[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 9]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR2509.78-1]

[Page 334-335]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
 CHAPTER XXV--EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SECURITY ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF 
                                  LABOR
 
PART 2509_INTERPRETIVE BULLETINS RELATING TO THE EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT 
INCOME SECURITY ACT OF 1974--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 2509.78-1  Interpretive bulletin relating to payments by certain 
employee welfare benefit plans.

    The Department of Labor today announced its interpretation of 
certain provisions of part 4 of title I of the Employee Retirement 
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), as those sections apply to a 
payment by multiple employer vacation plans of a sum of money to which a 
participant of beneficiary of the plan is entitled to a party other than 
the participant or beneficiary. \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Multiple employer vacation plans generally consist of trust 
funds to which employers are obligated to make contributions pursuant to 
collective bargaining agreements. Benefits are generally paid at 
specified intervals (usually annually or semi-annually) and such 
benefits are neither contingent upon the occurrence of a specified event 
nor restricted to use for a specified purpose when paid to the 
participant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 402(b)(4) of ERISA requires every employee benefit plan to 
specify the basis on which payments are made to and from the plan.
    Section 403(c)(1) of ERISA generally requires the assets of an 
employee benefit plan to be held for the exclusive purpose of providing 
benefits to participants in the plan

[[Page 335]]

and their beneficiaries \2\ and defraying reasonable expenses of 
administering the plan. Similarly, section 404(a)(1)(A) requires a plan 
fiduciary to discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely in the 
interest of the participants and beneficiaries of the plan and for the 
exclusive purpose of providing benefits to participants and their 
beneficiaries and defraying reasonable expenses of administering the 
plan. Section 404(a)(1)(D) further requires the fiduciary to act in 
accordance with the documents and instruments governing the plan insofar 
as such documents and instruments are consistent with the provisions of 
title I of ERISA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ Section 403 (c) and (d) provide certain exceptions to this 
requirement, not here relevant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, section 406(a) of ERISA specifically prohibits a 
fiduciary with respect to a plan from causing the plan to engage in a 
transaction if he knows or should know that such transaction 
constitutes, inter alia, a direct or indirect: furnishing of goods, 
services or facilities between the plan and a party in interest (section 
406(a)(1)(C)); or transfer to, or use by or for the benefit of, a party 
in interest of any assets of the plan (section 406(a)(1)(D)). Section 
406(b)(2) of ERISA prohibits a plan fiduciary from acting in any 
transaction involving the plan on behalf of a party, or representing a 
party, whose interests are adverse to the interests of the plan or of 
its participants or beneficiaries.
    In this regard, however, Prohibited Transaction Exemptions 76-1, 
Part C, (41 FR 12740, March 26, 1976) and 77-10 (42 FR 33918, July 1, 
1977) exempt from the prohibitions of section 406(a) and 406(b)(2), 
respectively, the provision of administrative services by a multiple 
employer plan if specified conditions are met. These conditions are: (a) 
the plan receives reasonable compensation for the provision of the 
services (for purposes of the exemption, ``reasonable compensation'' 
need not include a profit which would ordinarily have been received in 
an arm's length transaction, but must be sufficient to reimburse the 
plan for its costs); (b) the arrangement allows any multiple employer 
plan which is a party to the transaction to terminate the relationship 
on a reasonably short notice under the circumstances; and (c) the plan 
complies with certain recordkeeping requirements. It should be noted 
that plans not subject to Prohibited Transaction Exemptions 76-1 and 77-
10--i.e., plans that are not multiple employer plans--cannot rely upon 
these exemptions.
    A payment by a vacation plan of all or any portion of benefits to 
which a plan participant or beneficiary is entitled to a party other 
than the participant or beneficiary will comply with the above-mentioned 
sections of ERISA if the arrangement pursuant to which payments are made 
does not constitute a prohibited transaction under ERISA and:
    (1) The plan documents expressly state that benefits payable under 
the plan to a participant or beneficiary may, at the direction of the 
participant or beneficiary, be paid to a third party rather than to the 
participant or beneficiary;
    (2) The participant or beneficiary directs in writing that the plan 
trustee(s) shall pay a named third party all or a specified portion of 
the sum of money which would otherwise be paid under the plan to him or 
her; and
    (3) A payment is made to a third party only when or after the money 
would otherwise be payable to the plan participant or beneficiary.

In the case of a multiple employer plan (as defined in Prohibited 
Transaction Exemption 76-1, Part C, Section III), if the arrangement to 
make payments to a third party is a prohibited transaction under ERISA, 
the arrangement will comply with the above-mentioned sections of ERISA 
if the conditions of Prohibited Transaction Exemptions 76-1, Part C, and 
77-10 and the above three paragraphs are met. In this regard, it is the 
view of the Department that the mere payment of money to which a 
participant or beneficiary is entitled, at the direction of the 
participant or beneficiary, to a third party who is a party in interest 
would not constitute a transfer of plan assets prohibited under section 
406(a)(1)(D). It is also the view of the Department that if a trustee or 
other fudiciary of a plan, in addition to his duties with respect to the 
plan, serves in a decisionmaking capacity with another party, the mere 
fact that the fiduciary effects payments to such party of money to which 
a participant is entitled at the direction of the participant and in 
accordance with specific provisions of governing plan documents and 
instruments, does not amount to a prohibited transaction under section 
406(b)(2).
    It should be noted that the interpretation set forth herein deals 
solely with the application of the provisions of title I of ERISA to the 
arrangements described herein. It does not deal with the application of 
any other statute to such arrangements. Specifically, no opinion is 
expressed herein as to the application of section 302 of the Labor 
Management Relations Act, 1947 or the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 
(particularly the provisions of section 501(c)(9) of the Code).

[43 FR 58565, Dec. 15, 1978]

[[Page 336]]