The district court found Loomis breached fiduciary duties owed to the Welfare Trust and awarded $1,107,213 in damages, but found no breach regarding the Annuity Trust or Pension Trust. The Ninth Circuit affirmed liability findings but vacated and remanded for recalculation of damages.
What This Ruling Means
**California Ironworkers Trust v. Loomis Sayles: Investment Company Must Pay for Poor Management**
This case involved California ironworkers' employee benefit funds that hired Loomis Sayles & Company to manage their investments. The ironworkers' trust funds claimed that Loomis Sayles failed to properly manage their money and breached their duty to act in the funds' best interests.
The court ruled that Loomis Sayles did breach its responsibilities to one of the three trust funds - the Welfare Trust that provides health benefits to workers. The company was ordered to pay over $1.1 million in damages. However, the court found no wrongdoing regarding the other two funds (the Annuity Trust and Pension Trust). On appeal, a higher court agreed that Loomis Sayles was liable but sent the case back to recalculate the exact damage amount.
This matters for workers because it shows that companies managing employee benefit funds have legal obligations to handle workers' money properly. When investment managers fail in these duties, they can be held financially responsible. This provides some protection for workers' retirement and health benefit funds, ensuring that the companies hired to grow these funds face consequences if they mismanage workers' money.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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