1. Section 602(h)(2) of the National Service Life Insurance Act
of 1940 provides that insurance payable to a beneficiary who is
over 30 at the time of the insured's death shall be paid in equal
monthly installments for 120 months certain, with such payments
continuing during the remaining lifetime of the beneficiary.
Regulation 3450 of the Veterans' Administration, issued as a
construction of § 602(h)(2), provides that the amount of the
monthly installments so payable shall be calculated in accordance
with a schedule based upon the beneficiary's age and the American
Experience Table of Mortality. The beneficiary of a National
Service Life Insurance policy, who was over 30 at the time of the
insured's death in 1943, sued to obtain monthly payments in an
amount which, over a period of 120 months, would equal the face
amount of the policy plus interest. She contended that Regulation
3450 was not a proper construction of § 602(h)(2).
Held: the regulation is valid. Pp.
334 U. S.
604-624.
2. Read in its entirety and with regard to the specialized,
technical sense in which some of its wording is generally employed
in the insurance field, § 602(h)(2) is not so clear and free
from ambiguity as to preclude the construction adopted by the
Veterans' Administration in Regulation 3450. Pp.
334 U. S.
608-610.
3. In construing the provisions of an Act of Congress setting up
a system of national life insurance, only the intent of Congress
need be ascertained; the layman understanding of the policyholder
does not have the relevance that it has in the case of an ordinary
commercial insurance contract. Pp.
334 U. S.
610-611.
4. It is not enough, however, that the regulation is not plainly
interdicted by the statute, for, in § 608 of the Act, as
amended, Congress manifested an intent that regulations of the
Veterans' Administration be subjected to more than casual judicial
scrutiny to determine whether they are "not inconsistent" with the
statute, whether they are "necessary or appropriate" to carry out
its purposes, and whether they are "properly" issued. Pp.
334 U. S.
611-612.
5. But when the respective assumptions and consequences of each
of the two alternative interpretations of § 602(h)(2)
presented
Page 334 U. S. 603
in this case are tested against the legislative history and the
statute viewed in its entirety, it is clear that the one
incorporated in Regulation 3450 is that intended by Congress. Pp.
334 U. S.
612-624.
(a) Under a contrary interpretation of the statute, a
beneficiary over 30 would in most cases receive a far greater
aggregate amount than a beneficiary under 30. There is no
indication that Congress intended this sharp disparity of
treatment, and it does not result under the regulation. Pp.
334 U. S.
612-616.
(b) Congress contemplated that the reserve fund to meet the
liabilities of National Service Life Insurance policies was to be
self-supporting, sustained by the premiums paid and by the yield of
premiums invested, except as to those exceptional items of cost as
to which the statute specifically provided that the Government
would bear the financial burden. Under the construction advanced by
the beneficiary in this case, however, the Government's total
liability would be increased to an extent requiring either special
Congressional appropriations or a substantial increase in premium
rates. The statute nowhere specifies that the Government should
bear this huge cost, nor is there any basis for assuming that
Congress envisaged premium rates high enough to meet an added
liability of such proportions. Pp.
334 U. S.
616-617.
(c) The practice in effect under United States Government Life
Insurance for World War I veterans and the long established
practice of commercial insurance companies, which must be viewed as
part of the background of experience which the draftsmen of §
602(h)(2) had in mind, both accord with the construction embodied
in Regulation 3450. Pp.
334 U. S.
617-619.
(d) The juxtaposition of § 602(h)(2) with other provisions
indicating that actuarial principles were to be followed is also
significant. P.
334 U. S.
620.
(e) The subsequent legislative history of the statute clearly
indicates Congressional approval of the construction put on §
602(h)(2) by Regulation 3450. Pp.
334 U. S.
620-624.
162 F.2d 443 reversed.
In a suit by a beneficiary, the District Court sustained the
validity of Regulation 3450 of the Veterans' Administration as
being in accord with § 602(h)(2) of the National Service Life
Insurance Act of 1940. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed. 162
F.2d 443. This Court granted certiorari. 332 U.S. 835.
Reversed, p.
334 U. S. 624.
Page 334 U. S. 604
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are called upon in this case to determine whether Regulation
3450 of the Veterans' Administration [
Footnote 1] is in accord with a proper construction of
§ 602(h)(2) of the National Service Life Insurance Act of
1940. [
Footnote 2]
Respondent, Tillie Zazove, was designated beneficiary in a
$5,000 contract of National Service Life Insurance. The insured
died in 1943, and the named beneficiary filed her claim for the
insurance in the Veterans' Administration. Upon denial of the
claim, suit was instituted in the District Court for the Northern
District of Illinois. [
Footnote
3] The District Court ruled, on its view of the facts, that
Mrs. Zazove did not stand
in loco parentis to the soldier
and hence was not one of the persons who could be made a
beneficiary as provided by the statute. [
Footnote 4] On appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit ruled to the contrary and remanded for further
proceedings. 156 F.2d 24.
The issue remaining for determination by the District Court upon
remand was the validity of Regulation 3450. It sustained the
regulation as properly issued pursuant to
Page 334 U. S. 605
the National Service Life Insurance Act. On a second appeal, the
Circuit Court of Appeals, one judge dissenting, reversed. 162 F.2d
443. We granted certiorari to review the important question of
statutory construction involved.
The basic statutory provision involved is § 602(h) of the
National Service Life Insurance Act of 1940, which provides that
insurance issued under the Act
"shall be payable in the following manner:"
"(1) if the beneficiary to whom payment is first made is under
thirty years of age at the time of maturity, in two hundred and
forty equal monthly installments: . . ."
"(2) If the beneficiary to whom payment is first made is thirty
or more years of age at the time of maturity, in equal monthly
installments for one hundred and twenty months certain, with such
payments continuing during the remaining lifetime of such
beneficiary."
The Administrator, acting under the general rulemaking power
given him by the Act, [
Footnote
5] promulgated Regulation 3450 (set forth in the margin)
[
Footnote 6] shortly after the
enactment
Page 334 U. S. 606
of the statute, to put § 602(h) into operation. The
regulation provides, for beneficiaries covered by clause (1), that
"payment shall be made in 240 equal monthly installments at the
rate of $5.51 for each $1,000 of such insurance." The amount of the
monthly installment is so calculated that the sum of the 240
installments equals the face value of the insurance plus 3%
interest per annum.
Page 334 U. S. 607
It is the provision made by the regulation for first
beneficiaries covered by clause (2) that is in issue, since the
first beneficiary in this case, Mrs. Zazove, was more than thirty
years old when the policy matured. For such beneficiaries, who are
to receive payments for life with 120 payments certain, the
regulation provides that the
"amount of the monthly installment for each $1,000 of insurance
shall be determined by the age of the beneficiary as of last
birthday at the time of the death of the insured, in accordance
with a schedule based upon the American Experience Table of
Mortality and interest at the rate of 3 percentum per annum. . .
."
Accordingly, the size of the monthly installment varies not
merely with the face value of the insurance policy, but also with
the age of the first beneficiary, the latter factor being used as
the basis of an actuarial computation whereby the face value of the
policy plus interest is equalized over the life expectancy of the
beneficiary. Under this interpretation of § 602(h)(2), the
respondent, who was 54 years of age at the death of the insured, is
entitled to monthly installments of $29.50 at the rate of $5.90 for
each $1,000 of insurance in which she had a beneficial interest.
These installments are to be paid for 120 months certain, [
Footnote 7] and to continue during her
remaining lifetime if she lives beyond that 10-year period.
In reversing the District Court, the Circuit Court of Appeals
held this method of calculation set forth by Regulation 3450 to be
inconsistent with the provisions of § 602(h)(2). It construed
the latter provisions, in accord with the respondent's contention,
as plainly requiring
Page 334 U. S. 608
that the total of the equal monthly installments payable over a
period of 120 months certain should equal the face value of the
insurance, plus interest. Under this construction, Mrs. Zazove is
entitled to receive $48.08, instead of $29.50, as her monthly
installment, so that the total of the 120 payments certain will
amount to $5,000 (plus interest), instead of $3,450 (plus interest)
as determined by the Veterans' Administration, with the monthly
installments due her if she survives the period of guaranteed
payments continuing at the same rate. Taking into account Mrs.
Zazove's life expectancy as estimated by the American Experience
Table of Mortality, the actual cash value of this $5,000 insurance
policy at the time of the insured's death would amount of $8,145
under respondent's construction, instead of $5,000 as determined by
the regulation. [
Footnote
8]
In arriving at its decision, the majority of the Circuit Court
of Appeals reasoned that the terms of § 602(h)(2) are clear
and unambiguous; that nothing is said in the statute about
equalizing the sum over the life expectancy of the beneficiary, and
that Congress unmistakably prescribed payment of the face value
plus interest in equal monthly installments over a period of 120
months certain. The major difficulty with this reasoning lies in
the inadequate consideration that it gives to the full extent of
the payment provided by § 602(h)(2). In effect, the Circuit
Court of Appeals majority stopped short, in its reading of the
terms for payment of the insurance in that subsection, at the end
of the phrase "in equal monthly installments for one hundred and
twenty months certain." By stopping short at that phrase, the court
failed to consider the alternative possibility that Congress
intended the immediately following phrase, "with such payments
continuing during the remaining lifetime of such beneficiary,"
Page 334 U. S. 609
to provide an additional and equally essential component of the
statutory equivalent for the face value of the insurance. Assuming
that this alternative construction of the section is in fact what
Congress intended, the only proper interpretative regulation would
be one that computed the value of the monthly installments payable
to any given first beneficiary in such a manner that the value of
the payments to be made, giving due weight to the beneficiary's
life expectancy at the death of the insured, would be equivalent to
the face value of the policy, plus 3% interest. Regulation 3450 is
based on that assumption. It was only because the Circuit Court of
Appeals failed to regard the continuing payability of monthly
installments, after the payment of the 120 installments certain, as
possibly constituting a significant component of the insurance for
which the serviceman had contracted, rather than a sheer gratuity
conferred by Congress, that the court could view the subsection as
plainly and without ambiguity requiring the face value of the
insurance to be paid by the end of the 120 months certain.
Moreover, the very presence of the term "certain" in the phrase
"equal monthly installments for one hundred and twenty months
certain" suggests a view contrary to that reached by the court
below. It will be noted that, when Congress had in mind, as it
clearly did in the case of § 602(h)(1), that a fixed number of
installments provided for should equal the face value of the
insurance, there was no occasion for the use of "certain" in
describing the installments to be made and, indeed, the term is not
found in § 602(h)(1). While the inclusion of the term in
describing the fixed number of installments to be paid under §
602(h)(2) might conceivably be a mere superfluity, its presence at
least suggests the far greater probability that it was used in the
specialized technical sense in which it is generally employed in
the insurance field -- namely, to indicate a guaranty that a
designated number
Page 334 U. S. 610
of monthly payments shall be forthcoming, where a policy
provides an option for equal monthly installments continuing
throughout the lifetime of a payee, with the individual installment
varying in amount depending on the age of the beneficiary when the
policy matures. [
Footnote
9]
Hence, in our view, a reading of § 602(h)(2) in its
entirety suffices to demonstrate that the language there used by
Congress is far from being so clear and so free from ambiguity as
to preclude the construction adopted by the Veterans'
Administration in Regulation 3450. To this extent, we believe the
reasoning of the Circuit Court of Appeals was in error. But that
alone would not necessarily invalidate its holding, since, as the
Government appears to concede, the terms of § 602(h)(2) are
not unambiguously in accord with the regulation. Indeed, if the
ambiguity inherent in § 602(h)(2) were found in the terms of
an ordinary commercial insurance policy, there might well be
substantial ground for construing it in favor of the insured.
[
Footnote 10]
There is, of course, a marked distinction between the criteria
for judicial construction of an ordinary commercial insurance
contract and construction of the provisions of an act of Congress
setting up a system of national life insurance for servicemen to be
administered by a governmental agency. The statutory provisions,
where ambiguous, are to be construed liberally to effectuate the
beneficial purposes that Congress had in mind. In this respect,
judicial construction of the statute may appear similar to
construction of a commercial policy, where ambiguous provisions are
generally construed in favor of the insured. In the latter case,
construction favorable to the
Page 334 U. S. 611
insured rests on the theory that
"The phraseology of contracts of insurance is that chosen by the
insurer and the contract in fixed form is tendered to the
prospective policyholder who is often without technical training,
and who rarely accepts it with a lawyer at his elbow. So, if its
language is reasonably open to two constructions, that more
favorable to the insured will be adopted . . . , and, unless it is
obvious that the words are intended to be used in their technical
connotation, they will be given the meaning that common speech
imports. . . . [
Footnote
11]"
But the statute is an expression of legislative intent, rather
than the embodiment of an agreement between Congress and the
insured person. Only the intent of Congress, which in this case is
the insurer, need be ascertained to fix the meaning of the
statutory terms; the layman understanding of the policy holder does
not have the relevance here that it has in the construction of a
commercial contract. [
Footnote
12]
On the other hand, we think it clear that an administrative
regulation purporting to construe an ambiguous subsection of the
National Life Insurance Act of 1940 is not automatically to be
deemed valid merely because not plainly interdicted by the terms of
the particular provision construed. The Administrator's general
rulemaking power, which was exercised in issuing Regulation 3450,
is limited by the statute to
"such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the
provisions of this chapter, as are necessary or appropriate to
carry out its purposes. . . . [
Footnote 13]"
Moreover, a 1946 amendment to § 608, designed to eliminate
the finality of the decisions of the Administrator on
Page 334 U. S. 612
insurance matters, [
Footnote
14] amended the last sentence of § 608 to add the words
set out in italics:
"Except in the event of suit as provided in section 617 hereof,
or other appropriate court proceedings, all decisions
rendered by the Administrator under the provisions of this Act, or
regulations properly issued pursuant thereto, shall be final and
conclusive on all questions of law or fact, and no other official
of the United States,
except a judge or judges of United States
courts, shall have jurisdiction to review any such
decisions."
The extension of procedures available to secure judicial review,
the interpolation of the word "properly," and the addition,
presumably out of an abundance of caution, of the tautological
phrase "except a judge or judges of United States courts" are
indicative of congressional concern that the regulations of the
Veterans' Administration be subject to more than casual judicial
scrutiny when they are based upon a controverted construction of
the statute.
Accordingly, § 602(h)(2) must be read in the full context
of related sections of the statute and other indicia of legislative
intent before we can adequately determine whether the regulation is
"not inconsistent" with the provisions of the Act and whether it is
"necessary or appropriate to carry out its purposes." We turn,
therefore, from narrow, semantic considerations to a broader
context in which the intent of Congress can be more readily
comprehended.
The proper meaning of § 602(h)(2) becomes apparent when the
respective assumptions and consequences of each of the two
alternative interpretations before us are tested against the
legislative history, and the statute viewed in its entirety. The
construction adopted by the Circuit
Page 334 U. S. 613
Court of Appeals would result in conferring a far greater return
to beneficiaries in the group covered by § 602(h)(2),
i.e., over thirty at the time of the insured's death, than
the return to which first beneficiaries covered by §
602(h)(1),
i.e., under thirty at the insured's death, are
entitled. It is unquestioned that the latter group, under the
original statutory provisions, [
Footnote 15] were entitled only to 240 monthly
installments (
i.e., over a 20-year period) which, in the
aggregate, equal the face value plus interest, with no further
installments payable thereafter, whether or not the payee survived
that limited period. But, under the ruling of the Circuit Court of
Appeals, payments in many if not most, of the cases involving the
former group of beneficiaries would exceed the face value of the
policy, since any first beneficiary who survived the 10-year period
of § 602(h)(2) would automatically secure more than that
amount. In fact, the actual value of a policy at maturity, to a
30-year old beneficiary, under this ruling would be almost two and
a half times its face amount, [
Footnote 16] whereas the 29-year old beneficiary, paid in
accordance with § 602(h)(1) (whose interpretation is not open
to question), could never receive more than the face amount, plus
interest. And the aggregate of guaranteed and continuing payments
made at so high a rate under § 602(h)(2) would necessarily
greatly exceed the total face value of the policies issued under
the statute. [
Footnote
17]
Page 334 U. S. 614
This sharp disparity between the two different groups of
beneficiaries does not result under the regulation, since
Page 334 U. S. 615
the age of the first beneficiary is used by the regulation as
the basis of an actuarial calculation pursuant to a formula whereby
total payments under § 602(h)(2) approximate the face value of
the policies, plus interest. The extent of the difference in result
is indicated by the table, set forth in the margin, [
Footnote 18] of comparative present values
of the monthly installments under the regulation and under the view
of the Circuit Court of Appeals, taking into account the
beneficiary's life expectancy as shown by the American Experience
Table of Mortality.
The Circuit Court thought it probable that Congress originally
intended the higher rate of benefit payments to be restricted to
the beneficiaries covered by § 602(h)(2) because that group of
persons over 30 at the time of the serviceman's death would include
parents, who would be at least middle-aged, and "young widows with
small children whose ten years of monthly payments would end at the
most needed time." [
Footnote
19] This would hardly serve to explain, however, why Congress
would intentionally discriminate in so substantial a manner against
a similarly deserving but slightly younger widow in the
under-thirty category by failing to extend comparable benefits to
the latter group.
Page 334 U. S. 616
The disparity in benefits available under the respondent's view,
as contrasted with those available under the regulation, is
reflected in a correspondingly large increase, under the former
view, in the total liability for beneficial payments. [
Footnote 20] This greatly enhanced
liability could be met, theoretically, in either of two ways: by
special congressional appropriations or by greatly increased
premium rates substantially above those which are now set by the
Veterans' Administration on the assumption that the regulation is
proper.
The Circuit Court of Appeals was of the opinion that Congress
intended the Government to bear the burden of this extraordinary
liability. By express provisions in the 1940 Act, Congress
specified that the United States would bear the administrative
costs of the insurance system, [
Footnote 21] excess mortality and disability cost
resulting from the extra hazards of war, [
Footnote 22] and the cost of reimbursing the reserve
fund for waiving recovery of benefit payments erroneously made
where it would be inequitable to require repayment. [
Footnote 23] Congress obviously
contemplated that the reserve fund to meet the liabilities of
National Service Life Insurance policies was to be self-supporting,
sustained by the premiums paid and by the yield of premiums
invested, in all respects aside from those exceptional situations
where the statute specifically designated that the Government would
bear the financial burden. Yet Congress
Page 334 U. S. 617
nowhere specified that the United States would bear the huge
cost of the enhanced liability that it would necessarily have
anticipated had it impressed upon § 602(h)(2) the meaning that
respondent finds there, and that striking omission is persuasive,
in the absence of cogent considerations to the contrary, that no
generosity of this magnitude was contemplated. [
Footnote 24]
Nor can it be assumed that Congress envisaged the setting of
premium rates high enough to meet an added liability of such
proportions. Senator Harrison, who was in charge of the original
bill, informed the Senate that "Premium rates based on the average
age -- 25 years -- will be 67 cents per thousand per month."
[
Footnote 25] Such a rate,
though adequate to cover payments under Regulation 3450, would be
completely inadequate under the respondent's construction.
Moreover, whatever ambiguity exists in the language of §
602(h)(2) is dispelled by a consideration of the practice in effect
under United States Government Life Insurance, established for
World War I veterans, and the long established practice of
commercial insurance companies, viewed as part of the background of
experience which the draftsmen of § 602(h)(2) may be assumed
to have had in mind.
The World War Veterans Act, 1924, [
Footnote 26] provided for payment of insurance benefits
in 240 equal monthly installments, but authorized the Veterans'
Administration (formerly the Veterans' Bureau) to provide in the
contract
Page 334 U. S. 618
of insurance
"for optional settlements, to be selected by the insured,
whereby such insurance may be made payable either in one sum or in
installments for thirty-six months or more. . . ."
One of the options set up by Regulation 3068 under this
statutory authorization, provided that monthly installments in
amounts designated in an appended table -- the amounts being
graduated, just as in Regulation 3450, with the "age of beneficiary
at time of death of the insured" --
"will be payable throughout the lifetime of the designated
beneficiary, but if such designated beneficiary dies before 240
such installments have been paid, the remaining unpaid monthly
installments will be payable in accordance with the beneficiary
provisions of the policy. [
Footnote 27]"
It seems apparent to us that the congressional draftsmen, in
framing § 602(h)(2), were undoubtedly striving to incorporate
into the 1940 Act a provision modeled on the "life annuity with 240
payments certain option" set up by Regulation 3068 under the World
War Veterans Act of 1924, deviating materially only in the number
of payments guaranteed. True, § 602(h)(2) does not itself
define expressly the method of computation to be used by the
Administrator in determining the size of the monthly installments
in any given case. But, taking into account the factors previously
set forth, and considering them against the background of
experience under the 1924 Act, the only reasonable conclusion is
that Congress intended the calculation to be an actuarial one,
based on the age of the beneficiary. To subscribe to the opposite
conclusion, we must believe that Congress intended, by its wording
of § 602(h)(2), to bestow upon beneficiaries of World War II
servicemen total payments completely disproportionate to those
available to beneficiaries of World War I servicemen. To believe
that
Page 334 U. S. 619
Congress, by the enactment of a somewhat ambiguous provision,
intended this disproportionate result along with the other
disparities that have been shown to be required by the respondent's
view puts too great a strain upon the imagination.
Moreover, the congressional draftsmen of § 602(h)(2), with
the example before them of the 1924 Act and the similar practice of
standard commercial insurance companies, undoubtedly considered
that even the very wording of that subsection, without more,
necessarily implied that the Administrator was to follow the
existing practice in calculating the size of the monthly
installments. As previously noted, the term "certain," appearing in
the phrase "equal monthly installments for one hundred and twenty
months certain," is a technical word that connotes, because of the
context in which it is commonly used in standard commercial
policies, an actuarial calculation of the monthly installments
payable.
For example, one of the standard life insurance policies used in
1940 provided for a life income option to be
"Made payable in equal annual, semi-annual, quarterly or monthly
installments for ten or twenty years certain, with payments
continuing during the remaining lifetime of the person upon whose
life the income depends. . . . The first installment will be due
upon the date on which the option becomes operative. The amount of
such installments shall be determined in accordance with the table
of installments on the following page, which installments include
interest at the rate of 3% per annum, and shall be based on the sex
and the age at birthday nearest the due date of the first
installment, of the person upon whose life the income depends. . .
. [
Footnote 28]"
Another example, closer to the concise form of §
602(h)(2),
Page 334 U. S. 620
though using the term "fixed", rather than "certain," is an
option which provides for
"the payment of equal monthly installments in accordance with
the table below [a table whose payments are graduated in amount
with respect to the 'Age of Payee Nearest Birthday at Date of First
Instalment'], to the insured or the beneficiary, as the case may
be, for a fixed period of ten years and for so long thereafter as
the payee shall survive, the first installment being payable
immediately. [
Footnote
29]"
Congress may also have assumed that its intent was made manifest
by the juxtaposition of § 602(h)(2) with other provisions
having similar connotations. Section 605(b), for example,
authorizes the Administrator
"to set aside out of [the National Service Life Insurance Fund]
such reserve amounts
as may be required under accepted
actuarial principles, to meet all liabilities under such
insurance. . . ."
(Italics added.) And § 602(e) provides that the premium
rates, all
"cash, loan, paid up, and extended values,
and all other
calculations in connection with such insurance, shall be based upon
said American Experience Table of Mortality and interest at
the rate of 3 percentum per annum. . . ."
(Italics added.)
In any event, the subsequent legislative history of the
Page 334 U. S. 621
statute clearly indicates congressional approval of the
construction put upon § 602(h)(2) by Regulation 3450. A
proposed bill was suggested in a letter written by the
Administrator of the Veterans' Administration to Congress in June,
1944, to amend §§ 602(h)(1) and 602(h)(2) of the 1940 Act
by authorizing "the election of a refund life income in lieu of the
mode of payments now provided." [
Footnote 30] In explaining the necessity of the
amendment, the Administrator pointed out that, if
"a widow having a minor child, who is entitled to payments as
provided in section 602(h)(2), dies after having received one or
more installments of insurance, payments under the contract will
cease after payment of 120 installments has been completed,
even though the total amount of the installments paid or
payable is less than the face value of the policy and even
though the child is too young to be capable of self-support at the
time payments expire. The proposed amendments will authorize the
payment of the full face value of the insurance
in every
instance, and will also insure an income throughout the
lifetime of the first beneficiary under the policy. [
Footnote 31]"
In other words, the amendment was proposed partly to extend a
life income option to beneficiaries covered by § 602(h)(1),
who theretofore had been eligible only for the 240-payment plan,
and partly to provide a solution for the inequitable situation
presented in certain cases covered by the provisions of §
602(h)(2), when the 120 installments certain amounted to less than
the face value of the policy and the first beneficiary died before
having received an amount equal to that face value. The inequitable
situation thus considered to be present under § 602(h)(2) and
sought to be ameliorated by the proposed amendment could not have
existed, of course,
Page 334 U. S. 622
if the Circuit Court of Appeals were correct in the construction
it has put upon § 602(h)(2).
The Senate Committee on Finance, in recommending passage of the
bill, adopted the Administrator's letter as explanatory of the
various provisions of the bill, [
Footnote 32] and indicated thereby its approval of the
interpretation embodied in Regulation 3450, since otherwise a major
purpose claimed to be effected by the amendment would have been
completely illusory. Moreover, a table included in the
Administrator's letter, comparing the amount of each monthly
installment and the sum of the guaranteed installments under the
new refund life income plan and under § 602(h)(2), clearly
apprised Congress of the construction put upon the latter section
by the regulation. Hence, in enacting the amendment, [
Footnote 33] Congress indicated its
approval of the interpretation upon which the Regulation is based.
[
Footnote 34]
Similar recognition that, in many instances, "the aggregate
amount of insurance actually payable" under the original mode of
settlement provided by § 602(h)(2)
Page 334 U. S. 623
"amounted to much less than the face of the policy" was given by
the House Committee on World War Veterans' Legislation, in
recommending a 1946 amendment to permit policies on which payments
had been made prior to the 1944 act to elect the refund life income
plan. [
Footnote 35] The 1946
bill also included a provision setting up optional modes of
settlement for insurance maturing on or after August 1, 1946, and
the third option was couched in language identical in every
significant respect to that used in the original § 602(h)(2).
[
Footnote 36] Accordingly,
when Congress enacted the 1946 bill, it in effect incorporated the
old provision of § 602(h)(2), which was the basis for
Regulation 3450, and, in our view, thereby accepted the
construction embodied in that regulation, which had been so clearly
brought to its attention on this and prior occasions.
Page 334 U. S. 624
Further evidence, were any needed, that Congress accepted as its
own this interpretation of the language used in § 602(h)(2) is
supplied by the significant distinction maintained in this
reenactment between the mode of payment originally provided by
§ 602(h)(2) and the refund life income plan, viewed in the
light of the House Committee Report on the bill. It is hardly
conceivable -- and, if conceivable, hardly explicable -- that
Congress meant one thing by the language it used in §
602(h)(2) when enacting the original measure in 1940, and another
quite different thing when it reenacted that language in 1946.
In the light of the foregoing considerations, the validity of
Regulation 3450 is sustained and the decision of the Circuit Court
of Appeals is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
6 Fed.Reg. 1162, 1166, 38 C.F.R. 1941 Supp. § 10.3450.
[
Footnote 2]
Part I, Title VI of the Second Revenue Act of 1940, Act of Oct.
8, 1940, c. 757, 54 Stat. 974, 1008, 38 U.S.C. §§ 801,
802(h)(2).
[
Footnote 3]
Pursuant to § 617 of the Act, 38 U.S.C. § 817.
[
Footnote 4]
§ 602(g), 38 U.S.C. § 802(g).
[
Footnote 5]
Sec. 608, 38 U.S.C. § 808:
"The Administrator, subject to the general direction of the
President, shall administer, execute, and enforce the provisions of
this chapter, shall have power to make such rules and regulations,
not inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter, as are
necessary or appropriate to carry out its purposes, and shall
decide all questions arising hereunder. . . ."
[
Footnote 6]
"
Payment to first beneficiary. -- Upon due proof of the
death of the insured while a National Service Life Insurance policy
is in force, the monthly installments, without interest, which have
accrued since the death of the insured (the first installment being
due on the date of death of the insured) and the monthly
installments which thereafter become payable in accordance with the
provisions of the policy, shall be paid to the beneficiary or
beneficiaries entitled in the following manner:"
"(a) If the beneficiary to whom payment is first made is under
thirty years of age at the time of the death of the insured,
payment shall be made in 240 equal monthly installments at the rate
of $5.51 for each $1,000 of such insurance."
"(b) If the beneficiary to whom payment is first made is thirty
or more years of age at the time of the death of the insured,
payment shall be made in equal monthly installments for 120 months
certain, with such payment continuing throughout the remaining
lifetime of such beneficiary. The amount of the monthly installment
for each $1,000 of insurance shall be determined by the age of the
beneficiary as of last birthday at the time of the death of the
insured, in accordance with the following schedule based upon the
American Experience Table of Mortality and interest at the rate of
3 percentum per annum:"
Age of beneficiary Amount of
at date of death each monthly
of insured installment
30 $3.97
* * * *
40 4.50
* * * *
50 5.39
* * * *
54 5.90
* * * *
60 6.81
* * * *
68 8.19
* * * *
70 8.51
* * * *
80 9.55
* * * *
[
Footnote 7]
If the first beneficiary fails to survive the 10-year period,
after having received at least one installment,
"thereafter, monthly installments in the same amount shall be
paid to the person or persons entitled as beneficiary until all of
the installments certain shall have been paid."
Regulation 3451, 6 Fed.Reg. 1162, 1166, 38 C.F.R.Cum.Supp.
§ 10.3451.
[
Footnote 8]
See table
infra, note 18
[
Footnote 9]
See examples in the text
infra of standard
usage of this term in commercial insurance policies.
[
Footnote 10]
See Aschenbrenner v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty
Co., 292 U. S. 80,
292 U. S. 84
et seq.; Manufacturers' Accident Indemnity Co. v.
Dorgan, 58 F. 945, 956.
[
Footnote 11]
Aschenbrenner v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
supra, note 10 at
292 U. S.
84-85.
[
Footnote 12]
This is not, of course, to deny that the statute and regulations
adopted pursuant to it give rise to an obligation that has the
force of a binding contract with the serviceman insured.
See
Lynch v. United States, 292 U. S. 571,
292 U. S.
579.
[
Footnote 13]
§ 608, 38 U.S.C. § 808, quoted in part
supra,
note 6
[
Footnote 14]
S.Rep. No.1705, 79th Cong., 2d Sess. 9; H.R.Rep. No.2002, 79th
Cong., 2d Sess. 10; § 12 of the 1946 amendment, 60 Stat. 781,
788, amending § 608.
[
Footnote 15]
The statute was amended in 1946 to make all future
beneficiaries, regardless of age, eligible for the life annuity
with 120 guaranteed payments previously limited to those over
thirty. § 9 of the 1946 amendment, 60 Stat. 781, 785, adding
subsection (t)(3) to § 602 of the 1940 Act.
[
Footnote 16]
See table,
infra, note 18
[
Footnote 17]
Ibid.
As mentioned in
note 15
supra, the life annuity with 120 guaranteed payments was
made available in 1946 to all beneficiaries, regardless of age.
Acceptance of respondent's interpretation would require us to view
Congress as having offered, in the 1946 amendment, four optional
settlements (
see note
36 infra), three of which would be limited in value at
maturity to the face amount of the insurance, while the fourth
option would offer a value far in excess of the face amount, and
would be available to all beneficiaries without regard to their age
at the insured's death.
"By the calculations of the American Experience Table, a person
has to be 68 years old before his life expectancy is less than 10
years. Accordingly, in all cases where the first beneficiary is
under 68 years of age at the time the insured dies, the actual
value of the policy, thus computed, would exceed its face amount.
The Administrator estimates that, on the approximately 2.1 billion
dollars of death claims already incurred and now being settled
under the provision for life income with installments guaranteed
for 120 months, the additional liability that would result if
settlement were required to be made pursuant to the Circuit Court's
holding would amount to approximately 1.8 billion dollars.
Government's brief, p. 67. Potential liability on the billions of
dollars of insurance now in force and yet to mature would similarly
be vastly increased under this view."
The precise size of the latter liability is, of course,
problematical. In a letter to the Solicitor General, dated October
24, 1947, the Veterans' Administration estimated the amount of
insurance in force and not yet matured at 35 billion dollars.
Assuming that all of that insurance would be held to mature at
death and that the typical beneficiary would be a woman aged 30 at
the death of her husband, and that all policies would be settled
under the life income option with installments guaranteed for 120
months, the Administrator estimated that potential liability under
respondent's view of the statute might be about 97 billion dollars,
instead of 35 billion dollars (the potential liability under
Regulation 3450) -- an increased future liability of 62 billion
dollars. And if 10% of all lapsed policies were reinstated, the
potential additional liability (on the basis of the above
assumptions) would be about 19.7 billion dollars.
While these assumptions may be overly favorable to the
Government's contentions and may not be fully borne out by the
course of future events, it is obvious -- even allowing for a wide
margin of error -- that the added potential liability under the
holding of the Circuit Court of Appeals might well amount to
billions of dollars.
[
Footnote 18]
Present value Present value
under Regulation under C.C.A. 7
Beneficiary's age 3450 view
10 $1,000 $2,786
20 1,000 2,633
30 1,000 2,421
40 1,000 2,136
50 1,000 1,783
54 1,000 1,629
60 1,000 1,411
70 1,000 1,129
See Appendix D of the Government's brief for the
mathematical formulae used in constructing this table.
[
Footnote 19]
Transcript of Record, p. 10.
[
Footnote 20]
Under the respondent's view, this extraordinary putative
liability must be considered to have been tremendously increased by
the extension of the § 602(h)(2) method of payment to all
beneficiaries by the 1946 amendment which removed the limiting age
factor.
See note 15
supra.
[
Footnote 21]
§ 606, 38 U.S.C. § 806.
[
Footnote 22]
§ 607(a), 38 U.S.C. § 807(a).
[
Footnote 23]
§ 609, 38 U.S.C. § 809. Subsequent amendments to the
1940 Act added other specified costs to be borne by the United
States.
See, e.g., 38 U.S.C.Supp. V, § 802
et
seq.
[
Footnote 24]
Cf. the reasoning of the Court, speaking through Mr.
Justice Holmes, in
Pine Hill Coal Co. v. United States,
259 U. S. 191,
259 U. S.
196:
"A liability in any case is not to be imposed upon a Government
without clear words . . . , and where, as here, the liability would
mount to great sums, only the plainest language could warrant a
Court in taking it to be imposed. . . ."
[
Footnote 25]
86 Cong.Rec. 12920 (1940).
[
Footnote 26]
Title III, 43 Stat. 607, 624, as amended, 38 U.S.C. §
512.
[
Footnote 27]
38 C.F.R. 10.3068.
[
Footnote 28]
The Handy Guide to Standard and Special Contracts (1940)
294.
[
Footnote 29]
Id. at 613.
A third illustration provides in the following terms for an
election between a plan similar to that provided by §
602(h)(2) as construed by Regulation 3450, and the refund life
income plan provided by the 1944 amendment to the statute
(
see 334
U.S. 602fn33|>note 33
infra):
"The company will pay equal monthly installments during the
payee's remaining life, with 120 or 240 installments certain or
with installments certain until the proceeds are refunded, as may
be designated in the election of the option, the amount of each
installment to be determined from the table entitled 'Option 4-Life
Income With Instalments Certain' in accordance with the sex of the
payee and the age of the payee at the payee's birthday nearest to
the date when the proceeds of this policy shall become payable, the
first of said installments to be payable immediately. . . ."
Handy Guide,
supra, note 28 at 983.
See also id. at 1284-1285.
[
Footnote 30]
S.Rep. No. 1105, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2, quoting the
Administrator's letter.
[
Footnote 31]
Id. (Italics added.)
[
Footnote 32]
Id. at 1.
[
Footnote 33]
Section 6 of the 1944 Act, 58 Stat. 762, 763, amended §
602(h)(2) by providing that the Administrator
"may include a provision in the insurance contract authorizing
the insured or the beneficiary to elect, in lieu of this mode of
payment, a refund life income in monthly installments payable for
such period certain as may be required in order that the sum of the
installments certain, including a last installment of such reduced
amount as may be necessary, shall equal the face value of the
contract less any indebtedness with such payments continuing
throughout the lifetime of such beneficiary:
Provided
further, That such optional settlement shall not be available
in any case in which such settlement would result in payments of
installments over a shorter period than one hundred and twenty
months, nor in any case in which payments of insurance installments
have been commenced prior to the date of this amendatory Act."
Section 5 of the 1944 Act added a similar amendment to §
602(h)(1).
[
Footnote 34]
Cf. 9 U. S. Mayor, 5
Cranch 1,
9 U. S. 7-8.
[
Footnote 35]
H.R.Rep. No. 2002, 79th Cong., 2d Sess. 5. The measure was
approved by Congress, and § 5(a) of the Act amends §
602(h)(1) and (2) as indicated. 60 Stat. 781, 782, 783.
[
Footnote 36]
Section 9 of the Act added to § 602 a new subsection (t).
reading as follows:
"Insurance maturing on or subsequent to the date of enactment of
the Insurance Act of 1946 shall be payable in accordance with the
following optional modes of settlement:"
"(1) In one sum."
"(2) In equal monthly installments of from thirty-six to two
hundred and forty in number, in multiples of twelve."
"(3) In equal monthly installments for one hundred and twenty
months certain with such payments continuing during the remaining
lifetime of the first beneficiary."
"(4) As a refund life income in monthly installments payable for
such period certain as may be required in order that the sum of the
installments certain, including a last installment of such reduced
amount as may be necessary, shall equal the face value of the
contract, less any indebtedness, with such payments continuing
throughout the lifetime of the first beneficiary:
Provided, That such optional settlement shall not be
available in any case in which such settlement would result in
payments of installments over a shorter period than one hundred and
twenty months. . . ."