Under 29 U.S.C. § 1301(b)(1), all “trades or businesses” under common control with an employer that has withdrawn from a multiemployer pension plan are jointly and severally liable for the employer’s withdrawal liability.  The statute does not define what it means to be a “trade or business,” and though the statute references regulations promulgated by the Internal Revenue Service, those regulations focus only on what it means to be under “common control.”  In the absence of a statutory or regulatory definition, many courts have looked to the Supreme Court’s decision in Comm’r v. Groetzinger, 480 U.S. 23 (1987).  In that case, the Supreme Court held that a taxpayer’s gambling activities could constitute a “trade or business,” thereby making the taxpayer eligible to deduct his gambling losses as business expenses, if: (i) the primary purpose of the activity was to generate income or profit, and (ii) the activity was continuous and regular.  In Local No. 499, Bd. of Trs. of Shopmen’s Pension Plan v. Art Iron, Inc., 117 F.4th 923 (6th Cir. 2024), the Sixth Circuit joined in part the Second, Seventh, and D.C. Circuits in holding that the Groetzinger test should be used to determine whether an activity constitutes a “trade or business” for withdrawal liability purposes under 29 U.S.C. § 1301(b)(1). 

Background

In Art Iron, the plan argued that the withdrawn employer’s sole shareholder and his wife were personally liable for over $1 million in withdrawal liability because they each operated a “trade or business” at the time of the withdrawal—the husband received consulting fees from the employer and his wife sold jewelry.  The district court agreed, holding that the couple admitted in their tax returns that these activities constituted the operation of sole proprietorships.  In reaching this conclusion, the district court did not apply the two-part Groetzinger test because it interpreted the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. Findlay Indus., Inc., 902 F.3d 597 (6th Cir. 2018), to have rejected that standard.  In Findlay, the Sixth Circuit held that “any entity that leases property to a commonly controlled company is categorically a trade or business.”  In so holding, the Sixth Circuit declined to adopt the Groetzinger test, stating it was “specific to tax law” and “would not serve ERISA’s purposes.” 

The couple in Art Iron appealed the district court’s ruling, arguing that the Groetzinger test should apply, and the Sixth Circuit agreed.  The Court held that its prior decision in Findlay was limited to circumstances where the withdrawn employer leases property from a commonly owned entity, but that, in all other circumstances, whether an activity constitutes a “trade or business” under 29 U.S.C. § 1301(b)(1) should be evaluated under the Groetzinger test.  In so holding, the Court cited the adoption of the Groetzinger test by other circuit courts, the statute’s express reference to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, and common usage of the terms “trade” and “business.”  Applying this standard, the Sixth Circuit affirmed the district court’s ruling against the husband, but reversed the ruling against his wife.  The Court held that the husband’s consulting business was continuous and regular because he received consulting fees for “several consecutive years” through the year of withdrawal.  By contrast, his wife’s jewelry sales were not sufficiently continuous nor regular because she did not make any sales in the year of withdrawal.

Proskauer’s Perspective

The Sixth Circuit’s decision is a reminder that it is not just the employer that has withdrawn from a multiemployer pension plan that may owe withdrawal liability, but under certain circumstances, its owners, their spouses, and affiliated companies as well.  Whether liability will attach is a fact-intensive inquiry that involves a proper understanding of the operations and ownership structure of the employer and its affiliated entities and the relevant standards governing secondary liability under ERISA, including those in the particular jurisdiction in which the plan is operated and where the employer and its affiliates and owners are located.

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Photo of Neil V. Shah Neil V. Shah

Neil V. Shah is a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group, where he focuses on ERISA litigation.

He is the lead attorney representing the firm’s Taft-Hartley plan clients in withdrawal liability and delinquent contributions matters.  As part of his practice…

Neil V. Shah is a member of the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group, where he focuses on ERISA litigation.

He is the lead attorney representing the firm’s Taft-Hartley plan clients in withdrawal liability and delinquent contributions matters.  As part of his practice, Neil pursues employers, their owners and officers, and affiliated companies to collect the amounts owed to these plans using a variety of complex legal theories, and has secured several precedential opinions and multi-million-dollar judgments in their favor.  Neil also defends these plans in arbitrations challenging the methods and assumptions used to calculate withdrawal liability, which has yielded a number of notable arbitration decisions and court opinions.  Owing to his experience in this area, Neil is a co-editor of the withdrawal liability chapter of the premier employee benefits treatise, Employee Benefits Law, published by Bloomberg, and regularly presents on the topic before practitioners and consultants that work in the area, such as at meetings of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries and the Employee Benefits Section of ABA’s Section of Labor & Employment Law.

In addition to his Taft-Hartley plan experience, Neil has represented several plan sponsors and fiduciaries in ERISA class actions alleging that the plan’s investments or other practices are imprudent, such as excessive fee and stock drop cases.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Neil was an associate at a large regional firm, where he litigated individual and class actions involving challenges to insurer claims adjudication procedures under ERISA, fraud recoveries against healthcare providers, and claims for benefits.

Neil has authored several articles, including those published in the New Jersey Law Journal and Bloomberg National Affairs.  He is also a frequent contributor to Proskauer’s Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Blog.

Photo of Anastasia Gellman Anastasia Gellman

Stacy Gellman is an attorney in the Labor & Employment Department, where she focuses on ERISA litigation. Her experience includes representing trustees of multiemployer plans in federal court ERISA claims related to breach of fiduciary duty, withdrawal liability, and delinquent contributions.

Prior to…

Stacy Gellman is an attorney in the Labor & Employment Department, where she focuses on ERISA litigation. Her experience includes representing trustees of multiemployer plans in federal court ERISA claims related to breach of fiduciary duty, withdrawal liability, and delinquent contributions.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Stacy was an associate at a large regional firm, where she gained experience defending state and federal litigations at both the trial and appellate level, and a law clerk in New Jersey’s Appellate Division.