PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF OHIO v. BETTS
No. 88-389
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 28, 1989-Decided June 23, 1989
492 U.S. 158
Andrew I. Sutter, Assistant Attorney General of Ohio, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the briefs were Anthony J. Celebrezze, Jr., Attorney General, and Nancy J. Miller.
Robert F. Laufman argued the cause for appellee. With him on the brief was Alphonse A. Gerhardstein.
JUSTICE KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA), 81 Stat. 602, as amended,
I
A
In 1933, the State of Ohio established the Public Employees Retirement System of Ohio (PERS) to provide retirement benefits for state and local government employees. Public employers and employees covered by PERS make contributions to a fund maintained by PERS to pay benefits to covered employees. Under the PERS statutory scheme, two forms of monthly retirement benefits are available to public employees upon termination of their public employment. Age-and-service retirement benefits are paid to those employees who at the time of their retirement (1) have at least 5 years of service credit and are at least 60 years of age; (2) have 30 years of service credit; or (3) have 25 years of service credit and are at least 55 years of age.
Employees who take disability retirement are treated as if they are on leave of absence for the first five years of their retirement. Should their medical conditions improve during that time, they are entitled to be rehired.
B
Appellee June M. Betts was hired by the Hamilton County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities as a speech pathologist in 1978. The board is a public agency, and its employees are covered by PERS. In 1984, because of medical problems, appellee became unable to perform her job adequately and was reassigned to a less demanding position. Appellee‘s medical condition continued to deteriorate, however, and by May 1985, when appellee was 61 years of age, her employer concluded that she was no longer able to perform adequately in any employment capacity. Appellee was given the choice of retiring or undergoing medical testing to determine whether she should be placed on unpaid medical leave. She chose to retire, an option which gave her eligibility for age-and-service retirement benefits from PERS. Because she was over 60 at the time of retirement, however, appellee was denied disability retirement benefits, despite her medical condition.
Before 1976, the fact that appellee‘s age disqualified her for disability benefits would have had little practical significance, because the formula for calculating disability benefits was almost the same as the formula used to determine age-and-service benefits. In 1976, however, the PERS statutory scheme was amended to provide that disability retirement payments would in no event constitute less than 30 percent of the disability retiree‘s final average salary.
Appellee filed an age discrimination charge against PERS with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
A divided panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed. Betts v. Hamilton County Bd. of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 848 F. 2d 692 (CA6 1988). The majority agreed with the District Court that the
Judge Wellford dissented. Noting that PERS’ plan was adopted long before enactment of the ADEA, he argued that under United Air Lines, Inc. v. McMann, supra, it could not be a “subterfuge to evade the purposes” of the Act. Judge Wellford rejected the EEOC‘s regulations requiring cost justifications for all age-based reductions in benefits, finding that nothing in the statute‘s language imposed such a requirement. We noted probable jurisdiction, 488 U. S. 907 (1988), and now reverse.
II
Under
“to fail or refuse to hire or discharge any individual or otherwise discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual‘s age.”
29 U. S. C. § 623(a)(1) .
Notwithstanding this general prohibition, however,
“to observe the terms of . . . any bona fide employee benefit plan such as a retirement, pension, or insurance plan, which is not a subterfuge to evade the purposes of this chapter, except that no such employee benefit plan shall excuse the failure to hire any individual, and no such employee benefit plan shall require or permit
the involuntary retirement of any individual . . . because of the age of such individual.”
29 U. S. C. § 623(f)(2) .
On its face, the PERS statutory scheme renders covered employees ineligible for disability retirement once they have attained age 60.
We first construed the meaning of “subterfuge” under
Turning to the claim that the mandatory retirement provision was a “subterfuge to evade the purposes of” the Act, we rejected the conclusion of the court below that forced retirement on the basis of age must be deemed a subterfuge absent some business or economic purpose for the age-based distinction. Instead, we held that the term “subterfuge” must be given its ordinary meaning as “a scheme, plan, stratagem, or artifice of evasion.” Id., at 203. Viewed in this light, the retirement plan at issue could not possibly be characterized as a subterfuge to evade the purposes of the Act, since it had been established in 1941, long before the Act was enacted. As we observed, “[t]o spell out an intent in 1941 to evade a statutory requirement not enacted until 1967 attributes, at the very least, a remarkable prescience to the employer. We reject any such per se rule requiring an employer to show an economic or business purpose in order to satisfy the subterfuge language of the Act.” Ibid.
As an initial matter, appellee asserts that McMann is no longer good law. She points out that in 1978, less than a year after McMann was decided, Congress amended
The legislative history of the 1978 amendment contains various references to the definition of subterfuge, and according to appellee these reveal clear congressional intent to disapprove the reasoning of McMann. The Conference Committee Report on the 1978 amendment, for example, expressly discusses and rejects McMann, stating that “[p]lan provisions in effect prior to the date of enactment are not exempt under section 4(f)(2) by virtue of the fact that they
PERS disputes appellee‘s interpretation of this legislative history, asserting that it refers only to benefit plans that permit involuntary retirement and not to the more general issue whether a pre-Act plan can be a subterfuge in other circumstances. We need not resolve this dispute, however. The 1978 amendment to the ADEA did not add a definition of the term “subterfuge” or modify the language of
While McMann remains of considerable relevance to our decision here, we reject the argument that it is dispositive. It is true that the age-60 rule was adopted before 1974, and is thus insulated under McMann from challenge as a subterfuge. The plan provision attacked by appellee, however, is the rule that disability retirees automatically receive a minimum of 30 percent of their final average salary upon retirement, while disabled employees who retire after age 60 do not. The 30 percent floor was not added to the plan until 1976, and to the extent this new rule increased the age-based disparity caused by the pre-Act age limitation, McMann does not insulate it from challenge. See EEOC v. Cargill, Inc., supra, at 686, n. 4; EEOC v. County of Orange, supra, at 423; EEOC v. Home Ins. Co., 672 F. 2d 252, 259, and n. 9 (CA2 1982). No “remarkable prescience” would have been required of PERS in 1976 for it to formulate the necessary intent to evade the ADEA, and thus the automatic rule of McMann is inapplicable. See 434 U. S., at 203. Accordingly, we must turn to an inquiry into the precise meaning of the
III
Appellee and her amici say that
The requirement that employers show a cost-based justification for age-related reductions in benefits appears nowhere in the statute itself. The EEOC as amicus contends that this rule can be drawn either from the statutory requirement that age-based distinctions in benefit plans not be a subterfuge to evade the purposes of the Act, or from the portion of
A
The regulations define “subterfuge” as follows: “In general, a plan or plan provision which prescribes lower benefits for older employees on account of age is not a ‘subterfuge’ within the meaning of section 4(f)(2), provided that the lower level of benefits is justified by age-related cost considerations.”
Ignoring this inconsistency with the plain language of the statute, appellee and the EEOC suggest that the regulation represents a contemporaneous and consistent interpretation of the ADEA by the agencies responsible for the Act‘s enforcement and is therefore entitled to special deference. See EEOC v. Associated Dry Goods Corp., 449 U. S. 590, 600, n. 17 (1981); see also Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U. S. 837 (1984). But, of course, no deference is due to agency interpretations at odds with the plain language of the statute itself. Even contemporaneous and longstanding agency interpretations must fall to the extent they conflict with statutory language.
Contrary to the suggestion of the EEOC and appellee, moreover, the cost-justification requirement was not adopted contemporaneously with enactment of the ADEA. The cost-justification rule had its genesis in an interpretive bulletin issued by the Department of Labor in January 1969. 34 Fed. Reg. 322, 323, codified at
Appellee and her amici rely in large part on the legislative history of the ADEA and the 1978 amendments. In view of our interpretation of the plain statutory language of the subterfuge requirement, however, this reliance on legislative history is misplaced. See Davis v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 489 U. S. 803, 808, n. 3 (1989); McMann, 434 U. S., at 199. The “subterfuge” exception to the
B
The second possible source of authority for the cost-justification rule is the statute‘s requirement that the
There are a number of difficulties with this explanation for the cost-justification requirement. Perhaps most obvious, it requires us to read a great deal into the language of this clause of
The interpretation is weakened further by the fact that the regulation itself does not support it. According to
For these reasons, we conclude that the phrase “any bona fide employee benefit plan such as a retirement, pension, or insurance plan” cannot reasonably be limited to benefit plans in which all age-based reductions in benefits are justified by age-related cost considerations. Accordingly, the interpretive regulation construing
IV
Having established that the EEOC‘s definition of subterfuge is invalid, we turn to the somewhat more difficult task of determining the precise meaning of the term as applied to post-Act plans. We begin, as always, with the language of the statute itself.
The protection of
As the presence of the various exemptions and affirmative defenses contained in
“(1) to fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual or otherwise discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual‘s age;
“(2) to limit, segregate, or classify his employees in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise ad-
versely affect his status as an employee, because of such individual‘s age; or
“(3) to reduce the wage rate of any employee in order to comply with this chapter.”
29 U. S. C. § 623(a) .
The phrase “compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment” in
On the other hand, if
To be sure, this construction of the words of the statute is not the only plausible one. But the alternative interpretation would eviscerate
ment plans necessarily make distinctions based on age, I fail to see how the subterfuge language, which was included in the original version of the bill and was carried all the way through, could have been intended to impose a requirement which almost no retirement plan could meet.” 434 U. S., at 207.
Not surprisingly, the legislative history does not support such a self-defeating interpretation, but to the contrary shows that Congress envisioned a far broader role for the
One factor motivating Senator Javits’ amendment was the concern that, absent some exemption for benefit plans, the Act might “actually encourage employers, faced with the necessity of paying greatly increased premiums, to look for excuses not to hire older workers when they might have done so under a law granting them a degree of flexibility with respect to such matters.” Id., at 7076.8 Reducing the cost of
hiring older workers was not the only purpose of the proposed amendment, however. Its goals were far more comprehensive. As Senator Javits put it, “the age discrimination law is not the proper place to fight” the battle of ensuring “adequate pension benefits for older workers,” and
Other Members of Congress expressed similar views. Senator Yarborough, the principal sponsor and floor manager of the administration bill, observed that
While the Committee Reports on the ADEA do not address the matter in any detail, they do state that
While this result permits employers wide latitude in structuring employee benefit plans, it does not render the “not a subterfuge” proviso a dead letter. Any attempt to avoid the prohibitions of the Act by cloaking forbidden discrimination in the guise of age-based differentials in benefits will fall outside the
V
As construed above,
This result is supported by our longstanding interpretation of the analogous provision of Title VII, the statute from which “the prohibitions of the ADEA were derived in haec verba.” Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U. S. 575, 584 (1978). Section 703(h) of Title VII states that
“[n]otwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, it shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to apply different standards of compensation, or different terms, conditions, or privileges of employment pursuant to a bona fide seniority . . . system, . . . provided that such differences are not the result of an intention to discriminate because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin . . . .”
42 U. S. C. § 2000e-2(h) .
Despite the fact that
Applying this structure to the facts here, it follows that PERS’ disability retirement plan is the type of plan subject to the
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN joins, dissenting.
The majority today immunizes virtually all employee benefit programs from liability under the
It is common ground that appellant Public Employees Retirement System of Ohio (PERS) discriminated against appellee June Betts on account of her age. Ante, at 163-165. Had Betts become disabled before, rather than after, turning 60, PERS would be paying her $355.02 a month in disability benefits for the rest of her life, more than double the $158.50 a month she is now entitled to collect. It is also common ground that PERS’ facially discriminatory provision was enacted after the ADEA‘s passage in 1967, and therefore is subject to the Act‘s broad antidiscrimination command,
This case thus presents the issue whether a benefit plan which arbitrarily imposes disparate burdens on older workers can claim succor under
To reach the result it does, the majority uses an interpretive methodology, purportedly one parsing
Eschewing this approach, the majority begins its analysis not by seeking to glean meaning from the statute, but by launching a no-holds-barred attack on the business purpose reading of
There are deep problems with the majority‘s interpretive methodology, chief among them its unwillingness to apply the same unforgiving textual analysis to its reading of the
Beginning with the text, the only thing plain about
The structure of
A far more sensible structural interpretation regards the
The majority‘s reliance on the text of the statute as a basis for rejecting the business purpose test is, finally, made puzzling in light of its concession that its “construction of the words of the statute is not the only plausible one.” Ante, at 177. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the majority is using two different standards of textual analysis: the business purpose interpretation fails because the plain language
Given, then, that some ambiguity remains under any fair reading of
Several Senators, however, led by Senator Jacob Javits, urged that employers, in fashioning benefit programs, be allowed to consider cost differentials between benefits provided to older employees and those provided to younger ones. During Senate hearings on the bill which became the ADEA, Senator Javits criticized the initial version of
The history of
Even if I did not strongly believe that the text and structure of the
The majority today puts aside conventional tools of statutory construction and, relying instead on artifice and invention, arrives at a draconian interpretation of the ADEA which Congress most assuredly did not contemplate, let alone share, in 1967, in 1978, or now. Because I cannot accept that it is the ADEA‘s command to give employers a free hand to fashion discriminatory benefit programs, I dissent.
