Joe G. Garcia appeals the district court’s decision granting the motion of the San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority (“SAMTA”) for summary judgment and denying his own. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
SAMTA is the governmental body that runs the public transit system in San Antonio, Texas. The plaintiffs (collectively, “Garcia”), employees of SAMTA, brought this action in 1979 for back pay and liquidated damages attributable to SAMTA’s *1412 violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The historical context for the current appeal is unusually complex.
In 1974, Congress amended the FLSA to repeal the exemption from the minimum wage and overtime provisions for all state and local government employees. In 1976, however, the Supreme Court curtailed the application of the FLSA to state and local governments, holding that principles of federalism prevented Congress under the commerce clause from regulating “integral operations in areas of traditional governmental functions.”
National League of Cities v. Usery,
After the 1976 decision in National League of Cities, SAMTA notified its employees that it would no longer abide by the FLSA’s maximum hours and overtime provisions. The Department of Labor, which was charged with the enforcement of the FLSA, made no attempt to enforce the overtime provisions against any public transit system until September 17, 1979, when it informed SAMTA that it did not consider the operation of a public transit system a “traditional governmental function” protected under National League of Cities. Shortly afterward, SAMTA filed a declaratory judgment action against the Secretary of Labor, seeking reversal of the Department’s decision. The same day and in the same district court, Garcia brought the case now on appeal, an action for back pay and liquidated damages because of SAMTA’s claimed violation of the FLSA. 1
The district court stayed Garcia's case while the parties litigated
SAMTA I.
In 1981, the district court rendered summary judgment for SAMTA against the Secretary, holding that SAMTA’s operation of a public mass transit system was protected from federal regulation under
National League of Cities.
The Supreme Court, however, vacated the judgment and remanded the case for reconsideration in the light of the intervening decision of
UTU v. Long Island Railroad,
With SAMTA I dismissed by agreement in the district court, both parties moved for summary judgment in Garcia’s original action. SAMTA argued that the Supreme Court’s decision in SAMTA I should not be applied retroactively under the facts of the case; therefore, the court should apply the old National League of Cities test to exempt SAMTA from liability. Garcia argued that SAMTA I should be applied, and that therefore SAMTA was liable for back pay and liquidated damages because of its violation of the FLSA. The district court granted SAMTA’s motion and denied Garcia’s.
II
In
National League of Cities v. Usery,
It soon became apparent, however, that courts would have difficulty in applying National League of Cities consistently in deciding which state functions were “integral operations in areas of traditional [state] governmental functions.” As the Court later noted,
Just how troublesome the task has been is revealed by the results reached in other federal cases. Thus, courts have held that regulating ambulance services, licensing automobile drivers, operating a municipal airport; performing solid waste disposal, and operating a highway authority, are functions protected under National League of Cities. At the same time, courts have held that issuance of industrial development bonds, regulation of intrastate natural gas sales, regulation of traffic on public roads, regulation of air transportation, operation of a telephone system, leasing and sale of natural gas, operation of a mental health facility, and provision of in-house domestic services for the aged and handicapped, are not entitled to immunity. We find it difficult, if not impossible, to identify an organizing principle that places each of the cases in the first group on one side of a line and each of the cases in the second group on the other side.
Garcia v. SAMTA,
In the present case, the district court refused to apply
SAMTA I
retroactively. Instead, using the analysis of
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
First, the decision to be applied nonretro-actively must establish a new principle of law, ... by overruling clear past precedent on which litigants may have re-lied____ Second, it has been stressed that “we 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, we have weighed the inequity imposed by retroactive application, for “[w]here a decision of this Court could produce substantial inequitable results if applied retroactively, there is ample basis in our cases for avoiding the ‘injustice or hardship’ by a holding of nonretroactivity.”
Id.
In applying the Chevron analysis, the district court found that the first factor favored nonretroactivity, because SAMTA I *1414 had overruled a clear past precedent upon which SAMTA had “reasonably relied.” The second factor favored neither, because SAMTA I would be fully enforced in the future regardless of the outcome of the decision to apply it retroactively. The third factor strongly favored nonretroactivity, as SAMTA had “structured its conduct based on the reasonable belief that its employees performed a traditional government function. Wage rates and benefit packages were negotiated based on this premise.” The complete Chevron test therefore led the district court to conclude that SAMTA I should not be applied retroactively.
Garcia attacks the district court’s decision on three grounds. First, he argues that Chevron, which states a principle of mere federal common law, is inapplicable when Congress has by statute decided to apply the FLSA retroactively and that the FLSA, when read in conjunction with the Portal-to-Portal Act, 29 U.S.C. § 251 et seq., sets forth the only possible defenses to a FLSA violation, and that SAMTA has not fulfilled the requirements of any of these defenses. Second, he argues that Chevron is inapplicable because the parties in this case are the same as those in the Supreme Court’s SAMTA I decision, and Chevron cannot operate to deny to the victorious parties in SAMTA I the fruits of that victory. Last, he argues that even if Chevron is the proper standard, the district court erred in finding that Chevron requires nonretroactivity on the facts of this ease.
Ill
A.
Garcia asserts that
Chevron
set forth a doctrine of federal common law concerning retroactivity of civil cases. As a doctrine of federal common law, it naturally must yield when Congress by statute has set a contradictory policy.
See Milwaukee v. Illinois and Michigan,
A problem with Garcia’s argument is that there is little support for the proposition that
Chevron,
as a doctrine of federal common law, can never apply when a judicial decision changes the reach of a congressional statute. Garcia does cite one district court opinion,
Joiner v. City of Macon,
Garcia’s argument also suffers from problems of illogic. Even if Chevron is a doctrine of federal common law, there is no statute that sets a Congressional policy on retroactivity contrary to Chevron. Here, as in most cases when the Court decides to overrule a precedent, the Constitution and statutes fail to address the problem of re-troactivity. As a result, courts must employ doctrines such as Chevron to provide a solution. If Congress had addressed the retroactivity issue regarding the mass transit function, then Garcia’s argument that a statute should override the Chevron common law doctrine would have some force. 3
A further difficulty with Garcia’s argument is that it would never allow a decision holding a new rule of constitutional or statutory interpretation nonretroactive. The new rule, as the definitive expression of the meaning of either the Constitution or a statute, would naturally override any common law principles favoring nonretroactivity. The court would be limited under
Chevron
to considering the retroactivity of new rules of federal common law. But Supreme Court precedent belies that result. In some cases, the Court has applied
Chevron
to limit the retroactivity of cases announcing new principles of constitutional law.
See, e.g., Lemon v. Kurtzman,
B.
Garcia argues that, because the parties in the present case are the same as those in SAMTA I, he should not be denied the fruits of his victory in the Supreme Court by a decision not to apply that decision retroactively. He cites two cases to support his position.
In
Noble v. Drexel, Burnham, Lambert, Inc.,
Unavoidably, the losing party in a case which establishes new law sustains a full blast of “retroactivity,” otherwise the change in law is merely precatory and without full precedential force. The second loser, however, gets the potential benefits of the analysis suggested by Chevron Oil. The McMahons lost first and without hope of escape. We must *1416 determine whether Mr. Noble is to suffer the same fate.
In
Simpson v. Union Oil Co.,
The question we reserved was not an invitation to deny the fruits of successful litigation to this petitioner____ Formulation of a rule of law in an Article III case or controversy which is prospective as to the parties involved in the immediate litigation would be most unusual, especially where the rule announced was not innovative.
The Supreme Court’s holding in Simpson and the Fifth Circuit’s dictum in Noble suggested that retroactivity analysis does not apply to the parties to the case that establishes the new rule. Simpson, however, was decided before the Court’s decision in Chevron established a consistent framework for retroactivity analysis. In addition, the court’s comments in Noble were dicta, as that case did not concern the parties to the case that established the new rule. Furthermore, the tone of the cited passage indicates that this court found it inequitable that only one party would suffer from the new rule of law. Most important, since Chevron, other cases have applied the Chevron framework even to the parties to the case that established the new rule.
In
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
IV
Although in civil litigation, “[t]he usual rule is that federal cases should be decided in accordance with the law existing at the time of decision,”
Goodman v. Lukens Steel Co.,
— U.S. -,
A.
There is no question that
SAMTA I
overruled a clear past precedent:
“National League of Cities v. Usery
is overruled.” [Citations omitted],
We feel that the facts of this particular case prevent our making a straightforward assessment of this factor; however, all of the Chevron factors rely on equitable considerations which allow us to extrapolate from the principles underlying them and to apply them to the unwieldy facts here.
A straightforward assessment of this factor would be possible if we could look at National League of Cities and decide whether SAMTA had been entitled to rely on that case in refusing to follow the FLSA because that case had provided that mass transit was exempt from the FLSA. National League of Cities did not mention mass transit among the governmental functions which were exempt from FLSA requirements, however. Instead, National League of Cities listed a few examples, such as police and fire protection, and then stated that traditional governmental functions such as these were exempt from the FLSA while nontraditional state functions were not exempt. Thus, whether SAMTA was entitled to rely on National League of Cities in failing to follow the FLSA depends upon whether public mass transit is a traditional state function or a nontraditional one. Several appellate decisions which reached this issue have held that National League of Cities did not protect mass transit, because that function was not traditional. 4 Additionally, the Labor Department passed a regulation effective December 21, 1979, which determined that local public mass transit system is not a “traditional” public function, and thus is not exempted from the FLSA. 29 C.F.R. § 775.2(b)(3). It was this regulation that prompted SAMTA to file this suit for a declaratory judgment.
SAMTA did have, however, numerous persuasive arguments why mass transit should have been categorized as a traditional government function and thus exempted from the FLSA. It had enough arguments, in fact, to convince the district court twice that it was performing a “traditional” function. Finally, it convinced four members of the Supreme Court in
SAMTA I,
(
We believe, however, that the equitable nature of the
Chevron
test gives it enough flexibility to allow us to reach a conclusion as to whether
SAMTA 1
should be applied retroactively. Again, there is no doubt that prior to
SAMTA I,
SAMTA had a persuasive argument that it was exempt from the FLSA. SAMTA was relying on the general framework provided by
National League of Cities,
as it undoubtedly had a right to do. SAMTA also had a right to pursue its claim that it was exempt from the FLSA through the courts, and to the Supreme Court if necessary, to obtain a final resolution. Once it had obtained a district court decision in its favor, SAMTA definitely had a right to rely on that decision unless it was overturned. To be sure, the district court’s decision that SAMTA served a traditional function of government was never overturned. Although SAMTA pursued its right to litigate the question of its status as “traditional” or “nontraditional,” it never did obtain a final answer because, before it was able to do so, the Supreme Court swept away the framework upon which the question was to be decided. The special fact that distinguishes our case from other retroactivity cases is that not only did the Supreme Court sweep away the framework, but it also declared that framework illogical and unworkable. Thus, since the framework was illogical and unworkable from the start, we cannot go back and routinely determine under the first prong of
Chevron
whether mass transit would have been exempted from the FLSA under the old doctrine. We believe that this radical elimination of the entire test framework upon which SAMTA’s status would have been determined fulfills the first prong of
Chevron
— that the case to be applied nonretroactively “must establish a new principle of law ... by overruling clear past precedent on which litigants may have relied____”
Chevron,
B.
The second prong of the
Chevron
test requires examination of whether retroactivity will “ ‘further or retard [the] operation’ of the holding in question.”
Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
Now that the Supreme Court has ruled explicitly that no state employees are *1419 exempt from FLSA, the Port Authority maintains, there is no reason to believe that state and municipalities will not comply in the future. We agree. The [SAMTA /] decision makes the law clear that, in the future, states must comply with FLSA. Regardless of how we decide this case, there is no reason to suspect that states would refuse to be bound by FLSA. This situation leaves us free to decide the instant case on its facts and equitable principles without concern for furthering or retarding the operation of [SAMTA /]. The second Chevron factor neither favors nor opposes the retroactive application of the [SAMTA 7] decision.
Mineo v. Port Authority of New York & New Jersey,
Indeed, SAMTA also argues that retroactive FLSA liability might in fact frustrate the SAMTA I decision by placing such a burden on municipal and state governments that such governmental functions, and therefore jobs, might have to be eliminated. We think, however, that this argument is best dealt with under the third prong of the Chevron test, that is, the equities of retroactivity versus nonretroac-tivity.
C.
The district court in this case found that the third Chevron factor compelled nonre-troactivity:
[T]he third factor which requires consideration of the inequities caused by retroactive application of [SAMTA 7], compels nonretroactivity of the new rule of law and FLSA coverage____ SAMTA structured its conduct based on the reasonable belief that its employees performed a traditional government function. Wage rates and benefit packages were negotiated based on this premise____ Having negotiated this package, additional back pay liability would represent a windfall. As the Third Circuit observed in Mineo v. Port Authority of New York & New Jersey,779 F.2d at 946 , the courts cannot fairly punish those who are forced to make decisions without immediate guidance from the judiciary and who do so reasonably. This is particularly so where the consistent opinions of this district court found this employment relationship outside FLSA protection. The court need not expressly adopt the cries of “doom and gloom” to taxpayers, riders and recently hired public employees to agree that the third Chevron factor mandates nonretroactivity.
While we recognize that SAMTA employees have not been compensated for overtime work in compliance with the FLSA, we find compelling the fact that SAMTA has developed its structure of wages and benefits through meetings with the employees’ union representative and that this structure included six types of overtime pay, and took into account the nonapplicability of the FLSA’s overtime requirements. The Third Circuit explained in Mineo why this background makes retroactive overtime pay inequitable:
Any public or private organization must manage its revenues to most efficiently provide services at the lowest cost. When involved in labor negotiations, the organization poses estimates of how many hours it thinks the employees will work and how much money it has to compensate them. Within those parameters, the organization may opt for various pay structures. For example, some employees may be paid more than others; some compensation may be deferred; or employees may get a higher base pay in return for reduced overtime pay. It appears that the last situation was present in the instant case. Reasonably believing itself to be unshackled from the restrictions of FLSA, the Port Authority offered an attractive base pay that was balanced by lower overtime compensation. The Detectives agreed to this arrangement. The retroactive application of [SAMTA 7] to this situation would give the Detectives increased overtime pay without any reduction in base pay. To allow the Detectives to get a pay raise premised on retroactive application of an unforeseen decision that was made almost two years after the end of the contract period would be inequitable to *1420 the Port Authority and would constitute a windfall to the Detectives.
Mineo,
Thus, we find that the equities favor nonretroactivity as regards SAMTA for two basic reasons. First, huge back pay awards may very likely cripple the always closely budgeted municipal funds. There is a great difference between, on the one hand, knowing you are subject to a regulation, planning for it and taxing and charging the public for it all along, and, on the other hand, suddenly finding out that, contrary to precedent of the Supreme Court and decisions of the district court, you have been subject to a regulation for several years and are required to compensate under that regulation for previous years for which tax monies have already been otherwise allocated and spent. i Of course, the municipalities and the taxpayers have in some ways benefitted from their exemption from the FLSA. However, the equities do not justify saddling them with huge back-pay liabilities when they acted in good faith during all those years, believing for substantial precedential reasons that they were exempt from the FLSA, especially in the light of the next considered equity. The second equity compelling nonretroac-tivity of the SAMTA I decision is that what SAMTA employees have not received in overtime compensation over the past several years, they have received at least partially in other forms. SAMTA must compete for labor in the marketplace against employers who are subject to the FLSA, and so it could not simply subtract the benefits required by the FLSA from its own programs. It would be impossible at this point to calculate how many other benefits SAMTA employees have received instead of these overtime benefits and to subtract the amount from a backpay liability.
V
Thus, after consideration of all three prongs of the Chevron test, we find that the retroactive application of SAMTA I should be denied. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court allowed Garcia, the plaintiff in the second case, to intervene in SAMTA’s action against the Secretary. Thus, both cases confusingly bear the name
Garcia v. SAMTA.
For that reason, we call the case that SAMTA brought against the Secretary of Labor
“SAMTA
/” and the case that Garcia brought,
“SAMTA II,
. Another source of possible support for this argument is the opinion of Judge Gibbons dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.
Mineo v. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey,
. Garcia does argue that the 1985 amendments to the FLSA set a Congressional policy on re-troactivity. Those amendments did eliminate retroactive liability for the state functions that the Department of Labor's regulations had deemed "traditional” and thus exempt from the FLSA under National League of Cities. But section 7 of the amendments specifically states that the 1985 amendments "shall not affect whether a public agency ... is liable under ... [FLSA for a violation] occurring before April 15, 1986 [the date of SAMTA /], with respect to any employee of such public agency who would have been covered by such Act under the Secretary of Labor’s special enforcement policy on January 1, 1985____” Both the House and Senate Committee reports on the 1985 amendments also contain statements that Congress’ intent was not to take a position on the retroactivity of SAMTA I, except to eliminate liability for state agencies that were exempt from the FLSA under the Labor Department regulations. S.Rep. 159, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 15 (1985); H.R.Rep. 331, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 27-28 (1985), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 1985, p. 651.
.
Dove v. Chattanooga Area Regional Transportation Authority,
