Check how courts have cited this case. Use our free citator for the most current treatment.
No. 9500765
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Stephen Bafford v. Administrative Cmte. of the Northrop Grumman Plan
No. 9500765 · Decided May 9, 2024
No. 9500765·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
May 9, 2024
Citation
No. 9500765
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
STEPHEN H. BAFFORD; LAURA No. 22-55634
BAFFORD; EVELYN L. WILSON,
on their own behalves and on behalf of D.C. No.
a class of similarly situated 2:18-cv-10219-
participants and beneficiaries, ODW-E
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v. OPINION
ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE
OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN
PENSION PLAN,
Defendant-Appellee,
and
NORTHROP GRUMMAN
CORPORATION; ALIGHT
SOLUTIONS LLC, FKA Hewitt
Associates LLC,
Defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
Otis D. Wright II, District Judge, Presiding
2 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
Argued and Submitted October 17, 2023
San Francisco, California
Filed May 9, 2024
Before: Morgan Christen, Roopali H. Desai, and Anthony
D. Johnstone, Circuit Judges. *
Opinion by Judge Christen
SUMMARY **
Employee Retirement Income Security Act
The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal of an
action brought by pension plan participants, alleging that the
plan administrator violated the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act by not providing pension benefit
statements automatically or on request, and by providing
inaccurate pension benefit statements prior to the
participants’ retirements.
In an earlier appeal, the court affirmed in part and
vacated in part an earlier dismissal. On remand, plaintiffs
filed amended complaints. The panel held that the court’s
prior mandate did not preclude plaintiffs from pleading, on
remand, their claim for violation of 29 U.S.C.
*
Judge Desai was drawn at random to replace Judge Bea. Judge Desai
has reviewed the briefs, the record, and the recording of oral argument.
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 3
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) in the plan administrator’s failure to
provide them with pension benefit statements every three
years or with annual notices of the availability of such
statements. The panel further held that plaintiffs stated a
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim.
The panel held that plaintiffs also stated a claim under
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii), which requires administrators to furnish
pension benefit statements in response to participants’
written requests. The panel concluded that plaintiffs’ claim
that the administrator provided substantially inaccurate
pension benefit statements was cognizable under
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii). The panel also concluded that plaintiffs
adequately pleaded an ERISA violation based on their
allegation that they made written requests sufficient to
trigger the duty to produce pension benefit statements. The
panel rejected the administrator’s argument that there were
no remedies available for the ERISA violations plaintiffs
alleged.
Accordingly, the panel reversed the district court’s
dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i)-
(b)(ii) and remanded for further proceedings.
COUNSEL
Elizabeth Hopkins (argued) and Susan L. Meter, Kantor &
Kantor LLP, Northridge, California; Teresa S. Renaker and
Kirsten G. Scott, Renaker Scott LLP, San Francisco,
California; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Brett E. Legner (argued) and Nancy G. Ross, Mayer Brown
LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Kristin W. Silverman, Mayer Brown
LLP, Palo Alto, California; for Defendant-Appellee.
4 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
OPINION
CHRISTEN, Circuit Judge:
Evelyn Wilson and Stephen Bafford, participants in a
Northrop Grumman pension plan, allege that they requested
benefit statements from the plan’s administrator to plan their
retirements. In response, they received statements that
grossly overstated their retirement benefits. Wilson and
Bafford learned of the miscalculations only after they had
retired and had begun receiving their pensions. Plaintiffs
initiated this action, alleging that the plan administrator
violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., by not providing
pension benefit statements automatically or on request, and
by providing inaccurate pension benefit statements.
Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s dismissal of their ERISA
claims.
In an earlier appeal of this case, we held that an online
inquiry may qualify as a written request and trigger a plan
administrator’s statutory duty to provide a pension benefit
statement if the inquiry comprises an “‘intentional recording
of words in a visual form’ that conveyed a request for a
pension benefit statement.” Bafford v. Northrop Grumman
Corp., 994 F.3d 1020, 1030 (9th Cir. 2021) (quoting Writing,
Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)). We now hold that
Plaintiffs adequately alleged facts that, if proved, triggered
the duty to provide pension benefit statements, and that
Plaintiffs stated a viable ERISA claim by alleging that the
plan administrator provided substantially inaccurate pension
benefit statements. We therefore reverse and remand.
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 5
I. BACKGROUND
Evelyn Wilson and Stephen Bafford began working for
Northrop Grumman Corporation and participating in
subplans of a pension benefit plan that Northrop provided
for its employees, the Northrop Grumman Pension Plan (the
Plan), in the late 1980s. 1 Both Plaintiffs left Northrop after
eleven years of employment, then joined TRW Corporation
and participated in TRW’s pension plan. Northrop acquired
TRW in 2002, and at that time Plaintiffs again became
Northrop employees and TRW’s pension plan became a
Northrop pension plan. Only the pension plan from
Plaintiffs’ first periods of employment with Northrop is at
issue in this case.
The Plan is a defined benefit plan, meaning that
participants receive fixed monthly payments after they retire.
Benefits paid under the Plan are calculated using a formula
that includes the employee’s length of employment and the
average of the employee’s highest three years of salary
earned within the last ten years of Plan participation. For
employees like Plaintiffs who worked at Northrop during
more than one period, the formula counts years of service
from both periods but includes average salaries from only
the first period of employment.
The Administrative Committee of the Northrop Plan (the
Committee) is the Plan’s designated administrator. In that
role, the Committee sent several documents to Plan
participants, but it delegated authority to a third-party
contractor to handle some administrative services, including
1
Plaintiff Laura Bafford is Stephen Bafford’s wife and the beneficiary
of his pension under the Plan. In the remainder of this opinion, we use
“Plaintiffs” to refer to Wilson and Bafford in their capacities as Plan
participants.
6 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
providing pension-related documents. Relevant here, the
Committee sent participants a Summary Plan Description
(SPD) in 2014 that stated, “[y]ou can track the amount of
your accrued benefit and project your estimated benefit at
retirement online” at the website “My Benefits Access.” The
SPD also laid out participants’ right to “[o]btain a statement
telling you . . . what your estimated benefits would be at
normal retirement age if you stop working under the plan
now,” which “must be requested in writing.” Separately, the
Committee sent Annual Funding Notices in 2014, 2015, and
2016 that told participants, “you have the right to request and
receive, free of charge, a statement of your accrued pension
benefits. To request a statement of your accrued pension
benefits and/or retire, log on to My Benefits Access available
through Benefits OnLine or call the NGBC [Northrop
Grumman Benefits Center].”
Plaintiffs began planning their retirements in 2010 and
made several requests for pension statements over the next
few years. When they became Northrop employees for the
second time, Plaintiffs were told by Northrop representatives
that they would be able to obtain pension statements online
once the company corrected an issue with the website. Each
time Plaintiffs wanted to obtain a pension statement, they
logged onto the benefits website by typing their names and
Social Security or employee identification numbers, then
clicked through the online menu options to reach the pension
section. At that point, the website displayed a message
stating that it could not provide pension benefit statements,
and that in order to obtain one they would have to call a
telephone number instead. Plaintiffs allege that they called
the telephone number, again gave their names and Social
Security or employee identification numbers, provided
anticipated employment termination and retirement dates,
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 7
and requested calculations of their pension benefits. In
response, Plaintiffs received statements by mail showing
their projected monthly pension benefits. The statements
were titled “Retirement Plan Pension Estimate Calculation
Statement[s]” and explained that the “amounts are estimated
benefits using your personal information on file, the
assumptions you entered . . . , and the current terms of the
Retirement Plan.” Plaintiffs were aware that other
employees could obtain pension statements from the
website, so they continued to try to request statements
online. Bafford accessed the website to request statements
twelve times and received twelve responses by mail, each of
which informed him that he could expect to receive between
$2,000 and $2,115 per month. Wilson similarly requested
and received multiple statements, each of which informed
her that she could expect to receive approximately $1,630
per month. When Plaintiffs retired—Wilson in 2014 and
Bafford in 2016—they began receiving monthly payments
that were consistent with these statements.
In late 2016, the Committee switched its third-party
contractor and had an audit performed. The audit revealed
that the calculations of Plaintiffs’ benefits had incorrectly
applied the Plan’s formula by incorporating Plaintiffs’
salaries from their second periods of employment at
Northrop, which were higher than their salaries earned
during their first periods of employment. In early 2017, the
Committee notified Plaintiffs of the error and informed them
that it was cutting their benefits by more than half: Bafford’s
monthly benefit was reduced from $2,114.41 to $807.89 and
Wilson’s monthly benefit went from $1,630.11 to $768.59.
The Committee also notified Wilson that she would be
required to repay over $35,000 in pension benefits that she
had already received.
8 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
Plaintiffs filed suit in 2018, asserting that Northrop, the
Committee, and the contractor had breached their fiduciary
duties; that the Committee had violated ERISA’s disclosure
requirements; and that the contractor had violated state law. 2
The district court granted the Committee’s motion to
dismiss, ruling that Plaintiffs had failed to state cognizable
ERISA claims because, the court reasoned, the Defendants
had not breached their fiduciary duties, Plaintiffs’ online
inquiries were not “written requests” for pension benefit
statements within the meaning of ERISA, and ERISA
preempted their state-law claims. On appeal, we affirmed
dismissal of the fiduciary duty claim, reversed dismissal of
the state-law claims, vacated dismissal of the ERISA
disclosure claims, and remanded with instructions to allow
Plaintiffs to file an amended complaint. Bafford, 994 F.3d
at 1028, 1031–32.
On remand, Plaintiffs filed a Second Amended
Complaint realleging their state-law claims and their claims
against the Committee for violations of ERISA’s disclosure
provisions. Specifically, Plaintiffs alleged that they never
received pension benefit statements or notices informing
them how they could obtain such statements, and also
alleged they received inaccurate statements of their
retirement benefits in response to their written requests. The
district court dismissed with prejudice the claim based on
receipt of inaccurate pension benefit statements, this time
reasoning that ERISA did not require the Committee to
provide accurate pension benefit statements. The court
dismissed Plaintiffs’ other ERISA claims with leave to
amend because they were “so intertwined” with Plaintiffs’
2
Wilson and the Baffords filed separate suits in 2018 but Wilson joined
the Baffords’ case in 2019.
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 9
inaccuracy claim that the court had difficulty reviewing the
claims separately. The court subsequently declined to
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ state-law
claims. 3 When Plaintiffs filed a Third Amended Complaint
that continued to allege that they had received inaccurate
pension benefit statements, the court expressly ordered
Plaintiffs to file an amended complaint removing those
previously rejected allegations. The court ultimately struck
Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amended Complaint because it continued
to allege that Plaintiffs received inaccurate pension benefit
statements and because Plaintiffs’ allegations were
overbroad.
Rather than filing another amended complaint, Plaintiffs
requested entry of final judgment and filed a timely appeal.
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the district court’s compliance with
our mandate. Hall v. City of Los Angeles, 697 F.3d 1059,
1066 (9th Cir. 2012). We also review de novo a district
court’s dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim
under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) “and may
affirm on any ground supported by the record.” Saloojas,
Inc. v. Aetna Health of Cal., Inc., 80 F.4th 1011, 1014 (9th
Cir. 2023) (citing Hooks v. Kitsap Tenant Support Servs.,
Inc., 816 F.3d 550, 554 (9th Cir. 2016)). “[W]e accept the
factual allegations of the complaint as true and construe
them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Mudpie,
Inc. v. Travelers Cas. Ins. Co. of Am., 15 F.4th 885, 889 (9th
3
Plaintiffs refiled their state-law claims against the third-party contractor
in state court.
10 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
Cir. 2021) (alteration in original) (quoting L.A. Lakers, Inc.
v. Fed. Ins. Co., 869 F.3d 795, 800 (9th Cir. 2017)).
III. DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs’ operative complaint asserted claims for failure
to provide the pension benefit statements required by two
ERISA provisions. See 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i)–(ii).
Section 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) requires a plan administrator to
provide a pension benefit statement to an employed plan
participant at least once every three years. Plan
administrators can alternatively satisfy § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) by
complying with § 1025(a)(3)(A), which requires that plan
administrators provide at least annual notice of the
availability of pension benefit statements and notice of how
participants may obtain them. Plan administrators must
comply with one of these provisions without prompting;
there is no need for participants to make requests under these
provisions. Section 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) separately requires
plan administrators to provide pension benefit statements to
plan participants, employed or not, upon written request.
Participants are entitled to request and receive one such
statement per year. 29 U.S.C. § 1025(b). The pension
benefit statements provided under either § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i)
or § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) must reflect participants’ “total
benefits accrued.” 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(2)(A)(i)(I).
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that Plaintiffs never
received triennial pension benefit statements as provided in
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) or the annual notices described in
§ 1025(a)(3)(A). The operative complaint also alleges that
they received no pension benefit statements in response to
their online requests, or alternatively, that the statements
they did receive did not qualify as pension benefit statements
because they were grossly inaccurate.
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 11
This appeal presents four issues: (1) whether Plaintiffs
adequately alleged their claim under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) that
the Committee did not send triennial pension benefit
statements or annual notices of the availability of such
statements; (2) whether Plaintiffs’ allegation that the
Committee furnished inaccurate pension benefit statements
stated a cognizable cause of action under
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii); (3) whether Plaintiffs adequately
alleged that they made “written requests” for pension benefit
statements; and (4) whether any remedies are available for
the Committee’s alleged failure to provide compliant
pension benefit statements. 4
A. Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim
To state a claim for violating § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i),
Plaintiffs were required to allege that the Committee failed
to provide them with pension benefit statements every three
years, 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i), and also failed to
provide annual notice that pension benefit statements were
available and how to obtain them, 29 U.S.C.
§ 1025(a)(3)(A). See Bafford, 994 F.3d at 1028–29.
Plaintiffs’ operative complaint alleged that the Committee
did not comply with either alternative, and that the
Committee’s duty to provide pension benefit statements
4
The Committee also argues that Plaintiffs’ ERISA claims are time-
barred. The district court did not reach the statute of limitations issue
because it dismissed the complaint on the merits. “[A] complaint cannot
be dismissed unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove
no set of facts that would establish the timeliness of the claim.”
Supermail Cargo, Inc. v. United States, 68 F.3d 1204, 1207 (9th Cir.
1995). The Committee concedes in its briefing that the claim based on
one of Bafford’s requests for pension benefit statements may be timely.
Given the limited record before us, we decline to resolve in the first
instance whether Plaintiffs’ claims are timely.
12 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
every three years, or annual notice of how to obtain them,
began in December 2002 when Plaintiffs became Northrop
employees and Plan participants for the second time.
Plaintiffs sought statutory penalties and equitable remedies
for these alleged violations under 29 U.S.C. § 1132.
The Committee argues that our prior mandate precluded
Plaintiffs from pleading their § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim on
remand, and that even if the scope of the mandate allowed
Plaintiffs to replead this claim, the operative complaint does
not state a viable cause of action. We conclude that
Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim survives the
Committee’s Rule 12(b)(6) challenge.
1. Our prior mandate did not preclude Plaintiffs
from repleading their § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim
on remand.
The district court allowed Plaintiffs to replead their
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim on remand “[i]n light of the Ninth
Circuit’s mandate.” The Committee argues the district court
erred because our prior decision precluded Plaintiffs from
repleading their claim. We disagree.
Our prior opinion reasoned that Plaintiffs’
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim was inadequately pleaded because,
although the complaint alleged that the Committee did not
send triennial pension benefit statements, it did not allege
that the Committee failed to comply with the alternative
annual notice provision in § 1025(a)(3)(A). Bafford, 994
F.3d at 1029. We did not hold that this inadequacy was
impossible to cure. Instead, we “direct[ed] the district court
to permit Plaintiffs to file an amended complaint.” Id. at
1032. “Absent a mandate which explicitly directs to the
contrary, a district court upon remand can permit the plaintiff
to file additional pleadings.” S.F. Herring Ass’n v. Dep’t of
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 13
the Interior, 946 F.3d 564, 574 (9th Cir. 2019) (quoting
Nguyen v. United States, 792 F.2d 1500, 1502 (9th Cir.
1986)). Because our order did not express “clear intent to
deny amendment seeking to raise new issues not decided by
the . . . appeal,” id., the district court did not err by allowing
Plaintiffs to replead their § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim.
2. Plaintiffs adequately alleged their
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim.
Next, the Committee argues that Plaintiffs “plead[ed]
themselves out of court” on their § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i) claim
because their complaint quoted from a Summary Plan
Description and three Annual Funding Notices were
attached to their complaint. The Committee contends that
these documents show that it provided annual notice of the
availability of pension benefit statements required by the
alternate provision, § 1025(a)(3)(A). Plaintiffs counter that
the SPD and Annual Funding Notices are required by other
ERISA provisions and cannot also satisfy § 1025(a)(3)(A).
We consider these documents because they were
incorporated into the complaint and the complaint “refers
extensively to the document[s] or the document[s] form[] the
basis of the plaintiff’s claim.” Steinle v. City & Cnty. of San
Francisco, 919 F.3d 1154, 1162–63 (9th Cir. 2019) (quoting
United States v. Ritchie, 342 F.3d 903, 908 (9th Cir. 2003)).
Plaintiffs cite no authority barring documents from fulfilling
multiple ERISA requirements simultaneously and we do not
know of any. Thus, we consider whether either document
vitiates Plaintiffs’ claim.
Both the SPD and the Annual Funding Notices appear to
comply with § 1025(a)(3)(A). The SPD informed Plan
participants that they had the right to “[o]btain a statement
telling you . . . what your estimated benefits would be at
14 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
normal retirement age if you stop working under the plan
now,” and that the “statement must be requested in writing.”
The SPD also informed participants they could “track the
amount of your accrued benefit . . . online at My Benefits
Access, available at Benefits OnLine.” That disclosure
complied with § 1025(a)(3)(A) because it gave “notice of the
availability of the pension benefit statement” and, in
conjunction with the contact information on the last page of
the document, it conveyed “the ways in which the participant
may obtain such statement.” 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(3)(A).
The Annual Funding Notices similarly informed Plan
participants that “you have the right to request and receive,
free of charge, a statement of your accrued pension benefits.
To request a statement of your accrued pension benefits . . .
log on to MyBenefits Access available through Benefits
OnLine or call the NGBC.”
The complaint alleges that Plaintiffs were unable to
obtain pension benefit statements through the website
because when they attempted to follow the instructions in the
SPD and Annual Funding Notice, the website displayed
messages stating that it was unable to provide pension
benefit statements and directing Plaintiffs to call a telephone
number instead. Plaintiffs argue that the Committee
breached its duty to tell them how to access pension benefit
statements because the website did not actually allow them
to obtain such statements. To the extent the SPD and Annual
Funding Notice pointed participants to the website to request
pension benefit statements and Plaintiffs prove that the
website failed to function as promised, the documents
incorporated into the complaint do not satisfy the
Committee’s duty under § 1025(a)(3)(A). However, the
documents also notified participants that they could request
statements by mail and telephone; Plaintiffs received
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 15
statements in response to the inquiries they made, and they
do not allege it was impossible to request and receive
statements by mail.
Nevertheless, the Committee’s argument that Plaintiffs
defeated their own claim by incorporating these documents
in their complaint, thereby conceding that they received
these notices, ultimately fails because this record does not
establish that Plaintiffs received an SPD or Annual Funding
Notice at least once each year that they were employed at
Northrop and participating in the Plan. See 29 U.S.C.
§ 1025(a)(3)(A). The record before us shows only that the
Committee provided an SPD in 2014 and Annual Funding
Notices in 2014, 2015, and 2016; Plaintiffs each worked for
Northrop for over a decade after they returned to the
company in 2002. At this stage of the litigation, we cannot
conclude that the Committee satisfied § 1025(a)(3)(A).
B. Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim
Separate from the provisions that require plan
administrators to provide automatic statements or notices,
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) requires administrators to furnish
pension benefit statements in response to participants’
written requests. We previously remanded this case to allow
Plaintiffs to allege facts supporting their implied allegation
that their online inquiries qualified as written requests for
pension benefit statements, and Plaintiffs amended their
complaint on remand. The district court ruled it was
plausible that Plaintiffs’ online communications to the
Committee qualified as written requests, but the court also
ruled that providing inaccurate pension benefit statements
does not violate ERISA’s disclosure requirements. The
district court dismissed Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim
on this basis.
16 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
On appeal, the Committee provides multiple alternative
reasons to affirm the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim: Plaintiffs did not make written
requests, the documents they requested were not pension
benefit statements, and Plaintiffs are not eligible for any of
the remedies they seek. We first conclude that Plaintiffs’
claim that the Committee provided substantially inaccurate
pension benefit statements is cognizable. We then conclude
that Plaintiffs adequately pleaded an ERISA violation based
on their allegation that they made written requests sufficient
to trigger the duty to produce pension benefit statements, and
that we cannot determine on this record what type of
documents Plaintiffs requested. Finally, we consider and
reject the Committee’s argument that there are no remedies
available for the ERISA violations Plaintiffs allege.
1. Plaintiffs state a viable claim that they
received inaccurate pension benefit
statements.
The parties do not cite, and we are unaware of, any
circuit or Supreme Court authority addressing whether a
claim under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) may be premised on the
allegation that a plan administrator provided an inaccurate
pension benefit statement. The district court reasoned that
ERISA contains no “plain language suggesting that an
inaccuracy in a statement constitutes an ERISA violation.”
We respectfully disagree.
“We begin, as always, with the language of the statute,”
Duncan v. Walker, 533 U.S. 167, 172 (2001), and read
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) along with § 1025(a)(2)(A). The latter
provision explains that the pension benefit statements that
plan administrators must provide are required to notify
participants of their “total benefits accrued” and the
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 17
“nonforfeitable pension benefits, if any, which have
accrued,” “in a manner calculated to be understood by the
average plan participant.” 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a)(2)(A).
Section 1025 does not define “total benefits accrued,” but
ERISA elsewhere defines the similar term “accrued benefit”
as “the individual’s accrued benefit determined under the
plan . . . expressed in the form of an annual benefit
commencing at normal retirement age.” 29 U.S.C.
§ 1002(23)(A).
We can import that definition of “accrued benefit” into
§ 1025 only if we can discern that “accrued benefit” and
“total benefits accrued” share the same meaning. Section
§ 1025(a) uses those two terms in consecutive clauses:
§ 1025(a)(2)(A)(i) refers to “total benefits accrued,” while
§ 1025(a)(2)(A)(ii) refers to “any accrued benefits described
in clause (i).” Those two clauses use “accrued benefit” and
“total benefits accrued” to mean the same thing because
clause (ii) explicitly refers back to clause (i). See
HollyFrontier Cheyenne Ref., LLC v. Renewable Fuels
Ass’n, 141 S. Ct. 2172, 2177 (2021) (considering
“variation[s] of the very term in dispute” in neighboring
subparagraphs to resolve a term’s meaning). We therefore
conclude that “total benefits accrued” under § 1025(a)(2)(A)
has the same meaning as “accrued benefit” in § 1002(23)(A).
In Andersen v. DHL Retirement Pension Plan, we
interpreted “accrued benefit” in § 1002(23)(A) as it related
to another ERISA provision and explained that we “look to
the [plan] document itself to determine what ‘accrued
benefit’ means in the context of that plan.” 766 F.3d 1205,
1213 (9th Cir. 2014). Here, we look to the plan document to
determine whether a benefit amount complies with
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii). It is plain that if a benefit amount
disclosed in a pension benefit statement is substantially
18 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
miscalculated according to the plan’s formula, then that
statement of the benefit amount is not “determined under the
plan” as required by § 1002(23)(A) and does not reflect the
participant’s “total benefits accrued” as required by
§ 1025(a)(2)(A)(i). It follows that a pension benefit
statement reporting a substantially inaccurate benefit
amount does not comply with § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii).
Our interpretation is also consistent with ERISA’s goals.
Although ERISA does not require employers to provide any
retirement benefits, a central “policy of [ERISA] [is] to
protect . . . the interests of participants in employee benefit
plans and their beneficiaries, by requiring the disclosure and
reporting to participants and beneficiaries of financial and
other information.” 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). 5 The Supreme
Court has explained that “Congress’ purpose in enacting the
ERISA disclosure provisions [was] ensuring that ‘the
individual participant knows exactly where he stands with
respect to the plan.’” Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
489 U.S. 101, 118 (1989) (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 93–533, p.
11 (1973), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4639, 4649).
This core purpose of ERISA would be entirely frustrated if
plan administrators could satisfy their disclosure duties by
providing grossly inaccurate pension benefit statements.
Plaintiffs adequately alleged that the Committee violated
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) because they alleged that the Committee
provided them with pension benefit statements that did not
calculate their retirement benefits according to the Plan’s
5
See also 29 U.S.C. § 1001(a) (memorializing Congressional finding
that “it is desirable in the interests of employees and their
beneficiaries . . . that disclosure be made and safeguards be provided
with respect to the establishment, operation, and administration of
[pension] plans.”).
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 19
formula, and grossly overstated their benefits. See Bafford,
994 F.3d at 1024 (deeming pension benefits provided in this
case “grossly overestimated”). 6
2. Plaintiffs adequately alleged that they made
written requests for pension benefit
statements.
The Committee alternatively argues that, even if it is
possible to state a § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim premised on the
provision of inaccurate pension benefit statements, we
should affirm the district court’s order dismissing Plaintiffs’
claim because Plaintiffs did not allege that they made written
requests for pension benefit statements. We conclude that
Plaintiffs adequately pleaded their § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim.
a. Plaintiffs alleged that they made written
requests.
ERISA requires the administrator of a defined benefit
plan to provide a “pension benefit statement” to plan
participants “upon written request.” 29 U.S.C.
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii). The district court initially dismissed
Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim because Plaintiffs’
electronic requests did not qualify as written requests that
triggered the Committee’s obligation to provide pension
benefit statements. When this case was previously before
us, we vacated the district court’s ruling and held that
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) does not limit written requests to
handwritten or printed requests and that “an adequate
electronic writing suffices” if it comprises an “‘intentional
6
Plaintiffs contend that the pension benefit figure provided to plan
participants must be precise. To resolve this appeal, we need not decide
the margin by which a benefit calculation must miss the mark in order to
state a colorable claim under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii).
20 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
recording of words in a visual form’ that convey[s] a request
for a pension benefit statement.” Bafford, 994 F.3d at 1029–
30 (quoting Writing, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed.
2019)).
On remand, Plaintiffs amended their complaint to allege
that when they sought to obtain pension benefit statements
after returning to Northrop, Plaintiffs “made a written
request by first logging on to the Northrop benefits website”
as directed by the SPD, typing in their names and Social
Security numbers or employee identification numbers, then
clicking through menu options to reach the website’s
pension section. From there, they followed the directions to
complete their requests by telephone.
The Committee’s argument that Plaintiffs did not make
written requests because they “conveyed their requests via
the telephone” is not well taken. The complaint alleges that
Plaintiffs requested pension benefit statements in writing.
More specifically, Plaintiffs allege that the SPD and Annual
Funding Notices directed them to the website, and that they
typed in their information and clicked or navigated through
the portion of the site devoted to pensions. Plaintiffs allege
they were directed to call to complete their requests and that
some of the information they typed into the site was repeated
in those calls, but we cannot tell how much of the
information was entered by typing or clicking through the
site and how much was conveyed or repeated via telephone.
Whatever user inputs preceded Plaintiffs’ telephone calls, it
was apparently sufficient for the website to recognize that
Plaintiffs were requesting some sort of pension statements,
because the website displayed a notice that it was unable to
provide such statements and directed Plaintiffs to call to
complete the process. The responses Plaintiffs received
stated that the figures were based on Plaintiffs’ “personal
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 21
information on file [and] the assumptions [Plaintiffs]
entered.” The Committee’s contention, that this record
shows only that Plaintiffs orally requested pension benefit
statements, is not supported. 7
On this record, we agree with the district court’s ruling
on remand that the complaint sufficiently alleged that
Plaintiffs’ online inquiries qualified as written requests for
purposes of ERISA.
b. Plaintiffs alleged that they requested
pension benefit statements.
The Committee’s central argument is that Plaintiffs’
requests did not trigger its statutory duty to provide pension
benefit statements under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) because
Plaintiffs requested something other than pension benefit
statements. Indeed, the Committee argued before our court
that it did not send any pension benefit statements in
response to Plaintiffs’ requests because, in the Committee’s
view, Plaintiffs never requested this type of document.
The Committee argues that it offers multiple retirement-
related services to Plan participants, not all of which are
required by ERISA. The Committee points to a distinction
in the SPD between two types of pension information
participants could request: on one page, the SPD informed
participants of their right to obtain “a statement telling
you . . . what your estimated benefits would be at normal
retirement age if you stop working under the plan now” and,
on another page, the SPD told participants they could
7
As for the Committee’s related argument that Plaintiffs were required
to mail their written requests to the address listed at the end of the SPD,
the SPD provided two ways to request pension benefit statements, one
of which was to access the Plan’s website.
22 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
“project your estimated benefit at retirement.” The
Committee contends that the first option refers to a request
for a pension benefit statement as defined by ERISA, while
the second option refers to “an additional, gratuitous service
provided to help [participants] manage their benefits.” In the
Committee’s view, Plaintiffs requested “estimate[s] of their
future benefits” or “projection[s] of future benefits” that
were premised “on the assumption that they would work for
[Northrop] for an additional period of time,” and never
requested “pension benefit statements” based only on
already-accrued benefits without incorporating assumptions
about future accruals.
A pension benefit statement must indicate the “total
benefits accrued” by the participant, 29 U.S.C.
§ 1025(a)(2)(A), “expressed in the form of an annual benefit
commencing at normal retirement age,” 29 U.S.C.
§ 1002(23)(A). Based on the past tense in “total benefits
accrued,” we agree with the Committee that ERISA requires
a plan administrator to provide a statement that conveys the
benefits a participant has already accrued at the time of their
request, rather than benefits they may accrue in the future.
That said, the Committee’s argument presents a factual
dispute inappropriate for resolution on a motion to dismiss
because it requires making factual findings concerning the
type of documents Plaintiffs requested, which is not possible
on the present record.
The sample SPD in the record gave the same instructions
for how to request both types of information: it directed
participants to “track the amount of your accrued benefit and
project your estimated benefit at retirement online” by
accessing the Plan’s website. More problematically for the
Committee, it concedes in its briefing that the Annual
Funding Notices “explain[ed] how participants may obtain a
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 23
pension benefit statement,” and the Annual Funding Notices
incorporated into Plaintiffs’ complaint represented to
participants that they could “request a statement of your
accrued pension benefits” by “log[ging] on to My Benefits
Access available through Benefits OnLine or call[ing] the
NGBC.” Plaintiffs allege that they followed these
directions. Moreover, the website apparently interpreted
Plaintiffs’ online inputs as conveying requests for some sort
of pension statements, because it responded by displaying
messages that it could not provide pension benefit statements
and that Plaintiffs would need to call instead. The SPD’s
reference to another type of pension-related inquiry does not
shed light on the statements Plaintiffs requested on the
website or telephone. 8
The Committee makes several additional assertions
about what Plaintiffs requested, but these assertions are
premised on a sample of the documents Plaintiffs received
in response to their requests, not what they requested. For
example, the Committee insists that Plaintiffs got what they
asked for—something other than a pension benefit
statement—because the responses Plaintiffs received and
attached to their complaint were each titled “Retirement Plan
Pension Estimate Calculation Statement,” not “Pension
8
The Committee separately argues that Plaintiffs did not request pension
benefit statements by logging into the website because doing so enabled
other actions besides requesting pension benefit statements, including
reviewing prior statements and obtaining information about employee
health benefits. This argument overlooks that Plaintiffs alleged that they
navigated through the website to reach the point where they could, and
did, request pension benefit statements. To the extent the Committee’s
argument is that an administrator can avoid the duties imposed by
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) by directing participants to click, rather than type,
their requests, we reject their contention. See Bafford, 994 F.3d at 1030.
24 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
Benefit Statement,” and because the statements informed
them, “Here’s the pension estimate[s] you requested.” The
Committee’s argument incorrectly presumes that we can
establish at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage what Plaintiffs requested
by examining the documents they received.
We cannot be certain what type of statements Plaintiffs
requested because we do not have screenshots showing what
Plaintiffs saw on the benefits website and we lack details of
what Plaintiffs communicated by telephone. The Committee
argues that pension benefit statements would have shown the
amounts of Plaintiffs’ accrued benefits, i.e., the amounts
they could expect to receive if they stopped working on the
day the requests were made. From there, the Committee
suggests that the statements Plaintiffs requested necessarily
differed because Plaintiffs input hypothetical future
termination and retirement dates. This argument fails
because we do not know exactly how the Plan’s formula
works and whether Plaintiffs would have accrued additional
benefits after the dates of their requests and before their
respective employment termination dates. It is uncontested
that the formula should have incorporated an average of
Plaintiffs’ highest three years of salary from their first period
of employment only, but the Committee has not addressed
the details of how the second period of employment factors
into the formula. On this record, we are persuaded that
Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that they requested
pension benefit statements by following the Committee’s
directions for accessing the Plan’s website.
Plaintiffs also alleged a second theory of liability under
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii), that when they made written requests for
pension benefit statements on the website, the website
informed them that it could not provide pension benefit
statements and directed them to call instead. As we have
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 25
explained, if Plaintiffs prove that the website did not allow
them to request and receive pension benefit statements, and
also establish that their user inputs to the site were sufficient
to qualify as written requests for pension benefit statements,
the Committee cannot rely on the website to satisfy its
statutory obligation under § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii). The
Committee has not met its burden to show that dismissal of
Plaintiffs’ alternate theory is warranted.
3. Remedies
Plan participants can enforce ERISA’s disclosure
requirements through several provisions in ERISA § 502, 29
U.S.C. § 1132. Here, Plaintiffs’ operative complaint sought
statutory penalties under § 1132(c)(1) and equitable relief
under § 1132(a)(3). The Committee argues that we should
affirm the district court’s order dismissing Plaintiffs’
complaint because there is no relief available for any of the
violations Plaintiffs alleged. We disagree.
a. Statutory penalty
Section 1132(c)(1) provides that an administrator “who
fails to meet the requirements of . . . section 1025(a) of this
title,” or “who fails or refuses to comply with a request for
any information which such administrator is required by this
subchapter to furnish to a participant,” may in the court’s
discretion be liable for a penalty of up to $100 a day. 9
The district court did not definitively rule on this issue
but opined that it was “unlikely” that § 1132(c)(1)’s penalty
provision applied to administrators who provide inaccurate
pension benefit statements. The court viewed the penalty
9
The maximum daily penalty is now $110. See 29 C.F.R. § 2575.502c-
1.
26 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
provision as supporting its conclusion that ERISA does not
afford a cause of action for the provision of inaccurate
pension benefit statements because penalties under
§ 1132(c)(1) are assessed on a daily basis and therefore
increase “in proportion to the amount of time that has passed
since the participant made the request.” In contrast, the
district court reasoned, the harm from an inaccurate
statement “is in no way tied to the number of days that have
passed.” The Committee repeats this rationale on appeal and
urges that it presents another alternative basis for affirming
the order dismissing Plaintiffs’ § 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) claim.
We conclude that the statute is not so limited. The plain text
of § 1132(c)(1) broadly permits the imposition of penalties
for “fail[ing] to meet the requirements” of “section 1025(a).”
29 U.S.C. § 1132(c)(1). Because we hold that a claim under
§ 1025(a)(1)(B)(ii) for providing grossly inaccurate pension
benefit statements is cognizable, a colorable claim of that
type of violation falls within the scope of ERISA’s penalty
provision.
At least for a participant who does not otherwise receive
information that reveals that a mistake has been made in their
pension benefit calculation, the purpose of § 1132(c)(1)’s
daily penalty may apply with even more force for inaccurate,
rather than missing, pension benefit statements. Unlike a
participant who does not receive any pension benefit
statement and therefore does not know their retirement
benefit, a participant who receives a significantly inaccurate
statement may be affirmatively misled into believing that
their pension will be greater than it is and make inadvisable
decisions as a result. Here, Plaintiffs alleged that they chose
to retire when they did because the Committee’s grossly
inaccurate statements led them to believe that they were
financially secure enough to do so.
BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN 27
The Committee separately argues that lack of bad faith
precludes a court from awarding statutory penalties under
§ 1132(c)(1). To support this claim, the Committee relies on
an Eighth Circuit case, Christensen v. Qwest Pension Plan,
462 F.3d 913 (8th Cir. 2006). Christensen does not support
the Committee’s contention. There, the Eighth Circuit
concluded that the district court’s decision not to award a
penalty was not an abuse of discretion. The Eighth Circuit
reasoned that a penalty for the provision of an inaccurate
pension benefit statement would be unjust because there was
no indication of bad faith by the administrator, and because
the plaintiff in that case could have detected the error by
carefully reading the benefit statement he received. See 462
F.3d at 919. Christensen accordingly held that the absence
of bad faith is a factor “relevant to the discretionary penalty
decision”; it did not hold that the absence of bad faith
precludes the application of § 1132(c)(1)’s penalty
provision. Id.; see also Daughtrey v. Honeywell, Inc., 3 F.3d
1488, 1494 (11th Cir. 1993) (holding that an administrator’s
bad faith is relevant under section 1132(c), but the absence
of bad faith does not excuse the failure to provide a timely
statement of benefits). Notably, the Committee does not
argue that Plaintiffs could have determined from the
information they received that the statements erroneously
calculated their benefits. The plain text of the penalty
provision does not require a plan administrator to act in bad
faith to be liable for a penalty, and our circuit has never
required a finding of bad faith before applying § 1132(c)(1).
We decline to read that requirement into the statute.
b. Equitable remedies
Finally, the Committee argues that Plaintiffs are not
entitled to the equitable remedies they prayed for in their
operative complaint. Section 1132(a)(3) allows plan
28 BAFFORD V. ADMIN. COMM. OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN
participants to seek “appropriate equitable relief” for ERISA
violations. Plaintiffs’ complaint sought three equitable
remedies: equitable estoppel, plan reformation, and
surcharge. The district court did not reach equitable
remedies and the questions raised on appeal were not fully
briefed before the district court. “As a general rule, ‘a
federal appellate court does not consider an issue not passed
upon below.’” Golden Gate Hotel Ass’n v. City & Cnty. of
San Francisco, 18 F.3d 1482, 1487 (9th Cir. 1994) (quoting
Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 120 (1976)). Thus, we
decline to reach in the first instance the Committee’s
argument that no equitable remedies are available for the
violations alleged in Plaintiffs’ complaint.
IV. CONCLUSION
Because Plaintiffs stated cognizable claims under 29
U.S.C. § 1025(a)(1)(B)(i)–(B)(ii), we reverse the district
court’s dismissal of those claims and remand for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. Each party shall
bear its own costs.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT STEPHEN H.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT STEPHEN H.
02a class of similarly situated 2:18-cv-10219- participants and beneficiaries, ODW-E Plaintiffs-Appellants, v.
03OPINION ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PENSION PLAN, Defendant-Appellee, and NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION; ALIGHT SOLUTIONS LLC, FKA Hewitt Associates LLC, Defendants.
04OF THE NORTHROP GRUMMAN PLAN Argued and Submitted October 17, 2023 San Francisco, California Filed May 9, 2024 Before: Morgan Christen, Roopali H.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT STEPHEN H.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Stephen Bafford v. Administrative Cmte. of the Northrop Grumman Plan in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on May 9, 2024.
Use the citation No. 9500765 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.