In this enforcement action EEOC appeals from an adverse partial summary judgment which disposed of the one claim not covered by stipulation.
Until 1979, the health insurance policy which Puget Sound offered its employees did not provide full coverage for pregnancy-related expenses of female employees or spouses of male employees. Following passage in 1978 of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA), 42 U.S.C. 2000e(k) (1982) 1 , Puget Sound amended its health policy to cover the pregnancy-related expenses of female employees, but continued to exclude those of spouses of male employees. In January 1982, a male employee and the employees’ union filed a discrimination complaint with the EEOC alleging that the policy, as amended, discriminated against male employees by providing them with less comprehensive health insurance benefits than it provided to female employees and their spouses. In September 1983, EEOC brought an action in federal district court on behalf of Puget Sound’s male employees whose spouses had incurred non-covered pregnancy-related expenses which would have been covered if incurred by female employees.
The substantive question in that action had been decided several months earlier in
Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. EEOC,
Resolution of this question calls for application of the factors set forth in
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
First, the decision to be applied nonretroaetively must establish a new principle of law, either by overruling clear past precedent on which litigants may have relied ... or by deciding an issue of first impression whose resolution was not clearly foreshadowed____ Second, it has been stressed that “[a court] must ... weigh the merits and demerits in each case by looking to the prior history of the rule in question, its purpose and effect, and whether retrospective operation will further or retard its operation.” ... Finally ... the inequity imposed by retroactive application [must be weighed]____
Id. (citations omitted).
Retroactivity is not justified under the first Chevron factor if Puget Sound can reasonably claim that it could not predict Newport News. However, a number of signals were available to Puget Sound which render implausible its current claim that it did not expect that the PDA extended coverage to pregnant spouses of employees.
In 1979, the EEOC issued guidelines in question and answer form warning employers that EEOC considered the PDA to require insurance plans to extend coverage to pregnant spouses of employees. 44 Fed. Reg. 23804, 23807-08 (April 20, 1979). Puget Sound could predict that those guidelines of the enforcing agency would be given deference by the courts,
Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
While the weight of the guidelines could not immediately be assessed according to their own consistency over a period of time, as has been required,
see, e.g., Dothard v. Rawlinson,
Moreover, even before passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act and the related EEOC guidelines, the Supreme Court had held several times in the equal protection context that less favorable provision of benefits to spouses of female employees constituted sex discrimination not only against the spouses but against the employees.
Califano v. Goldfarb,
Between 1979 and 1983, at least two federal courts, including this one, ruled that the PDA did not extend to coverage for nonemployees.
EEOC v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co.,
27 FEP Cases 1209, 1210 (N.D.Cal.1981),
aff'd,
The holdings which supported the Puget Sound policy limitations lent substance to the possibility that Puget Sound’s interpretation of the PDA would prove to be correct. But those were not holdings in a vacuum. The earliest, decided in 1981, followed the EEOC guidelines on the PDA by two years. The 1981 case might therefore have justified Puget Sound in deciding in 1981 that the guidelines were incorrect; it does not vindicate Puget Sound’s ignoring the guidelines in the first place.
We do not except from this reasoning our own decision on July 6, 1982, in
Lockheed Missiles,
In spite of the EEOC guidelines on the PDA, related EEOC rulings on Title YII questions, analogous equal protection holdings by the Supreme Court and litigation over the application of the PDA to nonemployees, Puget Sound maintains that the first
Chevron
factor will not allow retroactivity here. We do not agree. We cannot say that the
Newport News
decision was “clearly foreshadowed.”
See Chevron,
Application of the second
Chevron
factor requires that we consider the “purpose and effect” of the rule applying the PDA to nonemployees and “whether retrospective operation will further or retard its operation.”
Chevron,
In Albemarle, deciding whether to award back pay to plaintiffs who, because of racial discrimination, had been denied promotion and other employment opportunities, the Supreme Court made a connection between the prophylactic and remedial purposes:
If employers faced only the prospect of an injunctive order, they would have lit- *1393 tie incentive to shun practices of dubious legality. It is the reasonably certain prospect of a backpay award that “provide^] the spur or catalyst which causes employers and unions to self-examine and to self-evaluate their employment practices____”
Id.
at 417-18,
The prospect, of retroactive liability for illegal and inadequate health insurance coverage can be expected to provide the same kind of catalyst to self-evaluation. That prospect is more than a dimly visible spectre;
Albemarle
established a presumption of retroactive liability in Title VII cases.
See Los Angeles Dep’t of Water & Power v. Manhart,
With regard to furthering the statutory purposes, the Supreme Court has denied retroactivity in Title VII cases only twice. In
Manhart,
the Supreme Court found discriminatory a pension plan which required women to make greater contributions to the system than those required of men. The Court was concerned with the complexity and expense of requiring retirement systems to refund the excess contributions, noting that “[rjetroactive liability could be devastating for a pension fund.”
We find no indication in Newport News that its application should be only prospective. EEOC urges us to read into Manhart and Norris a Supreme Court policy that retroactivity will be assumed unless it is specifically not allowed. EEOC argues that because the question was not discussed in Newport News, the Court intended retroactivity. On the other hand, Puget Sound finds in Manhart and Norris a Supreme Court determination that retroactivity is not appropriate' in cases involving insurance plans and suggests that Newport News was intended to fit into the same category of cases. While we do not necessarily agree with EEOC that the Supreme Court’s silence was a directive on the question of retroactivity, we must disagree with Puget Sound’s inferences for two reasons.
First, Newport News was decided before Norris, making it most unlikely that the Supreme Court intended Newport News to fit into an extant Manhart “pattern.” Second, the Supreme Court in Norris and Manhart may have been setting a retroactivity policy with regard to pension plans. But pension plans can be distinguished from health insurance plans of the kind at issue here. Retroactivity in this case would involve reimbursement only in a relatively small number of specific instances where a male employee and his spouse have privately financed pregnancy related expenses which would have been covered for a female employee and for which they had no other health insurance coverage.
“Absent
special circumstances
a victim of a Title VII violation is entitled to whatever retroactive relief is necessary to undo any damage resulting from the violation.”
Norris,
Finally, the equities of the case favor retroactivity. After passage of the PDA, Puget Sound had a choice between insuring or not insuring the pregnancy-related expenses of its workers’ nonemployee spouses. Even in the face of the significant warnings we noted above and despite phase-in time for compliance allowed by the PDA, Pub.L. 95-955 § 2(b), 92 Stat. 2076; see 1978 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News at 4756, Puget Sound gambled that the EEOC regulations were incorrect and that nonemployee spouses need not be fully insured. Puget Sound chose to provide minimal coverage, knowing that the minimum might be found to be unlawful; it cannot now complain that it is being required retroactively to compensate the employees for risks it had opportunity and good reason to insure from the beginning.
Even assuming Puget Sound in good faith thought the EEOC guidelines were wrong and thought it was pursuing a lawful course of action, Puget Sound’s good faith in interpreting the EEOC regulations and case law is not relevant to whether retroactivity is allowed. The absence of bad faith “is not a sufficient reason for denying backpay.”
Albemarle,
Puget Sound has expressed concern that Newport News will lead to rising costs for employer-sponsored health insurance and that retroactive application of Newport News will only add to those costs, some of which the employees will ultimately bear. We note first that Puget Sound, as the liable employer, must bear the full expense of retroactively compensating employees and their nonemployee spouses who have incurred pregnancy-related costs for which they were not insured. None of that expense is to be transmitted in any fashion to Puget Sound’s employee-insureds.
Second, our decision should not be affected by the prospective financial impact of
Newport News.
Any increase in expense to the insurer will doubtless be the subject of bargaining between employees and employers with regard to the desirable extent of insurance coverage and costs. Neither the PDA nor
Newport News
forces Puget Sound or any other employer to provide any pregnancy coverage at all; the law does require that whatever coverage is available must not be limited to certain groups in a discriminatory manner. Therefore, in keeping with the Supreme Court’s admonition in
Albemarle
that employers should strive to further the purposes of Title VII and eliminate discrimination,
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k), says in pertinent part:
The terms "because of sex" or "on the basis of sex” include, but are not limited to, because of or on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions; and women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions shall be treated the same for all employment-related purposes, including receipt of benefits under fringe benefit programs, as other persons not so affected but similar in their ability or inability to work, and nothing in section 2000e-2(h) of this title shall be interpreted to permit otherwise____
