This suit under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,. 29 U.S.C. *1049 §§ 1001 et seq., challenges the denial by a company’s pension trust of a claim for a pension. The district court granted summary judgment for the trust but denied its request for an award of attorney’s fees. The parties have cross-appealed.
Albert Van Boxel went to work for the Journal Company (the publisher of the Milwaukee Journal) as a printer in 1951. In 1959 the company granted him a leave of absence, without pay, to enable him to take a full-time position as Secretary-Treasurer of the local of the International Typographical Union that represents the company’s printers. (He still holds the position, although he no longer works full time.) A series of six-month extensions of his leave of absence from the Journal Company came to an end in 1963. Although he did not return to work for the company upon the expiration of his last leave of absence, in 1975 the company and the union signed a collective bargaining agreement that required the company to prepare a list of employees who were guaranteed their jobs until they reached the age of 65 — and Van Boxel’s name appeared on the list and on successive lists prepared in subsequent years. In 1984, exercising his rights under the collective bargaining agreement, Van Boxel returned to work for the Journal Company for the first time since he had left in 1959 (25 years earlier) — though only for one day; the next day he returned to his union job. A year later Van Boxel, who by this time was 53 years old, applied to the Journal Company’s pension trust fund for a pension based on his having put in 20 years of service with the company. To get up to 20 years he had to count time during which he was working full time for the union. The trustees refused to let him do this and consequently rejected his claim for a pension. Pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement in force at this time, all the trustees had been appointed by the Journal Company.
The black-letter rule is that a decision by a pension trust to deny benefits to an individual claimant can be set aside in a suit under ERISA only if the decision is “arbitrary and capricious.” See, e.g.,
Pok-ratz v. Jones Dairy Farm,
Van Boxel challenges the “arbitrary and capricious” standard. We are not entirely unsympathetic to the challenge, and notice that although the weight of authority is against him there is growing skepticism about the orthodox approach. The skeptical tendency, illustrated by dicta in
Varho-la v. Doe, supra,
The “arbitrary and capricious” standard is familiar from administrative law, where it is used to guide judicial review of discretionary decisions by administrative agencies. See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (Administrative Procedure Act). Pension fund trusts are not administrative agencies and most of the decisions they make are not discretionary in the sense, familiar from administrative law, of decisions that make policy under a broad grant of delegated powers. Certainly in a case such as the present one, pension fund trustees are not policy-makers; they are interpreters of contractual entitlements. The closest analogy might seem to be to arbitration. Like arbitrators, pension fund trustees asked to approve an application for a pension are private persons contractually authorized to decide the merits of a claim under a contract. If pension fund trustees can be equated to arbitrators, the arbitrary and capricious standard might be thought to confine their discretion too closely. Decisions by arbitrators can be set aside only for fraud or conflict of interest, or because the arbitrators failed to interpret the agreement they were appointed to interpret and instead embarked on a frolic of their own. See, e.g.,
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry.,
But how close really is the analogy between arbitrators and pension fund trustees? The fact that often (and here) the trustees are appointed by the company (which is perfectly proper under ERISA, see
Brown v. Retirement Committee of Briggs & Stratton Retirement Plan, supra,
Yet even in such a case, the impact on the company’s welfare of granting or denying an individual application for a pension will usually be too slight to compromise the impartiality of the trustees, even if all are appointed by the company. Nor is it in a company’s long-run best interest to alienate employees by dealing unfairly with pension claims; for the less an employee’s pension rights are worth, the higher are the wages that he will demand (assuming he is rational and well informed) so that he can buy supplementary retirement protection. But if the denial of an application is on grounds disqualifying a vast number of applicants, or if the company is not interested in the long run because it is about to go out of business, any presumption of neutrality may fail. Some courts do not apply the arbitrary and capricious standard at all in such cases, while others apply it in words only. See, e.g.,
In re White Farm Equipment Co.,
From the foregoing analysis one could argue (we do not say how persuasively) for a dual approach to the review of decisions by pension fund trustees. (1) The very low standard applicable to arbitrators, rather than the “arbitrary and capricious” standard applicable to agency decisions under the Administrative Procedure Act, would be used when the circumstances were such as to make the company a neutral party in the decision by the trustees, or the trustees were neutral third parties rather than employees of the company, or half the trustees had been appointed by the union rather than the company. (2) Where none of these conditions obtained, and especially where the trustees had an actual conflict of interest, the “arbitrary and capricious” standard would be jettisoned in favor of de novo judicial review — the approach in Bruch. (These are also cases where the normal standard for review of arbitrators’ decisions would not be followed even in an arbitration case, though as we said the criteria for conflict of interest are looser in the setting of arbitration than in that of conventional adjudication, for reasons explained in Merit.)
All this could presumably be left to contract; and it
is
left to contract, in a sense: parties to a pension plan can always insert an arbitration clause, and maybe when they do so they automatically curtail the scope of judicial review, though this question was left open in
Plumbers’ Pension Fund, Local 130 v. Domas Mechanical Contractors, Inc.,
If we are right that the “arbitrary and capricious” standard, at least if thought to lay down a unitary standard of “total unreasonableness” (see
Allen,
supra), is too lax in some pension cases and too stringent in others, the question arises why it is the dominant standard in ERISA cases. History points us to the answer. Common law trustees (a term used loosely, since trusts are “equitable” rather than “legal” devices) are forbidden to engage in self-dealing; and with their impartiality thus assured it makes sense for a court to defer to their discretionary judgments. The deference is not so complete as in the case of decisions by arbitrators but that is mainly because courts of equity traditionally exercise broad supervision over trustees, see, e.g., Bogert & Bogert, Handbook of the Law of Trusts, ch. 18 (5th ed. 1973), a tradition having no counterpart in judicial review of arbitration — an alternative to adjudication against which both common law courts and equity courts long fought, see
Kulukundis Shipping Co. v. Amtorg
*1052
Trading Corp.,
The Taft-Hartley Act authorized employers to set up pension plans jointly with unions, see 29 U.S.C. § 186(c)(5), but made no provision for judicial review of the decisions of the plan administrators. The tradition of equitable supervision of trustees made this omission seem anomalous; so when a plan provision as interpreted had the effect of denying an application for benefits unreasonably, or, as it came to be said, arbitrarily and capriciously, courts would hold that the plan as “structured” was not for the sole and exclusive benefit of the employees, so that the denial of benefits violated the statute. See Comment,
supra,
23 Duquesne L.Rev. at 1035-41. This standard was taken over for use in reviewing benefit denials under ERISA (which does not define the standard of judicial review of trustees’ decisions on benefit claims), apparently without the courts’ noticing that employers often held the whip hand in ERISA trusts as they did not with the joint employer-union trust funds authorized by Taft-Hartley. Or perhaps the courts believed (without saying) that the parties to ERISA plans had contracted in the expectation that trustees’ decisions would be reviewed under the arbitrary-and-capricious standard, no matter what. But, despite what we said earlier, this may be implausible; pension rights are too important these days for most employees to want to place them at the mercy of a biased tribunal subject only to a narrow form of “arbitrary and capricious” review, relying on the company’s interest in its reputation to prevent it from acting on its bias. Nor is it clear that the contractual perspective is the correct one in which to view claims under ERISA. A Congress committed to the principles of freedom of contract would not have enacted a statute that interferes with pension arrangements voluntarily agreed on by employers and employees. ERISA is paternalistic; and it seems incongruous therefore to deny disappointed pension claimants a meaningful degree of judicial review on the theory that they might be said to have implicitly waived it. Cf.
Lee v. Dayton Power & Light Co.,
Transposed to the ERISA setting, the arbitrary and capricious standard may be inapt, a historical mistake, or a mechanical extrapolation from different settings, at once too lax and too stringent, but even if it is any or all of these things it is saved from doing serious harm by its vagueness and elasticity. There are more verbal distinctions among the standards of judicial review than there are real differences. It is easier to multiply standards than actually to differentiate among them — to keep them from overlapping — in the setting of a particular case.
Associated Industries of New York State, Inc. v. United States Dept. of Labor,
As this example shows, flexibility in the scope of judicial review need not require a proliferation of different standards of review; the arbitrary and capricious standard may be a range, not a point. There may be in effect a sliding scale of judicial review of trustees’ decisions (cf.
Roland Machinery Co. v. Dresser Industries, Inc.,
Flexibly interpreted, the arbitrary and capricious standard, though infelicitously— perhaps even misleadingly — worded, allows the reviewing court to make the necessary adjustments for possible bias in the trustees’ decision. So there is no urgent need to throw it overboard and cast about for an alternative verbalization. Where, as in Allen and Pokratz, the claimant does not argue or is unable to show that the trustees had a significant conflict of interest, we reverse the denial of benefits only if the denial is completely unreasonable. The greater the conflict of interest of a majority of the trustees, the less we defer to a denial of benefits that appears to be wrong.
The present case may involve a conflict of interest, though how serious a one we shall not have to determine. Van Boxel bases his claim for a pension primarily on the years in which he was working full time for the union that represents the Journal Company’s printers. Labor relations in this period were tense and adversarial, and Van Boxel describes himself with some plausibility as a thorn in the company’s side. Cf.
Dockray v. Phelps Dodge Corp., supra,
Clearly it was. Even when we interpret the pension documents ourselves rather than review the trustees’ interpretation to decide whether it was reasonable (the latter being the usual approach in such cases, see
Quinn v. Burlington Northern Inc. Pension Plan,
From the way Van Boxel’s name climbed up the list in subsequent years until it reached the second position it appears that *1054 the company was letting him earn seniority on the company’s employee rolls while . working full time for the union. But this is still a far cry from earning pension benefits. The company was not paying him a wage, and from the company’s standpoint a fringe benefit such as pension rights is a form of wage, that is, a labor expense. A company naturally is loath to pay a worker either directly or indirectly when he is working full time for another employer. It is true that the pension plan did not require employer contributions as such—it was, as we said, a defined-benefits plan—but with every passing year the employee earned pension credits that the company would have to make good on eventually; it was a real, if contingent, cost.
The clincher is the method by which the amount of the pension is determined. As is usually the case it depends on the wage that the pensioner earned in his last years of working for the company. Computation of the pension is straightforward for any employee actually working for the company, but Van Boxel was not. How then was the amount of his pension to be determined? By the wage he received back in the 1950s before he left to work for the union and ceased to receive any wages from the company? By the wage he received for his one day’s work for the company in 1984? By the wage he received from the union—a wage over which the company had no control? No doubt some equitable formula could be devised for determining an appropriate level of company pension for one in Van Boxel’s position, but the fact that the pension documents contain no such formula is telling evidence that the parties never contemplated a pension for persons in that position.
The pension trust argues that Van Boxel’s claim is so weak that he should be made to pay its attorney’s fees. In
Bittner v. Sadoff & Rudoy Industries,
The district court in this case concluded that the consistent listing of Van Boxel’s name on the company’s employee roll from 1975 on raised sufficient question concerning the correctness of the company’s claim that he had ceased to be an employee in 1963 to give Van Boxel’s claim “a sufficiently solid, though not correct, basis” to ward off an award of attorney’s fees under the Bittner standard. We are not disposed to disturb the district judge’s conclusion, especially given the uncertainty about the proper standard for judicial review of decisions by pension plan trustees under ERISA.
AFFIRMED.
