NOTICE: This opinion is subject to
formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the
United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington,
D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in
order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print
goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 14–723
_________________
ROBERT MONTANILE, PETITIONER
v. BOARD
OF TRUSTEES of the NATIONAL ELEVATOR INDUSTRY HEALTH BENEFIT
PLAN
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the eleventh circuit
[January 20, 2016]
Justice Thomas delivered the opinion of the
Court.[
1]*
When a third party injures a participant in an
employee benefits plan under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 88Stat. 829, as amended, 29
U. S. C. §1001
et seq., the plan frequently pays
covered medical expenses. The terms of these plans often include a
subrogation clause requiring a participant to reimburse the plan if
the participant later recovers money from the third party for his
injuries. And under ERISA §502(a)(3), 29 U. S. C.
§1132(a)(3), plan fiduciaries can file civil suits “to obtain
. . . appropriate equitable relief . . . to
enforce . . . the terms of the plan.”[
2]
In this case, we consider what happens when a
participant obtains a settlement fund from a third party, but
spends the whole settlement on nontraceable items (for instance, on
services or consumable items like food). We evaluate in particular
whether a plan fiduciary can sue under §502(a)(3) to recover from
the participant’s remaining assets the medical expenses it paid on
the participant’s behalf. We hold that, when a participant
dissipates the whole settlement on nontraceable items, the
fiduciary cannot bring a suit to attach the participant’s general
assets under §502(a)(3) because the suit is not one for
“appropriate equitable relief.” In this case, it is unclear whether
the participant dissipated all of his settlement in this manner, so
we remand for further proceedings.
I
Petitioner Robert Montanile was a participant
in a health benefits plan governed by ERISA and administered by
respondent, the Board of Trustees of the National Elevator Industry
Health Benefit Plan (Board of Trustees or Board). The plan must pay
for certain medical ex-penses that beneficiaries or participants
incur. The plan may demand reimbursement, however, when a
participant recovers money from a third party for medical expenses.
The plan states: “Amounts that have been recovered by a
[ participant] from another party are assets of the Plan
. . . and are not distributable to any person or entity
without the Plan’s written release of its subrogation interest.”
App. 45. The plan also provides that “any amounts” that a
participant “recover[s] from another party by award, judgment,
settlement or otherwise . . . will promptly be applied
first to reimburse the Plan in full for benefits advanced by the
Plan . . . and without reduction for attorneys’ fees,
costs, expenses or damages claimed by the covered person.”
Id., at 46. Participants must notify the plan and obtain its
consent before settling claims.
In December 2008, a drunk driver ran through a
stop sign and crashed into Montanile’s vehicle. The accident
severely injured Montanile, and the plan paid at least $121,044.02
for his initial medical care. Montanile signed a reimbursement
agreement reaffirming his obligation to reimburse the plan from any
recovery he obtained “as a result of any legal action or settlement
or otherwise.”
Id., at 51 (emphasis deleted).
Thereafter, Montanile filed a negligence claim
against the drunk driver and made a claim for uninsured motorist
benefits under Montanile’s car insurance. He obtained a $500,000
settlement. Montanile then paid his attorneys $200,000 and repaid
about $60,000 that they had advanced him. Thus, about $240,000
remained of the settlement. Montanile’s attorneys held most of that
sum in a client trust account. This included enough money to
satisfy Montanile’s obligations to the plan.
The Board of Trustees sought reimbursement from
Montanile on behalf of the plan, and Montanile’s attorney argued
that the plan was not entitled to any recovery. The parties
attempted but failed to reach an agreement about reimbursement.
After discussions broke down, Montanile’s attorney informed the
Board that he would distribute the remaining settlement funds to
Montanile unless the Board objected within 14 days. The Board did
not respond within that time, so Montanile’s attorney gave
Montanile the remainder of the funds.
Six months after negotiations ended, the Board
sued Montanile in District Court under ERISA §502(a)(3), 29
U. S. C. §1132(a)(3), seeking repayment of the
$121,044.02 the plan had expended on his medical care. The Board
asked the court to enforce an equitable lien upon any settlement
funds or any property which are “ ‘in [ Montanile’s]
actual or constructive possession.’ ” 593 Fed. Appx. 903, 906
(CA11 2014) (quoting complaint). Because Montanile had already
taken possession of the settlement funds, the Board also sought an
order enjoining Montanile from dissipating any such funds.
Montanile then stipulated that he still possessed some of the
settlement proceeds.
The District Court granted summary judgment to
the Board. No. 12–80746–Civ. (SD Fla., Apr. 18, 2014), 2014 WL
8514011, *1. The court rejected Montanile’s argument that, because
he had by that time spent almost all of the settlement funds, there
was no specific, identifiable fund separate from his general assets
against which the Board’s equitable lien could be enforced.
Id., at *8–*11. The court held that, even if Montanile had
dissipated some or all of the settlement funds, the Board was
entitled to reimbursement from Montanile’s general assets.
Id., at *10–*11. The court entered judgment for the Board in
the amount of $121,044.02.
The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
affirmed. It reasoned that a plan can always enforce an equitable
lien once the lien attaches, and that dissipation of the specific
fund to which the lien attached cannot destroy the underlying
reimbursement obligation. The court therefore held that the plan
can recover out of a participant’s general assets when the
participant dissipates the specifically identified fund. 593 Fed.
Appx., at 908.
We granted certiorari to resolve a conflict
among the Courts of Appeals over whether an ERISA fiduciary can
enforce an equitable lien against a defendant’s general assets
under these circumstances.[
3]
575 U. S. ___ (2015). We hold that it cannot, and accordingly
reverse the judgment of the Eleventh Circuit and remand for further
proceedings.
II
A
As previously stated, §502(a)(3) of ERISA
authorizes plan fiduciaries like the Board of Trustees to bring
civil suits “to obtain other appropriate equitable relief
. . . to enforce . . . the terms of the plan.”
29 U. S. C. §1132(a)(3). Our cases explain that the term
“equitable relief” in §502(a)(3) is limited to “those categories of
relief that were
typically available in equity” during the
days of the divided bench (meaning, the period before 1938 when
courts oflaw and equity were separate).
Mertens v.
Hewitt
Associates, 508 U. S. 248, 256 (1993) . Under this Court’s
precedents, whether the remedy a plaintiff seeks “is legal or
equitable depends on [(1)] the basis for [the plaintiff’s] claim
and [(2)] the nature of the underlying remedies sought.”
Sereboff v.
Mid Atlantic Medical Services, Inc., 547
U. S. 356, 363 (2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). Our
precedents also prescribe a framework for resolving this inquiry.
To determine how to characterize the basis of a plaintiff’s claim
and the nature of the remedies sought, we turn to standard
treatises on equity, which establish the “basic contours” of what
equitable relief was typically available in premerger equity
courts.
Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v.
Knudson, 534 U. S. 204, 217 (2002) .
We have employed this approach in three earlier
cases where, as here, the plan fiduciary sought reimbursement for
medical expenses after the plan beneficiary or participant
recovered money from a third party. Under these precedents, the
basis for the Board’s claim is equitable. But our cases do not
resolve whether the
remedy the Board now seeks—enforcement
of an equitable lien by agreement against the defendant’s general
assets—is equitable in nature.
First, in
Great-West, we held that a plan
with a claim for an equitable lien was—in the circumstances
presented- seeking a legal rather than an equitable remedy. In that
case, a plan sought to enforce an equitable lien by obtaining a
money judgment from the defendants. The plan could not enforce the
lien against the third-party settlement that the defendants had
obtained because the defendants never actually possessed that fund;
the fund went directly to the defendants’ attorneys and to a
restricted trust. We held that the plan sought a legal rem-edy, not
an equitable one, even though the plan claimed that the money
judgment was a form of restitution.
Id., at 208–209,
213–214. We explained that restitution in equity typically involved
enforcement of “a constructive trust or an equitable lien, where
money or property identified as belonging in good conscience to the
plaintiff could clearly be traced to particular funds or property
in the defendant’s possession.”
Id., at 213. But the
restitution sought in
Great-West was legal—not
equitable—because the specific funds to which the fiduciaries
“claim[ed] an entitlement . . . [we]re not in [the
defendants’] possession.”
Id., at 214. Since both the basis
for the claim and the particular remedy sought were not equitable,
the plan could not sue under §502(a)(3).
Next, in
Sereboff, we held that both the
basis for the claim and the remedy sought were equitable. The plan
there sought reimbursement from beneficiaries who had retained
their settlement fund in a separate account. 547 U. S., at
359–360. We held that the basis for the plan’s claim was equitable
because the plan sought to enforce an equitable lien by agreement,
a type of equitable lien created by an agreement to convey a
particular fund to another party. See
id., at 363–364. The
lien existed in
Sereboff because of the beneficiaries’
agreement with the plan to convey the proceeds of any third-party
settlement. We explained that a claim to enforce such a lien is
equitable because the plan “could rely on a familiar rul[e] of
equity” to collect—specifically, the rule “that a contract to
convey a specific object even before it is acquired will make the
contractor a trustee as soon as he gets a title to the thing.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted; alteration in
original). The underlying remedies that the plan sought also were
equitable, because the plan “sought specifically identifiable funds
that were within the possession and control” of the
beneficiaries—not recovery from the beneficiaries’ “assets
generally.”
Id., at 362–363 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Finally, in
US Airways, Inc. v.
McCutchen, 569 U. S. ___ (2013), we reaffirmed our
analysis in
Sereboff and again concluded that a plan sought
to enforce an equitable claim by seeking equitable remedies. As in
Sereboff, “the basis for [the plan’s] claim was equitable”
because the plan’s terms created an equitable lien by agreement on
a third-party settlement. See 569 U. S.
, at ___ (slip
op., at 5) (internal quotation marks omitted). And, as in
Sereboff, “[t]he nature of the recovery requested” by the
plan “was equitable because [it] claimed specifically identifiable
funds within the [beneficiaries’] control—that is, a portion of the
settlement they had gotten.” 569 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
5) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Under these principles, the basis for the
Board’s claim here is equitable: The Board had an equitable lien by
agreement that attached to Montanile’s settlement fund when he
obtained title to that fund. And the nature of the Board’s
underlying
remedy would have been equitable had it
immediately sued to enforce the lien against the settlement fund
then in Montanile’s possession. That does not resolve this case,
however. Our prior cases do not address whether a plan is still
seeking an equitable remedy when the defendant, who once possessed
the settlement fund, has dissipated it all, and the plan then seeks
to recover out of the defendant’s general assets.
B
To resolve this issue, we turn to standard
equity trea-tises. As we explain below, those treatises make clear
that a plaintiff could ordinarily enforce an equitable lien only
against specifically identified funds that remain in the
defendant’s possession or against traceable items that the
defendant purchased with the funds (
e.g., identifiable
property like a car). A defendant’s expenditure of the entire
identifiable fund on nontraceable items (like food or travel)
destroys an equitable lien. The plaintiff then may have a personal
claim against the defendant’s general assets—but recovering out of
those assets is a
legal remedy, not an equitable one.
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.” 4 S. Symons, Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence §1234, p. 694
(5th ed. 1941) (Pomeroy). Equitable liens thus are ordinarily
enforceable only against a specifically identified fund because 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.”
Id., §1233, at
692; see also Restatement of Restitution §215, Comment
a, p.
866 (1936) (Restatement) (enforcement of equitable lien requires
showing that the defendant “still holds the property or property
which is in whole or in part its product”); 1 D. Dobbs, Law of
Remedies §1.4, p. 19 (2d ed. 1993) (Dobbs) (similar). This general
rule’s application to equitable liens includes equitable liens by
agreement, which depend on “the notion . . . that the
contract creates some right or interest in or over specific
property,” and are enforceable only if “the decree of the court can
lay hold of” that specific property. 4 Pomeroy §1234, at
694–695.
If, instead of preserving the specific fund
subject to the lien, the defendant dissipated the entire fund on
nontraceable items, that complete dissipation eliminated the lien.
Even though the defendant’s conduct was wrongful, the plaintiff
could not attach the defendant’s general assets instead. Absent
specific exceptions not relevant here, “where a person wrongfully
dispose[d] of the property of another but the property cannot be
traced into any product, the other . . . cannot enforce a
constructive trust or lien
upon any part of the wrongdoer’s
property.” Restatement §215(1), at 866 (emphasis added); see
also
Great-West, 534 U. S., at 213–214 (citing
Restatement §160). The plaintiff had “merely a personal claim
against the wrongdoer”—a quintessential action at law.
Id.,
§215(1), at 866.
In sum, at equity, a plaintiff ordinarily could
not enforce any type of equitable lien if the defendant once
possessed a separate, identifiable fund to which the lien attached,
but then dissipated it all. The plaintiff could not attach the
defendant’s general assets instead because those assets were not
part of the specific thing to which the lien attached. This rule
applied to equitable liens by agreement as well as other types of
equitable liens.
III
The Board of Trustees nonetheless maintains
that it can enforce its equitable lien against Montanile’s general
assets. We consider the Board’s arguments in turn.
A
First, the Board argues that, while equity
courts ordinarily required plaintiffs to trace a specific,
identifiable fund in the defendant’s possession to which the lien
attached, there is an exception for equitable liens by agreement.
The Board asserts that equitable liens by agreement require no such
tracing, and can be enforced against a defendant’s general assets.
According to the Board, we recognized this exception in
Sereboff by distinguishing between equitable restitution
(where a lien attaches because the defendant misappropriated
property from the plaintiff ) and equitable liens by
agreement.
The Board misreads
Sereboff, which left
untouched the rule that
all types of equitable liens must be
enforced against a specifically identified fund in the defendant’s
possession. See 1 Dobbs §4.3(3), at 601, 603. The question we faced
in
Sereboff was whether plaintiffs seeking an equitable lien
by agreement must “identify an asset they originally possessed,
which was improperly acquired and converted into property the
defendant held.” 547 U. S., at 365. We observed that such a
requirement, although characteristic of restitutionary relief, does
not “appl[y] to equitable liens by agreement or assignment.”
Ibid. (discussing
Barnes v.
Alexander, 232
U. S. 117 (1914) ). That is because the basic premise of an
equitable lien by agreement is that, rather than physically taking
the plaintiff’s property, the defendant constructively possesses a
fund to which the plaintiff is entitled. But the plaintiff must
still identify a specific fund in the defendant’s possession to
enforce the lien. See
id., at 123 (“Having a lien upon the
fund, as soon as it was identified they could follow it into the
hands of the appellant”).
B
Second, the Board contends that historical
equity practice supports enforcement of its equitable lien against
Montanile’s general assets. The Board identifies three methods that
equity courts purportedly employed to effectuate this principle:
substitute money decrees, deficiency judgments, and the swollen
assets doctrine. This argument also fails.
We have long rejected the argument that
“equitable relief” under §502(a)(3) means “whatever relief a court
of equity is empowered to provide in the particular case atissue,”
including ancillary legal remedies.
Mertens, 508
U. S.
, at 256. In “many situations . . . an
equity court could establish purely legal rights and grant legal
remedies which would otherwise be beyond the scope of its
authority.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). But
these legal remedies were not relief “typically available in
equity,” and interpreting them as such would eliminate any limit on
the meaning of “equitable relief” and would “render the modifier
superfluous.”
Id., at 256, 258 (emphasis deleted); see also
Great-West,
supra, at 210. As we have explained—and
as the Board conceded at oral argument—as a general rule,
plaintiffs cannot enforce an equitable lien against a defendant’s
general assets. See Part II–B,
supra. The Board contends
that there is an exception if the defendant wrongfully dissipates
the equitable lien to thwart its enforcement. But none of the
Board’s examples show that such relief was “typically available” in
equity.[
4]
The specific methods by which equity courts
might have awarded relief from a defendant’s general assets only
confirm that the Board seeks legal, not equitable, remedies. While
equity courts sometimes awarded money decrees as a substitute for
the value of the equitable lien, they were still legal remedies,
because they were “wholly pecuniary and personal.” 4 Pomeroy §1234,
at 694. The same is true with respect to deficiency judgments.
Equity courts could award both of these remedies as part of their
ancillary jurisdiction to award complete relief. But the treatises
make clear that when equity courts did so, “the rights of the
parties are strictly legal, and the final remedy granted is of the
kind which might be conferred by a court of law.” 1
id.,
§231, at 410; see also 1 Dobbs §2.7, at 180–181, and §4.3(3), at
602 (similar); New Federal Equity Rules 10 (rev. 5th ed. 1925)
(authorizing equity courts to award such relief). But legal
remedies—even legal remedies that a court of equity could sometimes
award—are not “equitable relief” under §502(a)(3). See
Mertens,
supra, at 256–258.
The swollen assets doctrine also does not
establish that the relief the Board seeks is equitable. Under the
Board’s view of this doctrine, even if a defendant spends all of a
specifically identified fund, the mere fact that the defendant
wrongfully had assets that belonged to another increased the
defendant’s available assets, and justifies recovery from his
general assets. But most equity courts and treatises rejected that
theory. See Taft, Note, A Defense of a Limited Use of the Swollen
Assets Theory Where Money Has Wrongfully Been Mingled With Other
Money, 39 Colum. L. Rev. 172, 175 (1939) (describing the swollen
assets doctrine as “often . . . rejected by the courts”);
see also Oesterle, Deficiencies of the Restitutionary Right to
Trace Misappropriated Property in Equity and in UCC §9–306, 68
Cornell L. Rev. 172, 189, and n. 33 (1983) (similar). To
the extent that courts endorsed any version of the swollen assets
theory, they adopted a more limited rule: that commingling a
specifically identified fund—to which a lien attached—with a
different fund of the defendant’s did not destroy the lien.
Instead, that commingling allowed the plaintiff to recover the
amount of the lien from the entire pot of money. See Restatement
§209, at 844; Scott, The Right To Follow Money Wrong-fully Mingled
With Other Money, 27 Harv. L. Rev. 125, 125–126 (1913). Thus, even
under the version of the swollen assets doctrine adopted by some
courts, recovery out of Montanile’s general assets—in the absence
of commingling—would not have been “typically available”
relief.
C
Finally, the Board argues that ERISA’s
objectives—of enforcing plan documents according to their terms and
of protecting plan assets—would be best served by allowing plans to
enforce equitable liens against a participant’s general assets. The
Board also contends that, unless plans can enforce reimbursement
provisions against a defendant’s general assets, plans will lack
effective or cost-efficient remedies, and participants will
dissipate any settlement as quickly as possible, before fiduciaries
can sue.
We have rejected these arguments before, and do
so again. “[ V ]ague notions of a statute’s ‘basic
purpose’ are . . . inadequate to overcome the words of
its text regarding the
specific issue under consideration.”
Mertens,
supra, at 261. Had Congress sought to
prioritize the Board’s policy arguments, it could have drafted
§502(a)(3) to mirror ERISA provisions governing civil actions. One
of those provisions, for instance, allows participants and
beneficiaries to bring civil actions “to enforce [their] rights
under the terms of the plan” and does not limit them to equitable
relief.
Great-West, 534 U. S., at 221 (quoting 29
U. S. C. §1132(a)(1)(B) (1994 ed.)).
In any event, our interpretation of §502(a)(3)
promotes ERISA’s purposes by “allocat[ing] liability for
plan-related misdeeds in reasonable proportion to respective
actors’ power to control and prevent the misdeeds.”
Mertens,
supra, at 262. More than a decade has passed since we
decided
Great-West, and plans have developed safeguards
against participants’ and beneficiaries’ efforts to evade
reimbursement obligations. Plans that cover medical expenses know
how much medical care that participants and beneficiaries require,
and have the incentive to investigate and track expensive claims.
Plan provisions—like the ones here—obligate participants and
beneficiaries to notify the plan of legal process against third
parties and to give the plan a right of subrogation.
The Board protests that tracking and
participating in legal proceedings is hard and costly, and that
settlements are often shrouded in secrecy. The facts of this case
undercut that argument. The Board had sufficient notice of
Montanile’s settlement to have taken various steps to preserve
those funds. Most notably, when negotiations broke down and
Montanile’s lawyer expressed his intent to disburse the remaining
settlement funds to Montanile unless the plan objected within 14
days, the Board could have—but did not—object. Moreover, the Board
could have filed suit immediately, rather than waiting half a
year.
IV
Because the lower courts erroneously held that
the plan could recover out of Montanile’s general assets, they did
not determine whether Montanile kept his settlement fund separate
from his general assets or dissipated the entire fund on
nontraceable assets. At oral argument, Montanile’s counsel
acknowledged “a genuine issue of . . . material fact on
how much dissipation there was” anda lack of record evidence as to
whether Montanile mixed the settlement fund with his general
assets. A remandis necessary so that the District Court can make
that determination.
* * *
We reverse the judgment of the Eleventh
Circuit and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.