Teets v. Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co.
Concurring Opinion
I join virtually all of the majority's thoughtful and persuasive opinion. I respectfully disagree only with the majority's analysis in Part II(A)(3)(a)(ii), which discusses the policy that allegedly prohibits plan sponsors from offering other low-risk funds alongside Great-West's own Key Guaranteed Portfolio Fund ("KGPF"). See Maj. Op. at 1250-52. Although I agree that Great-West is entitled to summary judgment on these claims, I do not believe that *1263Mr. Teets bore the burden to present the evidence discussed in the majority opinion.
1. Mr. Teets had no burden to allege specific facts to counter a basis for summary judgment that Great-West had not raised.
The majority reasons that Mr. Teets failed to set forth specific facts showing that participants had been forced to accept a credited interest rate or had felt locked into the KGPF. But Great-West had not moved for summary judgment on this basis.
A nonmovant opposing summary judgment is "obligated only to present evidence opposing the arguments made in the respondents' summary judgment motion." Bonney v. Wilson,
I don't think that Mr. Teets received such notice. In its motion for summary judgment, Great-West did not argue that Mr. Teets lacked evidence that he or other participants had felt restricted or that they would have invested in alternative low-risk funds but for Great-West's non-compete policy. Great-West instead urged
• the absence of a contractual provision that prohibited the offering of competitive funds (see Appellant's App'x, vol. II, at 353) and
• a marketplace theory of nonliability (that plan sponsors-not Great-West-are responsible for choosing the funds to offer) (id. at 155).
Thus, I would not fault Mr. Teets for failing to present evidence on how the non-compete policy had affected participants' behavior.
2. Great-West does not incur a fiduciary duty based on the plan sponsor's decision to offer the KGPF even if the plan sponsor's decision would have prevented the offering of competitive funds.
I would instead affirm the grant of summary judgment based on Great-West's marketplace theory of nonliability. In advancing this theory, Great-West argued that although it could decide on the terms that it would be "willing to offer an investment product, it [could not] compel the plan to accept the investment option on those terms over alternatives available in the marketplace." Appellant's App'x, vol. II, at 160. As a result, Great-West contended *1264that it could not incur a fiduciary duty for a plan sponsor's decision to offer the KGPF rather than competing funds.
I agree with Great-West. As alleged by Mr. Teets, the policy serves only to prevent plan sponsors from offering the KGPF if competing funds are also offered;
Mr. Teets responds that Great-West acts as a fiduciary because he cannot personally choose between the KGPF and other competing low-risk funds. But this response blames Great-West for the decision-making of Mr. Teets's plan sponsor. Plan sponsors need not offer participants (1) multiple funds in the same asset class or (2) any stable-value fund.
Even if this theory were otherwise valid, Mr. Teets has not alleged that his plan sponsor would make this choice. Great-West urged summary judgment by asserting that plan sponsors are solely responsible for choosing appropriate portfolios and that Mr. Teets's plan sponsor had selected the funds based on "independent recommendation and/or evaluation." Appellant's App'x, vol. II, at 155. In response, Mr. Teets contended that his plan sponsor couldn't offer competing funds alongside the KGPF, but this contention does not address whether his plan sponsor wanted to offer competitors' funds.
Mr. Teets assumes that plan sponsors would act as he wishes; but plan sponsors are not parties, and Mr. Teets points to no evidence that Great-West influences plan sponsors' selection of investments. Mr. Teets has thus failed to set forth specific facts contesting Great-West's argument for summary judgment based on a marketplace theory of nonliability. Celotex Corp.,
Mr. Teets instead complains that his plan sponsor offered the KGPF by itself rather than include other competitive funds. But Great-West cannot become a fiduciary based on the plan sponsor's selection of investment options. I would thus reject Mr. Teets's effort to pin fiduciary status on Great-West's conditioning of its offer to the plan sponsor.
The majority also notes that Mr. Teets can point to no case "in which a court has deemed a service provider to be a fiduciary based on participants' lack of alternative investment options, or on anything other than imposing a penalty or fee for withdrawal." Maj. Op. at 1251. I too have found no such case. But I also have not found any cases rejecting participant choice as a theory of liability. So this appears to be a question of first impression. The absence of case law on this theory suggests only that it is novel, not that it should be rejected.
Although the record does not reveal the origin of the non-compete policy, Mr. Teets has not alleged that Great-West imposes the policy without the plan sponsors' knowledge and consent.
In a regulation interpreting ERISA, the Department of Labor defines plan sponsors' responsibility to offer at least three investment options with "materially different risk and return characteristics" that "enable the participant or beneficiary by choosing among them to achieve a portfolio with aggregate risk and return characteristics at any point within the range normally appropriate for the participant or beneficiary."
Opinion of the Court
Great-West Life Annuity and Insurance Company ("Great-West") manages an investment fund that guarantees investors will never lose their principal or the interest they accrue. It offers the fund to employers as an investment option for their employees' retirement savings plans, which are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"),
John Teets-a participant in an employer retirement plan-invested money in Great-West's fund. He later sued Great-West under ERISA, alleging Great-West breached a fiduciary duty to participants in the fund or that Great-West was a non-fiduciary party in interest that benefitted from prohibited transactions with his plan's assets.
After certifying a class of 270,000 plan participants like Mr. Teets, the district court granted summary judgment for Great-West, holding that (1) Great-West was not a fiduciary and (2) Mr. Teets had not adduced sufficient evidence to impose liability on Great-West as a non-fiduciary party in interest. Exercising jurisdiction under
I. BACKGROUND
Great-West is a Colorado-based insurance company that provides "recordkeeping, administrative, and investment services to 401(k) plans." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 149. It qualifies as a service provider-a "person providing services to [a] plan"- under ERISA. See ERISA § 3(14)(B),
Mr. Teets participated through his employment in the Farmer's Rice Cooperative 401(k) Savings Plan ("the Plan"). Under the Plan, employees contribute to their own retirement accounts and choose how to allocate their contributions among the investment options offered. When employees invest in a particular fund, they become "participants" in that fund. Great-West contracts with the Plan and other comparable employer plans to offer the investment fund that is the subject of this case. Great-West is not in a contractual relationship with participants.
In this section, we first provide an overview of the ERISA legal framework governing this appeal. We then detail the factual background of the case and the proceedings in the district court.
A. Statutory Background
1. ERISA Protections Against Benefit Plan Mismanagement
ERISA regulates employee benefit plans, including health insurance plans, pension plans, and 401(k) savings plans. It is a "comprehensive and reticulated statute, the product of a decade of congressional study of the Nation's private employee benefit system." Mertens v. Hewitt Assocs.,
ERISA seeks to protect employees against mismanagement of their benefit *1238plans. See Fort Halifax Packing Co., Inc. v. Coyne,
2. ERISA Fiduciaries
a. Establishing fiduciary status- named and functional fiduciaries
Under ERISA, a party involved in managing a benefit plan takes on fiduciary obligations in one of two ways. See In re Luna,
(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.
Functional fiduciaries' obligations are limited in scope: "Plan management or administration confers fiduciary status only to the extent the party exercises discretionary authority or control." Coldesina,
*1239United Life Ins. Co.,
As the following discussion illustrates, although named fiduciaries and functional fiduciaries obtain fiduciary status in different ways, they are bound by the same restrictions and duties under ERISA.
b. Fiduciary duties and prohibited transactions
Section 404 of ERISA imposes general duties of loyalty on fiduciaries, requiring them to "discharge [their] duties with respect to a plan solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries" and "for the exclusive purpose of ... [1] providing benefits as to participants and their beneficiaries; and [2] defraying reasonable expenses of administering the plan."
In addition to imposing general duties, ERISA prohibits fiduciaries from engaging in certain specific transactions. First, it restricts transactions between plans and fiduciaries. Under § 406(b)(1), a fiduciary may not "deal with the assets of the plan in his own interest or for his own account."
If a fiduciary engages in one of these prohibited transactions under § 406, ERISA's civil enforcement provision, *1240§ 502, allows plan participants to sue the fiduciary "to enjoin any act or practice which violates any provision of this subchapter or the terms of the plan" or "to obtain other appropriate equitable relief." ERISA § 502(a)(3),
3. ERISA Non-Fiduciary Parties in Interest and Prohibited Transactions
Although parties in interest have no fiduciary obligations to a plan or its participants, the Supreme Court has read § 502(a)(3) to allow a suit against a party in interest for its participation in a prohibited transaction. Harris Tr. & Sav. Bank v. Salomon Smith Barney, Inc.,
B. Factual Background
1. The Key Guaranteed Portfolio Fund
a. Overview
Great-West offers an investment product called the Key Guaranteed Portfolio Fund ("KGPF"). The KGPF is a stable-value fund. It "guarantees capital preservation." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 150. This means KGPF participants will never lose the principal they invest or the interest they earn, which is credited daily to their accounts.
b. Great-West's management of the KGPF and the Credited Interest Rate
Great-West deposits the money that participants have invested in the KGPF into its general account. That account, in turn, is invested in fixed-income instruments such as treasury bonds, corporate bonds, and mortgage-backed securities. Great-West employs a self-described "conservative investment strategy." Id. at 157, 173. Its investments earn lower interest rates than some higher-risk instruments or funds.
Money invested in the KGPF earns interest at the "Credited Interest Rate" (the "Credited Rate"). Under the contracts it executes with employer plans, Great-West sets the Credited Rate quarterly, announcing the new rate at least two business days before the start of each quarter. Its contract with Mr. Teets's Plan provides, "Interest earned on the Key Guaranteed Portfolio Fund value is compounded daily to the effective annual interest rate. The interest rate to be credited to the Group Contractholder [the Plan] will be determined by [Great-West] prior to the last day of the previous calendar quarter." Aplt. App., Vol. I at 129. "The effective annual interest rate will never be less than 0%." Id.
Great-West retains as revenue the difference between the total yield on the KGPF's monetary instruments and the Credited Rate, also known as the "margin" or the "spread." Some portion of the margin goes toward Great-West's operating costs. Great-West publicly discloses an administrative fee of .89 percent, but claims that figure does not capture all the costs associated with maintaining the KGPF. Great-West retains as profit whatever portion of the margin exceeds its costs. The parties dispute the total KGPF-associated profit Great-West has earned, but all agree *1241that as of 2016 it was greater than $ 120 million.
The Credited Rate dropped from 3.55 percent before the financial crisis in 2008 to 1.10 percent in 2016. During that time, the Credited Rate increased only once, in 2013. At the same time, Great-West's margin remained relatively constant, between approximately two and three percent.
c. Exiting the KGPF
Plans may terminate their relationship with Great-West based on changes to the Credited Rate. If they do, Great-West "reserves the right to defer payment" of participants' KGPF money back to the plan- presumably to reinvest with another provider -"not longer than 12 months."
Participants who have placed their money in the KGPF may withdraw their principal and accrued interest at any time without paying a fee. Great-West does, however, prohibit plans offering the KGPF from also offering any other stable value funds, money market funds, or certain bond funds-in other words, products with comparable risk profiles.
C. Procedural Background
Mr. Teets sued Great-West in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado on behalf of all employee benefit plan participants who had invested in the KGPF since 2008, as well as those participants' beneficiaries. The district court certified the class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(3). See Teets v. Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co.,
1. Mr. Teets's ERISA Claims
Mr. Teets alleged three ERISA violations. His first two claims alleged Great-West had violated ERISA's fiduciary duty provisions. First, Mr. Teets claimed that Great-West had breached its general duty of loyalty under § 404 by (1) setting the Credited Rate for its own benefit rather than for the plans' and participants' benefit, (2) setting the Credited Rate artificially low and retaining the difference as profit, and (3) charging excessive fees. Second, he claimed that Great-West, again acting in its fiduciary capacity, had engaged in a prohibited transaction under § 406(b) by "deal[ing] with the assets of the plan in [its] own interest or for [its] own account."
*1242As a prerequisite to bring both of these claims, Mr. Teets alleged that Great-West is an ERISA fiduciary because it exercises authority or control over the quarterly Credited Rate and, by extension, controls its compensation. The district court limited its review of these two fiduciary duty claims by addressing only this prerequisite -that is, whether Mr. Teets had sufficiently established Great-West's fiduciary status. Because the court found that Great-West was not a fiduciary, it did not address whether Great-West had breached any fiduciary obligations. Great-West's fiduciary status is thus the focus of our review of Mr. Teets's fiduciary duty claims.
Mr. Teets's third claim, raised in the alternative, was based on Great-West's having non-fiduciary status. He alleged that Great-West was a non-fiduciary party in interest to a non-exempt prohibited transaction under § 406(a) insofar as it had used plan assets for its own benefit.
On all three claims, Mr. Teets sought declaratory and injunctive relief and "other appropriate equitable relief," including restitution and an accounting for profits. Aplt. App., Vol. I at 37.
2. Summary Judgment Ruling
After discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court denied Mr. Teets's motion and granted summary judgment for Great-West. It disposed of Mr. Teets's first two claims at the same time, concluding that Great-West was not acting as a fiduciary of the Plan or its participants. It held that Great-West's contractual power to choose the Credited Rate did not render it a fiduciary under ERISA because participants could "veto" the chosen rate by withdrawing their money from the KGPF.
The district court also granted summary judgment on Mr. Teets's third claim, concluding that Great-West was not liable as a non-fiduciary party in interest because Mr. Teets had failed to establish a genuine dispute as to whether Great-West had "actual or constructive knowledge of the circumstances that rendered the transaction unlawful."
Our review thus focuses on (1) whether Great-West is a functional fiduciary because it "exercises ... authority or control" over Plan assets, ERISA § 3(21)(A),
We will add further factual and procedural background as it becomes relevant.
D. Summary Judgment Background
"We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard as the district court." Coldesina,
"The movant bears the initial burden of making a prima facie demonstration of the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and entitlement to judgment as a matter of law." Libertarian Party of N.M. v. Herrera,
"If the movant meets this initial burden, the burden then shifts to the nonmovant to set forth specific facts from which a rational trier of fact could find for the nonmovant."
"Where, as here, we are presented with cross-motions for summary judgment, we must view each motion separately, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and draw all reasonable inferences in that party's favor." United States v. Supreme Ct. of N.M.,
II. DISCUSSION
Mr. Teets argues that (A) Great-West is a fiduciary because it has the authority to set the Credited Rate each quarter and, by extension, to determine its own compensation; and (B) even if Great-West is not a fiduciary, it is nonetheless liable as a party in interest because it benefitted from a transaction prohibited under ERISA.
A. Fiduciary Duty Claims-Great-West's Fiduciary Status
The threshold question for the two fiduciary duty claims is whether Great-West is a functional fiduciary under ERISA. Mr. Teets argues it is because Great-West exercises "authority or control" over the Plan or its assets by changing the Credited Rate without plan or participant approval. Aplt. Br. at 17-19, 25-26. He also contends Great-West has sufficient control over its own compensation to render it an ERISA fiduciary. We conclude that Mr. Teets did not make an adequate showing in response to Great-West's summary judgment motion to support these points.
The following discussion describes the pertinent legal background, summarizes the district court's ruling, and analyzes the evidence of Great-West's authority in relation to plans and participants.
1. Legal Background
As noted above, a service provider can be a functional fiduciary under § 3(21)(A) of ERISA when it exercises authority or control over plan management or plan assets. See
*1244The case law points to a two-step analysis to determine whether a service provider is a functional fiduciary when a plaintiff alleges it has acted to violate a fiduciary duty.
Thus, to establish a service provider's fiduciary status, an ERISA plaintiff must show the service provider (1) did not merely follow a specific contractual term set in an arm's-length negotiation; and (2) took a unilateral action respecting plan management or assets without the plan or its participants having an opportunity to reject its decision.
a. Arm's-length negotiation of contract terms
When a service provider adheres to a specific contract term that is the product of arm's-length negotiation, courts have held that the service provider is not a fiduciary. Schulist provides a useful example.
A service provider similarly does not owe a fiduciary duty regarding its compensation when compensation is fixed during *1245an arm's-length negotiation. In Transamerica Life Insurance, for example, the Ninth Circuit held that the manager of an employee retirement plan was not an ERISA fiduciary as to its compensation because the plan contract set the manager's compensation at a fixed percentage of the plan's assets, and it also provided a specific schedule for fees the manager could collect.
b. Unilateral decisions regarding plan or asset management
When a service provider acts with authority or control beyond the contract's specific terms, the service provider may be a fiduciary. And when the plan or the plan participants cannot reject the service provider's action or terminate the contract without interference or penalty, the service provider is a functional fiduciary. See, e.g., Charters v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co.,
In some cases, the service provider's unilateral decision changes a term of the plan contract. For example, in CBOE, a service provider provided investment services for an employee retirement benefit plan.
In other cases, the contract may "grant[ ] [a service provider] discretionary authority" over an aspect of plan or asset management. Ed Miniat, Inc. v. Globe Life Ins. Grp., Inc.,
*1246
In contrast to the foregoing cases holding a service provider to be a fiduciary, when plans and participants have a "meaningful opportunity" to reject a service provider's unilateral decision, courts have held the service provider is not a fiduciary. Charters,
In Zang and Others Similarly Situated v. Paychex, Inc., the employee benefit plan selected mutual funds to offer its participants from a list composed by a service provider.
The foregoing analysis applies to determining whether a service provider's control over its own compensation may make it a fiduciary. A contract might give a service provider "control over factors that determine the actual amount of its compensation." Krear,
2. District Court Ruling
The district court evaluated whether Great-West is a fiduciary based upon its changes to the Credited Rate and control over its compensation.
a. Change to the Credited Rate
The district court held that Great-West is not a fiduciary when it sets the Credited Rate. It acknowledged that "in some sense," Great-West "undoubtedly" exercises some control when it sets the Credited Rate. Aplt. App., Vol. I at 92. But the court recognized "a number of cases favoring the theory that a pre-announced rate of return prevents fiduciary status from attaching to the decision regarding the what [sic] rate to set, at least when the plan and/or its participants can `vote with their feet' if they dislike the new rate."
First, as to Great-West's ability to bind plans to its Credited Rate decisions, the district court rejected Mr. Teets's argument that plans cannot readily withdraw from the KGPF because Great-West has a right to impose a waiting period of up to one year. The court stated, "This is not an argument that the Court can consider in the present posture.... [W]hether [the waiting period] would actually be imposed... is speculative." Id. at 99.
Second, as to individual participants' ability to reject the Credited Rate, the district court concluded that participants do have a "real ability" to reject Great-West's choice of the Credited Rate by withdrawing their funds from the KGPF without fee or penalty. Id. Although it had "given serious thought to" the argument that participants cannot easily withdraw from the KGPF because Great-West prohibits plans from offering other comparable investment products, the court concluded that imposing a fiduciary duty on that basis would "introduce[ ] a host of other considerations individual to each participant." Id. As a result, it would be "too attenuated" to say that a given participant could not reject the Credited Rate each quarter. Id.
b. Control over compensation
The district court also concluded Great-West is not a fiduciary as to setting its *1248compensation. Although it acknowledged that a service provider's control over compensation factors can give rise to fiduciary obligations, the court said this principle "has only been applied in cases where the alleged fiduciary has some form of direct contractual authority to establish its fees and other administrative charges, or has authority to approve or disapprove the transactions from which it collects a fee." Id. at 100.
The court also reasoned that Great-West does not have control over its compensation because, even though it could use the Credited Rate to "influence its possible margins," the ultimate amount it earns depends on whether participants elect to keep their money in the KGPF each quarter. Id. at 101.
3. Analysis
Mr. Teets argues that Great-West's ability to set the Credited Rate renders it an ERISA fiduciary because neither the Plan nor its participants can reject changes to the Credited Rate.
Mr. Teets separately argues that Great-West's control over the Credited Rate gives it control over its compensation and thereby renders it an ERISA fiduciary. We conclude that because Great-West does not have unilateral authority or control over the Credited Rate, it also lacks such control over its compensation. We therefore affirm the district court's summary judgment ruling that Great-West is not a functional fiduciary.
a. Change to the Credited Rate
The contract between the Plan and Great-West does not set a Credited Rate or prescribe a Credited Rate formula. Instead, it authorizes Great-West to set the Credited Rate on a quarterly basis without input from the Plan or its participants. Accordingly, the Credited Rate is not the product of an arm's-length negotiation, and Great-West's fiduciary status therefore depends on whether the Plan or its participants can reject a change in the Credited Rate. To make that determination, we address Great-West's (1) right to impose a 12-month waiting period on departing plans and (2) prohibition on plans offering comparable investment options to their participants.
i. Potential 12-month waiting period for withdrawing plans
As discussed above, a service provider's unilateral decision regarding management of a plan or its assets can give rise to functional fiduciary status if the service provider can prevent or penalize plans for withdrawing funds from the service provider or terminating the contract. See, e.g., CBOE,
Mr. Teets contends that Great-West, like service providers held to be fiduciaries in CBOE, Ed Miniat, and Midwest Community Health, has "unhampered discretion" under ERISA because it has "the ability"-even if never used-"to force plans to accept the Credited Rate for up to a year." Aplt. Reply Br. at 7 (quotations omitted); see Aplt. Br. at 21-23.
Great-West argues that its contractual option to delay the return of a departing plan's funds does not establish fiduciary status because it has never exercised this right. Aplee. Br. at 29. It relies on ERISA's text, which confers fiduciary status on a service provider only to the extent it "exercises any discretionary authority or discretionary control" over a plan or its assets. ERISA § 3(21)(A),
We agree with Great-West that its contractual option to impose a 12-month waiting period on plan withdrawal is different from the penalties and fees that gave rise to fiduciary status in the cases cited by Mr. Teets. In those cases, the penalties either had been or were certain to be enforced on the plans. See, e.g., Ed Miniat,
We are not aware of any case finding fiduciary status under § 3(21)(A) of ERISA based on a service provider's unexercised contractual option to restrict or penalize withdrawal. But even if a potential restriction or penalty could make Great-West a fiduciary, it cannot do so in this case. This is so because Mr. Teets not only has provided no evidence that Great-West has ever imposed the waiting period on a plan's withdrawal, he has provided no evidence that even the potential of Great-West's imposing a waiting period has affected any plan's choice to continue with or withdraw from the KGPF contract. More than 3,000 plans have terminated the KGPF as a plan offering during the class period. Mr. Teets has not provided a single example showing the potential waiting period has deterred any of the 13,000 plans represented by participants in the class from withdrawing from the KGPF. Unlike in CBOE, there is no evidence a plan has actually been or is likely to be locked in to a Credited Rate for up to 12 months. See
*1250ii. Prohibition on comparable investment options for participants
We next turn to whether plan participants -the class members in this case- can reject the quarterly Credited Rate by withdrawing from the KGPF. When Great-West moved for summary judgment contesting fiduciary status, it argued that "[t]he evidence shows that" when it changes the Credited Rate, "participants, not Great-West, have the `final say' on whether any Credited Interest Rate will apply to their investments in the [KGPF]." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 176. Great-West contended that this was so because participants who have invested in the KGPF "can reject any new Credited Interest Rate by transferring their accounts out of the [KGPF] at any point, without penalty." Id.; see also id. at 151, 282-83.
First, he disagreed that Great-West's fiduciary status may turn on whether participants can freely withdraw from the KGPF.
Second, Mr. Teets argued, alternatively, in his opposition to summary judgment, that Great-West is a fiduciary because "Great-West precludes plans from offering *1251alternative low-risk investments alongside the KGPF" and therefore participants are not free to leave. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 301. He noted that when his Plan contracted with Great-West, it agreed that no stable value fund-effectively, no fund with a similar risk profile-would be offered that is comparable to the KGPF. Id. at 292-93, 301. As a result, "participants who divest from the KGPF in response to a change in Credited Rate are forced to alter the risk profile of their retirement accounts." Id. at 301. It follows, he asserted, that Great-West is a fiduciary as to setting the Credited Rate. See id.
Mr. Teets's opposition to summary judgment on this alternative ground lacked supporting law or facts. He has not cited, and we have not found, a case in which a court has deemed a service provider to be a fiduciary based on participants' lack of alternative investment options, or on anything other than imposing a penalty or fee for withdrawal. Moreover, Mr. Teets has not cited, and we have not found, a case finding fiduciary status based solely on restrictions on participants' ability to leave a fund.
Even if the ability of participants to reject service provider actions is relevant to the fiduciary status, Mr. Teets failed to provide factual support to counter Great-West's assertion in district court that participants can freely transfer their money out of the KGPF. See id. at 176. He pointed only to Great-West's policy against competing funds. He adduced no evidence that this policy forced participants to accept a Credited Rate or that they felt effectively locked in to the KGPF. See CBOE,
Like the 12-month waiting period's potential effect on plans, the restriction on competing investment options may impede participants from exiting the KGPF. But as with the waiting period, Mr. Teets offered no evidence that the competing fund provision has affected any of the 270,000 participants' decisions to stay with or leave the KGPF. Mr. Teets has not even alleged that the competing fund provision has affected his own choice about participation in the KGPF.
In sum, in response to Great-West's contention that it should receive summary judgment because the plan participants are free to leave the KGPF after a change in the Credited Rate, Mr. Teets said (1) the participants' freedom to leave the KGPF is not relevant to fiduciary status and (2) if it were, Great-West is a fiduciary because the limit on competing funds restricted participants' ability to leave. The first point seems to concede the issue to Great-West. On the second, Mr. Teets failed to provide legal support or "`set forth specific facts' from which a rational trier of fact could find" in his favor. Libertarian Party of N.M.,
* * * *
*1252Summary judgment on the issue of Great-West's authority or control over the Credited Rate was proper.
b. Control over compensation
Mr. Teets's failure to show Great-West has authority or control over the Credited Rate means he cannot show Great-West has authority or control over its compensation.
Mr. Teets's argument that Great-West exercises authority or control over its compensation because it exercises authority or control over the Credited Rate is self-defeating. As we have already discussed, Mr. Teets has not shown that Great-West has discretion over the Credited Rate. It follows that Great-West similarly lacks discretion or control over its compensation. Accord Insigna v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., No. 8:17CV179,
*1253B. Non-Fiduciary Prohibited Transaction Claim
Having affirmed summary judgment that Great-West is not a fiduciary, we turn to whether the district court properly granted summary judgment to Great-West on Mr. Teets's non-fiduciary party-in-interest claim. Because Mr. Teets failed to carry his burden to show that he qualified for "appropriate equitable relief" under ERISA § 502(a)(3), we affirm summary judgment for Great-West.
1. Legal Background-ERISA
Section 406(a) of ERISA lists transactions that are prohibited between fiduciaries and non-fiduciary parties in interest.
a. Prohibited transactions under ERISA § 406(a)
Section 406(a) of ERISA prohibits fiduciaries like the Farmer's Rice Cooperative from engaging in certain transactions with "part[ies] in interest," such as service providers like Great-West.
Under § 406(a), a fiduciary may not allow a plan to engage with a non-fiduciary party in interest in a transaction that the fiduciary knows or should know is (1) a "sale or exchange, or leasing, of any property between the plan and a party in interest"; (2) "lending of money or other extension of credit between the plan and a party in interest"; (3) "furnishing of goods, services, or facilities between the plan and a party in interest"; (4) "transfer to, or use by or for the benefit of a party in interest, of any assets of the plan"; or (5) "acquisition, on behalf of the plan, of any employer security or employer real property in violation of [§] 1107(a)."
The § 406(a)
b. Exemptions under ERISA § 408(b)
Although § 406(a) broadly delineates prohibited transactions, § 408(b) provides exemptions for parties engaged in those transactions.
The § 408(b) exemption pertinent to this case allows parties in interest to provide "services necessary for the establishment or operation of the plan"-otherwise prohibited under § 406(a)-so long as "no more than reasonable compensation is paid therefor."
c. Non-fiduciary party-in-interest liability for prohibited transactions
To be liable for a § 406(a) prohibited transaction, a non-fiduciary party in interest such as Great-West must have engaged in such a transaction and "have had actual or constructive knowledge of the circumstances that rendered the transaction unlawful." Salomon,
d. Appropriate equitable relief
In addition to satisfying the requirements of Salomon, a plaintiff bringing suit against a non-fiduciary party in *1255interest must show that equitable relief can be granted. ERISA's civil enforcement provision, § 502(a)(3), allows a "participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary" to bring a civil suit "to enjoin any act or practice" that violates ERISA or "to obtain other appropriate equitable relief ... to redress such violations."
In the remainder of this section we explain (1) how the Supreme Court has interpreted the scope of § 502(a)(3), (2) the requirement that plaintiffs seeking equitable restitution under § 502(a)(3) identify a specific res
i. Scope of equitable relief under § 502(a)(3)
The Supreme Court has interpreted "appropriate equitable relief" under § 502(a)(3) to include equitable remedies that only historical courts of equity were empowered to award. It has excluded remedies typically available in historical courts of law, such as compensatory damages.
In Mertens, the Supreme Court said that § 502(a)(3) of ERISA encompasses "those categories of relief that were typically available in equity (such as injunction, mandamus, and restitution, but not compensatory damages)."
*1256`equitable' and `legal' relief."). Thus, "legal remedies-even legal remedies that a court of equity could sometimes award- are not `equitable relief' under § 502(a)(3)." Montanile,
Certain remedies can be equitable or legal, depending on the circumstances. "Equitable remedies `are, as a general rule, directed against some specific thing; they give or enforce a right to or over some particular thing ... rather than a right to recover a sum of money generally out of the defendant's assets.'"
ii. Tracing requirement for equitable restitution
Payment of restitution, which Mr. Teets seeks, can be equitable or legal. See Knudson,
In contrast, when the plaintiff cannot "assert title or right to possession of particular property, but in which nevertheless he might be able to show just grounds for recovering money to pay for some benefit the defendant had received from him," the plaintiff has a right to legal restitution. Knudson,
iii. Modified tracing requirement for accounting and disgorgement of profits
Accounting for profits (also referred to as an "accounting") and disgorgement of profits are forms of restitution. See Knudson,
The tracing requirement described above for equitable restitution also applies to accounting and disgorgement of profits but may be modified in certain limited circumstances. See Knudson,
To qualify for this remedy in equity, the plaintiff still must show entitlement "to a constructive trust on particular property held by the defendant" that the defendant used to generate the profits. Knudson,
*1258Accordingly, without a particular profit-generating res, a claim for payment out of the defendant's general assets is a request for legal relief rather than for equitable accounting or disgorgement of profits and cannot be awarded under § 502(a)(3).
iv. Commingled funds and traceability
If a defendant disposes of all of the particular property that allegedly should belong to the plaintiff under equitable principles, the plaintiff no longer has a specifically identifiable res. The Supreme Court said in Montanile that § 502(a)(3) does not authorize "a suit to attach the [defendant's] general assets" as a substitute for the previously identifiable property.
2. Additional Procedural Background
Because we review summary judgment based on the "materials adequately brought to the attention of the district court by the parties," Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
a. Great-West's motion for summary judgment on the non-fiduciary claim and Mr. Teets's response
Great-West's sole argument for summary judgment on Mr. Teets's non-fiduciary claim was that he did not seek "appropriate equitable relief" available under ERISA. Great-West contended that Mr. Teets was seeking "as damages the margin on Great-West's general account assets" and claimed he "[could not] point to any evidence that Great-West's general account investment returns form a specifically-identifiable res that properly can be traced to any plan." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 182-83.
Mr. Teets did not attempt to rebut Great-West's argument by identifying the funds in Great-West's possession that generated the alleged profits he sought to recover. In his response, Mr. Teets stated that accounting and disgorgement of profits are recognized forms of equitable relief, id. at 317, and that "disgorgement of profits does not require the recovered funds to be traceable to a res or particular funds." Id. at 318.
b. District court ruling
The district court started with whether equitable relief was a possible remedy for Mr. Teets's claim and whether summary judgment could be granted because it was not. It recognized that "an order to pay money, even if functionally equivalent to a judgement awarding damages, qualifies as `appropriate equitable relief' in some ERISA cases." Aplt. App., Vol. I at 102. Citing Knudson,
Instead, the district court granted summary judgment for Great-West on a ground Great-West had not raised in its motion, concluding that Mr. Teets had not adduced sufficient evidence of Great-West's liability for its participation in a prohibited transaction. Id. at 106-08. The court rejected Mr. Teets's argument that Salomon required him to show only that Great-West as a party in interest had knowledge of "facts satisfying the elements" of ERISA § 406(a). Id. at 105-06. The court compared Salomon's description of the knowledge that defendant fiduciaries must have to be liable-"facts satisfying the elements of a § 406(a) transaction," Salomon,
3. Analysis
To prevail on his non-fiduciary claim, Mr. Teets must show, among other things, that he seeks equitable relief under § 502(a)(3) of ERISA. We conclude summary judgment was properly granted because Mr. Teets failed to identify the particular property in Great-West's possession over which he can "assert title or right to possession." Knudson,
a. Summary judgment standard-review of materials presented to district court
When this court reviews a district court's grant of summary judgment, "we conduct that review from the perspective of the district court at the time it made its ruling, ordinarily limiting our review to the materials adequately brought to the attention of the district court by the parties." Adler,
This court also may "more broadly review the record on appeal," but we ordinarily do not do so because "we, like the district courts, have a limited and neutral role in the adversarial process, and are wary of becoming advocates who comb the record of previously available evidence and make a party's case for it." Id.; see SIL-FLO, Inc. v. SFHC, Inc.,
b. Waiver of request for injunction
Mr. Teets did not preserve an argument that his amended complaint's request for an injunction satisfies § 502(a)(3)'s allowance for suits seeking "to enjoin any act or practice" that violates ERISA. 29 U.S.C.
*1260§ 1132(a)(3). His amended complaint asked the court to "[e]njoin Defendant from further prohibited transactions," Aplt. App., Vol. I at 38, which appears to satisfy § 502(a)(3). But Mr. Teets failed to rely on this remedy to overcome summary judgment.
Mr. Teets has not mentioned injunctive relief in any filing since the amended complaint. When prompted by Great-West's motion, he relied on other remedies- namely, accounting and disgorgement of profits. Great-West's motion stated not only that Mr. Teets could not satisfy the "appropriate equitable relief" standard, but also that "the relief Plaintiff seeks is not available under [§ 502(a)(3)]" at all. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 181. In response, Mr. Teets did not mention an injunction, instead asserting only that he sought "Appropriate Equitable Relief," and even quoting that distinct portion of the statute. Id. at 316-17.
Even if Mr. Teets had done enough in the district court to preserve his argument that his request for an injunction satisfied § 502(a)(3), he has abandoned any such argument on appeal. In this court, Mr. Teets argues that "ERISA provides [him] a remedy for Great-West's violation," but he never mentions the injunction. Aplt. Br. at 50. He explains, "Restitution of property and disgorgement are the central remedies Mr. Teets seeks here." Aplt. Reply Br. at 26.
Thus, although § 502(a)(3) authorizes injunctive relief, Mr. Teets did not rely on this form of relief to contest summary judgment, and he does not even do so on appeal. He has waived this basis to overcome summary judgment. See Tran v. Trs. of State Colls. in Colo.,
c. Failure to specify particular profit-generating property
Mr. Teets's amended complaint requested monetary relief in the form of (1) disgorgement of the profits Great-West obtained through knowing participation in prohibited transactions; (2) imposition of a constructive trust or equitable lien on funds Great-West received through those transactions; and (3) "other appropriate equitable relief," including restitution and an accounting for profits. Aplt. App., Vol. I at 38.
As discussed above, to be eligible for "appropriate equitable relief" in the form of restitution, Mr. Teets must show that Great-West possesses particular property that rightfully belongs to him. Knudson,
Great-West may possess such "particular property," but Mr. Teets failed to identify any such property in his response to Great-West's summary judgment motion.
*1261
As a result, the district court was left to guess what particular property Mr. Teets would assert (1) rightfully belonged to him and (2) was used to generate unlawful profits. It might have been, to borrow Great-West's phrasing, the "amounts [participants] contributed to the plans," which are "automatically credited to the accounts of individual participants." Id. at 167. Or it might have been, as the district court assumed, "the margin Defendant earned on Fund contributions." Aplt. App., Vol. I at 103. It could also have been any "compensation" Great-West retained beyond an amount that was "reasonable" in relation to its services under ERISA § 408(b). See Aplt. Br. at 45-50;
d. Mr. Teets's arguments fail
Mr. Teets's primary argument, both in the district court and on appeal, see Aplt. App., Vol. II at 318, is that ERISA does not require him to point to a specific res to be eligible for disgorgement as an equitable remedy. First, he contends that Salomon "endorsed" disgorgement of profits as an equitable remedy under ERISA. Aplt. Br. at 51-52. Second, he argues that trust law treatises and restatements confirm that accounting and disgorgement of profits are equitable remedies, even without an identifiable res.
Mr. Teets's argument overlooks how the Supreme Court has limited the remedies available under § 502(a)(3). As stated above, the fact that equity courts at common law could award a particular remedy does not mean the remedy is necessarily equitable for purposes of ERISA. Rather, "legal remedies-even legal remedies that a court of equity could sometimes award-are not `equitable relief' under§ 502(a)(3)." Montanile,
*1262Mr. Teets relies on authorities that discuss what remedies an equity court could award for a breach of trust, not whether those remedies are legal or equitable in nature. As the Salomon Court stated:
[W]hen a trustee in breach of his fiduciary duty to the beneficiaries transfers trust property to a third person, the third person takes the property subject to the trust.... The trustee or beneficiaries may ... maintain an action for restitution of the property (if not already disposed of) or disgorgement of proceeds (if already disposed of), and disgorgement of the third person's profits derived therefrom.
Mr. Teets also argues that his attempt to recover from the commingled profits in Great-West's general account does not bar equitable relief. This assertion, however, skips a critical step to establish appropriate equitable relief under § 502(a)(3)- namely, identifying the property that Great-West has commingled with its other assets. He has not specified the assets he alleges were commingled with Great-West's general account to generate the profits he seeks to disgorge, which is fatal to his claim under § 502(a)(3). See In re Unisys Corp.,
III. CONCLUSION
Great-West was entitled to summary judgment on both the fiduciary and non-fiduciary claims. Because Mr. Teets has not provided evidence that contractual restrictions on withdrawal from the KGPF actually constrained plans or participants, Great-West does not act as an ERISA fiduciary when it sets the KGPF's Credited Rate each quarter. As a result, it also lacks sufficient authority or control over its compensation to render it a fiduciary. As to liability as a party in interest, Great-West was entitled to summary judgment because Mr. Teets failed in the district court to carry his burden of showing that the relief he sought was equitable.
We refer to the relevant portions of ERISA by the section number of the Act. ERISA is codified at
Section 3(21)(A) lists three bases for a party to be a functional fiduciary. Because Mr. Teets rests his fiduciary status argument on only the first one, Aplt. Br. at 17, we have italicized that part of the provision here.
ERISA § 3(21)(A) creates functional fiduciary status for those who exercise "discretionary authority or discretionary control" in the management of a plan or who exercise "authority or control" over plan assets. ERISA § 3(21)(A),
Courts occasionally also use the term "plan fiduciaries" to distinguish plan-affiliated fiduciaries (typically named fiduciaries) from fiduciaries that are third parties. See, e.g., Hecker v. Deere & Co., , 586 ("We see nothing in the statute that requires plan fiduciaries to include any particular mix of investment vehicles in their plan."); Zang and Others Similarly Situated v. Paychex, Inc., , 271 (W.D.N.Y. 2010) (explaining that a service provider is not a functional fiduciary if "the appropriate plan fiduciary in fact makes the decision to accept or reject the change" (quoting Dept. of Labor Advisory Op. 97-16A,
This figure is drawn from a report Mr. Teets's expert prepared at the summary judgment stage. Great-West does not disclose its margins as a matter of course.
The KGPF is offered to participants in defined contribution retirement plans. In such plans, either the employee participant or the employer (or both) contribute funds to a participant's retirement account. See Edward A. Zelinsky, The Defined Contribution Paradigm,
Our review of the record supports this statement, and counsel for Great-West admitted as much at oral argument. Oral Arg. at 28:30-28:55.
The class period runs "until the time of trial." Teets,
Having concluded Great-West was not an ERISA fiduciary, the district court did not address whether, if it were a fiduciary, its conduct would amount to a breach of its duties.
This court has not decided any cases to determine whether a service provider exercised discretionary authority or control beyond the terms of a negotiated contract. Accordingly, we must look outside the Tenth Circuit for guidance. Although our review includes cases dealing with pension and insurance plans in addition to 401(k) plans like Mr. Teets's, the lessons we draw from these cases about functional fiduciary status apply to the various types of benefit plans subject to ERISA regulation.
Ministerial tasks alone do not qualify a service provider for fiduciary status. See Olson v. E.F. Hutton & Co., , 625 n.3 (8th Cir. 1992) ("It is well established that one who performs only ministerial tasks is not cloaked with fiduciary status."); see also
See also Midwest Cmty. Health Serv., Inc.,
See also Abraha v. Colonial Parking, Inc.,
The parties do not dispute that changing the Credited Rate is the kind of decision that might qualify Great-West for fiduciary status. Changing the rate of return on participants' investments cannot fairly be considered "ministerial" in the same way that calculating benefits or maintaining records can. See In re Luna,
In his opposition to Great-West's motion for summary judgment, Mr. Teets raised other penalties Great-West imposes on a departing plan. For example, he stated:
The default "cessation option" under [Great-West's contract with the Plan] is the "participant maintenance option," in which Great-West continues to hold participants' money in the KGPF until it is all transferred or distributed by the participants.... Further, the Contract provides for a "Contract Termination Charge" if the Contract is terminated before Great-West's recovery of all Start-Up Costs.
Aplt. App., Vol. II at 283. But Mr. Teets did not raise this argument on appeal until his rebuttal at oral argument. Oral Arg. at 38:20-39:27. It is therefore waived. See United States v. Dahda, , 1292 n.7 (10th Cir. 2017) ("[I]ssues raised for the first time at oral argument are considered waived." (quotations omitted)), aff'd, ___ U.S. ___, ,
To support its argument, Great-West pointed to paragraph 15 of its statement of material facts, which asserted, in part, "Participants who allocate money to the [KGPF] can withdraw that money, both principal and any accrued earnings, at any time-even prior to the expiration of the 90-day guarantee period- without paying any fee or incurring any penalty." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 151. Paragraph 15, in turn, cited to the contract between the Plan and Great-West, which states that "[a]mounts may be transferred from the Participant's account balance in the Key Guaranteed Portfolio Fund at any time," Aplt. App., Vol. I at 129, and to other evidence allegedly establishing that participants' withdrawals from the KGPF were "unrestricted." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 151.
Unlike the concurrence, we think this was enough for Great-West, the "party seeking summary judgment," to "inform[ ] the district court" of why "it believe[d]" there was an "absence of a genuine issue of material fact." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, , 323,
Mr. Teets asserted, "Great-West does not cite a single case supporting its contention that a service provider to an individual account defined contribution plan can avoid fiduciary status merely because participants have the ability to invest in or divest from the product offered by the service provider, and Plaintiff is aware of no such case." Aplt. App., Vol. II at 299-300.
Although service providers in the life insurance context have been held to be ERISA fiduciaries in their dealings with beneficiaries-as opposed to plans-these cases do not help Mr. Teets. Vander Luitgaren v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada, (D. Mass 2012), provides a useful illustration. In that case, a service provider administering a life insurance policy was held to be an ERISA fiduciary when it paid benefits to a plaintiff beneficiary using a retained-asset account and had unilateral control over the rate of return on the account. Id. at 61-62, 70. But even if life insurance beneficiaries (who do not themselves pay for life insurance) were analogous to 401(k) plan participants (who invest their own money in various funds), the plaintiff in Vander Luitgaren could not have cancelled his relationship with the service provider without suffering a penalty-namely, losing the potential benefits under the life insurance policy.
A Department of Labor ("DOL") rule cited by Great-West appears to suggest that Great-West's margin may not be compensation at all: "For purposes of [the reasonable compensation] exemption, the `spread' is not treated as compensation." Final Amendment to and Partial Revocation of Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 84-24,
Great-West also argued in the district court that it was not a fiduciary because ERISA's guaranteed-benefit policy ("GBP") exemption covers the KGPF. A GBP is "an insurance policy or contract to the extent that such policy or contract provides for benefits the amount of which is guaranteed by the insurer." ERISA § 401(b)(2)(B),
The district court found the KGPF allocates risk to Great-West because it guarantees participants' principal and all earned interest and because Great-West fixes the rate of return in advance. Accordingly, it could not be a fiduciary in its administration of the assets participants allocated to the KGPF. The court concluded that the GBP exemption did not free Great-West of all fiduciary obligations because the "contract by which the insurer obtained [participants'] contributions remains a part of the plan," and Great West's management of the contract (as opposed to the money) could be subject to fiduciary duties. Aplt. App., Vol. I at 91-92 (emphasis added).
On appeal, Great-West does not contend the GBP exemption shields it from fiduciary status.
The parties spent most of their summary judgment briefing in district court on the fiduciary duty claims and devoted limited attention to this claim. Great-West's motion, Mr. Teets's opposition, and Great-West's reply each addressed the non-fiduciary claim in less than three pages. Aplt. App., Vol. II at 181-83, 316-18, 366-68. As explained below, Mr. Teets's cursory treatment of this claim prevents him from overcoming summary judgment.
Although Mr. Teets's amended complaint alleged Great-West also violated § 406(b), that violation was premised on Great-West's acting as a fiduciary. Section 406(b) prohibits fiduciaries from benefitting from transactions with their plans, and § 406(b) claims can only be brought against fiduciaries. See
Great-West contends Mr. Teets forfeited his argument that Great-West was a party to a prohibited transaction under § 406(a) because he relied upon different subsections of that statute to support his theory of liability in the district court. In the district court, Mr. Teets argued Great-West engaged in a prohibited transaction when it "use[d] ... a plan asset ... for [its] benefit," invoking § 406(a)(1)(D). Aplt. App., Vol. II at 217. He then stated in his opening brief that "Section [406](a) generally prohibits parties in interest from `furnishing ... services' to a plan," paraphrasing § 406(a)(1)(C). Aplt. Br. at 41. His reply brief explains that his opening brief "plainly refers to activity prohibited by Section [406](a)(1)(A) and (D)," and that he merely "quoted [§ 406(a)(1)(C)] as an example." Aplt. Reply Br. at 19 (citations omitted). At oral argument, counsel for Mr. Teets stated the prohibited transaction at issue was Great-West's use of plan assets for its own benefit, as prohibited under § 406(a)(1)(D). Oral Arg. at 0:58-2:19. Mr. Teets thus has consistently contended that Great-West conducted a prohibited transaction under § 406(a)(1)(D) and has not forfeited that argument. We evaluate his non-fiduciary liability claim based on that provision.
As discussed in more detail in footnote 16 above, DOL rules suggest the compensation that Mr. Teets claims was unreasonable-the margin Great-West retained after paying participants according to the Credited Rate-is not "compensation" at all for purposes of § 408(b).
The parties dispute whether the plaintiff or the non-fiduciary party in interest bears the burden of establishing the party in interest's eligibility for a § 408(b) exemption. We need not resolve this dispute because we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment as to Mr. Teets's non-fiduciary claim on another ground.
The Latin term "res" generally refers to an "object, interest, or status, as opposed to a person." Res, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). In the trust context, it denotes the property that is the subject matter of a trust. See id.; Begier v. I.R.S., , 70,
The Salomon Court explained a constructive trust:
Whenever the legal title to property is obtained through means or under circumstances which render it unconscientious for the holder of the legal title to retain and enjoy the beneficial interest, equity impresses a constructive trust on the property thus acquired in favor of the one who is truly and equitably entitled to the same....
An equitable lien "is simply a right of a special nature over the thing ... so that the very thing itself may be proceeded against in an equitable action." Montanile,
See also Edmonson,
In Pender, the Fourth Circuit held that retirement plan participants seeking disgorgement of profits satisfied § 502(a)(3)'s "appropriate equitable relief" requirement.
In Urakhchin, participants in a 401(k) retirement plan sought under § 502(a)(3) to recover profits from non-fiduciary defendants who allegedly "improperly receive[d] Plan assets as profits at the expense of the Plan and its beneficiaries."
The reply brief elaborates on the remedies Mr. Teets sought in the district court, but injunctive relief is conspicuously absent: "Great-West claims Mr. Teets sought only an accounting for profits below. This is incorrect: he also specifically requested `disgorge[ment],' `constructive trust,' `equitable lien,' and `restitution.'" Aplt. Reply Br. at 26 n.11 (alteration in original) (citation omitted) (quoting Aplt. App., Vol. I at 38).
Because we affirm the grant of Great-West's summary judgment motion, we also conclude the district court properly denied Mr. Teets's motion for summary judgment. See Phila. Indem. Ins. Co. v. Lexington Ins. Co., , 1336 n.4 (10th Cir. 2017).
We grant the parties' motions to seal their appellate briefs and appendices in light of their submission at the court's request of publicly-available redacted versions of those filings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John TEETS, Plaintiff - Appellant, v. GREAT-WEST LIFE & ANNUITY INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant - Appellee, AARP; AARP Foundation; American Council of Life Insurers, Amici Curiae.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published