« Oldham: "Would Enactment of the Uniform Premarital and Marital Agreement Act in All Fifty States Change U.S. Law Regarding Premarital Agreements?" | Main | Breger: "The (In)Visibility of Motherhood in Family Court Proceedings" »
January 31, 2013
Feuer: "How the Supreme Court and the Department of Labor May Dispel Myths About ERISA’S Family Law Provisions and Protect the Benefit Entitlements that Arise Thereunder"
Albert Feuer has posted his paper entitled "How the Supreme Court and the Department of Labor May Dispel Myths About ERISA’S Family Law Provisions and Protect the Benefit Entitlements that Arise Thereunder" 45 J. Marshall L. Rev. 635 (2012) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This Article discusses the interaction between ERISA
and family law (i.e., domestic relations law and estates law). The Supreme
Court and the US Department of Labor (“DOL”) may improve the practice of both
ERISA and family law by dispelling myths that they have reinforced.
First, the Court incorrectly asserted that the Retirement Equity Act of 1984
(“REACT”) “enhanced protection to the spouse and dependent children in the
event of divorce or separation, and in the event of death the surviving
spouse.” This assertion has encouraged plan administrators and other courts to
find that domestic relations orders (“DROs”) govern an excessively broad class
of ERISA pension and life insurance benefits. However, REACT, like ERISA, was a
reaction to the inadequacies of state law and prior federal law pertaining to
domestic relations and estate law. Thus, it similarly circumscribed the role of
state law and increased substantive protections for ERISA participants and
beneficiaries.
Second, the Court added a gloss to ERISA in non-family law contexts that
emphasizes the importance of limiting the cost burdens imposed on employers by
ERISA, which, if excessive, would discourage employers from establishing and
maintaining employee benefit plans. This gloss has encouraged other courts to
lose sight of the leitmotif of ERISA, protecting plan benefits of participants
and beneficiaries. Thus, courts have wrongfully permitted individuals to use
superseded (state family law or federal common law) ownership claims to obtain
benefit entitlements from the recipients of those entitlements rather than the
plans. Such holdings violate Supreme Court decisions extending over more than a
hundred years, which consistently protected ERISA entitlements and other
federal entitlements, before and after their distribution.
The DOL has created issues by both its actions and inactions. First, the DOL
incorrectly asserted that the ERISA benefit claim provisions should not govern
plan reviews of DRO for compliance with the pertinent ERISA requirements, the
qualified domestic relations order (“QDRO”) requirements, but has failed to
present an alternative set of review provisions for plans to follow. This has
created unnecessary issues concerning the roles of plan administrators,
participants, their families, and courts in such reviews Second, the DOL has
provided only nonbinding, informal guidance to the general public rather than
extensive DOL regulations with respect the QDRO requirements. This has created
unnecessary issues for persons seeking to prepare a DRO that complies with the
pertinent ERISA requirements, and for plan administrators responding to such
requests.
MR
January 31, 2013 in Scholarship, Family Law | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef017c32c15c3d970b
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Feuer: "How the Supreme Court and the Department of Labor May Dispel Myths About ERISA’S Family Law Provisions and Protect the Benefit Entitlements that Arise Thereunder":
