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In Re Unisys Corp. Retiree Medical Benefits Erisa Litigation

E.D. Pa.March 20, 1995No. MDL 969Cited 27 times
Mixed ResultUnisys Corporation

Case Details

Judge(s)
Cahn
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
Third Circuit Court of Appeals decision on ERISA litigation regarding retiree medical benefits.
Circuit
3rd Circuit

Related Laws

erisa

Outcome

Third Circuit Court of Appeals addressed ERISA claims regarding Unisys Corporation's retiree medical benefits, determining liability for certain benefit modifications while remanding other issues for further proceedings.

What This Ruling Means

**Unisys Retiree Medical Benefits Case** This case involved retired Unisys Corporation employees who sued the company over changes to their medical benefits. The retirees claimed that Unisys violated federal law (ERISA) by modifying their healthcare coverage after they had already retired. They argued the company broke its promises about providing certain medical benefits and failed in its legal duties to manage retirement benefits properly. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals issued a mixed ruling. The court found that Unisys was liable for some of the benefit changes it made, meaning the company was legally responsible for certain modifications to retirees' medical coverage. However, the court sent other parts of the case back to lower courts for additional review, indicating that not all issues were resolved. This case matters for workers because it shows that companies can be held accountable when they improperly change retiree benefits. It demonstrates that employees have legal protections under ERISA when employers manage retirement and health benefits. However, the mixed outcome also highlights that these cases can be complex, and workers may need to pursue lengthy legal battles to protect their promised benefits. The ruling reinforces that retirement benefit promises have legal weight.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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In Re Unisys Corp. Retiree Medical Benefits Erisa
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Tisch
COLOCTAPPMar 2019

Corporations—Shareholder Derivative Action—Closely Held Corporation—Civil Theft—Piercing the Corporate Veil—Alter Ego—Dividends and Distributions—Statute of Limitations. Father assigned his stock in the Liquor Barn, Ltd. (Liquor Barn) to his son Gary, who was the company's sole director and majority shareholder. The two other Tisch siblings (the Tisch siblings) held nonvoting shares in Liquor Barn. The Tisch siblings filed a complaint against Gary alleging various causes of action related to his fiduciary duties. A jury found that Gary had committed civil theft against the Tisch siblings individually and against Liquor Barn by using the Liquor Barn profits for his private use. It awarded the Tisch siblings treble damages on the civil theft claim. The trial court entered judgment against Gary and Liquor Barn and awarded the Tisch siblings costs and attorney fees. Gary moved to amend the judgment, arguing that the trial court erred in piercing the corporate veil and that this error would prejudice Liquor Barn's creditors. He then filed a combined motion for new trial and relief from judgment, arguing that the trial court erred in disqualifying his expert witness and in piercing the corporate veil. The trial court denied the postjudgment motions and awarded the Tisch siblings attorney fees that exceeded the lodestar. On appeal, Gary contended that the trial court erroneously found that he, as an individual, and the Liquor Barn were "alter egos." Here, the record shows that Gary comingled his personal and other business funds with the Liquor Barn's funds, kept inadequate corporate records, routinely disregarded the legal formalities of declaring shareholder distributions and filing taxes related to payments he made to himself, and used corporate funds for noncorporate purposes and Gary's position as controlling and sole voting shareholder facilitated his misuse of Liquor Barn's funds. The record also shows that Gary used the corporate fiction to defeat the Tisch sibling

Plaintiff Win
In re the Interest of Black
COLOCTAPPJan 2018

Probate—Disability—Conservator—Fiduciary Duty—Conflict of Interest—Jurisdiction—Civil Theft. Black is the former conservator for his mentally-ill sister, Joanne. When he filed his petition to be appointed conservator, he did not tell the probate court that he sought the appointment to disclaim Joanne's interest in payable-on-death (POD) assets so that they could be redistributed in accordance with his and his children's expectations of his mother's estate plan. Nor did he disclose this conflict of interest when he requested authorization to disclaim Joanne's assets. Black later admitted this conflict. The probate court found that Black breached his fiduciary duties and committed civil theft by converting his sister's assets for his own benefit. Specifically, the court concluded that Black failed to adequately disclose his intent to use a disclaimer to divest his sister of one-third of the (POD) assets, and therefore did not have the court's authorization to redirect the assets. The court determined that his actions were undertaken in bad faith and satisfied the elements of civil theft. Based on its findings, the court surcharged Black in the amount of the converted funds and then trebled those damages under the civil theft statute. On appeal, Black first argued that the probate court lacked jurisdiction to enter the hearing order because only a CRCP 60(b) motion, and not a motion to void the disclaimer, could undo the court's order authorizing the disclaimer. However, the motion to void the disclaimer did not seek relief from a final order. Instead, the motion alleged that Black had breached his fiduciary duties to Joanne while acting as conservator, and it sought to unwind a transaction based on this breach. Thus, the probate court's jurisdiction was based on the court's authority to monitor fiduciaries over whom it has obtained jurisdiction. Accordingly, the court had jurisdiction to adjudicate the allegations and issues raised by the motion to void the disclaimer

Plaintiff Win

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