
Fiduciary Liability Under ERISA
Who Is A Fiduciary?
Many of the actions involved in operating a plan make the person or entity
performing them a fiduciary. Using discretion in administering and managing a
plan or controlling the plan’s assets makes that person a fiduciary to the
extent of that discretion or control. Thus, fiduciary status is based on the
functions performed for the plan, not just a person’s title.
A plan must have at least one fiduciary (a person or entity) named in the
written plan, or through a process described in the plan, as having control over
the plan’s operation. The named fiduciary can be identified by office or by
name. For some plans, it may be an administrative committee or a company’s board
of directors.
A plan’s fiduciaries will ordinarily include the trustee, investment
advisers, all individuals exercising discretion in the administration of the
plan, all members of a plan’s administrative committee (if it has such a
committee), and those who select committee officials. Attorneys, accountants,
and actuaries generally are not fiduciaries when acting solely in their
professional capacities. The key to determining whether an individual or an
entity is a fiduciary is whether they are exercising discretion or control over
the plan.
A number of decisions are not fiduciary actions but rather are business
decisions made by the employer. For example, the decisions to establish a plan,
to determine the benefit package, to include certain features in a plan, to
amend a plan, and to terminate a plan are business decisions. When making these
decisions, an employer is acting on behalf of its business, not the plan, and,
therefore, is not a fiduciary. However, when an employer (or someone hired by
the employer) takes steps to implement these decisions, that person is acting on
behalf of the plan and, in carrying out these actions, is a fiduciary.
What Is The Significance Of Being A Fiduciary?
Fiduciaries have important responsibilities and are subject to standards of
conduct because they act on behalf of participants in a retirement plan and
their beneficiaries. These responsibilities include:
Acting solely in the interest of plan participants and their beneficiaries
and with the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to them;
Carrying out their duties prudently;
Following the plan documents (unless inconsistent with ERISA);
Diversifying plan investments; and
Paying only reasonable plan expenses.
The duty to act prudently is one of a fiduciary’s central responsibilities
under ERISA. It requires expertise in a variety of areas, such as investments.
Lacking that expertise, a fiduciary will want to hire someone with that
professional knowledge to carry out the investment and other functions. Prudence
focuses on the process for making fiduciary decisions. Therefore, it is wise to
document decisions and the basis for those decisions. For instance, in hiring
any plan service provider, a fiduciary may want to survey a number of potential
providers, asking for the same information and providing the same requirements.
By doing so a fiduciary can document the process and make a meaningful
comparison and selection.
Following the terms of the plan document is also an important responsibility.
The document serves as the foundation for plan operations. Employers will want
to be familiar with their plan document, especially when it is drawn up by a
third-party service provider, and periodically review the document to make sure
it remains current. For example, if a plan official named in the document
changes, the plan document must be updated to reflect that change.
Diversification – another key fiduciary duty – helps to minimize the risk of
large investment losses to the plan. Fiduciaries should consider each plan
investment as part of the plan’s entire portfolio. Once again, fiduciaries will
want to document their evaluation and investment decisions.
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