A class-action lawsuit alleging UnitedHealth Group retained Wells Fargo investment funds as a key option in its employee retirement plan despite poor performance is headed to trial.
UnitedHealth, the plaintiffs claim, did this in part to protect its “balance of trade” with the big bank.
Judge John Tunheim of the U.S. District Court of Minnesota on Tuesday denied most of UnitedHealth Group’s motion for summary judgment in the case, which names the company and former chief executive officer David Wichmann as defendants.
The lawsuit was amended in August 2022 to add as a defendant chief financial officer John Rex, who plaintiffs allege was motivated by his company’s significant business relationship with Wells Fargo when he pushed to retain the bank’s low-performing investment funds in the employee 401(k) plan.
In his ruling, Tunheim said the case would be scheduled for court at the next available trial date.
“Because a reasonable trier of fact could easily find that plaintiff Kim Snyder caught defendant UnitedHealth Group, Inc., with its hand in the cookie jar, the court will substantially deny United’s motion for summary judgment,” the judge wrote.
“There are genuine disputes of material fact as to whether United breached its duties of prudence and loyalty [...] by investing its employees’ 401(k) savings in underperforming Wells Fargo funds for more than a decade and allowing United’s business relationship with Wells to influence that allegedly imprudent retention,” Tunheim ruled. “There is also a genuine dispute as to whether Wells’s fees were reasonable, and thus whether United engaged in a prohibited transaction.”
In a Wednesday statement to the Star Tribune, UnitedHealth group said: “These claims are without merit. We look forward to presenting our case at trial.”