Title IV of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) includes a mandatory Government insurance program that
protects private-sector workers participating in covered pension
plans against the termination of their plans before sufficient
funds have been accumulated to pay anticipated benefits. The
program is administered by petitioner Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC), which is responsible for paying terminated
plans' unfunded liabilities out of the proceeds of annual premiums
collected from employers maintaining ongoing plans. Respondent LTV
Corporation and many of its subsidiaries (collectively LTV) filed
reorganization petitions under the Bankruptcy Code for the purpose,
inter alia, of restructuring the pension obligations of
one of the subsidiaries under three ERISA-covered, chronically
underfunded pension plans (the Plans), two of which could not be
voluntarily terminated by LTV under ERISA's terms because they
resulted from collective bargaining negotiations with the United
Steelworkers of America. In light of LTV's statement that it could
no longer provide complete funding, the PBGC sought involuntary
termination of the Plans to protect the insurance program from the
risk of large losses. After the District Court terminated the
Plans, LTV and the Steelworkers negotiated new pension
arrangements, which the PBGC characterized as "follow-on" plans --
i.e., arrangements designed to wrap around PBGC insurance
benefits to provide substantially the same benefits as would have
been received had no termination occurred. Pursuant to its
anti-follow-on policy, which considers such plans to be "abusive"
of the insurance program, and in light of its perception that LTV's
financial circumstances had dramatically improved, the PBGC issued
a Notice of Restoration of the terminated Plans under § 4047
of ERISA, which authorizes the PBGC to undo a termination "in any .
. . case in which [it] determines such action to be appropriate and
consistent with its duties under [Title IV]." When LTV refused to
comply with the restoration decision, the PBGC filed an enforcement
action, but the District Court vacated the decision upon finding,
among other things, that the PBGC had exceeded its § 4047
authority. The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the
restoration decision was, in various respects, "arbitrary and
Page 496 U. S. 634
capricious" or contrary to law under § 706(2)(A) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
Held: The PBGC's restoration decision was not arbitrary
and capricious or contrary to law under § 706(2)(A) of the
APA. Pp.
496 U. S.
645-656.
(a) The PBGC's failure to consider and discuss the "policies and
goals" underlying federal bankruptcy and labor law did not, as the
Court of Appeals held, render the restoration decision arbitrary
and capricious. That holding cannot be reconciled with the plain
language of § 4047, which does not direct that the decision
further the "public interest" generally, but, rather, specifically
and unambiguously requires the PBGC to focus on ERISA. Moreover, if
agency action could be disturbed whenever a reviewing court was
able to pinpoint an arguably relevant statutory policy that was not
explicitly considered, a very large number of agency decisions
might be open to judicial invalidation in light of numerous federal
statutes that could be said to embody countless goals. Also,
because the PBGC can claim no expertise in the labor and bankruptcy
areas, it may be ill-equipped to undertake the difficult task of
discerning and applying the "policies and goals" of those fields.
Pp.
496 U. S.
645-647.
(b) The PBGC's anti-follow-on policy is not contrary to law. A
clear congressional intent to avoid restoration decisions based on
the existence of follow-on plans is not evinced by the text of
§ 4047, which embodies a broad grant of authority to the PBGC,
or by the legislative history of ERISA or its 1987 amendments.
Moreover, the policy is based on a "permissible" construction that
is rational and consistent with § 4047, and is therefore
entitled to deference. The policy is premised on the eminently
reasonable belief that employees will object more strenuously to a
company's original termination decision if a follow-on plan cannot
be used to put them in the same position after termination as they
were in before. The availability of such a plan thus would remove
employee resistance as a significant check against termination, and
may therefore tend to frustrate one of ERISA's objectives that the
PBGC is supposed to accomplish -- the continuation and maintenance
of voluntary private plans. In addition, such plans have a tendency
to increase the PBGC's deficit and employers' insurance premiums,
thereby frustrating a related ERISA objective -- the maintenance of
low premiums. Although the employer's financial improvement may be
relevant to the restoration decision, it is not, as respondents
contend, the only permissible consideration. It is rational for the
PBGC to disfavor follow-on plans where, as here, there is no
suggestion that immediate retermination will be rendered necessary
by the employers' financial situation. Pp.
496 U. S.
647-652.
(c) The restoration decision in this case was not rendered
arbitrary and capricious by the use of inadequate procedures. Since
the Court of Appeals did not point to any APA or ERISA provision
giving LTV the
Page 496 U. S. 635
procedural rights identified by the court -- an apprisal of
material on which the decision was to be based, an adequate
opportunity to offer contrary evidence, proceedings in accordance
with ascertainable standards, and a statement showing the PBGC's
reasoning in applying those standards -- the court's holding ran
afoul of
Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., 435 U.
S. 519,
435 U. S. 524.
Moreover, since there was no suggestion that the administrative
record was inadequate to enable the court to fulfill its § 706
duties, its holding finds no support in
Citizens to Preserve
Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U. S. 402,
401 U. S. 419.
Nor is LTV aided by the dictum of
Bowman Transportation, Inc.
v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc., 419 U.
S. 281,
419 U. S. 288,
n. 4, that a
"party is entitled . . . to know the issues on which decision
will turn and to be apprised of the factual material on which the
agency relies for decision so that he may rebut it."
That statement was made in the context of a formal agency
adjudication under the trial-type procedures of §§ 554,
556-557 of the APA, which require notice of the factual and legal
matters asserted, an opportunity for the submission and
consideration of facts and arguments, and an opportunity to submit
proposed findings and conclusions or exceptions. The determination
here, however, was lawfully made by informal adjudication under
§ 555, which does not require such elements. Pp.
496 U. S.
653-656.
875 F.2d 1008 (CA 2 1989), reversed and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and BRENNAN, MARSHALL, SCALIA, and KENNEDY, JJ.,
joined, and in which WHITE and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined except as to
the statement of judgment and n. 11. WHITE, J., filed an opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which O'CONNOR, J.,
joined,
post, p.
496 U. S. 656.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
496 U. S.
657.
Page 496 U. S. 636
Justice BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we must determine whether the decision of the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) to restore certain
pension plans under § 4047 of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 88 Stat. 1028,
as amended,
100 Stat. 237, 29 U.S.C. § 1347 (1982 ed., Supp. IV), was, as
the Court of Appeals concluded, arbitrary and capricious or
contrary to law within the meaning of § 706 of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 706.
I
Petitioner PBGC is a wholly owned United States Government
corporation,
see 29 U.S.C. § 1302, modeled after
the
Page 496 U. S. 637
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
See 120
Cong.Rec. 29950 (1974) (statement of Sen. Bentsen). The Board of
Directors of the PBGC consists of the Secretaries of the Treasury,
Labor, and Commerce. 29 U.S.C. § 1302(d). The PBGC administers
and enforces Title IV of ERISA. Title IV includes a mandatory
Government insurance program that protects the pension benefits of
over 30 million private-sector American workers who participate in
plans covered by the Title. [
Footnote 1] In enacting Title IV, Congress sought to
ensure that employees and their beneficiaries would not be
completely "deprived of anticipated retirement benefits by the
termination of pension plans before sufficient funds have been
accumulated in the plans."
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. v.
R.A. Gray & Co., 467 U. S. 717,
467 U. S. 720
(1984).
See also Nachman Corp. v. Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp., 446 U. S. 359,
446 U. S.
361-362, 374-375 (1980).
When a plan covered under Title IV terminates with insufficient
assets to satisfy its pension obligations to the employees, the
PBGC becomes trustee of the plan, taking over the plan's assets and
liabilities. The PBGC then uses the plan's assets to cover what it
can of the benefit obligations.
See 29 U.S.C. § 1344
(1982 ed. and Supp. IV). The PBGC then must add its own funds to
ensure payment of most of the remaining "nonforfeitable" benefits,
i.e., those benefits to
Page 496 U. S. 638
which participants have earned entitlement under the plan terms
as of the date of termination. § 1301(a)(8) and §§
1322(a) and (b) (1982 ed. and Supp. IV). ERISA does place limits on
the benefits PBGC may guarantee upon plan termination, however,
even if an employee is entitled to greater benefits under the terms
of the plan.
See 29 CFR § 2621.3(a)(2) and App. A
(1989); 29 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(3)(B). In addition, benefit
increases resulting from plan amendments adopted within five years
of the termination are not paid in full. Finally, active plan
participants (current employees) cease to earn additional benefits
under the plan upon its termination, and lose entitlement to most
benefits not yet fully earned as of the date of plan termination.
29 U.S.C. §§ 1322(a) and (b) (1982 ed. and Supp. IV), and
§ 1301(a)(8); 29 CFR § 2613.6 (1989).
The cost of the PBGC insurance is borne primarily by employers
that maintain ongoing pension plans. Sections 4006 and 4007 of
ERISA require these employers to pay annual premiums.
See
29 U.S.C. §§ 1306 and 1307 (1982 ed. and Supp. IV). The
insurance program is also financed by statutory liability imposed
on employers who terminate under-funded pension plans. Upon
termination, the employer becomes liable to the PBGC for the
benefits that the PBGC will pay out. [
Footnote 2] Because the PBGC historically has recovered
only a small portion of that liability, Congress repeatedly has
been forced to increase the annual premiums. Even with these
increases, the PBGC in its most recent Annual Report noted
liabilities of $4 billion and assets of only $2.4 billion, leaving
a deficit of over $1.5 billion.
As noted above, plan termination is the insurable event under
Title IV. Plans may be terminated "voluntarily" by an employer or
"involuntarily" by the PBGC. An employer may terminate a plan
voluntarily in one of two ways. It may proceed with a "standard
termination" only if it has sufficient
Page 496 U. S. 639
assets to pay all benefit commitments. A standard termination
thus does not implicate PBGC insurance responsibilities. If an
employer wishes to terminate a plan whose assets are insufficient
to pay all benefits, the employer must demonstrate that it is in
financial "distress" as defined in 29 U.S.C. § 1341(c) (1982
ed. Supp. IV). Neither a standard nor a distress termination by the
employer, however, is permitted if termination would violate the
terms of an existing collective bargaining agreement. 29 U.S.C.
§ 1341(a)(3) (1982 ed. Supp. IV).
The PBGC, though, may terminate a plan "involuntarily,"
notwithstanding the existence of a collective bargaining agreement.
Ibid. Section 4042 of ERISA provides that the PBGC may
terminate a plan whenever it determines that:
"(1) the plan has not met the minimum funding standard required
under section 412 of title 26, or has been notified by the
Secretary of the Treasury that a notice of deficiency under section
6212 of title 26 has been mailed with respect to the tax imposed
under section 4971(a) of title 26,"
"(2) the plan will be unable to pay benefits when due,"
"(3) the reportable event described in section 1343(b)(7) of
this title has occurred, or"
"(4) the possible long-run loss of the [PBGC] with respect to
the plan may reasonably be expected to increase unreasonably if the
plan is not terminated."
29 U.S.C. § 1342(a) (1982 ed. Supp. IV).
Termination can be undone by PBGC. Section 4047 of ERISA, 29
U.S.C. § 1347, provides:
"In the case of a plan which has been terminated under section
1341 or 1342 of this title the [PBGC] is authorized in any such
case in which [it] determines such action to be appropriate and
consistent with its duties under this subchapter, to take such
action as may be necessary to restore the plan to its
pretermination status, including, but not limited to, the transfer
to the employer or a plan
Page 496 U. S. 640
administrator of control of part or all of the remaining assets
and liabilities of the plan."
When a plan is restored, full benefits are reinstated and the
employer, rather than the PBGC, again is responsible for the plan's
unfunded liabilities.
II
This case arose after respondent The LTV Corporation (LTV Corp.)
and many of its subsidiaries, including LTV Steel Company Inc. (LTV
Steel) (collectively LTV), in July, 1986, filed petitions for
reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. At that
time, LTV Steel was the sponsor of three defined benefit pension
plans (the Plans) covered by Title IV of ERISA. Two of the Plans
were the products of collective bargaining negotiations with the
United Steelworkers of America. The third was for nonunion salaried
employees. Chronically underfunded, the Plans, by late 1986, had
unfunded liabilities for promised benefits of almost $2.3 billion.
Approximately $2.1 billion of this amount was covered by PBGC
insurance.
It is undisputed that one of LTV Corp.'s principal goals in
filing the Chapter 11 petitions was the restructuring of LTV
Steel's pension obligations, a goal which could be accomplished if
the Plans were terminated and responsibility for the unfunded
liabilities was placed on the PBGC. LTV Steel then could negotiate
with its employees for new pension arrangements. LTV, however,
could not voluntarily terminate the Plans because two of them had
been negotiated in collective bargaining. LTV therefore sought to
have the PBGC terminate the Plans.
To that end, LTV advised the PBGC in 1986 that it could not
continue to provide complete funding for the Plans. PBGC estimated
that, without continued funding, the Plans' $2.1 billion
underfunding could increase by as much as $65 million by December,
1987, and by another $63 million by December, 1988, unless the
Plans were terminated. Moreover, extensive plant shutdowns were
anticipated. These shut-downs,
Page 496 U. S. 641
if they occurred before the Plans were terminated, would have
required the payment of significant "shutdown benefits." The PBGC
estimated that such benefits could increase the Plans' liabilities
by as much as $300 million to $700 million, of which up to $500
million was covered by PBGC insurance. Confronted with this
information, the PBGC, invoking § 4042(a)(4) of ERISA, 29
U.S.C. § 1342(a)(4), determined that the Plans should be
terminated in order to protect the insurance program from the
unreasonable risk of large losses, and commenced termination
proceedings in the District Court. With LTV's consent, the Plans
were terminated effective January 13, 1987. [
Footnote 3]
Because the Plans' participants lost some benefits as a result
of the termination, the Steelworkers filed an adversary action
against LTV in the Bankruptcy Court, challenging the termination
and seeking an order directing LTV to make up the lost benefits.
This action was settled, with LTV and the Steelworkers negotiating
an interim collective bargaining agreement that included new
pension arrangements intended to make up benefits that plan
participants lost as a result of the termination. New payments to
retirees were based explicitly upon "a percentage of the difference
between the benefit that was being paid under the Prior Plans and
the amount paid by the PBGC." App. 181. Retired participants were
thereby placed in substantially the same positions they would have
occupied had the old Plans never been terminated. The new
agreements respecting active participants were also designed to
replace benefits under the old Plans that were not insured by the
PBGC, such as early retirement benefits and shutdown benefits. With
respect to shutdown benefits, LTV stated in Bankruptcy Court that
the new benefits totaled "75% of benefits lost as a result of plan
termination."
Page 496 U. S. 642
Id. at 159. With respect to some other kinds of
benefits for active participants, the new arrangements provided
100% or more of the lost benefits.
Id. at 235.
The PBGC objected to these new pension agreements,
characterizing them as "follow-on" plans. It defines a follow-on
plan as a new benefit arrangement designed to wrap around the
insurance benefits provided by the PBGC in such a way as to provide
both retirees and active participants substantially the same
benefits as they would have received had no termination occurred.
The PBGC's policy against follow-on plans stems from the agency's
belief that such plans are "abusive" of the insurance program and
result in the PBGC's subsidizing an employer's ongoing pension
program in a way not contemplated by Title IV. The PBGC
consistently has made clear its policy of using its restoration
powers under § 4047 if an employer institutes an abusive
follow-on plan. In three opinion letters, two in 1981 and one in
1986, the PBGC stated: "[T]he termination insurance program of
Title IV was not intended to subsidize an employer's ongoing
retirement program." App. to Pet. for Cert. 162a, 167a, 173a.
Accordingly, the PBGC has indicated that, if an employer adopts a
new plan that,
"together with the guaranteed benefits paid by the PBGC under
the terminated plan, provide[s] for the payment of, accrual of, or
eligibility for benefits that are substantially the same as those
provided under the terminated plan,"
App. 229, the PBGC will view the plan as an attempt to shift
liability to the termination insurance program while continuing to
operate the plan.
LTV ignored the PBGC's objections to the new pension
arrangements and asked the Bankruptcy Court for permission to fund
the follow-on plans. The Bankruptcy Court granted LTV's request. In
doing so, however, it noted that the PBGC
"may have legal options or avenues that it can assert
administratively . . . to implement its policy goals. Nothing done
here tonight precludes the PBGC from pursuing these options. . .
."
Id. at 261.
Page 496 U. S. 643
In early August, 1987, the PBGC determined that the financial
factors on which it had relied in terminating the Plans had changed
significantly. Of particular significance to the PBGC was its
belief that the steel industry, including LTV Steel, was
experiencing a dramatic turnaround. As a result, the PBGC concluded
it no longer faced the imminent risk, central to its original
termination decision, of large unfunded liabilities stemming from
plant shutdowns. Later that month, the PBGC's internal working
group made a recommendation, based upon LTV's improved financial
circumstances and its follow-on plans, to the PBGC's Executive
Director to restore the Plans under the PBGC's § 4047 powers.
After consulting the PBGC's Board of Directors, which agreed with
the working group that restoration was appropriate, the Executive
Director decided to restore the Plans. [
Footnote 4]
The Director issued a Notice Of Restoration on September 22,
1987, indicating the PBGC's intent to restore the terminated Plans.
The PBGC Notice explained that the restoration decision was based
on (1) LTV's establishment of "a retirement program that results in
an abuse of the pension plan termination insurance system
established by Title IV of ERISA," and (2) LTV's "improved
financial circumstances."
See App. to Pet. for Cert. 182a.
[
Footnote 5] Restoration meant
that
Page 496 U. S. 644
the Plans were ongoing, and that LTV again would be responsible
for administering and funding them.
LTV refused to comply with the restoration decision. This
prompted the PBGC to initiate an enforcement action in the District
Court. [
Footnote 6] The court
vacated the PBGC's restoration decision, finding, among other
things, that the PBGC had exceeded its authority under § 4047.
See In re Chateaugay Corp., 87 B.R.
779 (SDNY 1988).
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed, holding
that the PBGC's restoration decision was "arbitrary and capricious"
or contrary to law under § 706(2)(A) of the APA, 5 U.S.C.
§ 706(2)(A), in various ways. 875 F.2d 1008, 1015-1021 (1989).
The court first concluded that the PBGC's action was arbitrary and
capricious because the PBGC focused "inordinately on ERISA" to the
exclusion of other laws.
Id. at 1016. The court then found
the agency's anti-follow-on policy to be contrary to law because
the "legislative history of section 4047 reveals no indication that
Congress intended the establishment of successive [
i.e.,
follow-on] benefit plans to be a ground for restoration."
Id. at 1017. The court also found the PBGC's other basis
for restoration -- improved financial condition -- inadequate
because the PBGC did not explain many of its economic assumptions.
Id. at 1018-1020. Finally, the court concluded that the
agency's restoration decision was arbitrary and capricious because
the PBGC's decisionmaking process of informal adjudication lacked
adequate procedural safeguards.
Id. at 1021.
Because of the significant administrative law questions raised
by this case, and the importance of the PBGC's insurance program,
we granted certiorari. 493 U.S. 932 (1989).
Page 496 U. S. 645
III
A
The Court of Appeals first held that the restoration decision
was arbitrary and capricious under § 706(2)(A) because the
PBGC did not take account of all the areas of law the court deemed
relevant to the restoration decision. The court expressed the view
that
"[b]ecause ERISA, bankruptcy and labor law are all involved in
the case at hand, there must be a showing on the administrative
record that PBGC, before reaching its decision, considered all of
these areas of law, and to the extent possible, honored the
policies underlying them."
875 F.2d, at 1015. The court concluded that the administrative
record did not reflect thorough and explicit consideration by the
PBGC of the "policies and goals" of each of the three bodies of
law.
Id. at 1016. As the court put it, the PBGC "focused
inordinately on ERISA."
Ibid. The Court of Appeals did not
hold that the PBGC's decision actually conflicted with any
provision in the bankruptcy or labor laws, or that the PBGC's
action "trench[ed] upon the . . . jurisdiction" of another agency.
See Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States,
371 U. S. 156,
371 U. S. 173
(1962). Rather, the court held that, because labor law and
bankruptcy law are "involved in the case at hand," the PBGC had an
affirmative obligation, which had not been met, to address them.
875 F.2d at 1015.
The PBGC contends that the Court of Appeals misapplied the
general rule that an agency must take into consideration all
relevant factors,
see Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc.
v. Volpe, 401 U. S. 402,
401 U. S. 416
(1971), by requiring the agency explicitly to consider and discuss
labor and bankruptcy law. We agree.
First, and most important, we do not think that the requirement
imposed by the Court of Appeals upon the PBGC can be reconciled
with the plain language of § 4047, under which the PBGC is
operating in this case. This section gives the PBGC the power to
restore terminated plans in any case
Page 496 U. S. 646
in which the PBGC determines such action to be "appropriate and
consistent with its duties
under this title
[
i.e., Title IV of ERISA]" (emphasis added). The statute
does not direct the PBGC to make restoration decisions that further
the "public interest" generally, but rather empowers the agency to
restore when restoration would further the interests that Title IV
of ERISA is designed to protect. Given this specific and
unambiguous statutory mandate, we do not think that the PBGC did or
could focus "inordinately" on ERISA in making its restoration
decision.
Even if Congress' directive to the PBGC had not been so clear,
we are not entirely sure that the Court of Appeals' holding makes
good sense as a general principle of administrative law. The PBGC
points up problems that would arise if federal courts routinely
were to require each agency to take explicit account of public
policies that derive from federal statutes other than the agency's
enabling act. To begin with, there are numerous federal statutes
that could be said to embody countless policies. If agency action
may be disturbed whenever a reviewing court is able to point to an
arguably relevant statutory policy that was not explicitly
considered, then a very large number of agency decisions might be
open to judicial invalidation.
The Court of Appeals' directive that the PBGC give effect to the
"policies and goals" of other statutes, apart from what those
statutes actually provide, [
Footnote 7] is questionable for another reason as well.
Because the PBGC can claim no expertise in the labor and bankruptcy
areas, it may be ill-equipped to undertake the difficult task of
discerning and applying the "policies and goals" of those fields.
This Court recently observed:
"[N]o legislation pursues its purposes at all costs. Deciding
what competing values will or will not be sacrificed to the
achievement of a particular objective is the
Page 496 U. S. 647
very essence of legislative choice -- and it frustrates rather
than effectuates legislative intent simplistically to assume that
whatever furthers the statute's primary objective must be the
law."
Rodriguez v. United States, 480 U.
S. 522,
480 U. S.
525-26 (1987). For these reasons, we believe the Court
of Appeals erred in holding that the PBGC's restoration decision
was arbitrary and capricious because the agency failed adequately
to consider principles and policies of bankruptcy law and labor
law.
B
The Court of Appeals also rejected the grounds for restoration
that the PBGC
did assert and discuss. The court found that
the first ground the PBGC proffered to support the restoration --
its policy against follow-on plans -- was contrary to law because
there was no indication in the text of the restoration provision,
§ 4047, or its legislative history that Congress intended the
PBGC to use successive benefit plans as a basis for restoration.
The PBGC argues that, in reaching this conclusion, the Court of
Appeals departed from traditional principles of statutory
interpretation and judicial review of agency construction of
statutes. Again, we must agree.
In
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
467 U. S. 837
(1984), we set forth the general principles to be applied when
federal courts review an agency's interpretation of the statute it
implements:
"When a court reviews an agency's construction of the statute
which it administers, it is confronted with two questions. First,
always, is the question whether Congress has directly spoken to the
precise question at issue. If the intent of Congress is clear, that
is the end of the matter, for the court, as well as the agency,
must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.
If, however, the court determines Congress has not directly
addressed the precise question at issue, the court does not simply
impose its own construction on the statute, as would be necessary
in the absence of an
Page 496 U. S. 648
administrative interpretation. Rather, if the statute is silent
or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for
the court is whether the agency's answer is based upon a
permissible construction of the statute."
Id. at
467 U. S.
842-843 (footnotes omitted).
Here, the PBGC has interpreted § 4047 as giving it the
power to base restoration decisions on the existence of follow-on
plans. Our task, then, is to determine whether any clear
congressional desire to avoid restoration decisions based on
successive pension plans exists, and, if the answer is in the
negative, whether the PBGC's policy is based upon a permissible
construction of the statute.
See Mead Corp. v. Tilley,
490 U. S. 714
(1989) (applying
Chevron principles to PBGC's construction
of ERISA).
Turning to the first half of the inquiry, we observe that the
text of § 4047 does not evince a clear congressional intent to
deprive the PBGC of the ability to base restoration decisions on
the existence of follow-on plans. To the contrary, the textual
grant of authority to the PBGC embodied in this section is broad.
As noted above, the section authorizes the PBGC to restore
terminated plans "in any such case in which [the PBGC] determines
such action to be appropriate and consistent with its duties under
[Title IV of ERISA]." 29 U.S.C. § 1347 (1982 ed. Supp. IV).
The PBGC's duties consist primarily of furthering the statutory
purposes of Title IV identified by Congress. These are:
"(1) to encourage the continuation and maintenance of voluntary
private pension plans for the benefit of their participants;"
"(2) to provide for the timely and uninterrupted payment of
pension benefits to participants and beneficiaries under plans to
which this subchapter applies; and"
"(3) to maintain premiums established by [the PBGC] under
section 1306 of this title at the lowest level consistent with
carrying out the obligations of this subchapter."
29 U.S.C. § 1302(a).
Page 496 U. S. 649
On their face, of course, none of these statutorily identified
purposes has anything to say about the precise question at issue --
the use of follow-on plans as a basis for restoration
decisions.
Nor do any of the other traditional tools of statutory
construction compel the conclusion that Congress intended that the
PBGC not base its restoration decisions on follow-on plans. The
Court of Appeals relied extensively on passages in the legislative
history of the 1974 enactment of ERISA which suggest that Congress
considered financial recovery a valid basis for restoration, but
which make no mention of follow-on plans. The court reasoned that,
because follow-ons were not among the bases for restoration
discussed by Members of Congress, that body must have intended that
the existence of follow-ons not be a reason for restoring pension
plans.
See 875 F.2d at 1017.
We do not agree with this conclusion. We first note that the
discussion in the legislative history concerning grounds for
restoration was not limited to the financial-recovery example. The
House Conference Report indicated that restoration was appropriate
if financial recovery or "some other factor made termination no
longer advisable." H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 93-1280, p. 378 (1974),
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1974, pp. 4639, 5157. Moreover, and
more generally, the language of a statute -- particularly language
expressly granting an agency broad authority -- is not to be
regarded as modified by examples set forth in the legislative
history. An example, after all, is just that: an illustration of a
statute's operation in practice. It is not, as the Court of Appeals
apparently thought, a definitive interpretation of a statute's
scope. We see no suggestion in the legislative history that
Congress intended its list of examples to be exhaustive. Under
these circumstances, we conclude that ERISA's legislative history
does not suggest "clear congressional intent" on the question of
follow-on plans.
The Court of Appeals also relied on the legislative history of
the 1987 amendments to ERISA effected by the Pension
Page 496 U. S. 650
Protection Act, Pub.L. No. 100-203, 101 Stat. 1330-333.
See 875 F.2d at 1017. This history reveals that Congress
in 1987 considered, but did not enact, a provision that expressly
would have authorized the PBGC to prohibit follow-on plans. But
subsequent legislative history is a "hazardous basis for inferring
the intent of an earlier" Congress.
United States v.
Price, 361 U. S. 304,
361 U. S. 313
(1960). It is a particularly dangerous ground on which to rest an
interpretation of a prior statute when it concerns, as it does
here, a proposal that does not become law.
See, e.g., United
States v. Wise, 370 U. S. 405,
370 U. S. 411
(1962). Congressional inaction lacks "persuasive significance"
because "several equally tenable inferences" may be drawn from such
inaction, "including the inference that the existing legislation
already incorporated the offered change."
Id. These
admonitions are especially apt in the instant case because Congress
was aware of the action taken by the PBGC with respect to LTV at
the time it rejected the proposed amendment.
See H.R.Rep.
No. 100-391, pt. 1, at pp. 106-107 (1987), U.S.Code Cong. &
Admin.News 1987, p. 2313-1. Despite Congress' awareness of the
PBGC's belief that the adoption of follow-on plans was a ground for
restoration, Congress did not amend § 4047 to restrict the
PBGC's discretion. The conclusion that Congress thought the PBGC
was properly exercising its authority is at least as plausible as
any other. Thus, the legislative history surrounding the 1987
amendments provides no more support than the 1974 legislative
history for the Court of Appeals' holding that the PBGC's
interpretation of § 4047 contravened clear congressional
will.
Having determined that the PBGC's construction is not contrary
to clear congressional intent, we still must ascertain whether the
agency's policy is based upon a "permissible" construction of the
statute, that is, a construction that is "rational and consistent
with the statute."
NLRB v. Food & Commercial Workers,
484 U. S. 112,
484 U. S. 123
(1987);
see also Sullivan v. Everhart, 494 U. S.
83 (1990). Respondents argue that the PBGC's
anti-follow-on plan policy is irrational because,
Page 496 U. S. 651
as a practical matter, no purpose is served when the PBGC bases
a restoration decision on something other than the improved
financial health of the employer. According to respondents,
"financial improvement [is] both a necessary and a sufficient
condition for restoration. The agency's asserted abuse policy . . .
is
logically irrelevant to the restoration decision."
Brief for Respondents LTV Corp. and LTV Steel 33 (emphasis
added). We think not. The PBGC's anti-follow-on policy is premised
on the belief, which we find eminently reasonable, that employees
will object more strenuously to a company's original decision to
terminate a plan (or to take financial steps that make termination
likely) if the company cannot use a follow-on plan to put the
employees in the same (or a similar) position after termination as
they were in before. The availability of a follow-on plan thus
would remove a significant check -- employee resistance -- against
termination of a pension plan.
Consequently, follow-on plans may tend to frustrate one of the
objectives of ERISA that the PBGC is supposed to accomplish -- the
"continuation and maintenance of voluntary private pension plans."
29 U.S.C. § 1302(a)(1). In addition, follow-on plans have a
tendency to increase the PBGC's deficit and increase the insurance
premiums all employers must pay, thereby frustrating another
related statutory objective -- the maintenance of low premiums.
See 29 U.S.C. section 1302(a)(3). In short, the PBGC's
construction based upon its conclusion that the existence of
follow-on plans will lead to more plan terminations and increased
PBGC liabilities is "assuredly a permissible one."
Everhart, 494 U.S. at
494 U. S. 93.
Indeed, the judgments about the way the real world works that have
gone into the PBGC's anti-follow-on policy are precisely the kind
that agencies are better equipped to make than are courts.
[
Footnote 8] This practical
agency expertise is one of the principal
Page 496 U. S. 652
justifications behind
Chevron deference.
See
467 U.S. at
467 U. S.
865.
None of this is to say that financial improvement will never be
relevant to a restoration decision. Indeed, if an employer's
financial situation remains so dire that restoration would lead
inevitably to immediate retermination, the PBGC may decide not to
restore a terminated plan even where the employer has instituted a
follow-on plan. [
Footnote 9]
For present purposes, however, it is enough for us to decide that
where, as here, there is no suggestion that immediate retermination
of the plans will be necessary, [
Footnote 10] it is rational for the PBGC to disfavor
follow-on plans. [
Footnote
11]
Page 496 U. S. 653
C
Finally, we consider the Court of Appeals' ruling that the
agency procedures were inadequate in this particular case. Relying
upon a passage in
Bowman Transportation, Inc. v. Arkansas-Best
Freight System, Inc., 419 U. S. 281,
419 U. S. 288,
n. 4 (1974), the court held that the PBGC's decision was arbitrary
and capricious because the
"PBGC neither apprised LTV of the material on which it was to
base its decision, gave LTV an adequate opportunity to offer
contrary evidence, proceeded in accordance with ascertainable
standards . . . , nor provided [LTV] a statement showing its
reasoning in applying those standards."
875 F.2d at 1021. The court suggested that, on remand, the
agency was required to do each of these things.
The PBGC argues that this holding conflicts with
Vermont
Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 435 U. S. 519
(1978), where, the PBGC contends, this Court made clear that, when
the Due Process Clause is not implicated and an agency's governing
statute contains no specific procedural mandates, the
Administrative Procedure Act establishes the maximum procedural
requirements a reviewing court may impose on agencies. Although
Vermont Yankee concerned additional procedures imposed by
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on the
Atomic Energy Commission when the agency was engaging in informal
rulemaking, the PBGC argues that the informal adjudication process
by which the restoration decision was made should be governed by
the same principles.
Respondents counter by arguing that courts, under some
circumstances, do require agencies to undertake additional
procedures. As support for this proposition, they rely on
Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe,
401 U. S. 402
(1971). In
Overton Park, the Court concluded that the
Page 496 U. S. 654
Secretary of Transportation's "
post hoc
rationalizations" regarding a decision to authorize the
construction of a highway did not provide "an [a]dequate basis for
[judicial] review" for purposes of § 706 of the APA.
Id. at
401 U. S. 419.
Accordingly, the Court directed the District Court on remand to
consider evidence that shed light on the Secretary's reasoning at
the time he made the decision. Of particular relevance for present
purposes, the Court in
Overton Park intimated that one
recourse for the District Court might be a remand to the agency for
a fuller explanation of the agency's reasoning at the time of the
agency action.
See id. at
401 U. S.
420-421. Subsequent cases have made clear that remanding
to the agency in fact is the preferred course.
See Florida
Power & Light Co. v. Lorion, 470 U.
S. 729,
470 U. S. 744
(1985) ("[I]f the reviewing court simply cannot evaluate the
challenged agency action on the basis of the record before it, the
proper course, except in rare circumstances, is to remand to the
agency for additional investigation or explanation"). Respondents
contend that the instant case is controlled by
Overton
Park rather than
Vermont Yankee, and that the Court
of Appeals' ruling was thus correct.
We believe that respondents' argument is wide of the mark. We
begin by noting that, although one initially might feel that there
is some tension between
Vermont Yankee and
Overton
Park, the two cases are not necessarily inconsistent.
Vermont Yankee stands for the general proposition that
courts are not free to impose upon agencies specific procedural
requirements that have no basis in the APA.
See 435 U.S.
at
435 U. S. 524.
At most,
Overton Park suggests that § 706(2)(A) of
the APA, which directs a court to ensure that an agency action is
not arbitrary and capricious or otherwise contrary to law, imposes
a general "procedural" requirement of sorts by mandating that an
agency take whatever steps it needs to provide an explanation that
will enable the court to evaluate the agency's rationale at the
time of decision.
Page 496 U. S. 655
Here, unlike in
Overton Park, the Court of Appeals did
not suggest that the administrative record was inadequate to enable
the court to fulfill its duties under § 706. Rather, to
support its ruling, the court focused on "fundamental fairness" to
LTV. 875 F.2d at 1020-1021. With the possible exception of the
absence of "ascertainable standards" -- by which we are not exactly
sure what the Court of Appeals meant -- the procedural inadequacies
cited by the court all relate to LTV's role in the PBGC's
decisionmaking process. But the court did not point to any
provision in ERISA or the APA which gives LTV the procedural rights
the court identified. Thus, the court's holding runs afoul of
Vermont Yankee, and finds no support in
Overton
Park.
Nor is
Arkansas-Best, the case on which the Court of
Appeals relied, to the contrary. The statement relied upon (which
was dictum) said:
"A party is entitled, of course, to know the issues on which
decision will turn and to be apprised of the factual material on
which the agency relies for decision so that he may rebut it."
419 U.S. at
419 U. S. 288,
n. 4. That statement was entirely correct in the context of
Arkansas-Best, which involved a formal adjudication by the
Interstate Commerce Commission pursuant to the trial-type
procedures set forth in §§ 5, 7 and 8 of the APA, 5
U.S.C. §§ 554, 556-557, which include requirements that
parties be given notice of "the matters of fact and law asserted,"
§ 554(b)(3), an opportunity for "the submission and
consideration of facts [and] arguments," § 554(c)(1), and an
opportunity to submit "proposed findings and conclusions" or
"exceptions," § 557(c)(1), (2).
See 5 U.S.C. §
554(a); 49 Stat. 548, 54 Stat. 913,
formerly codified at
49 U.S.C. §§ 17, 305(h) (1976 ed.),
repealed, 92
Stat. 1466; 96 Stat. 2444. The determination in this case, however,
was lawfully made by informal adjudication, the minimal
requirements for which are set forth in § 555 of the APA, and
do not include such elements. A failure to provide them where the
Due Process
Page 496 U. S. 656
Clause itself does not require them (which has not been asserted
here) is therefore not unlawful.
IV
We conclude that the PBGC's failure to consider all potentially
relevant areas of law did not render its restoration decision
arbitrary and capricious. We also conclude that the PBGC's
anti-follow-on policy, an asserted basis for the restoration
decision, is not contrary to clear congressional intent, and is
based on a permissible construction of § 4047. Finally, we
find the procedures employed by the PBGC to be consistent with the
APA. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed
and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Title IV covers virtually all "defined benefit" pension plans
sponsored by private employers. A defined benefit plan is one that
promises to pay employees, upon retirement, a fixed benefit under a
formula that takes into account factors such as final salary and
years of service with the employer.
See 29 U.S.C. §
1321. It is distinguished from a "defined contribution" plan (also
known as an "individual account" plan), under which the employer
typically contributes a percentage of an employee's compensation to
an account, and the employee is entitled to the account upon
retirement.
See 29 U.S.C. §§ 1002(34) and (35).
ERISA insurance does not cover defined contribution plans because
employees are not promised any particular level of benefits;
instead, they are promised only that they will receive the balances
in their individual accounts.
[
Footnote 2]
Prior to 1987, employers were liable for only 75% of PBGC's
expenditures. In that year, Congress eliminated the 75% cap.
See Pension Protection Act, Pub.L. No. 100-203, 101 Stat.
1330=333.
[
Footnote 3]
The Steelworkers appealed the District Court's judgment (giving
effect to the PBGC's termination) to the United States Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit. That court affirmed.
Jones
& Laughlin Hourly Pension Plan v. The LTV Corp., 824 F.2d
197 (1987).
[
Footnote 4]
Thereafter, the Executive Director offered to meet with LTV to
"consider any additional information [it] might wish to supply."
App. 348. Representatives of LTV and the PBGC then met on September
19 and 21, 1987. At these meetings, LTV officials expressed concern
about the timing of the restoration decision and indicated that
restoration would give rise to time-consuming litigation, which
would cast doubt on the bankruptcy reorganization, thereby imposing
hardship on other creditors.
[
Footnote 5]
The PBGC also gave a third reason for restoration -- LTV's
"demonstrated willingness to fund employee retirement
arrangements."
See App. to Pet. for Cert. 182a. Before the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the PBGC conceded that
this reason was not an independent basis for the restoration
decision, but rather was "subsumed [with]in the other two" grounds.
See 875 F.2d 1008, 1020 (1989). Accordingly, the Court of
Appeals did not address this explanation for restoration, and
neither do we.
[
Footnote 6]
Meanwhile, LTV filed an action in the Bankruptcy Court alleging
that restoration would violate the automatic stay provision of the
Bankruptcy Code.
See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). The District
Court granted the PBGC's motion to withdraw LTV's action from the
Bankruptcy Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(d) (1982 ed.
Supp. IV), and considered the two actions together.
See In re
Chateaugay Corp., 86 B.R. 33
(SDNY 1987).
[
Footnote 7]
It is worth noting that the provisions of ERISA itself do take
account of other areas of federal law. For example, as noted above,
an employer may not voluntarily terminate a plan if to do so would
violate the terms of a collective bargaining agreement. 29 U.S.C.
§ 1341(a)(3) (1982 ed. Supp. IV).
[
Footnote 8]
Justice STEVENS suggests that the possibility of follow-on plans
will make employees
"no less likely to object to the financial steps that will lead
to [an involuntary] plan termination because they would have no
basis for belief that a union will insist on [the adoption of
follow-on plans] when, perhaps years later, the PBGC involuntarily
terminates the plan."
Post at
496 U. S. 659.
There is no reason to believe, however, that financial decisions
that lead to an involuntary termination always or ordinarily occur
far in advance of the termination itself. Thus, as Justice STEVENS
himself acknowledges with respect to a voluntary termination,
"those who could object to [the events resulting in an
involuntary termination may also be] reasonably assured of
receiving benefits when the insurance is paid."
Post at
496 U. S. 659.
Moreover, even when an involuntary termination does not occur until
well after the financial decisions that lead to termination are
made, we think the PBGC's apparent belief that employee resistance
to those financial decisions will be lessened to some degree by the
prospect of follow-on plans after termination is not an
unreasonable one.
[
Footnote 9]
For example, the PBGC did not restore a fourth LTV plan that had
been terminated because, among other things, the plan had
insufficient assets to pay benefits when due. App. 318.
[
Footnote 10]
In this respect, we observe that, in its Notice of Restoration,
the PBGC relied on the long-term potential for PBGC liability.
See § 1342(a)(4). The PBGC did not conclude that the
Plans were in any imminent danger, or that LTV could not meet the
statutory minimum-funding requirements. In fact, the PBGC observed
in the Notice that LTV did have "sufficient cash" to cover current
benefits.
See App. to Pet. for Cert. 183a. No party has
suggested to this Court that, at the time of restoration, immediate
retermination, either voluntary or involuntary, was likely.
[
Footnote 11]
Because we, like the Court of Appeals, read the PBGC's Notice of
Restoration as indicating that the PBGC's anti-follow-on policy
constitutes an independent ground for the restoration decision, we
need not address that court's ruling that the PBGC's methodology
with regard to the other asserted basis for restoration -- improved
financial condition -- was flawed.
Justice WHITE, with whom Justice O'CONNOR joins, concurring in
part and dissenting in part.
I join the Court's opinion except for the statement of the
judgment and footnote 11. In particular, I agree that the
anti-follow-on policy at issue here is not contrary to the statute,
and that PBGC would not have been prohibited from applying that
policy as a basis for restoration in this case. Unlike the Court,
however, I cannot read the Notice of Restoration as relying on the
anti-follow-on policy and respondents' alleged improved financial
position as alternative, independent grounds for restoration. The
Notice, as I read it, clearly rested on both grounds in
conjunction. Furthermore, it would make good sense to rely on
improved financial position, for without it there would be a risk
of an early retermination of the plan. At the very least, there is
serious doubt about the matter, and if the Court of Appeals was
correct that PBGC's assessment of respondents' financial position
was inadequate -- and I think it was -- the case should be remanded
to the agency to consider whether the anti-follow-on plan by itself
provides sufficient grounds for a restoration order.
Page 496 U. S. 657
I realize that PBGC represented at oral argument that it had
relied on its anti-follow-on policy and on respondents' improved
financial condition as separate and independent grounds for the
restoration, Tr. of Oral Arg. 25-26, but counsel's
post
hoc rationalizations are no substitute for adequate action by
the agency itself.
See Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United
States, Inc. v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
463 U. S. 29,
463 U. S. 50
(1983). Nor may PBGC's restoration order be upheld even though the
agency might reach the same result on remand, relying only on the
anti-follow-on policy.
"[The agency's] action must be measured by what [it] did, not by
what it might have done. . . . The [agency's] action cannot be
upheld merely because findings might have been made and
considerations disclosed which would justify its order as an
appropriate safeguard for the interests protected by the Act."
SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U. S. 80,
318 U. S. 93-94
(1943).
I would therefore reverse the Court of Appeals in part, affirm
in part, and remand with directions to return the case to PBGC.
Justice STEVENS, dissenting.
In my opinion, at least with respect to ERISA plans that the
PBGC has terminated involuntarily, the use of its restoration power
under § 4047 to prohibit "follow-on" plans is contrary to the
agency's statutory mandate. Unless there was a sufficient
improvement in LTV's financial condition to justify the restoration
order, I believe it should be set aside. I therefore would remand
the case for a determination of whether that ground for the agency
decision is adequately supported by the record.
A company that is undergoing reorganization under Chapter 11 of
the Bankruptcy Code continues to operate an ongoing business and
must have a satisfactory relationship with its workforce in order
to complete the reorganization process successfully. If its
previous pension plans have been involuntarily terminated, with the
consequence that the PBGC has
Page 496 U. S. 658
assumed the responsibility for discharging a significant share
of the company's pension obligations, that responsibility by PBGC
is an important resource on which the company has a right to rely
during the reorganization process. It may use the financial cushion
to fund capital investments, to pay current salary, or to satisfy
contractual obligations, including the obligation to pay pension
benefits. As long as the company uses its best efforts to complete
the reorganization (and, incidentally, to reimburse PBGC for
payments made to its former employees to the extent required by
ERISA), [
Footnote 2/1] the PBGC
does not have any reason to interfere with managerial decisions
that the company makes and the bankruptcy court approves. Whether
the company's resources are dedicated to current expenditures or
capital investments and whether the package of employee benefits
that is provided to the work force is composed entirely of wages,
vacation pay, and health insurance, on the one hand, or includes
additional pension benefits, on the other, should be matters of
indifference to the PBGC. Indeed, if it was faithful to the
statement of congressional purposes in ERISA,
see ante at
496 U. S. 648,
it should favor an alternative that increases the company's use and
maintenance of pension plans and that provides for continued
payment to existing plan beneficiaries. The follow-on plans, in my
opinion, are wholly consistent with the purposes of ERISA.
According to the Court, the PBGC policy is premised on the
belief that, if the company cannot adopt a follow-on plan, the
employees will object more strenuously (1) in the case of a
Page 496 U. S. 659
voluntary termination, to the "company's original decision to
terminate a plan" and (2) in the case of an involuntary
termination, to the company's decision "to take financial steps
that make termination likely."
Ante at
496 U. S. 651.
That belief might be justified in the case of a voluntary
termination of an ERISA plan. Since the follow-on plan would be
adopted immediately after plan termination, those who could object
to the insurable event are also reasonably assured of receiving
benefits when the insurance is paid. [
Footnote 2/2] That view is wholly unwarranted, however,
in the case of an involuntary termination. The insurable event,
plan termination, is within the control of the PBGC, which
presumably has determined that the company does not have the
financial resources to meet its current pension obligations. Even
if the company could adopt a follow-on plan, the employees will be
no less likely to object to the financial steps that will lead to
plan termination because they would have no basis for belief that a
union will insist on that course when, perhaps years later, the
PBGC involuntarily terminates the plan. The safety that comes from
a healthy pension plan will not be overcome by the hope that a
future union will remember the interests of its retirees and former
employees. Plan restoration in these circumstances is not a
legitimate curative to the problem of moral hazard, but rather
constitutes punishment of both labor and management for the
imprudence of their predecessors.
In the case of an involuntary termination, if a mistake in the
financial analysis is made, or if there is a sufficient change in
the financial condition of the company to justify a reinstatement
of the company's obligation, the PBGC should use its restoration
powers. Without such a financial justification, however, there is
nothing in the statute to authorize the PBGC's use of that power to
prevent a company from creating
Page 496 U. S. 660
or maintaining the kind of employee benefit program that the
statute was enacted to encourage.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
At the time of the termination of the LTV plans, PBGC was
entitled to recover only 75 percent of the amounts expended to
discharge LTV's pension obligations. The statute has since been
amended to authorize a 100 percent recovery. LTV represents that,
if the restoration order is upheld, and if -- as seems highly
probable -- it is promptly followed by another termination, the
PBGC bankruptcy claim will increase from about $2 billion to more
than $3 billion. Brief for Respondents LTV Corp. and LTV Steel 33,
n. 21. PBGC, of course, does not assert this change as a
justification for the restoration order.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The three opinion letters identifying the PBGC policy concerning
follow-on plans all involved voluntary terminations.
See
App. to Pet. for Cert. 159a, 165a, 172a. The restoration order
entered in this case was unprecedented.