                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                         __________________

                            No. 97-51081
                         __________________



PATRICIA J. MATASSARIN, Individually, for and on behalf
of The Great Empire Broadcasting Employee Stock
Ownership Plan and its Beneficiaries; for and on behalf
of that class of persons, participants and/or
Beneficiaries of The Great Empire Broadcasting
Employees Stock Ownership Plan, Past or Present,
Defrauded,

                          Plaintiff-Appellant,

          versus

F.F. MIKE LYNCH, Individually and as Trustee for The
Great Empire Broadcasting Employees Stock Ownership
Plan (ESOP); MICHAEL C. OATMAN, Individually and as
Trustee for The Great Empire Broadcasting Employees
Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP); DANNY E. JENKINS,
Individually and as former Trustee of the ESOP and
Agent of the Trustees and Agent of the Administrator of
The Great Empire Broadcasting Employees Stock Ownership
Plan; Great Empire Broadcasting, Inc., Individually and
as a Plan Administrator for The Great Empire
Broadcasting Employees Stock Ownership Plan, and The
Great Empire Broadcasting Employees Stock Ownership
Plan “Administrative Committee”; GREAT EMPIRE
BROADCASTING INC., Individually and as Plan
Administrator for the Great Empire Broadcasting
Employees Stock Ownership Plan; KAREN K. WARNER, CPA,
Individually and as a member of the Great Empire
Broadcasting Employees Stock Ownership Plan
“Administrative Committee”; UNKNOWN MEMBERS OF THE
“BOARD OF DIRECTORS”, of the Great Empire Broadcasting
Employees Stock Ownership Plan; MENKE & ASSOCIATES,
INC.; DON T. BUFORD; CURTIS W. BROWN,

                               Defendants-Appellees.

         ______________________________________________
      Appeals from the United States District Court for the
                     Western District of Texas
          ______________________________________________
                           April 27, 1999

Before EMILIO M. GARZA, BENAVIDES, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:

     Plaintiff Patricia Matassarin appeals the district court’s

grants of summary judgment dismissing her ERISA and securities

claims. We affirm.

                                I

     In this unusual employee benefits matter, Patricia

Matassarin, who is the plaintiff/appellant and the current

plaintiff’s attorney of record, brought suit against the Great

Empire Broadcasting, Inc. (“Great Empire”) employee stock

ownership plan (“ESOP” or “Plan”) and its fiduciaries and author.

The Great Empire ESOP is subject to the Employee Retirement

Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq.

     Until 1988, appellees Mike Lynch and Michael Oatman owned 75

and 25 percent of Great Empire, respectively. Great Empire

established the ESOP effective January 1, 1988, by document

executed on October 21, 1988, in order to distribute Lynch’s and

Oatman’s shares more widely among Great Empire employees. The

Plan was restated on November 15, 1994. The restatement, which

brought the Plan into compliance with certain tax code

provisions, was deemed retroactive to January 1, 1989. Appellee

Menke & Associates, Inc. drafted the original documents


                               -2-
establishing the ESOP and continues to provide ministerial

services to Great Empire but does not serve as the Plan

administrator. Every Great Empire employee who satisfies the

ESOP’s service requirements and who is not subject to a

collective bargaining agreement automatically becomes a Plan

participant. As Great Empire makes all contributions to the Plan,

employee participants do not contribute directly.

     Appellant Matassarin was married to appellee Danny Jenkins,

Great Empire’s chief financial officer and a participant in the

Great Empire ESOP, until the couple divorced on October 15, 1991.

Upon their divorce, Jenkins and Matassarin entered into a

qualified domestic relations order (“QDRO”), which was approved

by a Kansas state court. Menke & Associates suggested the terms

of the QDRO. Under the QDRO, Jenkins agreed to assign Matassarin

one-half of his interest in the Great Empire ESOP. Great Empire

would hold Matassarin’s interest in a segregated account, where

it would accrue interest at the rate of a one-year certificate of

deposit.1 The QDRO did not specify how long Great Empire would


     1.   Paragraphs 4 and 5 of Matassarin and Jenkins’s QDRO
state:
          4.   The Husband assigns to the Wife as Alternate
     Payee one-half of his interest of the assets accredited
     to Participant’s ESOP Accounts as of October 15, 1991.
     This assignment of benefits will require that the
     Administrator of the Great Empire Broadcasting, Inc.
     ESOP segregate the Alternate Payee’s interest, and that
     said segregated account will continue to accumulate
     interest at a rate equivalent to a one-year Certificate
     of Deposit.
          5.   This assignment of benefits does not require

                                -3-
retain Matassarin’s interest or when it would pay any

distribution directly to her. Matassarin was represented by

counsel when she agreed to the QDRO.

     On the day of Jenkins’s divorce from Matassarin, his Great

Empire ESOP account held 1040.171 total shares. The Plan

administrator segregated 520.086 of those shares into an account

for Matassarin. The Plan administrator valued Matassarin’s

520.086 shares at $22 per share, their market value at the end of

1990, the Plan’s last determination date for value. Matassarin’s

interest in the Plan, thus calculated, totaled approximately

$11,442. The Plan administrator then allowed Matassarin’s account

to accumulate interest at the rate of a one-year certificate of

deposit.

     When Great Empire restated its Plan on December 15, 1994,

Michael Oatman sent a letter to everyone who had a segregated

account under the original Plan. Most of the segregated-account

holders, approximately sixty-seven people, were Plan participants

who had left Great Empire’s employment and had accounts

established pursuant to Plan § 14(h).2 The letter stated that the


     that the Plan provide any type or form of benefit, or
     any option, not otherwise provided under the Plan
     . . . .
Paragraph 5 reflects the language of 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(D).

     2. Section 14(h) of the original Plan provided, in part,
that a Plan participant’s segregated account would earn interest
equivalent to that paid on a one-year certificate of deposit
(“CD”):
          Any part of a Participant’s Plan Benefit which is

                               -4-
ESOP administrative committee3 had authorized lump-sum

distributions to segregated-account holders. The letter offered

distributions either in cash or in shares of Great Empire stock.

Matassarin contends that she never received this letter, and in

any event she did not respond to it. Oatman sent follow-up

correspondence to Matassarin and other segregated-account holders

in May 1995,4 which reiterated the distribution offer but failed

to mention that segregated-account holders could select shares of

company stock as their form of distribution. The appellees now

contend that Matassarin, unlike other segregated-account holders,

was not entitled to any distribution and was sent Oatman’s


     retained in the Trust after the Anniversary Date
     coinciding with or immediately following the date on
     which he terminates employment will be credited to a
     separate account in the name of the Participant, and
     such account shall be credited with interest on the
     unpaid principal balance at the rate paid on one-year
     certificates of deposit (as of the beginning of each
     Plan Year) by any bank or savings and loan association
     designated, in its sole discretion, by the Committee.
     . . . The balance in a Participant’s undistributed
     account shall represent his interest in the Company
     Stock Account and the Other Investments Account.
     However, except in the case of reemployment (as
     provided for in Section 4), none of his Accounts will
     be credited with any further Employer Contributions or
     Forfeitures.
Section 14(g) of the amended Plan provides essentially similar
language.

     3. The administrative committee oversees the trustees’
actions. Lynch and Oatman, along with appellees Karen Warner, Don
Burford, and Curtis Brown, comprise the committee.

     4. It appears from the record that all segregated-account
holders who failed to respond to the December received such
follow-up correspondence.

                               -5-
correspondence only in error. According to the appellees,

§ 18(e)(4) in both the original and the restated Plan provides

that the Plan need not offer Matassarin any distribution until

Jenkins is eligible for retirement. Section 18(e)(4) states: “In

the case of any payment to an Alternate Payee before a

Participant has separated from service, the Plan shall not be

required to make any payment to an Alternate Payee prior to the

date Participant attains (or would have attained) the Earliest

Retirement Age.” It is not clear from the record how many of the

segregated-account holders received payment. For those who did,

the Plan administrator converted the “suspended” stock, i.e.,

that in the segregated accounts, to cash value for distribution,

then reallocated the stock among active Plan participants. For

distribution purposes, the Plan apparently valued the suspended

stock by the fair market value for whichever year-end preceded

the relevant employee’s termination from Great Empire employment.

The Great Empire ESOP defines the “valuation date” as the

December 31 “coinciding with or immediately preceding the date of

actual distribution of Plan Benefits.”

     On May 9, 1996, Matassarin brought suit in the United States

District Court for the Western District of Texas against Lynch,

Oatman, Jenkins, Great Empire, Warner, Menke & Associates, and

unknown members of Great Empire’s Board of Directors. She alleged

that the defendants committed common-law fraud and violated

ERISA, federal securities laws, and state securities laws.

                               -6-
     Matassarin filed a motion for class certification, with

herself as the representative plaintiff, which the district court

denied. She then filed a motion to have her suit treated as a

shareholder’s derivative action, or alternatively for joinder, or

alternatively for reconsideration of the district court’s

decision denying class certification. The district court denied

the motion in toto.

     The district court then granted partial summary judgment

against Matassarin on her federal securities claims against

Lynch, Oatman, Jenkins, Warner, Great Empire, and Menke &

Associates. Matassarin amended her complaint, adding Burford and

Brown, members of the ESOP administrative committee, as

defendants. The court granted partial summary judgment on

Matassarin’s federal securities claims against Burford and Brown,

as well.

     The court next granted partial summary judgment for all of

the defendants on Matassarin’s fraud, conversion, and state

securities claims.

     The defendants filed a motion for partial summary judgment

on Matassarin’s claim for attorneys’ fees. The district court

granted summary judgment with regard to any legal work done or

supervised by Matassarin but denied the motion as to work done by

other attorneys.5


     5. The law firm of Brin & Brin, P.C., where Matassarin
worked as an attorney, originally represented Matassarin in this

                               -7-
     The district court then ordered Matassarin to file an

amended complaint including only claims that still remained after

the summary judgment grants. Matassarin did so, alleging only

ERISA violations. The court thereafter struck Matassarin’s jury

demand and, in two separate orders, granted summary judgment for

the defendants on Matassarin’s ERISA claims, effectively ending

her suit.

     Matassarin also filed a motion requesting that Judge Prado,

the presiding judge, recuse himself from the case on the basis of

alleged bias. The judge denied the motion, prompting Matassarin

to petition this Court for a writ of mandamus directing Judge

Prado to recuse himself. A three-judge panel of this Court denied

the petition and Matassarin’s subsequent motion for rehearing on

the issue.

     Both Matassarin and the defendants filed motions seeking to

recover attorneys’ fees. The district court denied Matassarin’s

motion but, finding Matassarin’s ERISA suit “frivolous,” awarded

more than $24,000 in attorneys’ fees to Menke & Associates and

more than $88,000 to the other defendants.

     Matassarin now appeals the district court’s refusal to




matter. Matassarin signed many of the Brin & Brin pleadings
herself. At some time during these proceedings, Matassarin’s
employment with Brin & Brin ended and Brin & Brin ceased
representing her. Matassarin, unable to find counsel who would
take the case on a contingent-fee basis, began to handle the case
alone.

                               -8-
certify her proposed classes;6 the grants of summary judgment on

her ERISA and securities claims; the striking of her jury demand;

Judge Prado’s refusal to recuse himself; and the denial of her

motion for attorneys’ fees. The district court awarded attorneys’

fees to the defendants after Matassarin filed her first notice of

appeal. As such, Matassarin contests that award as part of a

separate appeal, No. 98-50473, which is not now before this

Court.

                               II

     Matassarin requested certification of three classes. First,

she asked the district court to certify a class of all Great

Empire ESOP participants, on whose behalf she sought to resolve

“ambiguity between the Plan Documents, specifically, which Plan

Document governs ‘distribution’ and ‘valuation’ decisions”; and

“to unseat the [Plan] Trustees for fraudulent misrepresentations,

conflict of interest, failure to comply with the Plan Document,

and/or incompetence.” Second, Matassarin sought to certify a

class of all Plan beneficiaries who were offered lump sums for

their segregated accounts. She contended that these beneficiaries

were denied the fair value of their interests and “have been the


     6. Matassarin raises the following issue on appeal: “The
District Court erred in finding that Matassarin was not a
‘suitable’ representative for Class Action and/or Joinder and/or
a Shareholder’s Derivative Action and in denying Motions
pertaining to each.” Within her brief, however, Matassarin
addresses only the issue of class certification. We therefore
deem the issues of joinder and shareholder’s derivative abandoned
on appeal by Matassarin and do not consider them further.

                               -9-
victim[s] of misrepresentations concerning the fair value of

their benefits and/or their ability to elect distribution in the

form of stock.” Finally, Matassarin sought certification for

“QDRO beneficiaries whose valuations were frozen at the time of

their divorce[s].”

     A district court has wide discretion in deciding whether to

certify a proposed class. See Applewhite v. Reichhold Chemicals,

Inc., 67 F.3d 571, 573 (5th Cir. 1995). So long as the district

court considers the four Rule 23 criteria,7 this Court will

reverse the decision only if the district court abused its

discretion. See Lightbourn v. City of El Paso, 118 F.3d 421, 426

(5th Cir. 1997).

     The district court in this case did not abuse its

discretion. The court mentioned and considered the Rule 23

prerequisites. Accurately considering Fifth Circuit precedent,

the court found that Matassarin’s “continuing and virulent

antagonism” against defendant Jenkins, her prior litigation

against Jenkins, her admission that she might bring another claim



     7. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 lists four
prerequisites to a class action:
     (1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all
     members is impracticable, (2) there are questions of
     law or fact common to the class, (3) the claims or
     defenses of the representative parties are typical of
     the claims or defenses of the class, and (4) the
     representative parties will fairly and adequately
     protect the interests of the class.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(A).

                              -10-
against the defendants, and her probable unwillingness to settle

made her an inappropriate representative. Cf. Fed. R. Civ. P.

23(A). We see no abuse of discretion in this decision.

Matassarin’s pleadings make specific reference to information,

presumably passed in confidence from spouse to spouse before the

divorce, regarding Jenkins’s motivation in helping establish the

ESOP and his desire to benefit himself. Based on such pleadings

and on the nature of this case, the district court reasonably

found that Matassarin might be more interested in hurting her ex-

husband than in ensuring adequate representation for a class. In

addition, the district court rightly found that Matassarin could

not serve as both the representative plaintiff and the class

attorney; her duty to represent class interests would

impermissibly conflict with her chance to gain financially from

an award of attorneys’ fees. The Fifth Circuit frowns upon a

named plaintiff’s partner or spouse serving as counsel for a

class. See, e.g., Phillips v. Joint Legislative Committee on

Performance and Expenditure Review, 637 F.2d 1014, 1023 (5th Cir.

1981); Zylstra v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 578 F.2d 102, 104 (5th

Cir. 1978). It follows that the same reasoning should prevent a

named plaintiff herself from serving as counsel. See Zylstra, 578

F.2d at 104 (“We are persuaded . . . that attorneys . . . who

themselves are members of the class of plaintiffs should be

subject to a per se rule of disqualification under Canon 9 [of


                              -11-
the Code of Professional Responsibility] and should not be

permitted to serve as counsel for the class.”). Finally, even

apart from those grounds upon which the district court explicitly

relied, several other considerations support the denial of class

certification. These include Matassarin’s atypical position as a

QDRO beneficiary to the ESOP--Matassarin herself spends pages of

her reply brief to this Court arguing that she was in fact

discriminated against and treated differently than other ESOP

participants, including other segregated-account holders--and the

likely failure of at least one of her proposed classes to meet

Rule 23’s numerosity requirement.

     Accordingly, the district court’s decision to deny class

certification did not constitute an abuse of discretion.

                                 III

     We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for

the defendants as to Matassarin’s state and federal securities

claims.

A.   Federal Securities Claims

     A cause of action falls under the 1933 Securities Act and

the 1934 Securities Exchange Act only if the interest involved

constitutes a “security” under § 2(1) of the ’33 Act, 15 U.S.C.

§ 77b(a)(1),8 or § 3(a)(10) of the ’34 Act, 15 U.S.C.


     8.  Section 77b(a)(1) provides:
          The term “security” means any note, stock,
     treasury stock, bond, debenture, evidence of
     indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation

                                 -12-
§ 78c(a)(10).9 Neither Act specifically includes any sort of

ERISA-type plan in its definition. The few courts addressing

whether such plans are securities have focused on whether the

plans constitute “investment contracts” under the Acts. See,

e.g., International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. Daniel, 439 U.S.

551, 99 S. Ct. 790 (1979); Uselton v. Commercial Lovelace Motor

Freight, 940 F.2d 564 (10th Cir. 1991). An investment contract

has three components: It (1) involves an investment of money (2)

in a common enterprise (3) with profits to come solely from the

efforts of others. See SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293, 301,

66 S. Ct. 1100, 1104 (1946). Matassarin contends that language in

the Great Empire ESOP document--such as “stock” and “security”--

establishes that an interest in the ESOP is a security. This



     in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust
     certificate, preorganization certificate or
     subscription, transferable share, investment contract,
     voting-trust certificate, certificate of deposit for a
     security, fractional undivided interest in oil, gas, or
     other mineral rights, any put, call, straddle, option,
     or privilege on any security, certificate of deposit,
     or group or index of securities (including any interest
     therein based on the value thereof), or any put, call,
     straddle, option, or privilege entered into on a
     national securities exchange relating to foreign
     currency, or, in general, any interest or instrument
     commonly known as a “security”, or any certificate of
     interest or participation in, temporary or interim
     certificate for, receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant
     or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the
     foregoing.

     9. Section 78c(a)(10)’s definition of “security” is similar
to that of § 77b(a)(1).

                              -13-
argument is without merit. The Howey test “is to be applied in

light of ‘the substance--the economic realities of the

transaction--rather than the names that may have been employed by

the parties.’” Daniel, 439 U.S. at 558, 99 S. Ct. at 796 (quoting

United Housing Foundation, Inc. v. Forman, 421 U.S. 837, 851-52,

95 S. Ct. 2051, 2060 (1975)). Matassarin also argues that the

Tenth Circuit’s reasoning in Uselton, the only case since Daniel

in which a circuit court discussed at length whether an ESOP

constitutes a security, should control in this case. We agree

that Uselton’s reasoning is persuasive, but we find that the

Great Empire ESOP, considered under Daniel and Uselton together,

is not subject to ’33 or ’34 Act protection.

     Daniel involved a union-established pension plan to which

employers contributed. Every union member had to belong to the

plan and could not have the employer contributions paid directly

to him instead of to the plan. Every plan participant who served

20 continuous years with the union received identical “defined”

pension benefits after retirement. The employers made uniform

contributions for each week an employee worked. An employee did

not have an individual account tied to employer contributions

attributable to his period of service. When the union denied

benefits to member John Daniel after he retired, Daniel sued

under the ’33 and ’34 Acts. The Court found that the union

pension plan did not constitute an “investment contract” under


                              -14-
Howey. First, the Court found that the plan did not include an

“investment of money”: The plan collected a small part of each

employee’s compensation package, but the employee did not pay any

“tangible and definable consideration in return for an interest.”

Daniel, 439 U.S. at 560, 99 S. Ct. at 797. Furthermore, no fixed

relationship existed between employer contributions to the fund

and an employee’s potential benefit. “Looking at the economic

realities,” the Court wrote, “it seems clear that an employee is

selling his labor primarily to obtain a livelihood, not making an

investment.” Id. at 560, 99 S. Ct. at 797. Second, the Court

reiterated that, as it had stated in Forman, “the ‘touchstone’ of

the Howey test ‘is the presence of an investment in a common

venture premised on a reasonable expectation of profits to be

derived from the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of

others.’” Id. (quoting Forman, 421 U.S. at 852, 95 S. Ct. at

2060). Although the union pension fund in Daniel depended some on

earnings from its assets, “a far larger portion of its income

[came] from employer contributions, a source in no way dependent

on the efforts of the [plan’s] managers.” Id. at 562, 99 S. Ct.

at 797. An employee’s receipt of benefits was not tied to the

financial health of the plan but instead to the employee’s

meeting eligibility requirements. Therefore, “viewed in light of

the total compensation package an employee must receive in order

to be eligible for pension benefits, it [became] clear that the


                              -15-
possibility of participating in a plan’s asset earnings ‘[was]

far too speculative and insubstantial to bring the entire

transaction within the Securities Acts.’” Id. at 563, 99 S. Ct.

at 798 (quoting Forman, 421 U.S. at 856, 95 S. Ct. at 2062).

     Uselton concerned an entirely different type of plan, an

ESOP. In 1984, Pepsico, Inc. sold Lee Way Motor Freight (“Lee

Way”), a wholly owned subsidiary, to Commercial Lovelace (“CL”).

Almost immediately, CL began encouraging Lee Way’s union

employees to participate in CL’s year-old wage-reduction program.

The program allowed an employee to take a voluntary 17.35-percent

reduction in wages in exchange for profit sharing and an interest

in CL’s existing ERISA-governed ESOP. The ESOP established

individual accounts for participants, allocating shares of CL

stock according to the employee’s compensation. Within a year, CL

merged with Lee Way and filed for bankruptcy. Pepsico thereafter

allegedly reacquired Lee Way’s former assets. Union employees who

had chosen to participate in the wage-reduction program charged

that Pepsico’s sale of Lee Way and CL’s rapid demise were a sham

transaction to facilitate and disguise Pepsico’s liquidation of

Lee Way. They brought suit to recover their contributed wages,

relying in part on federal securities laws.

     The Tenth Circuit acknowledged that “an employee benefit

plan that is either noncontributory or compulsory is not an

investment contract because it does not allow a participant to


                              -16-
make the ‘investment’ required by the first prong of the Howey

test.” Uselton, 940 F.2d at 573-74. The court noted, however,

that in the CL ESOP, each union employee who chose to join gave

up specific consideration--a portion of his wages--and thus made

an investment. See id. at 575-76. The court also held that the CL

ESOP satisfied the third Howey prong, as it would produce

capital-appreciation profits and/or allow participation in

earnings resulting from the investment: “[A]ny profit on

plaintiffs’ ESOP interest would occur through dividend

distributions and appreciation in the value of the stock

allocated to their accounts, which in both cases would result

primarily from the efforts [of] CL’s managers and its employees.”

Id. at 576-77.

     Under the Tenth Circuit’s reasoning, the Great Empire ESOP

meets Howey’s third prong. Nonetheless, under both Uselton and

Daniel, the Great Empire ESOP fails Howey’s first prong; it is

not a voluntary investment choice, but instead a mandatory,

employer-funded program.10 Matassarin therefore cannot maintain a

federal securities action, and the district court’s grant of

summary judgment is affirmed as to that claim.



     10. Matassarin seeks to defeat this point by arguing that
“an individual may use cash to purchase shares of stock.” This
argument misrepresents the Plan provision she cites, § 17(b),
which provides only that a participant may leave a portion of his
distributions, if any, in the Plan for reinvestment. This is not
equivalent to using cash from any source to buy stock.

                              -17-
B.   State Securities Claims

     Matassarin also brought claims under Texas Business and

Commerce Code Section 27.01 and under Texas Civil Statutes

article 581 (Blue Sky Law). The district court dismissed

Matassarin’s state securities claims, stating, “Texas law uses

the same basic standards as federal law for determining what

constitutes a security. . . . Because this Court has previously

ruled that the transaction in the present case do[es] not satisfy

the Howey test for what constitutes a security, the Court

concludes that Texas state law would arrive at the same result.”

The district court cited Wilson v. Lee, 601 S.W.2d 483, 485 (Tex.

Civ. App.—Dallas 1980, n.w.h.), for the proposition that federal

precedent defining a “security” also applies to the definition of

a security under Texas state law. But neither Wilson nor other

cases that state this proposition11 deal with an ESOP interest.

In fact, Texas law may differ from federal law as to whether an

ESOP interest is a security. Texas Civil Statutes article 581

provides, in part:

          The term “security” or “securities” shall include

     . . . any certificate or instrument representing or



     11. See, e.g., Callejo v. Bancomer, 764 F.2d 1101, 1125
n.33 (5th Cir. 1985); Campbell v. C.D. Payne & Geldermann Sec.,
Inc., 894 S.W.2d 411, 417 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1995, writ denied);
First Municipal Leasing Corp. v. Blankenship, Potts, Aikman,
Hagin & Stewart, 648 S.W.2d 410, 414 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1983, writ
ref’d n.r.e.).

                               -18-
     secured by an interest in any or all of the capital,

     property, assets, profits or earnings of any company,

     investment contract, or any other instrument commonly

     known as a security, whether similar to those herein

     referenced or not.

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581—4(A). Unlike the federal securities

law definitions of a “security” found in 15 U.S.C. §§ 77b(a)(1)

and 78c(a)(10), the Texas statute may well be broad enough to

include a nonvoluntary ESOP interest. We need not reach the

issue, however, because even if the Great Empire ESOP constitutes

a security under Texas law, Matassarin cannot maintain her state

securities action.

     Matassarin bases her action upon Texas Revised Civil

Statutes article 581—33(B) and upon Texas Business and Commerce

Code § 27.01(a)(1). The former provision states in part:

          A person who offers to buy or who buys a security

     . . . by means of an untrue statement of a material

     fact or an omission to state a material fact necessary

     in order to make the statements made, in light of the

     circumstances under which they are made, not

     misleading, is liable to the person selling the

     security to him, who may sue either at law or in equity

     for recision or for damages if the buyer no longer owns

     the security.

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581—33(B). Texas Business and Commerce

                              -19-
Code section 27.01 applies to fraud in stock transactions. That

section provides in part:

     Fraud in a transaction involving . . . stock in a

     corporation or joint stock company consists of a . . .

     false representation of a past or existing material

     fact, when the false representation is (A) made to a

     person for the purpose of inducing that person to enter

     into a contract; and (B) relied on by that person

     entering into the contract . . . .

Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 27.01(a)(1). Requisite to an action under

these statutes is an “untrue statement of a material fact or an

omission to state a material fact” or a “false representation.”

Matassarin’s state securities claim rests upon an issue central

to her ERISA argument, namely, that the defendants made

misrepresentations concerning her ESOP rights or the value of her

benefit. As set forth hereafter in our discussion of Matassarin’s

ERISA claims, we find that the defendants made no untrue

statements of material fact or false representations to her. On

that ground, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary

judgment on Matassarin’s state securities claims. See Chevron

U.S.A., Inc. v. Traillour Oil Co., 987 F.2d 1138, 1146 (5th Cir.

1993) (noting that an appellate court may affirm a grant of

summary judgment on grounds other than those relied on by the

district court).


                              -20-
                                IV

     Matassarin seeks recovery under the Employee Retirement

Income Security Act of 1974 for benefits due her under the Plan

and relief for various ERISA violations. We find that the

district court properly granted summary judgment to the

defendants on Matassarin’s ERISA claims.12

A.   Denial of Benefits Due

     Great Empire interpreted the Plan and Matassarin’s QDRO to

require segregation of Matassarin’s Plan benefits into an account

that will accrue minimal interest until Danny Jenkins reaches

retirement age. Matassarin contends that her benefit due should

continue to be 520.086 shares of Great Empire shares at current

share value, or alternatively that she, along with other

segregated-account holders, should have the opportunity to

receive a cash distribution equal to the current fair market

value of her shares. ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B) states: “A civil action

may be brought . . . by a participant or beneficiary . . . to

recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan, to

enforce his rights under the terms of the plan, or to clarify his

rights to future benefits under the terms of the plan . . . .” 29

U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). As a QDRO recipient, Matassarin has




     12. Because we affirm the grants of summary judgment, we do
not consider whether appellee Menke & Associates could face
liability as a Plan fiduciary within 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A)’s
definition of a fiduciary.

                               -21-
standing to bring these claims. See Boggs v. Boggs, 520 U.S. 833,

---, 117 S. Ct. 1754, 1763 (1997) (“In creating the QDRO

mechanism Congress was careful to provide that the alternate

payee . . . is to be considered a plan beneficiary.”); see also

29 U.S.C. § 1056 (d)(3)(J).

     The Great Empire ESOP gives its administrator discretionary

authority to construe the Plan terms.13 When a plan gives such

discretion, a district court will overrule the plan

administrator’s interpretation of plan terms only if the

interpretation is “arbitrary and capricious.” See Firestone Tire

& Rubber Co. v. Bruch, 489 U.S. 101, 115, 109 S. Ct. 948, 955

(1989); Wildbur v. ARCO Chemical Co., 974 F.2d 631, 637-39 (5th

Cir. 1992). The “arbitrary and capricious” review amounts to an

abuse-of-discretion standard. See McDonald v. Provident Indemnity

Life Insurance. Co., 60 F.3d 234, 236 (5th Cir. 1995). Applying

the same standards as the district court, this Court reviews the

Great Empire ESOP administrator’s interpretation of Plan terms

for abuse of discretion.

     We do not afford such deference to the Plan administrator’s

interpretation of Matassarin’s QDRO. A court reviews de novo a



     13. Plan § 18(a)(2)(A), in both the original and the
amended version, provides, in part, “All decisions required to be
made by the [Plan administrative] Committee involving the
interpretation, application and administration of the Plan shall
be resolved by majority vote either at a meeting or in writing
without a meeting.”

                              -22-
plan administrator’s legal conclusions regarding the meaning of a

contract or statute. Cf. Penn v. Howe-Baker Engineers, Inc., 898

F.2d 1096, 1100 (5th Cir. 1990) (reviewing de novo a plan

administrator’s determination as to whether an employee was an

independent contractor for coverage purposes). The QDRO, unlike

the Plan, is a separate, judicially approved contract between

Jenkins and Matassarin, which the Plan administrator has no

special discretion to interpret. Although we allow a plan

administrator discretion to determine whether an agreement

constitutes a QDRO under the plan, we otherwise review de novo a

plan administrator’s interpretation of the meaning of a QDRO. See

Hullett v. Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc., 38 F.3d 107,

114 (3d Cir. 1994) (finding that a district court “did not err in

holding that it should review de novo the plan administrator’s

construction of the [divorce agreement], which invoked issues of

contract interpretation under the Agreement and not the plan”).

     1.   The Nature of Matassarin’s Interest

     Congress created the QDRO structure in the Retirement Equity

Act (“REA”) of 1984, which amended ERISA. Through the REA,

Congress enhanced ERISA’s protection of divorced spouses and

their interest in retirement funds earned during marriage. See

Boggs, 520 U.S. at ---, 117 S. Ct. at 1763. “The QDRO provisions

protect those persons who, often as a result of divorce, might

not receive the benefits they otherwise would have had available


                              -23-
during their retirement as a means of income.” Id. at ---, 117 S.

Ct. at 1767. In order to accomplish this, the REA amendments

require that “[e]ach pension plan shall provide for the payment

of benefits in accordance with the applicable requirements of any

qualified domestic relations order.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(A).

Furthermore, “[e]ach plan shall establish reasonable procedures

to determine the qualified status of domestic relations orders

and to administer distributions under such qualified orders.” 29

U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(G)(ii).

     The QDRO in this case assigned Matassarin one-half of

Jenkins’s “[i]nterest [in] the assets accredited to [his] ESOP

Accounts as of October 15, 1991.” It also “require[d] that the

Administrator of the Great Empire Broadcasting, Inc. ESOP

segregate [Matassarin’s assigned] Interest, and that said

segregated account . . . continue to accumulate Interest at a

rate equivalent to a one-year Certificate of Deposit.” These two

requirements’ opaqueness makes it understandable that Matassarin

might question the treatment of her account. We seek here to

provide clarification.

     Matassarin contends that she is entitled to more than the

simple interest that will accumulate on her segregated shares’

cash value as of the last valuation date before the segregation.

She contends that she should receive the cash value of 520.086

shares at whatever time the Plan passes the benefits to her. We



                              -24-
disagree. The ESOP defines the “valuation date” as the December

31 “coinciding with or immediately preceding the date of actual

distribution of Plan Benefits.” Matassarin states that because

the Plan has not made a distribution to her, the administrator

erred by valuing her shares as of the divorce date. The QDRO,

however, contravenes the interpretation that Matassarin urges.

Necessarily reducing Matassarin’s interest to cash value is

implicit in the QDRO, because cash principal can accumulate

interest, whereas shares, owing to their fluctuating value,

cannot. To read the QDRO as requiring Matassarin to receive the

total of 520.086 shares valued at the date of payment to

Matassarin would render meaningless the QDRO provision pertaining

to interest. The Plan administrator instead valued Matassarin’s

interest at the date of segregation--that is, distribution to her

interest-accumulating segregated account. In light of the QDRO

provisions, the Plan administrator’s interpretation was legally

correct.

     Matassarin also argues that the Great Empire ESOP--

specifically, restated § 18(e)(1)--supports her position. Under

that provision, the Plan administrator must segregate a QDRO

beneficiary’s account and “continue to [treat it] in the same

manner as the affected Accounts of the Participant,” albeit

absent further contributions or forfeitures from Great Empire.

The appellees argue that the restated Plan, although retroactive

to 1989, should not apply to Matassarin’s QDRO, because at the

                              -25-
time that the QDRO was entered, the original Plan provisions were

effective. The appellees’ reasoning is not self-evident, and one

might plausibly argue that the 1994 restatement should indeed

apply to Matassarin’s QDRO.14 That issue, however, is a matter of

Plan interpretation, which we review under the abuse-of-

discretion standard. No matter which interpretation this Court

might prefer, the Plan administrator did not act arbitrarily and

capriciously in finding that the provisions added to § 18(e)(1)

in 1994 do not govern Matassarin’s QDRO.

     2.    Distribution of Benefits

     Matassarin argues that she is currently entitled to

distribution of her benefit, that beneficiaries under the ESOP

may select distribution of benefits “in the form of employer

securities,” and that beneficiaries have an option to “put” those

securities back for fair market value. Matassarin argues that two

tax code provisions--26 U.S.C. § 409(h)15 and 26 U.S.C.


     14. In the original Plan § 19(a), Great Empire “reserve[d]
the right to amend the Plan at any time and from time to time, in
whole or in part, including without limitation, retroactive
amendments . . . .” Matassarin became a Plan beneficiary on
October 15, 1991, and remained so in 1994, when the Plan was
restated. Section 1(b) of the 1994 restatement rendered the
restatement’s provisions retroactive to January 1, 1989. The
restatement does not except segregated accounts from retroactive
application of its terms. Thus, at the time that Plan fiduciaries
offered Matassarin a distribution in December 1994 or May 1995,
they might have been able to treat Matassarin’s account--a
“segregated account” as established under the Plan--as subject to
the restated Plan.

     15.   That statute provides, in part:
           A plan meets the requirements of this subsection

                               -26-
§ 4975(e)(7)16--mandate these beneficiary options in a tax-exempt

plan such as the Great Empire ESOP. Matassarin is correct that,

under those provisions, ESOP participants who are entitled to

distribution must be able to demand employer securities as the

form of distribution. She is, however, mistaken to contend that

she is now entitled to a distribution. Although the QDRO fails to

specify the date of distribution, § 18(e)(4) in both the original

and the restated Plan provides that no distributions need be made

to Matassarin before Jenkins reaches retirement eligibility. The

Retirement Equity Act recognizes that a QDRO may delay

distribution until the Plan participant could retire. See 29

U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(E)(i). We see no reason why an ERISA-

qualified plan may not do the same.

     Matassarin’s domestic relations order met the Plan’s § 18(e)

qualifications. The Plan administrator interpreted the QDRO

requirements and harmonized them with the Plan provisions. We

find no error in the Plan administrator’s interpretation of the




     if a participant who is entitled to a distribution from
     the plan—(A) has a right to demand that his benefits be
     distributed in the form of employer securities, and (B)
     if the employer securities are not readily tradable on
     an established market, has a right to require that the
     employer repurchase employer securities under a fair
     valuation formula.
26 U.S.C. § 409(h)(1).

     16. “A plan shall not be treated as an employee stock
ownership plan unless it meets the requirements of section 409(h)
. . . .” 26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(7).

                              -27-
QDRO and no abuse of discretion in its interpretation of the Plan

provisions. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of

summary judgment to the defendants on Matassarin’s ERISA claim

for denial of benefits.

B.   ERISA Violations and Breach of Fiduciary Duty

     Matassarin next contends that the Great Empire ESOP

fiduciaries failed to satisfy ERISA requirements and violated

their fiduciary duty to her and to the Plan generally. She relies

upon ERISA §§ 502(a)(2) and (a)(3).

     1.   Section 502(a)(2)

     Section 502(a)(2) provides a cause of action for injuries

caused by violations of ERISA § 509. Section 509 focuses on

fiduciary breaches that cause harm to a plan as a whole:

          Any person who is a fiduciary with respect to a

     plan who breaches any of the responsibilities,

     obligations, or duties imposed upon fiduciaries by this

     subchapter shall be personally liable to make good to

     such plan any losses to the plan resulting from each

     such breach, and to restore to such plan any profits of

     such fiduciary which have been made through use of

     assets of the plan by the fiduciary, and shall be

     subject to such other equitable or remedial relief as

     the court may deem appropriate, including removal of

     such fiduciary.


                              -28-
29 U.S.C. § 1109(a). The Supreme Court, noting ERISA’s primary

concern with the possible misuse or poor management of plan

assets, has stated that the “loss to the plan” language in § 1109

limits claims to those that inure to the benefit of the plan as a

whole and not to the benefit only of individual plan

beneficiaries. See McDonald, 60 F.3d at 237 (citing Massachusetts

Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Russell, 473 U.S. 134, 140-42 & nn.

8-9, 105 S. Ct. 3085, 3089-90 & nn. 8-9 (1985)). Based upon this

statutory purpose, we find that the district court properly

granted summary judgment on Matassarin’s § 502(a)(2) claim.

     Most of the ERISA breaches that Matassarin alleges concern

only her individual account or, at most, those of the sixty-seven

Plan participants who were offered lump-sum distributions. The

exception to this is Matassarin’s claim that the defendants

failed to conform the Great Empire ESOP to 26 U.S.C. § 409(h) and

26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(7) and thereby jeopardized the Plan’s tax-

exempt status. It appears that the original Plan document did

fail to allow segregated-account holders to purchase company

stock. The amended Plan document remedied that error in order to

bring the Plan into compliance with the tax code provisions. The

defendants have admitted to omitting mistakenly from the May 1995

follow-up correspondence the fact that participants could select

Great Empire securities as the form of distribution. But this

omission seems to have been a simple oversight. Nothing in the


                              -29-
record or pleadings indicates that participants who were entitled

to distribution were in fact denied the right to demand employer

securities, such as would disqualify the Plan under those tax

code provisions. Matassarin has failed to allege any way in which

the defendants’ actions caused a loss to the Plan as a whole as

envisioned in § 502(a)(2). We therefore affirm the district

court’s grant of summary judgment on Matassarin’s § 502(a)(2)

claim.

     2.   Section 502(a)(3)

     Summary judgment on Matassarin’s § 502(a)(3) claim was

appropriate only if Matassarin provided no evidence of any ERISA

violation. Under § 502(a)(3), a plan participant may bring an

action

     (A) to enjoin any act or practice which violates any

     provision of [ERISA’s protection of employee benefit

     rights] or the terms of the plan, or (B) to obtain

     other appropriate equitable relief (i) to redress such

     violations or (ii) to enforce any provisions of

     [ERISA’s protection of employee benefit rights] or the

     terms of the plan.

29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). A plan beneficiary may bring a

§ 502(a)(3) action against an ERISA fiduciary based on loss to

the individual beneficiary as well as based on loss to the plan

as a whole. See Varity Corp. v. Howe, 516 U.S. 489, 496, 116 S.


                              -30-
Ct. 1065, 1075-76 (1996) (contrasting § 1132(a)(2) with

§ 1132(a)(3), which does not require loss to the plan as a

whole). Matassarin alleges four types of ERISA violations: (1)

fiduciary self-dealing, (2) failure to invest prudently, (3)

interference with her exercise of protected rights, and (4)

failure to provide information.

             a.   Fiduciary Self-Dealing

     The Great Empire ESOP in early 1995 reabsorbed suspended

shares in § 14(h) accounts, paying each account holder the value

of his shares as of the December 31 preceding his separation from

the Plan. According to Matassarin, the Plan effectively

repurchased shares for less than the fair market value on the

date of repurchase. Those who benefitted most from this

repurchase, she continues, were (1) the Plan fiduciaries, who

held the largest share accounts in the Plan; and (2) Lynch and

Oatman, whose company, Great Empire, was able to avoid paying

fair market value for the shares. Matassarin argues that these

actions violated ERISA § 406(b), which prohibits fiduciary self-

dealing.17


     17.  A fiduciary with respect to a plan shall not--
          (1) deal with the assets of the plan in his own
     interest or for his own account,
          (2) in his individual or in any other capacity act in
     any transaction involving the plan on behalf of a party (or
     represent a party) whose interests are adverse to the
     interests of the plan or the interests of its participants
     or beneficiaries, or
          (3) receive any consideration for his own personal
     account from any party dealing with such plan in connection

                                 -31-
     We need not consider the claim in depth. Under § 502(a)(3),

a beneficiary may bring an action to enjoin an ERISA violation or

for equitable relief. In this case, Matassarin has nothing to

enjoin and no equitable relief available to her on behalf of the

Plan as a whole. The “repurchase” took place in 1995. The Plan as

a whole did not suffer, and Matassarin’s individual segregated

account was unaffected. Even if Matassarin’s § 406(b) allegations

are meritorious, the only beneficiaries possibly entitled to

relief would be the Plan participants who were allegedly offered

less than fair value for the interests in their § 14(h)

accounts.18 As we have stated, the district court did not abuse

its discretion in finding Matassarin an inappropriate

representative for a class that would include those Plan

participants. Whereas Matassarin individually has no § 502(a)(3)

relief available to her for § 406(b) violations, the district

court properly denied her claim for breach of fiduciary duty.19


     with a transaction involving the assets of the plan.
29 U.S.C. § 1106(b).

     18. We make no finding here as to whether any separated
Plan participant with a § 14(h) account would have a claim
against the Plan fiduciaries.

     19. We have not considered whether the duties set forth in
§ 406(b) necessarily apply in this ESOP situation. ERISA § 408(e)
generally exempts ESOP fiduciaries from § 406 requirements when
the questioned transaction involves the acquisition or sale of
“qualifying employer securities,” which include stock. 29 U.S.C.
§ 1108(e); see 29 U.S.C. § 1107(d)(5)(A). Section 408(e) has been
interpreted to allow “[a]n ESOP [to] acquire employer securities
in circumstances that would otherwise violate Section 406 if the
purchase is made for ‘adequate consideration.’” Donovan v.

                              -32-
          b.   Failure To Invest Prudently

     Matassarin next argues that the defendants’ allowing her

segregated account to accrue only minimal interest violates the

prudent-person investment standard’s diversification requirement

under ERISA § 404. ERISA § 404 requires a plan fiduciary to

“discharge his duty with respect to a Plan solely in the interest

of the participants and beneficiaries and . . . by diversifying

the investments of the plan so as to minimize the risk of large

losses, unless under the circumstances it is clearly prudent not

to do so.” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(C); see Metzler v. Graham, 112

F.3d 207, 209 (5th Cir. 1997) (addressing the diversification

requirement). The defendants’ failure to diversify Matassarin’s

account did not in any way expose it to the risk of large losses

and therefore did not breach an explicit § 404 diversification

duty. We are mindful, however, that implicit within § 404(a) is

the desirability of increasing a plan’s value--preferably

ensuring more than passbook interest--through sound investment.20



Cunningham, 716 F.2d 1455, 1465 (5th Cir. 1983). The more likely
challenge involving this exemption would question whether an ESOP
paid too much for employer securities. We know of none in which a
claimant alleged that an ESOP cheated its former participants by
paying too little for employer securities. Whereas Matassarin
would not be entitled to relief even if § 406(b) does apply, we
need not decide the issue here.

     20. Section 404(a)(1)(B), for example, requires an ERISA
fiduciary to discharge his duties as would “a prudent man acting
in like capacity and familiar with such matters,” which would
contemplate increasing the plan’s value. 29 U.S.C.
§ 1104(a)(1)(B).

                              -33-
Nonetheless, Matassarin’s QDRO, the terms of which the defendants

were bound to apply, requires just passbook interest, rendering

it clearly prudent under §404(a)(1)(C) for Great Empire not to

diversify in this case.

     We recognize the aberrancy and difficulty of Matassarin’s

situation. In enacting ERISA, Congress sought to ensure that

workers who have been promised certain retirement benefits

actually receive those benefits. See Pension Benefit Guaranty

Corp. v. R.A. Gray & Co., 467 U.S. 717, 720, 104 S. Ct. 2709,

2713 (1984). Although the primary purpose of an ESOP differs from

that of a pension plan, ESOPs remain subject to ERISA’s general

protective restrictions and requirements. See Cunningham, 716

F.2d at 1463-68. From Matassarin’s point of view, the QDRO

structure has hurt her retirement prospects. While married to

Jenkins, Matassarin no doubt looked forward to enjoying with him


     ERISA sound-investment requirements do not generally apply
to an ESOP, which is “designed to invest primarily in securities
issued by its sponsoring company.” Cunningham, 716 F.2d at 1458;
see 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(2) (exempting ESOPs from diversification
requirements); 29 U.S.C. § 1107(b), (d) (same); see also Moench
v. Robertson, 62 F.3d 553, 568 (3d Cir. 1995) (“ESOPs, unlike
pension plans, are not intended to guarantee retirement benefits,
and indeed, by its very nature, ‘an ESOP places employee
retirement assets at much greater risk than does the typical
diversified ERISA plan.’” (quoting Martin v. Feilen, 965 F.2d
660, 664 (8th Cir. 1992)). If Matassarin were an ordinary ESOP
participant, the nature of the Plan would probably exempt her
account from standard ERISA diversification requirements. But
Matassarin is of course not an ordinary ESOP participant, insofar
as her account, per the terms of her QDRO, no longer depends upon
employer securities. As such, any ESOP exception seems
inapplicable.

                              -34-
the retirement benefits of his Great Empire ESOP shares.

Presumably, she and Jenkins expected that the shares’ value would

increase in the years before Jenkins became eligible for

retirement. Because the QDRO requires valuation of Matassarin’s

shares as of the date of her divorce, she lost the prospect of

significant increase in the shares’ value to fund her retirement.

In short, Matassarin’s QDRO removed her savings from the ambit of

a more traditional ERISA-qualified ESOP or pension plan, which

would focus on increasing savings.

     This case raises the question, then, of how a plan

administrator is to treat a beneficiary whose QDRO appears out of

line from the greater goals of ERISA. We believe that both ERISA

and case law require a plan administrator to follow the dictates

of the QDRO. Once a plan administrator determines that a domestic

relations order meets the criteria set forth in 29 U.S.C.

§ 1056(d)(3) and thus is “qualified,” he is required to act in

accordance with the QDRO. See, e.g., In re Gendreau, 122 F.3d

815, 817-18 (9th Cir. 1997); Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v.

Wheaton, 42 F.3d 1080, 1085 (7th Cir. 1994). “ERISA does not

require, or even permit, a pension fund to look beneath the

surface of the order. Compliance with a QDRO is obligatory. . . .

This directive would be empty if pension plans could add to the

statutory list of requirements for ‘qualified’ status.” Blue v.

UAL Corp., 160 F.3d 383, 385 (7th Cir. 1998). Through its QDRO


                              -35-
amendments, federal ERISA law defers to domestic relations orders

approved in state court proceedings. We do not find the deference

to be affected by whether the QDRO may slow the growth of the

subject retirement savings.

     Matassarin makes several arguments as to why her QDRO should

not be enforced. She contends, for example, that Jenkins insisted

on the QDRO format as necessary to recognition under the Great

Empire ESOP, that Menke & Associates unfairly drafted the order,

and that she did not realize the implications of the order for

her retirement benefits. A United States district court is not

the proper forum in which to raise such arguments. We acknowledge

that ERISA supersedes state law insofar as the state law

“relate[s] to” an ERISA-qualified employee benefit plan. 29

U.S.C. § 1144(a). Federal courts may be called upon to determine

the proper beneficiary under a QDRO or to review a plan

administrator’s interpretation of a QDRO, as we have done here.

But although we read § 1144(a)’s “relates to” language broadly,

see Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 463 U.S. 85, 97, 103 S. Ct.

2890, 2900 (1983), we cannot say that a federal court’s role

extends as far as examining the circumstances under which a

potential beneficiary entered and a state court approved a QDRO.

Such a claim affects domestic relations, which is not an area of

exclusive federal concern. See Memorial Hospital System v.

Northbrook Life Insurance Co., 904 F.2d 236, 245 (5th Cir. 1990)


                              -36-
(stating that cases in which ERISA preempts state-law claims, the

claims address areas of exclusive federal concern). If Matassarin

believes that she mistakenly entered the QDRO or was fraudulently

induced to do so, then the Kansas state court that approved that

order is the entity to hear her complaints. Cf. Perkins v. Time

Insurance Co., 898 F.2d 470, 473 (5th Cir. 1990) (holding that a

claim that an insurance agent fraudulently induced an insured to

surrender his current insurance and participate in an ERISA plan

“related to” the ERISA plan only indirectly, so that ERISA would

not preempt the state claim). The REA amendments preserve ERISA

anti-alienation provisions while leaving domestic relations in

the states’ hands. We will not disturb that structure.

          c.   Interference with Protected Rights

     ERISA § 510, titled “Interference with Protected Rights,”

makes it unlawful to discriminate against an ERISA plan

beneficiary for exercising his rights or in order to interfere

with his attainment of any right. See 29 U.S.C. § 1140. A

violation of § 510 requires specific intent to discriminate. See

Unida v. Levi Strauss & Co., 986 F.2d 970, 979-80 (5th Cir.

1993). Matassarin alleges that Lynch, Oatman, Jenkins, and Great

Empire discriminated against her for seeking her entitlement

under her QDRO. Although her claims are not entirely clear,

Matassarin apparently argues that because Great Empire sent her

the May 1995 letters--which it claims were sent in error--and


                              -37-
later denied that she was entitled to any distribution, Great

Empire was in fact discriminating against her for seeking what

she was due. We find that summary judgment on this claim was

appropriate because Matassarin produced no evidence that her

inquiries prompted the defendants’ actions or Plan

interpretation. Matassarin also claims more general

discrimination based on the appellees’ contention that she was

the only segregated account holder who was not entitled to a

distribution in May 1995. This claim is likewise without merit.

Unlike the sixty-seven separated Plan participants, Matassarin

had a QDRO, a separate contract that required different treatment

for Matassarin than for the sixty-seven holders of § 14(h)

accounts offered distributions. Summary judgment was appropriate

as to Matassarin’s claims for interference with her protected

rights.

          d.   Failure To Provide Information

     Matassarin argues that the defendants violated ERISA

§ 105(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1025(a), which concerns statements

furnished by an administrator to participants and beneficiaries:

          Each administrator of an employee pension benefit

     plan shall furnish to any plan participant or

     beneficiary who so requests in writing, a statement

     indicating, on the basis of the latest available

     information--(1) the total benefits accrued, and (2)



                              -38-
     the nonforfeitable pension benefits, if any, which have

     accrued, or the earliest date on which benefits will

     become nonforfeitable.

29 U.S.C. § 1025(a). As the provision states, the plan

participant must request the statement in writing in order to

trigger the administrator’s § 1025 duty. Matassarin seeks

penalties of $100 per day under ERISA § 502(c)(1) against the

trustees and other fiduciary defendants for Great Empire’s

alleged failure to provide information regarding the value of her

stock. Section 502(c)(1), similar to § 1025(a), requires the

participant to request information before an administrator may be

sanctioned for failing to provide it.21 Matassarin does not state

what, if any, material she specifically requested and the

defendants failed to provide, such as would allow for penalties

under § 502(c)(1). This Court reviews only for abuse of

discretion a district court’s decision whether to assess



     21.  ERISA § 502(c)(1) states, in part:
          Any administrator . . . who fails or refuses to
     comply with a request for any information which such
     administrator is required by this subchapter to furnish
     to a participant or beneficiary (unless such failure or
     refusal results from matters reasonably beyond the
     control of the administrator) by mailing the material
     requested to the last known address of the requesting
     participant or beneficiary within 30 days after such
     request may in the court’s discretion be personally
     liable to such participant or beneficiary in the amount
     of up to $100 a day from the date of such failure or
     refusal, and the court may in its discretion order such
     other relief as it deems proper.
29 U.S.C. § 1132(c)(1).

                              -39-
penalties under § 502(c)(1). See, e.g., Godwin v. Sun Life

Assurance Co., 980 F.2d 323, 327 (5th Cir. 1992) (reviewing only

for abuse of discretion the district court’s refusal to award

penalties under § 502); Fisher v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

Co., 895 F.2d 1073, 1077 (5th Cir. 1990) (same). Given that the

defendants do not appear to have denied any request that

Matassarin made, the district court did not abuse its discretion

in refusing to asses penalties.

     In her Third Amended Complaint and other pleadings,

Matassarin argued that the defendants violated ERISA when they

failed to provide her with a summary plan description or with

annual reports. She also provided the district court with an

affidavit stating that she had not received a summary plan

description. We need not examine whether the district court

improperly granted summary judgment on this issue,22 insofar as

Matassarin fails to brief adequately or otherwise pursue it on

appeal and thus has waived it.

     Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment as to

Matassarin’s ERISA § 502(a)(3) claim.

C.   Jury Trial Demand

     Because we have concluded that Matassarin did not present

any viable ERISA claim, we do not consider the district court’s


     22. ERISA § 104(b), 29 U.S.C. § 1024(b), requires that plan
participants and beneficiaries be furnished with a summary plan
description, as set forth in § 1022(a), and with annual reports.

                                 -40-
denial of her motion for a jury trial.

D.   Attorneys’ Fees

     ERISA § 502(g)(1), 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1), allows the court,

in its discretion, to award reasonable attorneys’ fees to either

party. Given that Matassarin herself performed most of the legal

work and pursued unviable claims, the district court did not

abuse its discretion in refusing to award attorneys’ fees to

Matassarin.

                                V

     Matassarin next appeals Judge Prado’s refusal to recuse

himself. In her earlier petition to this Court for a mandamus

directing the judge to recuse himself, Matassarin complained that

a footnote in one of the judge’s orders evinced a bias against

her. She stated that the footnote, which reminded all parties to

the action to treat court personnel with courtesy and civility,

resulted from a briefing attorney incorrectly reporting to Judge

Prado the tenor of a conversation he had with Matassarin. On the

basis of this alleged bias, Matassarin claims, Judge Prado should

have recused himself. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 144 and 455(a)-(b).

     We review Judge Prado’s denial of the motion to recuse for

abuse of discretion. See In re Billedeaux, 972 F.2d 104, 106 (5th

Cir. 1992) (citing Chitimacha Tribe v. Harry L. Laws Co., 690

F.2d 1157, 1166 (5th Cir. 1982)). “The standard for judicial

disqualification under 28 U.S.C. § 455 is whether a reasonable


                              -41-
person, with full knowledge of all the circumstances, would

harbor doubts about the judge’s impartiality.” Vieux Carre

Property Owners, Residents, and Associates, Inc. v. Brown, 948

F.2d 1436, 1448 (5th Cir. 1991). We note that

     remarks during the course of a trial that are critical

     or disapproving of, or even hostile to, counsel, the

     parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a

     bias or partiality challenge. . . . Not establishing

     bias or partiality . . . are expressions of impatience,

     dissatisfaction, annoyance, and even anger that are

     within the bounds of what imperfect men and women, even

     after having been confirmed as federal judges,

     sometimes display. A judge’s ordinary efforts at

     courtroom administration--even a stern and short-

     tempered judge’s ordinary efforts at courtroom

     administration--remain immune.

Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555-56, 114 S. Ct. 1147,

1157 (1994); see also Hollywood Fantasy Corp. v. Gabor, 151 F.3d

203, 216 n.6 (5th Cir. 1998). Judge Prado’s footnote, even if it

did result from a false report about Matassarin’s interaction

with court personnel, falls far, far short of “such a high degree

of favoritism or antagonism as to make fair judgment impossible.”

Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555, 114 S. Ct. at 1157. We therefore hold

that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying


                              -42-
the motion to recuse.

                               VI

     The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in all

respects.




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