Petitioners are multiemployer benefit plans governed by the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). The plans
operate under trust agreements for the purpose of providing health,
welfare, and pension benefits to employees performing work that is
covered by collective bargaining agreements negotiated between a
labor union and respondent trucking companies. Under these
collective bargaining agreements, each employer must make weekly
contributions to petitioners for each such employee, and each
employer agrees to be bound by the trust agreements. Because they
are so large, petitioners rely on employer self-reporting to
determine the extent of an employer's contribution liability, and
police this self-reporting system by conducting random audits of
the participating employers' records. When respondents refused to
allow petitioners' requested audit of respondents' payroll, tax,
and personnel records, including records of employees who
respondents claimed were not plan participants, petitioners filed
an action in Federal District Court seeking an order permitting the
audit. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of
petitioners. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
petitioners had to show "reasonable cause" to believe that a
specific employee was covered by the plans before gaining a right
of access to that employee's records.
Held: Respondents must allow petitioners to conduct the
requested audit. Pp.
472 U. S.
565-581.
(a) Various provisions of the trust agreements granting the
trustees power to enable them to administer the trusts properly,
including a provision granting power to demand and examine
pertinent employer records, support the right to audit claimed by
petitioners. Moreover, petitioners' assertion that the requested
audit is highly relevant to the trust agreements' legitimate
interests fully conforms to generally accepted auditing standards.
Pp.
472 U. S.
565-568.
(b) Petitioners' trustees' interpretation of the trust
agreements as authorizing the requested audit is not inconsistent
with ERISA, and indeed, is entirely reasonable in light of ERISA's
policies. Rather
Page 472 U. S. 560
than explicitly enumerating all of the powers and duties of
trustees, Congress invoked the common law of trusts to define the
scope of their authority and responsibility. Under the common law,
trustees have all such powers as are necessary or appropriate for
the carrying out of the trust purposes, and an examination of
ERISA's structure in light of the common law leaves no doubt as to
the validity and weight of the audit goals on which petitioners
rely. Both the concerns for fully informing participants of their
rights and status under a plan and for assuring the financial
integrity of the plans by determining the class of potential
benefit claimants and by holding employers to the full and prompt
fulfillment of their contribution obligations are proper and
weighty within ERISA's framework. Pp.
472 U. S.
568-574.
(c) A benefit plan should not have to rely on union monitoring
of an employer's compliance with its trust obligations as an
alternative to audits by the plans themselves.
Cf. Schneider
Moving & Storage Co. v. Robbins, 466 U.
S. 364. A trustee's duty extends to all participants and
beneficiaries of a multiemployer plan, whereas a union's duty is
confined to current employees employed in the bargaining unit in
which it has representational rights. Nor would the Department of
Labor's policing of employer compliance be an acceptable
alternative. That Department has insufficient resources for such
policing, and neither ERISA's structure nor its legislative history
shows any congressional intent that benefit plans should rely
primarily on centralized federal monitoring of employer
contributions requirements. Pp.
472 U. S.
575-579.
(d) To rely on covered employees themselves to come forward to
assure that employers make the required contributions would not be
feasible. While ERISA's reporting requirements are designed to
assure that participants receive information about their status and
rights, they do so by placing a reporting duty
on the
plans. Thus, to give participants initial notice of their
status, the plans would need to know the participants' identities,
the very information that the requested audit here sought to
verify. P.
472 U. S.
579.
(e) The fact that a benefit plan could bring an action against a
delinquent employer as the employer's breaches of its obligations
are discovered does not foreclose the plan from seeking to deter
such breaches or discover them early. To suggest that a plan should
be so foreclosed ignores the trustees' various fiduciary duties
under ERISA and conflicts with ERISA's concern that plans should
assure themselves of adequate funding by promptly collecting
employer contributions. Pp.
472 U. S.
580-581.
698 F.2d 802,
reversed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN WHITE, BLACKMUN, POWELL and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined. STEVENS,
J.,
Page 472 U. S. 561
filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in
which BURGER, C.J., and REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
472 U. S.
582.
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion for the Court.
The issue presented is whether an employer who participates in a
multiemployer benefit plan that is governed by the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001
et seq., must allow the plan to conduct an audit involving
the records of employees who the employer denies are participants
in the plan.
I
A
Petitioners are two large multiemployer benefit plans, the
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund and the
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Health and Welfare
Fund (hereinafter referred to collectively as Central States).
[
Footnote 1] Governed by §
302(c)(5) of
Page 472 U. S. 562
the Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, 29 U.S.C. §
186(c)(5), and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA), 88 Stat. 829, 29 U.S.C. § 1001
et seq., as
amended by the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980,
Pub.L. 96-364, 94 Stat. 1208, these plans operate as trusts for the
purpose of providing specified health, welfare, and pension
benefits to employees performing work that is covered by collective
bargaining agreements negotiated by various affiliates of the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen
and Helpers of America (Teamsters).
Respondents (hereinafter referred to collectively as Central
Transport) are 16 interstate trucking companies, each of which,
either individually or through a multiemployer association, engages
in collective bargaining with the Teamsters. Pursuant to that
bargaining, each has become a signatory to the National Master
Freight Agreement and supplemental, individual collective
bargaining agreements. Under these collective bargaining
agreements, each employer must make weekly contributions to Central
States for each employee who performs work covered by the
collective bargaining agreements, and each employer agrees to be
bound by the trust agreements that govern Central States.
Because the plans are so large -- with thousands of
participating employers -- Central States relies principally on
employer self-reporting to determine the extent of an employer's
liability. [
Footnote 2] Central
States polices this self-reporting
Page 472 U. S. 563
system by conducting random audits of the records of
participating employers.
B
On December 5, 1979, Central States contacted Central Transport
to arrange an audit, which it described as part of a program of
"
periodic reviews of participating employer contributions for
the benefit of Plan Participants and their Beneficiaries.'"
522 F.
Supp. 658, 662 (ED Mich.1981). The audit was to take place at
Central Transport's offices and was to encompass, among other
subjects, the "`[d]etermination of eligible Plan Participants
covered by Collective Bargaining Agreements.'" Ibid,.
Among the documents the auditors requested access to were payroll,
tax, and other personnel records of those employees who the
employer claimed were not plan participants.
Central States explained that access to these records would
allow the auditors independently to determine the membership of the
class entitled to participate in the plans, and thus to verify that
Central Transport was making all required contributions. [
Footnote 3] Central Transport, however,
insisted that 60% of its employees were not covered by the plans,
and that Central States had no right to examine any records of
noncovered employees. When Central Transport refused to allow the
requested audit, Central States filed an action in Federal District
Court seeking an
"order permitting its auditors to conduct an independent
verification of Central Transport's complete payroll records in
order to determine
Page 472 U. S. 564
whether the duties and status of each of its employees has been
accurately reported by Central Transport."
Id. at 660. [
Footnote
4]
The parties agreed that the facts of the case were not in
dispute, and that the court should treat their pleadings as
cross-motions for summary judgment. The District Court granted
summary judgment in favor of Central States. After examining
Central States' contractual relationship with Central Transport and
Central States' responsibilities under ERISA, the court concluded
that Central States had a right to conduct the requested audit. The
audit was a reasonable means of "independently verify[ing] the
status and duties of all individuals employed by Central Transport
in order to insure that proper benefit contribution payments are
being made."
Ibid. The court thus ordered "that Central
Transport provide to the audit representatives of Central States
all of the documentation requested and that the audit procedure
undertaken by Central States be allowed to continue."
Ibid. [
Footnote 5]
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed. 698 F.2d
802 (1983). Interpreting the collective bargaining agreements and
trust documents in light of ERISA, the Court of Appeals held that
Central States had to show "reasonable cause" to believe that a
specific employee was covered by the plans before gaining a right
of access to that employee's records.
Id. at 809-812. We
granted certiorari, 467 U.S. 1250 (1984), and we now reverse the
judgment of the Court of Appeals.
Page 472 U. S. 565
II
The documents governing Central Transport's contractual
relationship with Central States include the collective bargaining
agreements between Central Transport and various affiliates of the
Teamsters and the trust agreements of the Central States plans.
Generally, the collective bargaining agreements obligate Central
Transport to participate in the Central States plans and to be
bound by Central States' trust agreements. The trust agreements,
which have been signed by Central Transport, govern the operation
of the plans.
These trust documents include a number of provisions that are
highly supportive of the right to audit claimed by Central States'
trustees.
A
We note first that the Pension Fund trust agreement [
Footnote 6] places on each
participating employer the responsibility to make "continuing and
prompt payments to the Trust Fund as required by the applicable
collective bargaining agreement." App. to Pet. for Cert. A-44 (Art.
III, § 1). The trustees are designated the recipients of all
contributions and are "vested with all right, title and interest in
and to such moneys."
Ibid. (Art. III, § 3).
The agreement contains various specific and general grants of
power to the trustees to enable them to administer the trusts
properly. Most generally, the agreements authorize the trustees to
"do all acts, whether or not expressly authorized . . . which
[they] may deem necessary or proper for the protection of the
property held [under the trust agreement]."
Id. at A-47
(Art. IV, § 14(e)). The agreement also grants broad powers
relating to the collection of employer contributions,
Page 472 U. S. 566
such as the power "to demand and collect the contributions of
the Employers to the Fund,"
id. at A-45 (Art. III, §
4), and the power to
"take such steps . . . as the Trustees in their discretion deem
in the best interest of the Fund to effectuate the collection or
preservation of contributions . . . which may be owed to the Trust
Fund."
Ibid.
Among the more specific grants of trustee power is a power to
demand and examine employer records:
"Production of Records -- Each employer shall promptly furnish
to the Trustees, upon reasonable demand the names and current
addresses of its Employees, their Social Security numbers, the
hours worked by each Employee and past industry employment history
in its files and such other information as the Trustees may
reasonably require in connection with the administration of the
Trust.
The Trustees may, by their representatives, examine the
pertinent records of each Employer at the Employer's place of
business whenever such examination is deemed necessary or advisable
by the Trustees in connection with the proper administration of the
Trust."
Id. at A-46 (Art. III, § 5) (emphasis added).
B
Central States' trustees interpret these provisions as
authorizing random field audits like the one at issue in this case.
In particular, they argue that the records of not-concedely-covered
employees are "pertinent records" because their examination is a
"proper" means of verifying that the employer has accurately
determined the class of covered employees. The plans have a
substantial interest in verifying the employer's determination of
participant status, the trustees argue, because an employer's
failure to report all those who perform bargaining unit work may
prevent the plans from notifying participants and beneficiaries of
their entitlements and obligations under the plans and may
create
Page 472 U. S. 567
unfunded liabilities chargeable against the plans. [
Footnote 7] Moreover, an employer has
an incentive to underreport the number of employees covered,
because such underreporting would reduce his liability to the
plans.
The reasonableness and propriety of the audit are confirmed, the
trustees argue, by the accounting profession's generally accepted
auditing standards, which articulate the elementary principle that
for an auditor to verify a certain selection decision, he must
refer to a universe broader than the selection itself:
"When planning a particular sample, the auditor should consider
the specific audit objective to be achieved and should determine
that the audit procedure, or combination of procedures to be
applied will achieve that objective. The auditor should determine
that the population from which he draws the sample is appropriate
for the specific audit objective.
For example, an auditor would
not be able to detect understatements of an account due to omitted
items by sampling the recorded items. An appropriate sampling plan
for detecting such understatements would involve selecting from a
source in which the omitted items are included."
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Codification
of Statements on Auditing Standards, AU § 350.17, p. 223
(1985) (emphasis added).
Page 472 U. S. 568
The trustees' determination that the trust documents authorize
their access to the records here in dispute has significant weight,
for the trust agreement explicitly provides that "any construction
[of the agreement's provisions] adopted by the Trustees in good
faith shall be binding upon the Union, Employees and Employers."
App. to Pet. for Cert. A-48 (Art. IV, § 17). [
Footnote 8] There has been no evidence of a
bad-faith motive behind the trustees' determination of the scope of
their powers under the trust agreement or behind their
determination of the auditing program's propriety. The trustees
assert that the requested audit is highly relevant to the trust's
legitimate interests, and this assertion fully conforms to
generally accepted auditing standards. Thus, if our inquiry were
merely an inquiry into the trust agreement, the trustees' right to
conduct the audit in question would seem clear.
III
The Court of Appeals, nonetheless, rejected the Central States
trustees' interpretation of their contractual power. In the court's
view, such an auditing power would be unreasonable in light of the
policies and protections embodied in ERISA. We agree with the Court
of Appeals that trust documents cannot excuse trustees from their
duties under ERISA, and that trust documents must generally be
construed in light of ERISA's policies,
see 29 U.S.C.
§ 1104(a)(1)(D), but we find no inherent inconsistency between
ERISA and the interpretation of the trust agreement offered by the
Central States trustees. Indeed, we find the
Page 472 U. S. 569
trustees' interpretation of their documents to be entirely
reasonable in light of ERISA's policies.
An examination of the duties of plan trustees under ERISA, and
under the common law of trusts upon which ERISA's duties are based,
makes clear that the requested audit is highly relevant to
legitimate trustee concerns.
A
This Court has on a number of occasions discussed the policy
concerns behind ERISA. In
Nachman Corp. v. Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corp., 446 U. S. 359,
446 U. S. 361
(1980), we noted that Congress enacted ERISA after "almost a decade
of studying the Nation's private pension plans" and other employee
benefit plans. [
Footnote 9]
Congress found that there had been a "rapid and substantial" growth
in the "size, scope, and numbers" of employee benefit plans and
that "the continued wellbeing and security of millions of employees
and their dependents are directly affected by these plans." 29
U.S.C. § 1001(a). But it also recognized that "owing to the
inadequacy of [pre-ERISA] minimum standards, the soundness and
stability of plans with respect to adequate funds to pay promised
benefits may [have been] endangered."
Ibid. We have
recognized that one of ERISA's principal purposes was "to correct
this condition by making sure that, if a worker has been promised a
defined pension benefit upon retirement -- and if he has fulfilled
whatever conditions are required to obtain a vested benefit -- he
actually will receive it." 446
Page 472 U. S. 570
U.S. at
446 U. S. 375.
One of the methods of accomplishing this was the provision of
"minimum standards" that would "assur[e] the equitable character of
[employee benefit plans] and their financial soundness." 29 U.S.C.
§ 1001(a).
B
In general, trustees' responsibilities and powers under ERISA
reflect Congress' policy of "assuring the equitable character" of
the plans. Thus, rather than explicitly enumerating
all of
the powers and duties of trustees and other fiduciaries, Congress
invoked the common law of trusts to define the general scope of
their authority and responsibility. [
Footnote 10] Under the common law of trusts, as under the
Central States trust agreements, trustees are understood to have
all "such powers as are necessary or appropriate for the carrying
out of the purposes of the trust." 3 A. Scott, Law of Trusts §
186, p. 1496 (3d ed.1967) (hereinafter Scott). [
Footnote 11]
The manner in which trustee powers may be exercised, however, is
further defined in the statute through the provision of strict
standards of trustee conduct, also derived from the common law of
trusts -- most prominently, a standard of loyalty and a standard of
care. Under the former, a plan
Page 472 U. S. 571
fiduciary
"shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely in the
interest of the participants and beneficiaries and . . . for the
exclusive purpose of providing benefits to participants and their
beneficiaries; and . . . defraying reasonable expenses of
administering the plan."
29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A).
See also §
1103(c)(1);
cf. § 186(c)(5). Under the latter, a
fiduciary
"shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan . . . with
the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances
then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and
familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an
enterprise of a like character and with like aims."
§ 1104(a)(1)(B). [
Footnote 12]
An examination of the structure of ERISA in light of the
particular duties and powers of trustees under the common law
leaves no doubt as to the validity and weight of the audit goals on
which Central States relies. ERISA clearly assumes that trustees
will act to ensure that a plan receives all funds to which it is
entitled, so that those funds can be used on behalf of participants
and beneficiaries, and that trustees
Page 472 U. S. 572
will take steps to identify all participants and beneficiaries,
so that the trustees can make them aware of their status and rights
under the trust's terms.
C
One of the fundamental common law duties of a trustee is to
preserve and maintain trust assets, Bogert § 582, at 346, and
this encompasses "determin[ing] exactly what property forms the
subject matter of the trust [and] who are the beneficiaries."
Id. § 583, at 348 (footnotes omitted). The trustee is
thus expected to "use reasonable diligence to discover the location
of the trust property and to take control of it without unnecessary
delay."
Id. at 355. [
Footnote 13] A trustee is similarly expected to
"investigate the identity of the beneficiary when the trust
documents do not clearly fix such party" and to "notify the
beneficiaries under the trust of the gifts made to them."
Id. at 348-349, n. 40.
The provisions of ERISA make clear that a benefit plan trustee
is similarly subject to these responsibilities, not only as a
result of the general fiduciary standards of loyalty and care,
borrowed as they are from the common law, but also as a result of
more specific trustee duties itemized in the Act. For example, the
Act's minimum reporting and disclosure standards require benefit
plans to furnish all participants with various documents informing
them of their rights and obligations under the plan,
see,
e.g., 29 U.S.C. §§ 1021, 1022, 1024(b), [
Footnote 14] a task that would
certainly include the duty of determining who is in fact a plan
participant. [
Footnote 15]
The Act also
Page 472 U. S. 573
requires that a benefit plan prevent participant employers from
gaining even temporary use of assets to which the plan is entitled,
see § 1106(a)(1)(B) (prohibiting trustees from
"caus[ing] the plan to engage in a transaction, if . . . such
transaction constitutes a direct or indirect . . . extension of
credit" to a participating employer), a requirement that would
certainly create a trustee responsibility for assuring full and
prompt collection of contributions owed to the plan. [
Footnote 16]
Moreover, that these trustee duties support the auditing
authority claimed in this case is strongly suggested by the other
provisions of ERISA as well as by the positions of the
administrative agencies charged with the administration of the Act.
For example, § 209 of the Act supplements the benefit plans'
duties to furnish reports to plan participants by requiring
employers to maintain records on employees and to furnish to
benefit plans the information needed for the plans' fulfillment of
their reporting duties. 29 U.S.C. § 1059. The Secretary of
Labor has explicitly interpreted the trustees' duty to prevent
employer use of trust assets as creating a plan duty to verify
employer determinations and requiring plans to adopt systems for
policing employers. And the Secretary has endorsed the
appropriateness of field auditing programs for this purpose. Thus,
the Secretary notes that
"many multiple employer plans have adopted written procedures
for the orderly collection of delinquent employer contributions
which involve reasonable, diligent and systematic
Page 472 U. S. 574
methods for the review of employer contribution accounts by
means of, for example, . . . field audits."
In the Department's view, plans "which do not establish and
implement [such] collection procedures" may "by failing to collect
delinquent contributions" be found to have violated § 406's
prohibition of extensions of credit to employers. Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 76-1, 41 Fed.Reg. 12740, 12741 (1976);
accord, Department of Labor Advisory Op.No. 78-28A (Dec.
5, 1978) (
reprinted in App. to Pet. for Cert.
A71-A74).
In light of the general policies behind ERISA as well as the
particular provisions of the statute, we can only conclude that
there is no conflict between ERISA and those concerns offered by
Central States to justify its audit program. Both the concern for
fully informing participants of their rights and status under a
plan and the concern for assuring the financial integrity of the
plans by determining the class of potential benefit claimants and
holding employers to the full and prompt fulfillment of their
contribution obligations are proper and weighty within the
framework of ERISA.
IV
The Court of Appeals offered a number of reasons why the
requested audit would nevertheless be improper as a matter of law.
The Court of Appeals largely relied on the presence of alternative
means of protecting a plan's interests to conclude that a plan's
access to employee records could safely be limited to those
instances where a plan shows "reasonable cause" to believe that a
specific employee is a participant. The court speculated that
"[t]he Funds enjoy a number of protections against being called
upon to dispense benefits to a participant on whose behalf no
contributions or insufficient contributions were made," 698 F.2d at
813, that the plans thus did not need primarily to rely on its own
monitoring to safeguard its interests, and that therefore "the
possibility of
Page 472 U. S. 575
liability . . . on the part of . . . the Funds [could] not
justify the broad audit [the trustees] seek."
Ibid.
A
The Court of Appeals first noted that employer contributions
could effectively be policed by interested unions or by the
Secretary of Labor, thus diminishing the trustees' interests in
independently monitoring employer compliance. Moreover, in the
court's view, a plan's reliance on union or Government oversight of
an employer's contributions would be more consistent with federal
policies in the pension and labor fields than would be a plan's
reliance on the sort of audit at issue here.
(1)
The notion that federal policy favors union enforcement of an
employer's collectively bargained obligations to a benefit plan, to
the exclusion of enforcement by the plan's trustees, simply did not
survive last Term's decision in
Schneider Moving & Storage
Co. v. Robbins, 466 U. S. 364
(1984). In
Schneider, we held that a benefit plan could
bring an independent action for judicial enforcement of an
employer's trust obligations, and we in large part relied on the
proposition that there was no federal policy favoring trustee
dependence on a union's use of a grievance and arbitration system
for such enforcement. [
Footnote
17]
Of greatest significance here is this Court's conclusion that
compelling benefit plans to rely on unions would erode the
protections ERISA assures to beneficiaries, for the diminishment of
trustee responsibility that would result would not necessarily be
made up for by the union. ERISA places strict duties on trustees
with respect to the interests of
Page 472 U. S. 576
beneficiaries, and unions' duties toward beneficiaries are of a
quite different scope.
A trustee's duty extends to all participants and beneficiaries
of a multiemployer plan, while a local union's duty is confined to
current employees employed in the bargaining unit in which it has
representational rights. The breadth of the trustee's duty may
result in a very different view of the special situations that may
exist in any single unit, and, as we recognized in
Schneider, a union's arrangements with a particular
employer might compromise the broader interests of the plan as a
whole:
"These are multiemployer trust funds. Each of the participating
unions and employers has an interest in the prompt collection of
the proper contribution from each employer. Any diminution of the
fund caused by the arbitration requirements of a particular
employer's collective bargaining agreement would have an adverse
effect on the other participants."
466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 373
(footnotes omitted).
See also Lewis v. Benedict Coal Co.,
361 U. S. 459,
361 U. S. 469
(1960).
See generally Schneider, supra, at
466 U. S. 376,
n. 22 (the union's duty "runs only to the members of its collective
bargaining unit, and is coextensive with its statutory authority to
act as the exclusive representative for all the employees within
the unit"). [
Footnote
18]
Similarly, a local union's duties to bargaining unit workers is
a general duty to act in the group's interests regarding the
overall terms and conditions of employment. The trustees'
Page 472 U. S. 577
duty, in contrast, is to provide specific benefits to those who
are entitled to them in accordance with the terms of a plan. That
the general nature of a union's duty may result in less than full
protection to individual entitlements has been well recognized in
our cases, and we have accordingly refrained from making
enforcement of such entitlements rest primarily on union action.
See Barrentine v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc.,
450 U. S. 728,
450 U. S. 742
(1981) (union goal of maximizing overall compensation for the
bargaining unit as a whole may prevent it from effectively policing
employer's payment to each employee of statutory minimum wages). In
Schneider, we recognized that in the context of ERISA
primary reliance on unions would allow "wide discretion and would
provide only limited protection," 466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 376,
n. 22, to those participant and beneficiary rights that the statute
was designed to ensure:
"A primary union objective is 'to maximize overall compensation
of its members.' Thus, it may sacrifice particular elements of the
compensation package 'if an alternative expenditure of resources
would result in increased benefits for workers in the bargaining
unit as a whole.'"
Ibid. (citation omitted).
See also NLRB v. Amax
Coal Co., 453 U. S. 322,
453 U. S. 336
(1981) ("The atmosphere in which employee benefit trust fund
fiduciaries must operate, as mandated by [29 U.S.C. §
186(c)(5)] and ERISA, is wholly inconsistent with th[e] process of
compromise and economic pressure [that characterizes collective
bargaining]").
The rationale in
Schneider and our other cases in this
area thus precludes a holding that a benefit plan must primarily
rely on union monitoring of an employer's compliance with its trust
obligations. [
Footnote
19]
Page 472 U. S. 578
(2)
There are also compelling reasons why the Department of Labor's
power to police employer compliance must be rejected as an
alternative to audits by the plans themselves. Indeed, the
structure of ERISA makes clear that Congress did not intend for
Government enforcement powers to lessen the responsibilities of
plan fiduciaries.
First, the Department of Labor denies that it has the resources
for policing the day-to-day operations of each multiemployer
benefit plan in the Nation. The United States, as
amicus,
informs us that approximately 900,000 benefit plans file annual
reports with the Secretary of Labor, and that between 11,000 and
12,000 of these are multiemployer plans. As the petitioners'
situations illustrate, some multiemployer plans can be quite large.
See n 1,
supra. It is therefore not surprising that the United
States argues that
"[i]t is thus wholly unrealistic to suggest that centralizing
all auditing authority in the Secretary would provide protection to
benefit plan participants comparable to that afforded by trustee
audits."
Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae 20, n. 11.
Second, although ERISA grants the Secretary of Labor broad
investigatory powers,
see, e.g., 29 U.S.C. § 1134,
neither the structure of the Act nor the legislative history shows
any congressional intent that plans should rely primarily on
centralized federal monitoring of employer contribution
requirements. Indeed, Congress expressly withheld from the
Secretary the authority to initiate actions to enforce an
employer's contribution obligations.
See 29 U.S.C.
§§ 1132(b)(2), 1145. In contrast, as we have noted,
trustees
Page 472 U. S. 579
were given the authority to sue to enforce an employer's
obligations to a plan. § 1132.
B
The Court of Appeals also challenged Central States' need for
the audit because of the likelihood that covered employees would
themselves come forward to assure that employers are making
required contributions on their behalf. The court emphasized that
participants could become aware of their status through the Act's
reporting provisions. 698 F.2d at 813 (
citing 29 U.S.C.
§ 1021). But although the reporting requirements are designed
to assure that participants receive information about their status
and rights, they do so by placing a reporting duty
on the
plans. Thus, to give participants initial notice of their
status, the plans need to know the identities of participants.
See nn.
14 15 supra, and accompanying
text. That is, of course, precisely the information that Central
States sought to verify in its requested audit. [
Footnote 20]
Page 472 U. S. 580
C
The Court of Appeals' remaining reason for questioning Central
States' interest in the audit focused on the fact that a benefit
plan would have an action against a delinquent employer should any
benefit claims ever be made by a participant who had never been the
subject of contributions. We reject the notion that the plan's
ultimate ability to remedy an employer's breach of its obligations
forecloses the plan from seeking to deter such breaches or to
discover them early. Such a suggestion ignores the trustees'
fiduciary duty to inform participants and beneficiaries of their
rights, to gain immediate use of trust assets for the benefit of
the trust, to avoid the time and expense of litigation, and to
avoid unfunded liabilities that might eventually prove
uncollectable as a result of insolvencies. For a plan passively to
allow an employer to create such unfunded liabilities would
jeopardize the participants' and beneficiaries' interests as well
as those of all participating employers who properly comply with
their obligations.
See Schneider, 466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 373,
and n. 17.
The Court of Appeals' argument obviously conflicts with one of
the principal congressional concerns motivating the passage of the
Act, that plans should assure themselves of adequate funding by
promptly collecting employer contributions. [
Footnote 21] In ERISA, Congress sought to create
a pension system in which "[a]ll current accruals of benefits based
on current service . . . [would] be paid for immediately." H.R.Rep.
No. 93-533, p. 14 (1973).
See generally 29 U.S.C. §
1082. As the Reports accompanying the bills declared:
"The pension plan which offers full protection to its employees
is one which is funded with accumulated assets which at least are
equal to the accrued liabilities,
Page 472 U. S. 581
and with a contribution rate sufficient to maintain that status
at all times."
Id. at 7; S.Rep. No. 93-127, pp. 9-10 (1973) (identical
language). [
Footnote 22]
V
Given Congress' vision of the proper administration of employee
benefit plans under ERISA, we have little difficulty holding that
the audit requested by Central States is well within the authority
of the trustees as outlined in the trust documents. But we should
also specify what we do not hold. First, we do not hold that under
ERISA a benefit plan's interests in fully identifying participants
and beneficiaries
require that it conduct the sort of
audit in question. This case involves only the trustees'
right to conduct this particular kind of audit program,
not their
duty to do so. Second, we have no occasion to
determine whether ERISA would independently confer on the trustees
a right to perform the sort of audit demanded in this case in the
face of trust documents that explicitly limit the audit powers of
trustees.
Cf. 29
Page 472 U. S. 582
U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(D). Last, we have no occasion in this
case to analyze what sort of factual showing would be necessary to
a claim that a particular auditing program was being conducted in a
manner that violated ERISA's fiduciary duties of loyalty or care.
Although we do not question the proposition that the auditing
powers of a benefit plan are limited to prudent actions furthering
the legitimate purposes of the plan, there is no reason in ERISA or
the plan documents of this case why the kind of audit requested
here should, as a matter of law, be considered outside the scope of
proper plan administration. [
Footnote 23]
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is accordingly
reversed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
As the Court of Appeals noted: "The record . . . indicates that
the Funds are among the largest Taft-Hartley trust funds in the
United States, that more than 13,000 employers participate and that
they serve more than 500,000 employees whose job classifications
are covered in thousands of collective bargaining agreements." 698
F.2d 802, 811 (CA6 1983).
See also Schneider Moving &
Storage Co. v. Robbins, 466 U. S. 364,
466 U. S. 373,
n. 16 (1984).
[
Footnote 2]
The District Court described this system as follows:
"Traditionally, the Central States Funds have operated on a
self-reporting basis, which required the employer to initially
establish a base group of employees entitled to weekly
contributions and then to inform [Central States] monthly of any
fluctuations in the employment status of individuals covered by the
collective bargaining agreement. Central States relies upon the
status reports of [Central Transport] to compute an invoice
statement which it forwards to Central Transport. Thus, when the
employer reports the termination or layoff of an individual
formerly covered by the collective bargaining agreement, Central
States will adjust its records and reduce the defendant's invoice
to reflect the reported change. Conversely, when an employer
reports the addition of new employees, Central States will increase
the invoice by an amount which corresponds to the weekly
contribution figure multiplied by the number of weekly hired
employees."
522 F.
Supp. 658, 662 (ED Mich.1981).
[
Footnote 3]
See infra at
472 U. S.
566-568.
[
Footnote 4]
The action was filed pursuant to § 301(a) of the Labor
Management Relations Act, 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), and §
502 of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132.
[
Footnote 5]
In reaching its decision, the District Court was
"mindful of the fact that Central States ha[d] repeatedly stated
that confidential payroll data [would] not be copied or removed
from the Central Transport premises once the auditors have
satisfied themselves that particular individuals are not performing
[bargaining] unit work."
522 F. Supp. at 664.
[
Footnote 6]
The trust agreement governing the Pension Fund and the trust
agreement governing the Health and Welfare Fund are identical in
all pertinent respects. References will therefore be made only to
the Pension Fund trust agreement.
[
Footnote 7]
The consistent view of the Secretary of Labor is that, under
ERISA's minimum participation, vesting, and benefit accrual
standards for pension plans, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1052, 1053,
1054, a pension plan covered by ERISA
must award
credit
"solely on the basis of service performed for a participating
employer, regardless [of] whether that employer is required to
contribute for such service or has made or defaulted on his
required contributions."
In the Secretary's judgment, "[a]ny plan term or Trustees'
resolution to the contrary is . . . unlawful and unenforceable."
Department of Labor Advisory Op.No. 76-89 (Aug. 31, 1976)
(reprinted in App. to Pet. for Cert. A70-A71);
accord,
Department of Labor Advisory Op.No. 78-28A (Dec. 5, 1978)
(
reprinted in App. to Pet. for Cert. A71-A74).
[
Footnote 8]
Similarly, the collective bargaining agreement provides that
each employer is deemed to have "ratif[ied] all action already
taken or to be taken by [Trustees] within the scope of their
authority." 522 F. Supp. at 661 (
quoting National Master
Freight Agreement, Art. 60). A trust "participation agreement"
entered into by Central Transport is of similar effect, providing
that Central Transport "assent[s] to . . . all of the actions of
the Trustees in administering such Trust Fund in accordance with
the Trust Agreement and rules adopted."
Ibid.
(
quoting paragraph one of the Pension Fund participation
agreement).
[
Footnote 9]
Although most of ERISA's legislative history focused on pension
plans, Congress also studied the operation of other employee
benefit plans and developed a similar regulatory framework
respecting these other plans. For example, ERISA's rules concerning
reporting, disclosure, and fiduciary responsibility apply to all
employee benefit plans.
See 29 U.S.C. §§
1021-1031, 1101-1114.
See also 29 U.S.C. § 1001(a)
(stating congressional findings and policies with respect to
"employee benefit plans"); 29 U.S.C. § 1002(3) (defining
"employee benefit plan" as including both "pension benefit plan[s]"
and "welfare benefit plan[s]").
See generally Shaw v. Dell Air
Lines,Inc., 463 U. S. 85,
463 U. S. 91
(1983).
[
Footnote 10]
See, e.g., 29 U.S.C. § 1103(a) ("assets of an
employee benefit plan shall be held in trust"); S.Rep. No. 93-127,
p. 29 (1973) ("The fiduciary responsibility section, in essence,
codifies and makes applicable to these fiduciaries certain
principles developed in the evolution of the law of trusts");
H.R.Rep. No. 93-533, p. 11 (1973) (identical language);
cf.
NLRB v. Amax Coal Co., 453 U. S. 322,
453 U. S.
329-334 (1981) (Congress intended that union welfare
funds regulated by the Taft-Hartley Act,
see 29 U.S.C.
§ 186(c)(5), be operated under traditional trust law
principles, and this desire became explicit in ERSA).
[
Footnote 11]
Accord, G. Bogert & G. Bogert, Law of Trusts and
Trustees § 551, p. 41 (2d rev. ed.1980) (hereinafter Bogert)
(trustee has the power to use all "ordinary and natural means" for
accomplishing the trust's objective); Restatement (Second) of
Trusts § 186(b) (1959) (hereinafter Restatement) (trustee has
all powers "necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of
the trust").
[
Footnote 12]
In light of ERISA's standards, Central Transport correctly
argues that the audit request would be illegitimate under the
standard of loyalty if it were actually an effort by plan trustees
to expand plan coverage beyond the class defined in the plans'
terms or to acquire information about the employers to advance
union goals. It similarly argues that the audit would be imprudent
if it were clearly wasteful of plan assets or unrelated to
legitimate plan concerns.
Central Transport, however, has submitted no evidence that
Central States' audit program's actual goal was to expand the
trust's coverage beyond that provided in the applicable collective
bargaining agreements or to acquire information for union goals;
nor did it submit any evidence that the audits were unjustifiably
costly. Thus, whether the auditing power claimed by Central States
is consistent with ERISA must be analyzed in terms of the goal upon
which Central States has rested its audit, that of policing Central
Transport's "
[d]etermination of eligible Plan Participants
covered by Collective Bargaining Agreements,'" 522 F. Supp. at 662
(quoting Central States' letter to Central Transport), so as
to verify that Central Transport is indeed contributing all
required amounts on behalf of all covered employees.
[
Footnote 13]
See also Bogert 355 (where the settlor retains
possession of trust assets, "the trustee must hold the settlor to
[his] obligation"); 2 Scott § 175, at 1415 ("trustee is under
a duty to take such steps as are reasonable to secure control of
the trust property and to keep control of it").
[
Footnote 14]
See also 29 CFR §§ 2520.104b-1 - 2520.104b-30
(1984).
[
Footnote 15]
That the reporting requirements presuppose a plan's knowledge of
participants' identities is highlighted by the Labor Department's
determination that to comply with the minimum reporting standards a
plan "must [send the prescribed material] by a method or methods of
delivery likely to result in full distribution." 29 CFR §
2520.104b-1 (1984). Mail distribution is one of the suggested
methods, and more importantly, the Department cautions that "in no
case is it acceptable [for a plan] merely to place copies of the
material in a location frequented by participants" as a means of
complying with ERISA's reporting requirements.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 16]
See also 29 U.S.C. § 1103(c)(1) (providing that
"the assets of a plan shall never inure to the benefit of any
employer"); § 1145 (requiring employers to fulfill the
contribution obligations in accordance with the terms of plan
documents). For a more detailed discussion of Congress' concern for
assuring full and prompt compliance with contribution obligations,
see 472 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 17]
The benefit plans involved in
Schneider were the same
plans that are petitioners here, and the trust agreements at issue
in Schneider are also the same as those here.
[
Footnote 18]
This potential conflict was also discussed in
Chemical
Alkali Workers v. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., 404 U.
S. 157,
404 U. S.
171-175 (1971), where we recognized that the interests
of retirees may substantially conflict with the interests of active
workers. Because of the potential conflicts, we held that retirees
cannot be considered part of a collective bargaining unit
represented by a union and that retirees' benefits are not within
the mandatory subjects of union-employer collective bargaining.
Retirees, as beneficiaries of a pension plan, clearly are within
the class to whom trustees owe a duty.
[
Footnote 19]
In
Schneider we not only concluded that compelling
benefit plan reliance on union enforcement of trust obligations
would have significant costs to the protections of ERISA, but we
also concluded that compelling such reliance would produce few
benefits in terms of federal labor policies. For example, such
policies as the presumption in favor of arbitrability derive in
large part from the desire to promote alternatives to strikes,
lockouts, and other exercises of economic power. But that goal has
little relevance to the field of trust administration, where
disputes between plans and participating employers do not normally
have such results. 466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 372,
and n. 13.
[
Footnote 20]
The Court of Appeals also questioned the importance of the
audit's goal, speculating that the plan might simply be able to
deny benefit claims of participants who had been notified of their
status through the reporting requirement but had nevertheless taken
no action to assure that their employers properly contributed on
their behalf. 698 F.2d at 813. Obviously, this "estoppel argument"
has the same flaw as the argument that a participant, once notified
of his status, will come forward to identify himself: Before the
plan can notify a participant of his status, it must have
identified him, and such identification was the purpose of the
requested audit.
In addition, however, the argument has other major problems.
First, we note that the Labor Department has consistently taken the
position that any pension plan document language denying benefits
to a participant because of an employer's failure to make required
contributions would violate ERISA and would thus be unenforceable.
See n 7,
supra. At a minimum, this means that Central States is
reasonable in operating its audit program under the assumption that
it would be liable for pension claims regardless of an employer's
failure to make required contributions. Second, the Court of
Appeals did not contend that the reports Central States sends to
participants inform them of a burden of verifying their employer's
contributions, or that the plan documents deny benefits on the
basis of an employer's failure to make proper contributions. Thus,
even if ERISA allowed a plan to operate in one of these manners,
there has been no finding that the plans at issue here have done
so.
[
Footnote 21]
See 472 U. S.
supra.
[
Footnote 22]
In the floor debate on the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments
Act of 1980, Pub.L. 96-364, 94 Stat. 1208, which amended ERISA to
further protect the funding of multiemployer plans, one of the
floor managers explained the problems some employers create for
multiemployer plans by not fully and promptly complying with their
contribution obligations:
"Failure of employers to make promised contributions in a timely
fashion imposes a variety of costs on plans. While contributions
remain unpaid, the plan loses the benefit of investment income that
could have been earned if the past due amounts had been received
and invested on time. Moreover, additional administrative costs are
incurred in detecting and collecting delinquencies. Attorneys' fees
and other legal costs arise in connection with collection
efforts."
"These costs detract from the ability of plans to formulate or
meet funding standards and adversely affect the financial health of
plans. Participants and beneficiaries of plans as well as employers
who honor their obligation to contribute in a timely fashion bear
the heavier cost of delinquencies in the form of lower benefits and
higher contribution rates. Moreover, . . . uncollected
delinquencies can add to the unfunded liability for all
employers."
126 Cong.Rec. 23039 (1980) (statement of Rep. Thompson).
[
Footnote 23]
We note that in this case Central States has agreed to various
limits on its audit so as not to exceed what would be reasonably
appropriate for the service of the audit's legitimate purposes.
See n 5,
supra. Central States does not dispute that its right to
demand access to employer records does not reach beyond what is
appropriate for the proper administration of the plans, and, of
course, a court ordering an employer to comply with a particular
audit demand could, upon a proper showing by the employer, limit
the auditors accordingly.
Cf. Central States, Southeast and
Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Theut Products, Civ. NO.
82-71080 (ED Mich., Oct. 21, 1982) (Cohn, J.) (
reprinted
in APP. to Pet. for Cert. A-96) (ordering an employer to
comply with a benefit plan's audit request but allowing the
employer to withhold specific information that was not relevant to
the audit's purposes and allowing the employer to restrict the
auditors' ability to copy or disclose information where the
auditors' did not need to do so).
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
REHNQUIST join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
If an employer who participates in a multiemployer benefit plan
enters into an agreement that authorizes the trustees of the plan
to conduct an audit of the employer's personnel records, such an
agreement is not prohibited by ERISA. That is the proposition of
law that I understand the Court to announce today and I agree with
it.
Page 472 U. S. 583
In my opinion, the right to conduct an audit of the kind
involved in this case must be granted by contract; it is not
conferred by ERISA itself. My disagreement with the Court is based
on our differing interpretations of the particular contract
documents in this case.
The Pension Fund trust agreements, as the Court accurately
quotes, provide that "each Employer shall promptly furnish to the
Trustees, upon reasonable demand" information concerning "its
Employees." App. to Pet. for Cert. A-46. The term "Employees,"
however, the first letter of which is capitalized in the trust
agreements, does not comprise
all employees of
respondents. Instead, Article I, § 3, expressly provides that
"[t]he term
Employee' as used herein shall include," in
pertinent part, persons who are both employed pursuant to the
collective bargaining agreement and covered by the pension
plan. Id. at A-43. * Thus, the
trustees have power to audit personnel records only of
covered employees.
Nor do the trust agreements require this Court to acquiesce in
the trustees' understandable assertion of power to investigate
whatever personnel records they deem necessary. It is true that
Article IV provides that interpretations of the trust agreements
adopted by a majority of the trustees "in good faith shall be
binding upon the Union, Employees and Employers."
Id. at
A-48. But as the Court of Appeals pointed out, this broad
language
"does not . . . give the trustees
carte blanche powers
to undertake an audit of the records of all of [respondents']
employees. They are limited in their discretion by . . . the common
law concept that a trustee may only act within the scope of his or
her authority."
698 F.2d 802, 810 (1983).
Page 472 U. S. 584
In sum, although I acknowledge that the provisions of those
documents that the Court has quoted lend support to its conclusion,
I find the painstaking and accurate analysis of the complete set of
documents in Judge Kennedy's opinion for the Court of Appeals far
more persuasive.
See id. at 806-810. Because the dispute
over the meaning of these particular documents is not a matter of
special public interest, I simply record my agreement with the
Court of Appeals' interpretation of the contract. To that extent, I
respectfully dissent.
* The general language italicized by the Court,
ante at
472 U. S. 566,
in context authorizes audits Of records in addition to those
specifically listed, but only as to covered employees. If the
language were construed to encompass records Of noncovered
employees, the limitations in the preceding sentence of the trust
agreements would be read out of the contract.