CALIFANO, SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE v. WEBSTER
No. 76-457
Supreme Court of the United States
March 21, 1977
430 U.S. 313
Under § 215 of the Social Security Act, as added, 64 Stat. 506, and amended,
tion of her “average monthly wage” three more lower earning years than a similarly situated male wage earner could exclude. This would result in a slightly higher “average monthly wage” and a correspondingly higher level of monthly old-age benefits for the retired female wage earner.3 A single-judge District Court for the Eastern District of New York, on review under § 205 (g) of the Social Security Act,
The statutory scheme involved here is more analogous to those upheld in Kahn and Ballard than to those struck down in Wiesenfeld and Goldfarb. The more favorable treatment of the female wage earner enacted here was not a result of “archaic and overbroad generalizations” about women, Schlesinger v. Ballard, supra, at 508, or of “the role-typing society has long imposed” upon women, Stanton v. Stanton, 421 U. S. 7, 15 (1975), such as casual assumptions that women are “the weaker sex” or are more likely to be child-rearers or dependents. Cf. Califano v. Goldfarb, supra; Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld, supra. Rather, “the only discernible purpose of [§ 215‘s more favorable treatment is] the permissible one of redressing our society‘s longstanding disparate treatment of women.” Califano v. Goldfarb, ante, at 209 n. 8.
The legislative history of § 215 (b)(3) also reveals that Congress directly addressed the justification for differing treatment of men and women in the former version of that section and purposely enacted the more favorable treatment for female wage earners to compensate for past employment discrimination against women. Before 1956, the sexes were treated equally by § 215 (b)(3); the computation it required turned on the attainment of “retirement age,” which was then defined in
“Your committee believes that the age of eligibility should be reduced to 62 for women workers. . . . A recent study by the United States Employment Service in the Department of Labor showed that age limits are applied more frequently to job openings for women than for men and that the age limits applied are lower.” H. R. Rep. No. 1189, 84th Cong., 1st Sess., 7 (1955).7
The effect of this change on § 215 (b)(3) was also discussed in connection with the amendment of that section in 1961.8 Social Security Amendments of 1961, § 102 (d)(2), 75 Stat. 135. During the hearings on that amendment Representative Watts asked why a woman would draw more benefits than a similarly situated man. After it was noted that this did not change the law as it had existed since 1956, Representative Boggs confirmed that the difference in treatment was not inadvertent:
“If I may interrupt, I think we went into this at great length some years ago when we adopted the 62-year provision for women and the theory was that a woman at that age was less apt to have employment opportunities than a man and despite the fact of some statistics to the effect
that women live longer than men, I think the other fact is equally commanding, so there is some justification for a distinction between men and women.” Executive Hearings on Social Security Amendments of 1961, before the House Committee on Ways and Means, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 146-147 (1961).
Thus, the legislative history is clear that the differing treatment of men and women in former § 215 (b)(3) was not “the accidental byproduct of a traditional way of thinking about females,” Califano v. Goldfarb, ante, at 223 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment), but rather was deliberately enacted to compensate for particular economic disabilities suffered by women.
That Congress changed its mind in 1972 and equalized the treatment of men and women does not, as the District Court concluded, constitute an admission by Congress that its previous policy was invidiously discriminatory. 413 F. Supp., at 129. Congress has in recent years legislated directly upon the subject of unequal treatment of women in the job market.9 Congress may well have decided that “[t]hese congressional reforms . . . have lessened the economic justification for the more favorable benefit computation formula in § 215 (b)(3).” Kohr v. Weinberger, 378 F. Supp. 1299, 1305 (ED Pa. 1974), vacated on other grounds, 422 U. S. 1050 (1975). Moreover, elimination of the more favorable benefit computation for women wage earners, even in the remedial context, is wholly consistent with those reforms, which require equal treatment of men and women in preference to the attitudes of “romantic paternalism” that have contributed to the “long and unfortunate history of sex discrimination.” Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S. 677, 684 (1973).
Finally, there is no merit in appellee‘s argument that the failure to make the 1972 amendment retroactive constitutes
Reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, concurring in the judgment.
While I am happy to concur in the Court‘s judgment, I find it somewhat difficult to distinguish the Social Security provision upheld here from that struck down so recently in Califano v. Goldfarb, ante, p. 199. Although the distinction drawn by the Court between this case and Goldfarb is not totally lacking in substance, I question whether certainty in the law is promoted by hinging the validity of important statutory schemes on whether five Justices view them to be more akin to the “offensive” provisions struck down in Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld, 420 U. S. 636 (1975), and Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S. 677 (1973), or more like the “benign” provisions upheld in Schlesinger v. Ballard, 419 U. S. 498 (1975), and Kahn v. Shevin, 416 U. S. 351 (1974). I therefore concur in the judgment of the Court for reasons stated by MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST in his dissenting opinion in Goldfarb, in which MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, and I joined.
Notes
Section 215 (a) of the Act,
Before it was amended in 1972, § 215 (b) of the Act,
“(1) . . . [A]n individual‘s ‘average monthly wage’ shall be the quotient obtained by dividing—
“(A) the total of his wages paid in and self-employment income credited to his ‘benefit computation years’ (determined under paragraph (2)), by
“(B) the number of months in such years.
“(2) (A) The number of an individual‘s ‘benefit computation years’ shall be equal to the number of elapsed years (determined under paragraph (3) of this subsection), reduced by five; except that the number of an individual‘s benefit computation years shall in no case be less than two.
“(B) An individual‘s ‘benefit computation years’ shall be those computation base years, equal in number to the number determined under subparagraph (A), for which the total of his wages and self-employment income is the largest.
“(C) For purposes of subparagraph (B), ‘computation base years’ include only calendar years in the period after 1950 and prior to the earlier of the following years—
“(i) the year in which occurred . . . the first month for which the individual was entitled to old-age insurance benefits, or
“(ii) the year succeeding the year in which he died.
. . . . .
“(3) For purposes of paragraph (2), the number of an individual‘s elapsed years is the number of calendar years after 1950 . . . and before—
“(A) in the case of a woman, the year in which she died or, if it occurred earlier but after 1960, the year in which she attained age 62.
. . . . .
“(C) in the case of a man who has not died, the year occurring after 1960 in which he attained (or would attain) age 65.”
“[T]he number of an individual‘s elapsed years is the number of calendar years after 1950 . . . and before the year in which he died, or if it occurred earlier but after 1960, the year in which he attained age 62.”
The amendment, however, does not apply to men who reached age 62 before its effective date in 1972, and so the former statute continues to govern the determination of this and some other claims of male wage earners.
