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CourtListener opinion 10262794

Citation: Domestic Relations Order · Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
pending
Extracted reporter citation
Domestic Relations Order
Docket / number
pending
QDRO relevance 5/5Retirement relevance 5/5Family-law relevance 5/5gold label pending
Research-use warning: This page contains machine-draft public annotations generated from public opinion text. The headnote is not Willie-approved gold-label work product and is not legal advice. Verify the full opinion and current law before relying on it.

Machine-draft headnote

Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 10262794 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to ERISA / defined contribution issues. The current annotation is conservative: it identifies source provenance, relevance signals, and evidence quotes for attorney/agent retrieval. It is not a Willie-approved legal headnote yet.

Retrieval annotation

Draft retrieval summary: this opinion has QDRO relevance score 5/5, retirement-division score 5/5, and family-law score 5/5. Use the quoted text and full opinion below before relying on the case.

Category: ERISA / defined contribution issues

Evidence quotes

ERISA

eptember 18, 2020, Filing No. 101-2, Ex. A (hereinafter, the "Settlement Agreement") and on the plaintiffs' application for an award of attorney fees, Filing No. 105. This is an action for alleged violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action and personal jurisdiction over all parties to the action, including all members of the settlement Class. The Court held a fairness hearing on the motion on February 1, 2021. Class counsel and counsel for the defendants appeared at the hearing by videoconferenc

401(k)

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA TAMERA S. LECHNER, Individually, on behalf of the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Long- Term Savings Plan and on behalf of a class 8:18CV22 of all those similarly situated; REGINA K. WHITE, Individually, on behalf of the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Long-Term Savings Plan and on behalf of a class of all those similarly situated; and STEVEN D. GIFFORD, Individually, on behalf of the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Long-Term Savings Plan and FINA

alternate payee

gs Plans and the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Retirement Savings Plans (the "Plans") at any time during the Class Period, including any Beneficiary of a deceased person who participated in one or both of the Plans at any time during the Class Period, and/or Alternate Payee, in the case of a person subject to a Qualified Domestic Relations Order who participated in one or both of the Plans at any time during the Class period. Excluded from this Class are all current and/or former employees of Defendants who were members of the Administration Committee, Investment Committee, and IMOC during the Class Period. See Fili

domestic relations order

(the "Plans") at any time during the Class Period, including any Beneficiary of a deceased person who participated in one or both of the Plans at any time during the Class Period, and/or Alternate Payee, in the case of a person subject to a Qualified Domestic Relations Order who participated in one or both of the Plans at any time during the Class period. Excluded from this Class are all current and/or former employees of Defendants who were members of the Administration Committee, Investment Committee, and IMOC during the Class Period. See Filing No. 102, Memorandum and Order. In accordance with the Court's orders,

Source and provenance

Source type
courtlistener_qdro_opinion_full_text
Permissions posture
public
Generated status
machine draft public v0
Review status
gold label pending
Jurisdiction metadata
US
Deterministic extraction
reporter: Domestic Relations Order
Generated at
May 14, 2026

Related public corpus pages

Deterministic links based on shared title/citation terms and QDRO / retirement / family-law retrieval scores.

Clean opinion text

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 
 FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA 

TAMERA S. LECHNER, Individually, on 
behalf of the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Long- 
Term Savings Plan and on behalf of a class 8:18CV22 
of all those similarly situated; REGINA K. 
WHITE, Individually, on behalf of the Mutual 
of Omaha 401(k) Long-Term Savings Plan 
and on behalf of a class of all those similarly 
situated; and STEVEN D. GIFFORD, 
Individually, on behalf of the Mutual of 
Omaha 401(k) Long-Term Savings Plan and FINAL ORDER OF APPROVAL OF 
on behalf of a class of all those similarly CLASS-ACTION SETTLEMENT 
situated; 

 Plaintiffs, 

 vs. 

MUTUAL OF OMAHA INSURANCE 
COMPANY, UNITED OF OMAHA LIFE 
INSURANCE COMPANY, 

 Defendants. 

 This matter is before the Court on the Plaintiffs' unopposed motion, Filing No. 104, 
for final approval of the Class Action Settlement Agreement dated September 18, 2020, 
Filing No. 101-2, Ex. A (hereinafter, the "Settlement Agreement") and on the plaintiffs' 
application for an award of attorney fees, Filing No. 105. This is an action for alleged 
violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 
et seq. The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action and personal 
jurisdiction over all parties to the action, including all members of the settlement Class. 
 The Court held a fairness hearing on the motion on February 1, 2021. Class 
counsel and counsel for the defendants appeared at the hearing by videoconference. No 
one appeared at the hearing to object to the settlement. 
 The Court finds as follows. For the reasons stated in its earlier order preliminarily 
certifying the class, the Court first finds the following non-opt-out class should be finally 

certified under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(1) for purposes of the Settlement Agreement: 
 All persons who are or were participants or beneficiaries in one or both of 
 the Mutual of Omaha 401(k) Long-Term Savings Plans and the Mutual of 
 Omaha 401(k) Retirement Savings Plans (the "Plans") at any time during 
 the Class Period, including any Beneficiary of a deceased person who 
 participated in one or both of the Plans at any time during the Class Period, 
 and/or Alternate Payee, in the case of a person subject to a Qualified 
 Domestic Relations Order who participated in one or both of the Plans at 
 any time during the Class period. Excluded from this Class are all current 
 and/or former employees of Defendants who were members of the 
 Administration Committee, Investment Committee, and IMOC during the 
 Class Period. 
See Filing No. 102, Memorandum and Order. 
 In accordance with the Court's orders, and as reflected in the information from the 
Settlement Administrator, Settlement Notices were timely distributed by first-class mail 
and publication on the Settlement Website to all Class Members who could be identified 
with reasonable effort. Filing No. 108, status report at 1-2. Of the 12,655 class notices 
mailed to class members, 1027 (8.1%) were returned as undeliverable. Id. The 
Settlement Administrator searched for updated address information for those returned as 
undeliverable, and re-mailed notices to those Class Members. Id.; Filing No. 108-1, Ex. 
A, Declaration of Michael Hamer ("Hamer Decl.") at 2-4. The administrator also set up a 
settlement website where class members could view information, and view and download 
documents. Id. at 3. The deadline for objecting to the settlement, as set out in the notice 
was January 12, 2021. Id. The administrator has not received any objections to the 
settlement. Id. at 4. 
 The Court finds the form and methods of notifying the class members of the terms 
and conditions of the proposed Settlement Agreement met the requirements of Fed. R. 
Civ. P. 23(c)(2) and (e), and due process, and constituted the best notice plan practicable 

under the circumstances. See Filing No. 102, Memorandum and Order. The Court finds 
that due and sufficient notice of the fairness hearing and the rights of all class members 
have been provided to all people, powers, and entities entitled thereto. Filing No. 108, 
status report; Filing No. 108-1, Hamer Decl., Ex. A, notice. No objections to the 
Settlement Agreement were filed and no one appeared at the fairness hearing to object 
to the settlement. 
 In submissions to the Court, the plaintiffs have shown that: (1) the Settlement 
Agreement resulted from arm's-length negotiations by experienced and competent 
counsel overseen by a neutral mediator; (2) the settlement was negotiated only after class 

counsel had conducted a pre-settlement investigation and received extensive discovery 
and other pertinent information and documents from defendants; (3) the plaintiffs and the 
defendants were well positioned to evaluate the value of the Class Action; (4) if the 
Settlement Agreement had not been achieved, both the plaintiffs and the defendants 
faced the expense, risk, and uncertainty of extended litigation; (5) the amount of the 
settlement—$6,700,000—is fair, reasonable, and adequate and the gross settlement 
Amount is within the range of reasonable settlements that would have been appropriate 
in this case; (6) at all times, the class representatives have acted independently; (7) the 
class representatives and class counsel have concluded that the Settlement Agreement 
is fair, reasonable, and adequate; (8) class members had the opportunity to be heard on 
all issues regarding the resolution and release of their claims by submitting objections to 
the Settlement Agreement to the Court and there were no objections to the settlement.; 
and (9) the Settlement Agreement was reviewed by an independent fiduciary, Gallagher 
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC, who has approved the Settlement. See Filing No. 108, status 

report; Filing No. 108-1, Hamer Decl.; Filing No. 108-2, independent fiduciary letter; Filing 
No. 108-3, independent fiduciary report. For the reasons stated in its earlier order, and 
based on the above showing, the Court finds that the Settlement Agreement is fair, 
reasonable, and adequate. See Filing No. 103, Memorandum and Order. 
 The plaintiffs seek an award of fees and expenses in the amount of $2,233,333.00, 
or one-third of the Settlement Fund, and which includes both attorneys' fees, 
reimbursable expenses of $36,019.94, a fee of $15,000 to the independent fiduciary as 
provided in the Settlement Agreement and service awards in the amount of $10,000 each 
to class representatives to plaintiffs Tamera S. Lechner, Regina K. White and Stephen D. 

Gifford as the named Class Representatives. Filing No. 105. The plaintiffs' intention to 
move for those awards was disclosed in the Settlement Agreement, as well as the notice. 
Filing No. 101-1, Settlement Agreement at 10; Filing No. 108-1, Hamer Decl., Ex. A, notice 
at 5. The defendants agreed in the Settlement Agreement that they would not challenge 
an award as long as it did not exceed $2,233,333.00. Filing No. 101-1, Settlement 
Agreement at 10. 
 A thorough judicial review of fee applications is required in all class action 
settlements. In re Diet Drugs, 582 F.3d 524, 537-38 (3d Cir. 2009); Johnson v. Comerica 
Mortgage Corp., 83 F.3d 241, 246 (8th Cir. 1996) (noting that the district court bears the 
responsibility of scrutinizing attorney fee requests). Courts utilize two main approaches 
to analyzing a request for attorney fees: (1) the "lodestar" methodology (multiplying the 
hours expended by an attorneys' reasonable hourly rate of compensation to produce a 
fee amount that can be adjusted to reflect the individualized characteristics of a given 
action); and (2) the "percentage of the benefit" approach (permitting an award of fees that 

is equal to some fraction of the common fund that the attorneys were successful in 
gathering during the course of the litigation). Johnston, 83 F.3d at 244-45. It is within the 
court's discretion to decide which method to apply. Id. The percentage-of-recovery 
methodology has been approved in common-fund settlement class action cases. See, 
e.g., In re US Bancorp Litig., 291 F.3d 1035, 1038 (8th Cir. 2002) (approving an award of 
36% of the settlement fund); Petrovic v. Amoco Oil Co., 200 F.3d 1140, 1157 (8th Cir. 
1999) (approving award of 24% of monetary compensation to the class). To recover fees 
from a common fund, attorneys must demonstrate that their services were of some benefit 
to the fund or that they enhanced the adversarial process. In Re US Bancorp Litig., 291 

F.3d at 1038. 
 The plaintiffs have shown that they incurred fees for over 800 hours of work at 
rates of between $535.00 per hour and $970.00 per hour for attorneys and between $305 
and $345.00 for paralegals. Filing No. 105-2, Declaration of Todd Schneider. They have 
also established litigation expenses in the amount of $36,019.94, which includes 
$14,316.00 for the Schneider firm and $15,000 for the independent fiduciary. Id.; Filing 
No. 104-2, Declaration of John J. Nestico ("Nestico Decl."). Further, the plaintiffs have 
shown that the lodestar amount of fees for their efforts is over 1.1 million dollars, 
representing a multiplier of 1.88, which is in line with other contingency fee awards 
approved in this Circuit. Filing No. 104-2, Nestico Decl. at 2. They have also shown that 
the rates charged by class counsel are within the range of market rates for attorneys of 
their experience and expertise in cases of this nature. Id. Also, a fee request of one-third 
of the settlement amount is typical in ERISA class action litigation. Filing No. 108-3, 
independent fiduciary report at 5. 

 The Court further finds that plaintiffs have shown that incentive or case contribution 
awards in the amount of $10,000 to each of the named plaintiffs are fair and reasonable 
in light of their contributions. Awards in that amount are in line with other incentive awards 
in this type of case. The plaintiffs have shown they incurred reasonable expenses of 
$36,019 that are included in the attorney fee award. The defendants have no objection 
to the fees, expenses, or incentive award. The Court finds the amounts for incentives 
and expenses are reasonable and will be approved 
 The requested fees were disclosed in the notice of settlement and no class 
members have objected to the settlement or the motion for fees. The plaintiffs have 

demonstrated that counsel's services have benefitted the class. They have also shown 
that class counsel undertook significant risk of nonrecovery in prosecuting this action. 
The Court agrees with the independent fiduciary that the proposed attorneys' fee award 
and other sums to be paid from the total settlement amount are reasonable in light of the 
plan's likelihood of full recovery, the value of claims foregone and the risks and costs of 
litigation. Filing No. 108-3, Ex. C, independent fiduciary report at 3. The plaintiffs have 
achieved successful results and obtained a monetary benefit for the class. Based on its 
familiarity with the litigation, a fee of approximately 33% of the monetary benefits 
recovered seems reasonable. The Court finds the fee request should be approved and 
will enter judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for the amount requested. 
 Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e), the Court finds the parties' Settlement 
Agreement is a fair, reasonable, and adequate settlement and compromise of the claims 
asserted in the Class Action. The Court hereby approves the Settlement Agreement and 

will order that the Settlement Agreement be consummated and implemented in 
accordance with its terms and conditions. Accordingly, the Court finds the Plaintiffs' 
Motion for Final Approval of the Settlement Agreement should be granted. 
 IT IS ORDERED that 
 1. The Plaintiffs' Motion for Final Approval of the Settlement Agreement (Filing 
 No. 104) is granted. 
 2. The Settlement of the Class Action (Filing No. 101-2) is approved and is 
 incorporated herein by reference. 
 3. The Plaintiffs and Defendants are hereby directed to take the necessary 

 steps to effectuate the terms of the Settlement Agreement. 
 4. The Action and all Released Claims, whether asserted by Class 
 Representatives on their own behalf or on behalf of the Class Members, or 
 derivatively to secure relief for the Plans, are hereby dismissed with 
 prejudice and without costs to any of the Plaintiffs and Defendants, except 
 as otherwise provided for in the Settlement Agreement. 
 5. Each Class Member and their respective heirs, beneficiaries, executors, 
 administrators, estates, past and present partners, officers, directors, 
 agents, attorneys, predecessors, successors, and assigns, shall be (i) 
 conclusively deemed to have, and by operation of the Effective Approval 
 Order shall have, fully, finally, and forever settled, released, relinquished, 
 waived, and discharged the Released Parties from all Released Claims, and 
 (ii) barred and enjoined from suing any of the Released Parties in any action 
 or proceeding alleging any of the Released Claims, even if any Class 

 Member may thereafter discover facts in addition to or different from those 
 which the Class Member or Class Counsel now know or believe to be true 
 with respect to the Class Action and the Released Claims, whether or not 
 such Class Members have filed an objection to the Settlement, and whether 
 or not the objections or claims for distribution of such Class Members have 
 been approved or allowed. 
6. The Plans and each Class Member (and their respective heirs, 
 beneficiaries, executors, administrators, estates, past and present partners, 
 officers, directors, agents, attorneys, predecessors, successors, and 

 assigns) on behalf of the Plans shall be (i) conclusively deemed to have, 
 and by operation of the Effective Approval Order shall have, fully, finally, 
 and forever settled, released, relinquished, waived, and discharged the 
 Released Parties from all Released Claims, and (ii) barred and enjoined 
 from suing any of the Released Parties in any action or proceeding alleging 
 any of the Released Claims, even if the Plans or any Class Member on 
 behalf of the Plans may thereafter discover facts in addition to or different 
 from those which the Plans or any Class Member now knows or believes to 
 be true with respect to the Class Action and the Released Claims. 
7. The Class Members and the Plans hereby settle, release, relinquish, waive 
 and discharge any and all rights or benefits they may now have, or in the 
 future may have, under any law relating to the releases of unknown claims, 
 including without limitation, Section 1542 of the California Civil Code, which 
 provides: "A general release does not extend to claims which the creditor 

 does not know or suspect to exist in his favor at the time of executing the 
 release, which if known by him must have materially affected his settlement 
 with the debtor." The Class Members and the Plans with respect to the 
 Released Claims also hereby waive any and all provisions, rights and 
 benefits conferred by any law of any State or territory of the United States 
 or any foreign country, or any principle of common law, which are similar, 
 comparable, or equivalent in substance to Section 1542 of the California 
 Civil Code. 
8. Each Class Member and the Plans shall release the Released Parties, 

 Defense Counsel, and Class Counsel from any claims, liabilities, and 
 attorneys' fees and expenses arising from the allocation of the Gross 
 Settlement Amount or Net Settlement Amount and for all tax liability and 
 associated penalties and interest as well as related attorneys' fees and 
 expenses; 
9. The Court shall retain jurisdiction over this Action solely to enforce the 
 Settlement Agreement, but such retention of jurisdiction shall not affect the 
 finality of this Final Approval order and Judgment. 
10. The Settlement Administrator shall have final authority to determine the 
 share of the Net Settlement Amount to be allocated to each Current and 
 Former Participant pursuant to the Plan of Allocation specified in Article 6 
 of the Settlement Agreement, which has been approved by the Court. 
11. With respect to payments or distributions to Former Participants, all 

 questions not resolved by the Settlement Agreement shall be resolved by 
 the Settlement Administrator in its sole and exclusive discretion. 
12. Within twenty-one (21) calendar days following the issuance of all 
 settlement payments to Class Members as provided by the Plans of 
 Allocation approved by the Court, the Settlement Administrator shall 
 prepare and provide to Class Counsel and Defense Counsel a list of each 
 person who received a settlement payment or contribution from the 
 Qualified Settlement Fund and the amount of such payment or contribution 
 as required by Section 6.8 of the Settlement Agreement. 

13. The plaintiffs' motion for an award of attorney fees, and approval of incentive 
 awards, and litigation expenses in the total amount of $2,233,333.00 (Filing 
 No. 105) is granted. 
14. Class Counsel's attorneys' fees and expenses and Plaintiffs' incentive or 
 case contribution award shall be paid pursuant to the timing requirements 
 described in the Settlement Agreement. 
15. The Plan of Allocation for the Settlement Fund is approved as fair, 
 reasonable, and adequate. Any modification or change in the Plan of 
 Allocation that may hereafter be approved shall in no way disturb or affect 
 this Final Order and shall be considered separate from this Final Order. 
16. Upon the effective date of this Final Order, the Settling Parties, the Class 
 Members, and the Plans shall be bound by the Settlement Agreement as 
 amended and by this Final Approval Order. 

17. A judgment for attorney fees, expenses, and incentive awards in the amount 
 of $2,233,333.00 will be entered. 
Dated this 8th day of February, 2021. 

 BY THE COURT: 

 s/ Joseph F. Bataillon 
 Senior United States District Judge