This сase involves challenges to the constitutionality of the Coal Industry Retiree Health Benefit Act of 1992, 26 U.S.C. §§ 9701 et seq. (“Coal Act”). Congress enacted the Coal Act to guarantee that retired coal miners and their families would receive health benefits for life. The Act was passed in response to a financial crisis that threatened the viability of the existing health benefit arrangement between miners and mining companies as well as the overall stability of the coal industry. The source of the financial crisis was simple: too many beneficiaries under the industry-wide health benefit plan and too few contributing employers. Thus when Congress passed the Coal Act, it mandated that all current and former coal operators contribute to a combined fund on a proportionate basis, including former coal operators that had not signed a collective bargaining agreement for health benefits since 1950. Plaintiffs in this case are five such former coal operators. None is presently in the coal industry and most have not mined coal for at least thirty years. All are required to pay premiums under the Coal Act because, at a minimum, they each signed a collective bargaining agreement in 1950. Plaintiffs argue that the reach-back financing provision of the Act is unconstitutional as applied to them under both the Due Process Clause and the Takings Clause of the Fifth
I.
The following is a relatively brief factual background to the present controversy. More exhaustive accounts are available. See In re Chateaugay Corp.,
A.
Background to the Coal Act
The Coal Act is Congress’s solution to a national health benefit problem long in the making. In 1946, the United Mine Workers of America (“UMWA”) staged a nationwide strike over the refusal of coal operators to create a health and retirement fund. President Truman nationalized the coal mines and ordered negotiations with the Secretary of the Interior. The result was a collective bargaining agreement known as the “KrugLewis Agreement” that established a broad outline for employer-sponsored health and welfare programs. The coal mines were returned to private control in 1947, and the first in a series of National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreements (“NBCWAs”) between the UMWA and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, Inc. (“BCOA”), a multi-employer association of coal producers, was agreed upon. NBCWAs governed the terms and conditions of employment in coal mines operated by BCOA members, as well as nonBCOA “me too” operators that agreed to be bound by the terms of the NBCWAs.
The 1950 NBCWA established the United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund of 1950 (“1950 W & R Fund”), which succeeded the then-governing 1947 UMWA Welfare and Retirement Fund. The 1950 W & R Fund was intended to provide benefits to working and unemployed miners, their spouses and dependent children under age 18, retired miners and their spouses, widows of deceased miners, and relatives of deceased miners who cared for the miners’ orphaned children. The program included the payment of unlimited hospitalization and in-hospital medical care as well as disability, death, or retirement benefits. Signatory coal operators contributed to the Fund on a per-ton royalty basis at rates specified in successive NBCWAs or amendments. Trustees of the Fund retained discretion over the amount and nature of benefits to be paid.
In 1974, the BCOA and the UMWA agreed to divide the 1950 W & R Fund into four separate multi-employer plans: two for pension benefits and two for other benefits. This was largely in response to the enactment of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq. (“ERISA”), which mandated that pension plans be fully funded on an actuarial basis. The two non-pension plans were known as the UMWA 1950 Benefit Plan and Trust (“1950 Benefit Trust”) and the UMWA 1974 Benefit Plan and Trust (“1974 Benefit Trust”). The 1950 Benefit Trust provided health benefits to miners who retired before 1976 and their dependents, while the 1974 Benefit Trust provided health benefits to miners who were active, or who retired on or after January 1, 1976, and their dependents.
Economic difficulties that ultimately led to the Coal Act surfaced in the late 1970s. Sev
The basic trust structure was maintained by subsequent NBCWAs in the 1980s, but economic difficulties continued and worsened. By 1990, the UMWA Benefit Trusts had incurred debts of over $100 million, and their funding from coal producers was decreasing faster than the beneficiary population. The crisis led to a 10-month strike at the Pittston Coal Company and threatened the stability of coal production as well as the economies of coal-producing states. As part of the settlement of the Pittston strike, the Secretary of Labor established the Advisory Commission on United Mine Workers of America Retiree Health Benefits (“Coal Commission”) to make recommendations to assure the long-term viability of the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts.
The Coal Commission issued its report in November 1990, documenting. the financial crisis of the UMWA Benefit Trusts and stating that the primary culprit was the escalating cost of paying for “orphan” retirees whose last NBCWA signatory employer had either left the coal business or was otherwise not a contributing coal producer. The Commission made findings and recommendations as follows: (1) that retired miners are entitled to health care benefits that were promised them and that such commitments must be honored; (2) that a statutory obligation to contribute to the trusts should be imposed on current and former signatories to NBCWAs; and (3) that mechanisms should be еnacted to prevent the future dumping of retiree health care costs on the UMWA Trusts. The Coal Commission proposed two alternative methods for financing orphan retirees: (1) a quasi-governmental corporation financed by an industry-wide tax on all coal operators; and (2) a private multi-employer fund financed by signatories to the 1978 and later NBCWAs, and, to provide benefits for orphaned retirees, further funded by all employers that were signatories to one or more NBCWAs in the past.
B.
The Coal Act
After the Coal Commission issued its report, Congress commenced hearings to consider its findings and recommendations. See Coal Commission Report on Health Benefits of Retired Coal Miners: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Medicare and Long-Term Care of the Senate Finance Comm., 102d Cong., 1st Sess. (1991) (“Senate Hearings”). In October 1992, Congress passed the Coal Act as part of the Energy Policy Act of 1992 with the following stated purpose:
to remedy problems with the provision and funding of health care benefits with respect to the beneficiaries of multiemployer benefit plans that provide health care benefits to retirees of the coal industry ... [and] to provide for the continuation of a privately financed self-sufficient program for the delivery of health care benefits to the beneficiaries of such plans.
Pub.L. No. 102-186, § 19142(b). Congress found that the coal industry’s existing system for funding retiree health benefits had to be modified “to identify persons most responsible for plan liabilities____” Id. § 19142(a).
Congress adopted a financing arrangement similar to the Coal Commission’s second alternative recommendation.
C.
The Plaintiffs
The plaintiffs in this case are companies that signed the 1950 NBCWA. Several plaintiffs also signed successor NBCWAs in the 1950s and 1960s; however, none signed the 1974 NBCWA nor any subsequent NBCWA. Because the Coal Act’s financing provision reaches back to 1950 NBCWA signatories, each plaintiff has been assigned beneficiaries under the Act and as such is obligated to pay premiums to the Combined Fund. This is a consolidated appeal arising out of two separate but related suits by plaintiffs. The first complaint was filed by Templeton Coal Company (“Templeton”), Sherwood-Templeton Coal Company (“Sherwood”), Princeton Mining Company (“Princeton”), and Berwind Corporation (“Berwind”). Collectively, we will refer to these plaintiffs as the “Templeton Employers.” The relevant background of each follows:
(1.) Templeton. Incorporated in 1920, Templeton closed its last mine in 1954. Currently, it engages in business that is unrelated to coal productiоn. Templeton signed the 1950 NBCWA and its amendments in 1951 and 1952; it stopped participating in the UMWA Funds in 1954. The Secretary assigned 39 beneficiaries to Templeton at a first-year cost of $138,131.35.
(2.) Sherwood. Incorporated in 1929, Sherwood, a wholly owned subsidiary of Templeton as of 1967, sold its last mine in 1960 and is currently engaged in business unrelated to coal production. Sherwood signed the 1950 NBCWA and its amendments in 1951, 1952, 1955, 1956, and 1958; it last participated in the UMWA Funds in 1960. The Secretary assigned four beneficiaries to Sherwood at a cost of $15,147.22 for the first year.
(3.) Princeton. Incorporated in 1923, Princeton stopped mining coal in 1966 and is also currently engaged in non-coal activities. Princeton was a signatory to the 1950 NBCWA and subsequent amendments in
(4.) Berwind. Originally Berwind-White Coal Mining Company, it was a signatory to the 1950 NBCWA and its amendments in 1951, 1952, 1955, 1956, and 1958. Berwind closed its last mine in 1962, but in January 1963 it merged with another coal company and became a 98% shareholder of Reitz Coal Company; Reitz was a signatory to the 1968, 1971, 1974, 1978, and 1981 NBCWAs. Currently, Berwind owns the Berwind Natural Resources Corporation, which is the parent of several cоal companies; these companies pay royalties to Berwind on the coal mined. The Secretary assigned by far the largest number of beneficiaries to Berwind among the plaintiffs — 914 at a first-year cost of $3,227,727.96.
The second complaint was filed by Davon Incorporated (“Davon”). Davon’s predecessor, the New York Coal Company, was engaged in coal mining from 1933 until 1954. During this time, it employed UMWA-represented miners and was signatory to the 1950 NBCWA and its 1951 and 1952 amendments.
The beneficiaries assigned to each of the five plaintiff-companies consist of approximately 30 percent retired UMWA miners who worked for plaintiffs and 70 percent spouses and dependents of those miners. Plaintiffs point out that many of the beneficiaries assigned to them have only the most tenuous connection to the company. For example, some beneficiaries worked for less than a day at the contributing company. Nonetheless, the Coal Act requires plaintiffs to pay their health benefits for life. In addition, plaintiffs must also pay premiums for “orphan,” or unassigned, miners and relatives. The contributions for unassigned ben-' eficiaries, as stated above, are calculated based on the company’s proportion of assigned beneficiaries. These contributions will continue until the last beneficiary dies.
D.
Proceedings Below
The Templeton Employers filed suit in the district court on September 2,1993, challenging the constitutionality of the financing provisions of the Coal Act, 26 U.S.C. § 9704, under the Due Process Clause and the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The Combined Fund and its Trustees intervened to defend the validity of the statute, but on October 25, 1993, the district court issued an injunction against the Secretary and the Trustees enjoining them from enforcing the Coal Act. On November 3,1993, Davon filed a complaint against the Secretary and the Combined Fund seeking the same relief as the Templeton Employers. After conducting a hearing, the district court on November 18, 1993, denied Davon’s request for injunctive relief and vacated the October 25 injunction in the Templeton Employers’ case sua sponte. Templeton Coal Co. v. Shalala, 855 F.Supp. 990 (S.D.Ind.1993). The court said only that “[w]hen originally issuing the injunction, the court was reading the Due Process and Takings cases too narrowly.” Id. at 999 n. 10.
The parties subsequently filed cross-motions for summary judgment. On April 4, 1995, the district court denied plaintiffs’ motion and granted the motions of the Secretary and the Trustees. Templeton Coal,
*1121 Because the Coal Act does not write on an historical blank slate, but merely provides for a prospective statutory continuation of collectively-bargained health care premium payments for UMWA miners dating back nearly half a century, the Act imposes neither “new” nor “retroactive” legal duties on Plaintiffs in the constitutional sense.
Id. at 815. Ultimately rejecting plaintiffs’ due process argument, the district court stated, “Plaintiffs did work in the [coal] industry at one time. This fact ... would be enough to keep Plaintiffs’ connection to the current financial obligation from being considered arbitrary or void of reason.” Id. at 821. The court also rejected plaintiffs’ Takings Clause argument, primarily because it considered unreasonable any expectation by the plaintiffs that they would never again be responsible for health benefits for retired UMWA miners, especially in light of the continued provision of such benefits and the pervasive nature of government regulation in every facet of the coal mining industry. Id. at 826.
II.
On appeal, the Templeton Employers and Davon argue that the district court erred in granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Specifically, they argue that the reach-back financing provision of the Coal Act is unconstitutional as applied to them under the Due Process and Takings Clauses of the Fifth Amendment. We will address these arguments in turn. This Court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo. East Food & Liquor, Inc. v. United States,
A.
Due Process
The constitutional analysis necessarily begins with a discussion of the appropriate standard of review. The Coal Act is “a classic example of an economic regulation — a legislative effort to structure and accommodate ‘the burdens and benefits of economic life.’” Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Envtl. Study Group,
It is by now well established that legislative Acts adjusting the burdens and benefits of economic life come to the Court with a presumption of constitutionality, and that the burden is on one complaining of a due process violation to establish that the legislature has acted in an arbitrary and irrational way.
Turner Elkhorn,
In mounting a due process challenge to the Coal Act, plaintiffs in this ease must maneuver through “unusually inhospitable legal terrain.” In re Chateaugay Corp.,
Plaintiffs argue that we should subject the Coal Act to heightened scrutiny because it is an economic regulation that is applied retroactively. Retroactive legislation, they argue, imposes an added burden
The second component of plaintiffs’ argument is their assertion that the retroactive nature of the Coal Act subjects it to greater scrutiny under the Due Process Clause. Unfortunately for plaintiffs, Supreme Court precedent could not be more clearly contrary to their position.
It does not follow, however, that what Congress can legislate prospectively it can legislate retrospectively. The retrospective aspects of legislation, as well as the prospective aspects, must meet the test of due process, and the justifications for the latter may not suffice for the former.
We find ... that the imposition of liability for the effects of disabilities bred in the past is justified as a rational meаsure to spread the costs of the employees’ disabilities to those who have profited from the fruits of their labor----
Id. at 18,
[I]t is for Congress to choose between imposing the burden of inactive miners’ disabilities on all operators ... or to impose that liability solely on those early operators whose profits may have been increased at the expense of their employees’ health. We are unwilling to assess the wisdom of Congress’ chosen scheme---It is enough to say that the Act approaches the problem of cost spreading rationally....
Id. at 18-19,
That the same due process standard applies to retroactive economic legislation was confirmed in Gray, supra. In that case, the Court upheld the Multi-Employer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980 (“MPPAA”), which was applied retroactively to employers withdrawing from pension plans up to five months prior to enactment. The Court elucidated the somewhat misleading language from Turner Elkhom that “[i]t does not follow ... that what Congress can legislate prospectively it can legislate retrospectively,” stating that the burden to justify retroactive ty in economic legislation “is met simply by
showing that the retroactive application of the legislation is itself justified by a rational legislative purpose.” Gray,
Plaintiffs are correct that this Court must give additional consideration to the retroactive effects of the Coal Act; however, they are incorrect in asserting that we must look beyond the rationality of Congress’s economic choices. The additional consideration required by Turner Elkhorn, Gray, and Romein is that the retroactive aspects of economic legislation must be justified independently of the prospective aspects. In other words, Congress must have an independent rational basis for making a law retroactive, even where the prospective aspects of the legislation are plainly rational. This methodology was meticulоusly employed in Turner Elkhom. There the Black Lung Benefits Act was plainly rational as to current employees of existing mining companies, but the Court independently analyzed the rationality of spreading the costs to companies for injuries bred in the past, including companies out of the mining business. The Court found the retroactive portion of the Act rational because it imposed liability on companies that profited from the fruits of the injured miners’ labor and because those companies might have taken steps in the past to minimize black lung dangers.
Thus we müst independently analyze the retroactive aspects of the Coal Act’s financing provisions and determine whether Congress chose rational means to further its legislative purpose.
First, every NBCWA signatory company profited from the labor of its retired miners. Plaintiffs in this case each employed at some time retired miners covered under the Coal Act and thus benefitted from their labor. Congress could rationally have concluded that a сompany which profited in the coal industry from the labor of retired miners should be held proportionally responsible for guaranteeing health benefits. When viewed in this light, it would have been irrational to draw the line anywhere other than 1950 NBCWA signatories.
Plaintiffs respond that the Coal Act forces them to finance benefits for “orphan” retirees who never worked for them and thus never benefitted their mining operations. Given that plaintiffs benefitted from the labor of retired mine workers the same as companies still operating in the coal industry, it was rational for Congress to require all contributing coal companies to share responsibility for “orphan” beneficiaries. The essential premise of the Coal Act, as the district court noted, is proportionality. Plaintiffs are assigned “orphan” beneficiaries proportional to their overall participation in the Combined Fund, and the Coal Act makes provision for proportionally reducing plaintiffs’ responsibility for “orphan” retirees as statutory transfers are received from the 1950 Pension Fund and the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund. 26 U.S.C. § 9705(a)(3)(B) & (b)(2). These provisiоns, which effectively mitigate the burden of operators to fund “orphan” retirees, further demonstrate the rationality of Congress’s financing scheme. We cannot say that Congress’s scheme of proportionality is arbitrary or irrational.
Second, every NBCWA signatory company shared some responsibility in creating a legitimate expectation among miners of lifetime health benefits. Imposing liability on companies that have profited from the retirees’ labor was found rational in Turner Elkhorn,
In arguing that the Coal Act should not have reached back beyond the 1974 or 1978 NBCWAs, plaintiffs state that the Act requires them to fulfill contractual obligations to which they were not a party. They contend that they have fulfilled all of their obligations under the NBCWAs they signed. This argument' assumes that the Due Process Clause prohibits Congress from imposing obligations on employers beyond those voluntarily assumed by contract. The assumption is simply wrong. In rejecting a due process challenge to the retroactive withdrawal liability provision of the MPPAA, the Supreme Court in Gray stated that “legislation readjusting rights and burdens is not unlawful solely because it upsets otherwise settled expectations” and that “this is true even though the effect of the legislation is to impose a new duty or liability based on past acts.”
Third, mandatory contributions from all NBCWA signatory companies were neees
Fourth, restricting the statutory obligation to fewer than all NBCWA signatory companies could have resulted in economic conflict in the coal industry. Congress could rationally have concluded that restricting contributions to post-1974 signatories would have placed such a great financial burden on existing coal companies as to cause economic conflict and threaten the financial stability of the national bituminous coal industry. Additionally, allowing the demise of the multi-employer health care system could have had a devastating effect on the economies of the major coal-producing states. Congress at least had a rational basis, given events such as the 1946 strike and the Pittston strike, to think so.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the retroactive financing scheme of the Coal Act is a rational means to achieve legitimate legislative purposes. Davon argues that the Coal Act is not rational as applied to it specifically because it purchased the assets of New York Coal after that company had left the coal industry. But the aforementioned rationales apply with equal force to an asset purchaser. Through the asset purchase, Davon benefitted from the profits obtained by New York Coal with its employment of miners. Further, participation by as many signatory companies as possible was necessary both to ensure adequate funding and avert an economic crisis in the coal industry. Thus Congress could rationally have chosen to ignore changes in corporate form that would allow a company to avoid responsibility for retired miners and the Coal Act’s required contributions.
Plaintiffs make several additional arguments that, if accepted, would render the Act unconstitutional despite our finding of rationality. First, plaintiffs argue that the retroactive financing provision reaches back an unprecedented length of time and that the length of the period affected is an especially “significant factor” in the due process inquiry. We agree with the Second Circuit that there is no support for the proposition that the degree of retroactivity itself violates the Due Process Clause. Chateaugay,
As with CERCLA and thе Black Lung Benefits Act, ... the Coal Act triggers current and future liabilities on the basis of past actions, in this case the hiring and firing of workers and the signing of [an NBCWA]. The Coal Act contains no requirement that signatory operators pay for health benefits delivered prior to the effective date of the statute. Thus, the financial impact of the Coal Act on assigned operators is strictly prospective: only the weight and duration of the funding burdens vary according to past acts.
Plaintiffs also argue regarding the length of retroactivity that while due process can tolerate a short retroactive period necessary to implement legislation, it cannot tolerate a lengthy retroactive period in which a “wholly new” obligation is imposed. For this proposition plaintiffs cite Carlton, supra, which sustained the retroactivity of a Tax Code amendment because it was not a “wholly new tax.” As our decision in Estate of Ekins v. C.I.R. demonstrates, the “wholly new tax” concept is unique to cases addressing revenue statutes and has no application here.
Next, plaintiffs argue that the retroactive financing provision of the Coal Act imposes an unforeseeable liability on them. The liability was unforeseeable, they argue, because their participation in collective bargaining agreements occurred so far in the past and because their contractual obligations during that period were much more limited than the obligations imposed by the Coal Act. As such, their foreseeability argument is little more than reiteration. Nonetheless, plaintiffs cite no authority indicating that foreseeability is a due process requirement for retroactive legislation; thus we have searched only for a rational basis. In the same vein is plaintiffs’ argument that the Coal Act upsets their settled expectations and therefore offends due process. Even assuming the statute upset their expectations, the Supreme Court has said that “legislation readjusting rights and burdеns is not unlawful solely because it upsets otherwise settled expectations,” and “[t]his is true even though the effect of the legislation is to impose a new duty or liability based on past acts.” Turner Elkhorn,
We conclude that the Coal Act’s retroactive financing provision challenged by plaintiffs easily passes the due process rationality test. Our conclusions are consistent with every other court that has addressed the issue. See Chateaugay, supra; Barrick Gold, supra; Unity Real Estate Co. v. Hudson,
g
Takings
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment — “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation” — prohibits the government “from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.” Armstrong v. United States,
The first Connolly factor turns on the question of proportionality. The Connolly Court, in addressing the withdrawal liability provision of the MPPAA, stated that “the
There is nothing to show that the withdrawal liability actually imposed on an employer will always be out of proportion to its experience with the plan, and the mere fact that the employer must pay money to comply with the Act is but a necessary consequence of-the MPPAA’s regulatory scheme.
Id. at 226,
Rather than arguing proportionality, plaintiffs’ primary contention focuses on the language of Connolly that requires “experience with the plan.” They point out that the plans which the Coal Act merged into the Combined Fund did not exist when they were in the coal industry; rather, their еxperience was with different NBCWAs from much earlier and not with the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts that were merged into the Combined Fund. Thus they claim that the liability imposed on them will always be out of proportion to their experience with the plans. As noted above, the consecutive NBCWAs created a continuous multi-employer scheme for providing health benefits from approximately 1950 to the present. Each of the plaintiffs participated in at least one of the NBCWAs since 1950 and thus had experience with the multi-employer plans. Plaintiffs’ argument regarding experience, rather than proportionality, is only persuasive if we accept the premise that the multi-employer plans of 1974 and after are sufficiently different from prior NBCWAs such that experience with the .former does not constitute experience with the latter. Indeed, plaintiffs distinguish the Second Circuit’s rejection of the Takings Clause claim because plaintiffs in that case participated in the 1974 NBCWA and later plans that promised lifetime benefits. See Chateaugay, supra. We find the distinction wholly unpersuasive. Each consecutive NBCWA, including those after 1974, accomplished the same end — to provide benefits to miners until the next NBCWA — using the same means — funding on a multi-employer basis. Nothing radical happened in 1974. As we stated in the due process context, the promise of lifetime benefits was not an unforeseeable inclusion in an NBCWA; every coal operator that participated in the multi-employer plans contributed directly to the retirees’ legitimate expectations of lifetime benefits. Plaintiffs’ “experience with the plan[s]” that eventually became the Combined Fund is easily deduced on the facts of this case.
The second factor is the degree of interference with plaintiffs’ “reasonable investment-backed expectations.” Connolly,
Second, plaintiffs point to the fact that they never promised lifetime benefits and thus did not expect to be held liable for such. Their expectations in this regard would have been unreasоnable. The 1950 W & R Fund and its predecessors — as well as the early NBCWAs signed by plaintiffs and subsequent NBCWAs — provided continuous health benefits to miners for almost 30 years prior to the NBCWAs that expressly promised lifetime benefits. Thus plaintiffs’ argument ignores the fact that they substantially participated in a system that provided continuous benefits and created legitimate expectations that such provisions would not cease. Any expectation that they could never be held liable for retired miners’ health benefits, in light of their participation in the NBCWAs, was not reasonable.
We also note that the contractual promises made by plaintiffs in their collective bargaining agreements do not necessarily limit Congress’s authority via the Takings Clause:
“Contracts, however express, cannot fetter the constitutional authority of Congress. Contracts may create rights of property, but when contracts deal with a subject matter which lies within the control of Congress, they have a congenital infirmity. Parties cannot remove their transactions from the reach of the dominant constitutional power by making contracts about them.”
If the regulatory statute is otherwise within the powers of Congress, therefore, its application may not be defeated by private contractual provisions. For the same reason, the fact that legislation disregards or destroys existing contractual rights does not always transform the regulation into an illegal taking.
Connolly,
Regarding the third and final factor — the character of the government action — we find the Coal Act indistinguishable from the MPPAA sustained in Connolly and Concrete Pipe. Like the Coal Act, the MPPAA does not permit the government to “physically invade or permanently appropriate any of the employer’s assets for its own use.” Connolly,
In addition, plaintiffs’ argument regarding their lack of responsibility goes beyond debate about the character of the government program, which we take from the language of Connolly to be an inquiry into the form or nature of interference with private property. The Coal Act entails no physical intrusion of plaintiffs’ property nor any permanent confiscation of assets for government use. As the Supreme Court stated,
It is well settled that a “ ‘taking’ may more readily be found when the interference with property can be characterized as a physical invasion by government, than when interference arises from some public program adjusting the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the common good.”
Keystone Bituminous Coal Ass’n v. DeBenedictis,
In conclusion, we find that all three of the Connolly factors demonstrate that the Coal Act does not unconstitutionally take property from plaintiffs without compensation.
III.
The Coal Act was a rational solution to a serious health benefit problem that threatened the stability of the bituminous coal industry in the United States. Requiring plaintiffs to participate in the solution because they once benefitted from the labor of coal industry retirees and once participated in collective bargaining agreements that fostered a legitimate expectation of lifetime health benefits was also a rational legislative decision. This Court does not sit in judgment on the wisdom of Congress’s solution, only its rationality. Turner Elkhom,
Notes
. Plaintiffs point to numerous occasions from 1950 to 1960 on which the Trustees exercised their authority to terminate, decrease, or otherwise modify benefits.
. Subsequent to the 1950 agreement, NBCWAs were negotiated by the UMWA and the then-operating coal producers in 1955, 1956, 1958, 1964, 1966, 1968, and 1971. From 1950 to 1974, the Fund and its predecessors collected approximately $3.9 billion in contributions from coal operators and paid approximately $1.5 billion in hospital and medical care benefits, $283 million in survivors and other related benefits, and $2 billion in pension benefits.
. The parties disagree over whether the Coal Commission’s second alternative proposal recommended a reach-back to 1950 signatories or only to 1978 signatories. Defendants cite the following language from the Commission as support for their statement that it recommended a reach-back to 1950 signatories:
Instead of imposing a new tax on all coal operators and establishing an agency of the federal government, this plan seeks additional revenues from a broadened base of current and past signatories to the contracts, establishing and providing revenues for the Benefit Funds. Past obligations would be defined as those arising from firms once signatory who may be identified through a chain of succession to a current operator, (emphasis added by defendants).
We note only that this language is ambiguous and that it is therefore not clear whether Congress “reached-back” further than the Commission recommended. In any event, the question whеther reaching back beyond 1978 signatories was rational subsumes the question whether it was rational to ignore the Coal Commission.
. The figures for assigned beneficiaries are for the first year only. In some cases, the companies were assigned additional beneficiaries in subsequent years.
. Davon states in its brief that it has no records indicating that its predecessor signed any NBCWA. It noted that the Combined Fund's only basis for concluding that New York Coal was a signatory from 1933 to 1954 was a computer list prepared by the Combined Fund. We are aware of no evidence, and Davon points to none, that the Secretary erred in assigning beneficiaries to Davon.
. Plaintiffs argue that retroactive legislation such as the Coal Act is unconstitutional if it is "harsh and oppressive.” They claim that the "harsh and oppressive” inquiry is a multi-factor analysis, focusing on, for example, the length of period affected, the foreseeability of the legislation, the disruption to settled expectations, and whether a party relied on the state of the law at the time it acted. In support, plaintiffs cite a host of cases, all of which are еither misconstrued by plaintiffs or inapposite to this case. Plaintiffs’ citation to cases addressing the constitutionality of revenue statutes is misplaced. The "harsh and oppressive” standard originated in Welch v. Henry,
In support of their argument that the "harsh and oppressive” standard encompasses a multifactor test, plaintiffs read too much into several Supreme Court and Seventh Circuit cases. None of the cases cited applies a multi-factor test like the one plaintiffs propose and most are taken from revenue statute cases — cases that the Supreme Court has recently clarified should be governed by the rationality standard. See Carlton, supra. In аddition, several of the factors alleged to be relevant are taken from cases interpreting the Contract Clause, even though the Supreme Court has explicitly stated that "federal economic legislation ... is not subject to constraints coextensive with those imposed upon the States by the Contract Clause....” Concrete Pipe & Prods, of Cal., Inc. v. Construction Laborers' Pension Trust for S. Cal.,
. The legitimacy of the legislative purpose is not seriously at issue in this case. The Coal Act’s stated purposes are to "remedy problems with the provision and funding of health care benefits” under the 1950 and 1974 Trusts, to establish “sufficient operating assets for such plans,” and
. It is on this basis that plaintiffs here distinguish themselves from the plaintiffs who unsuccessfully challenged the Coal Act in the Second Circuit. See Chateaugay, supra. Plaintiffs in Chateaugay were signatories to the 1974 NBCWA. However, as we discuss in the text, the rationality of Congress’s decision to reach back further than 1974 (a "Super” reach-back, as plaintiffs like to call it) can be justified independently from its decision to reach companies that made contractual promises of lifetime health benefits. As such, distinguishing Chateaugay matters little.
. Plaintiffs contend that Congress must find a causal connection between their actions prior to leaving the coal industry and the financial crisis that led to the Coal Act. Although this Court believes that Congress could rationally find such a connection, plaintiffs cite no binding authority for their proposition, relying instead on statements made in Supreme Court concurrences and dissents. See, e.g., Connolly v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp.,
. Plaintiffs further argue that lack of timely notice of impending liability under the Coal Act violates due process. This is nothing more than their unforeseeability and settled-expectations arguments combined. They offer no authority, and we have uncovered none, that timely notice is a due process requirement for retroactive economic legislation. Thus the argument does not alter our conclusion.
. Although plaintiffs do not raise the issue on appeal, defendants note in their brief that a threshold jurisdictional question must be answered: whether the district court could entertain plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief, given the fact that the Takings Clause "does not forbid takings” but merely requires compensation. See Rose Acre Farms, Inc. v. Madigan,
. We are thus in agreement with all but one federal court to have decided the issue. See Chateaugay, supra; Barrick Gold, supra; Blue Diamond, supra; Lindsey Coal, supra. But see Unity Real Estate Co. v. Hudson,
