The U.S. Supreme Court is taking up a case about fees in a huge 401(k) plan, and the case involves the use of retail mutual fund shares.
Yesterday the highest court in the land granted a petition to step in to
Tibble v. Edison, a lawsuit
filed by participants in the power company's multi-billion-dollar 401(k) plan [our sister publication,
401kWire, also covered the move]. How the justices rule could impact the future (or lack thereof) of retail mutual funds in large 401(k) plans.
Lawrence Hurley of
Reuters, Hazel Bradford of
Pensions & Investments, and Greg Stohr of
Bloomberg all covered the Supreme Court's move.
Big legal guns are lined up in the case.
Jerry Schlichter of
Schlichter Bogard and Denton, has represented plaintiffs in numerous 401(k) fee lawsuits, and he is doing so here, too.
Jonathan Hacker of
O'Melveny & Myers is representing
Edison International. And U.S. Solicitor General
Donald Verrilli, Jr. even weighed in on the case.
The question before the Supreme Court revolves around retail share classes of six mutual funds. A lower court
ruled four years ago that Edison breached its fiduciary duty when including retail shares (instead of available institutional shares) of three of those funds -- the
William Blair Small Cap Growth Fund, the
MFS Total Return Fund and the
Pimco (Allianz) RCM Global Tech Fund. Yet those funds were all chosen within six years of the lawsuit being filed. Retail shares of three other funds -- the
Allianz CCM Capital Appreciation Fund, the
Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund, and the
Janus Small Cap Investors Fund -- were all chosen more than six years before the suit, and the district court and the circuit court both
dismissed those claims as being beyond the statute of limitations. Schlichter wants those claims reopened. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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