Cash balance pension plans do not discriminate against older
employees, a federal judge has ruled.
Judge E. Richard Webber of the U. S. District Court of the
Eastern District of Missouri last week dismissed age discrimination charges
against U.S. Bancorp of Minneapolis, noting that the benefit and interest
credits provided to plan participants did not discriminate on the basis of
age.
Judge Webber rejected plaintiffs’ argument that the plans are
age discriminatory because the same benefit provided to an older employee as a
younger employee will result in a smaller retirement annuity to an older
employee.
That result, Judge Webber ruled, is not because of age
discrimination, but occurs because of the "time value of money, a characteristic
correlated with age, but not age itself."
The
cash balance plan involved in the litigation was set up in 1998 by Mercantile
Bank of St. Louis, which was later acquired by Firstar
Corp. Firstar later bought the majority of stock of U.S. Bancorp, with U.S.
Bancorp being the surviving entity of the merger.
The ruling is the first since a second circuit court-the 3rd
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals-ruled last month that the plans are not age
discriminatory. The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a widely publicized
decision, ruled last year that cash balance plans in general and IBM Corp.’s in
particular, are not age discriminatory.
Of the seven lower court rulings since the IBM decision, five
have rejected age discrimination charges, while two courts have said the plans
violate age discrimination law.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.