Outcome
The court entered default judgment against PAS, LLC for failing to comply with orders to produce payroll records and make contributions to union benefit funds. Plaintiffs obtained judgment for $120,291.00 plus interest and liquidated damages under ERISA Section 502.
What This Ruling Means
**Union Wins $120,000 After Company Refuses to Pay Required Benefits**
This case involved a dispute between Teamsters Local Union No. 727's health and welfare fund and PAS, LLC, a company whose workers were covered by a union contract. The union alleged that PAS failed to make required contributions to employee benefit funds, which employers must pay under collective bargaining agreements to provide healthcare and other benefits to workers.
When the union sued, PAS refused to cooperate with the court. The company failed to produce payroll records that would show how much it owed and ignored court orders to make the required benefit payments. Because of this non-compliance, the court entered a default judgment against PAS.
The court awarded the union $120,291 in unpaid contributions, plus additional interest and penalty damages under federal ERISA law, which governs employee benefit plans.
**What this means for workers:** If your employer has a union contract requiring benefit contributions, those payments aren't optional – they're legally required. When companies try to skip these payments, unions can successfully sue to recover the money, ensuring workers don't lose healthcare and other benefits they've earned through their labor agreements.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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This ruling information is sourced from public court records via CourtListener.com. It is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.