IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [Doc. No. 10] is DENIED. 


IT IS SO ORDERED.                                                         


Dated: September 18, 2024            /s/ Susan Richard Nelson             
                                    SUSAN RICHARD NELSON                 
                                    United States District Judge         

Reference

Status
Unknown