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The Impact of Slayer Statutes on Surviving Spouse Benefits Under ERISAThe Impact of Slayer Statutes on Surviving Spouse Benefits Under ERISA

Tire pension plan falls flat

4 Min Read
The Impact of Slayer Statutes on Surviving Spouse Benefits Under ERISA

Regular readers of our column may remember our article from this past Spring discussing the variations among state “slayer statutes”—laws preventing murderers from inheriting from their victims.  A recent opinion by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama in Box v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Case No. 4:11-CV-02829-MHH, provides a logical sequel to that discussion, adding considerations under federal statutory and common law into the mix.

On Aug. 5, 2003, Barbara Box shot and killed her husband, Kenneth Box.  He was found dead on the sidewalk in front of their home, shot in the back.  A jury ultimately convicted Barbara of murder in March 2006, and she’s currently incarcerated.

 

The Goodyear Plan

Kenneth worked for Goodyear until Aug. 5, 2003 and participated in the company’s pension plan, which is a defined benefit plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).  The Goodyear plan provides a qualified pre-retirement benefit in the form of a survivor annuity (a QPSA) for the surviving spouse of a vested plan participant if the participant dies before he’s eligible to receive his pension benefits.  The QPSA pays a monthly benefit to the surviving spouse for her lifetime, provided that the couple was married for at least one year before the employee’s death and that the participant didn’t elect to waive the QPSA benefit.

The Goodyear plan provides the QPSA benefit for surviving spouses only.  It doesn’t provide an option for an employee to name a contingent or secondary beneficiary, nor does it authorize payment of such benefit to anyone other than the surviving spouse.  Nor does the plan address whether a surviving spouse is eligible to receive QPSA payments if she murdered the plan participant, violated the law in any way that would preclude her right to that benefit or otherwise became ineligible in some way.

In this case, it wasn’t entirely clear whether Alabama law or federal law governed Barbara’s right to the QPSA benefit under Kenneth’s pension plan.  However, that question presented a distinction without a difference.  If Alabama law applied, then the Alabama slayer statute treated Barbara as though she predeceased Kenneth such that she wouldn’t be entitled to the QPSA benefit.  The federal common law would similarly prevent her from receiving the benefit under the broader principle that no person should profit from her own wrong.

No matter which law applied the result would be the same: Barbara wouldn’t receive pension benefits as Kenneth’s surviving spouse.  That result is logical and fair and appears to achieve the exact purpose for which slayer statutes exist in the first place.  But, as is frequently the case, there’s a twist.

 

Children Sue for Benefits

Kenneth and Barbara have two kids: a son, Kevin, and a daughter, Katrina.  The kids brought a petition in the District Court, both individually and with Kevin acting as the representative for his father’s estate, seeking an order requiring the QPSA benefit to be paid either to the estate or to them as their father’s heirs in light of the fact that their mother was ineligible for the benefit.  Goodyear responded to the petition and argued that because the plan doesn’t provide a contingent beneficiary, the pre-retirement spousal benefit was only available to an employee’s spouse under the terms of the plan, and Barbara’s disqualification meant that the QPSA wasn’t payable to anyone.

It was undisputed that under the terms of the plan, Barbara was the surviving spouse, and there was no designated contingent beneficiary.  The District Court ultimately agreed with Goodyear.  Applying the legal fiction that Barbara predeceased Kenneth, the court found that there was no surviving spouse under the terms of the plan and, therefore, no beneficiary to whom Goodyear would be required to pay the spousal benefit.

 

Plan Comes Out Ahead

The result in this case ultimately benefitted the plan because it didn’t have to pay the QPSA benefit at all.  Of course, that’s not really the intended effect of either the Alabama slayer statute or the federal common law rule that “killers don’t take.”  Some state’s slayer statutes specify that when a beneficiary becomes ineligible as a result of having killed an insured, the contingent beneficiary shall receive the benefit.  But even a specific statutory provision of that nature wouldn’t have changed the result for Kevin and Katrina when their father’s plan didn’t allow him to name contingent beneficiaries in the first place.

Federal law specifically allows for the division of retirement assets in an ERISA plan through qualified domestic relations orders to effectuate family support and division of property at divorce.  As such, Congress may have provided an exception for cases like Box if it had considered the effect of slayer statutes and other laws affecting beneficiary eligibility under ERISA plans.  As it stands, however, the analysis in each case will depend on the interplay between the applicable state or federal law and specific provisions of the plan at issue.

 

 

About the Authors

John T. Brooks

Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP

http://www.foley.com/

John T. Brooks is a partner with Foley & Lardner LLP focusing his practice in the area of estate, trust and fiduciary litigation. He has been Peer Review Rated as AV® Preeminent™, the highest performance rating in Martindale-Hubbell's peer review rating system and was recently re-elected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America® 2007-2012 in the field of trusts and estates. He was also selected for inclusion in the 2005-2012 Illinois Super Lawyers® lists and Leading Lawyer in 2003-2009.*

Mr. Brooks began his legal career in estate planning and administration and subsequently transferred the substantive knowledge he acquired in those areas into a successful practice litigating contested estate and trust matters. His practice encompasses all aspects of estate and trust litigation including breach of fiduciary duty issues, judicial constructions of wills and trusts, will and trust contests, tax litigation, contested heirship, adoption and paternity issues, charitable pledge disputes, guardianship matters, estate planning malpractice, and wrongful death actions. He also handles appeals of these matters as well.

Mr. Brooks is a frequent speaker on topics related to estate and trust litigation and fiduciary risk management. He has lectured to the Chicago Bar Association, the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education (IICLE), ALI-ABA, the Heckerling Institute, the American Bankers Association, Chicago Estate Planning Council and the Chicago Council on Planned Giving. Besides the numerous publications listed below, Mr. Brooks is the general editor of IICLE’s 2009 Handbook for Lawyers: Litigating Disputed Estates, Trusts, Guardianships and Charitable Bequests. He also authors a monthly e-mail newsletter for and serves on the Advisory Board to Trusts & Estates magazine.

Mr. Brooks' professional activities include membership in the Chicago Bar Association and the American College of Trust & Estate Counsel.

Mr. Brooks earned both his B.S. (business administration) and law degree (magna cum laude) from the University of Illinois. He is admitted to the bar in both Illinois and Florida and is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He represents individuals as well as banks and trust companies.

Jena L. Levin

Jena L. Levin is an associate with Foley & Lardner LLP in Chicago and is a member of the Firm’s Business Litigation & Dispute Resolution Practice.

 

Ms. Levin concentrates a substantial portion of her practice on litigating contested estate and trust matters on behalf of individual clients, banks and non-profit corporations.  Her practice involves all aspects of estate and trust litigation including will and trust contests and judicial constructions, contested heirship and adoption issues, disputes over the enforcement of charitable pledges, and breach of fiduciary duty issues.  Ms. Levin is a frequent author on topics related to estate and trust litigation.  In addition to articles for the Trusts & Estates Magazine e-newsletter, she co-authors several chapters in the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education’s attorney practice handbooks.

 

Ms. Levin is a member of the Chicago Bar Association, the Illinois State Bar Association, and the American Bar Association.  She earned her law degree from Duke University School of Law (J.D., 2009). She received her bachelor's degree, with highest distinction, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (B.A., 2005), where she was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society.