This appeal requires that we consider, for the first time, whether the 1987 amendments to the Higher Education Act of 1965 (the Act), codified as amended at 20 U.S.C. §§ 1071-1098 (1988), can be applied to alter preexisting contractual rights conferred by the Act. The United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island said that the amendments could not be so utilized.
Rhode Island Higher Educ. Assistance Auth. v. Cavazos,
Our odyssey does not end at that point, for the district court grounded its judgment on alternative holdings. Perscrutation of the record convinces us that the second ground relied on below — the Secre
I. BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are comprehensively set forth in the lower court’s opinion, id. at 415-19, and it would be pleonastic to rehearse them in great detail. Hence, we limn only those facts needed to place the issues on appeal into satisfactory context.
Congress enacted the first version of the Act, establishing the Guaranteed Student Loan Program (GSLP), Pub.L. No. 89-329, 79 Stat. 1232 (1965), in order to make higher education more widely accessible to the populace. To achieve this end, Congress chose to encourage States to implement tuition insurance programs (or, alternatively, to strengthen programs already in existence). S.Rep. No. 673, 89th Cong., 1st Sess.,
reprinted in
1965 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 4027, 4061-62. The GSLP began with the premise that private lenders would offer student loans at below-market interest rates if the loans were guaranteed; and, from that premise, proceeded to facilitate the provision of such guarantees.
See generally Citizens Savings Bank v. Bell,
In 1977, the Rhode Island General Assembly created RIHEAA, a public corporation, and designated it as the agency in charge of administering the GSLP in Rhode Island. 1 RIHEAA promptly entered into serial contracts with the Secretary, including a Basic Agreement, an Advances Agreement, a Reinsurance Agreement, and a Supplemental Reinsurance Agreement (SRA). Forsaking comprehensiveness, we mention only selected features of these instruments.
The Basic Agreement recognized RI-HEAA as Rhode Island’s guaranty agency and provided for an interest rate subsidy to lenders receiving RIHEAA’s guaranty. The Advances Agreement entitled RI-HEAA to cash advances from the Secretary (ultimately to be repaid). The Reinsurance Agreement, as modified by the SRA, committed the Secretary to reimburse RIHEAA for between 80% and 100% of the losses incurred in meeting its guaranty obligations on defaulted loans (the precise level of reimbursement being dependent on RIHEAA’s success in controlling the default rate on the loans which it insured). The Basic Agreement and Reinsurance Agreement each stated that the parties “shall be bound by all changes in the Act or regulations in accordance with their respective effective dates.” The agreements also contained language to the effect that, if RIHEAA failed “to comply with any of the [agreements’] provisions ... or applicable Federal law or regulations,” the Secretary could withhold reimbursement payments otherwise due. Finally, consistent with 34 C.F.R. § 682.414(b), the agreements obligated RIHEAA to submit detailed financial statements to the Secretary on a regular basis.
After these documents were executed, RIHEAA operated as the State’s GSLP guaranty agency. Pursuant to that role,
For federal accounting purposes, a guaranty agency’s reserve fund is comprised of its cash assets. See 34 C.F.R. § 682.410(a)(1). Federal regulations prohibit the use of these assets for purposes other than those associated with the GSLP. See 34 C.F.R. § 682.410(a)(2). In RI-HEAA’s case, its reserve fund consisted of guaranty fees charged to lenders, a lump sum inherited from its predecessor agency, see supra note 1, collections from defaulted borrowers, federal advances, reinsurance payments, and administrative cost allowances.
Administrative cost allowances are paid by the Secretary to guaranty agencies to help offset operating costs. See 20 U.S.C. § 1078(f). In 1986, Congress made these allowances mandatory and conferred upon the guaranty agencies a “contractual right” to receive the allowances. Id. at § 1078(f)(1)(B). At the same time, Congress ceded a similar contractual right to the guaranty agencies respecting reinsurance payments:
The Secretary may enter into a guaranty agreement with any guaranty agency, whereby the Secretary shall undertake to reimburse it, under such terms and conditions as the Secretary may establish, with respect to losses (resulting from the default of the student borrower) on the unpaid balance of the principal and accrued interest of any insured loan,.... The guaranty agency shall be deemed to have a contractual right against the United States, during the life of such loan, to receive reimbursement according to the provisions of the subsection.
20 U.S.C. § 1078(c)(1)(A). It is this statutorily created “contractual right” which RI-HEAA contends was unlawfully abrogated by the Secretary’s retrospective application of the 1987 amendments to the Act, to which we now turn.
In 1987, Congress received a Comptroller General’s report suggesting that guaranty agencies across the country had accumm-lated huge cash reserves, not necessary for the due accomplishment of program-related objectives. See H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 495, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. 518, reprinted in 1987 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 2313-1, 2313-1264. Some of these funds were apparently being used for forbidden purposes. The Comptroller General recommended, therefore, that Congress set limits on the funds that a guaranty agency could keep in reserve, so that the amount held by each agency would correspond to the financial risks it faced in connection with its activities under the GSLP umbrella. Congress addressed this problem in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA), Pub.L. No. 100-203, 101 Stat. 1330 (1987), limiting the amount of cash reserves that state-sponsored guaranty agencies could accumulate. The legislative formula for determining the maximum reserve maintainable was geared to an agency’s financial condition at the end of the 1986 fiscal year. See 20 U.S.C. § 1072(e). 2 An agency holding cash reserves in excess of the formulaic ceiling was obliged to transfer the surplus to the Secretary in order to defray certain program-related costs. See 20 U.S.C. § 1081. In the same vein, OBRA also modified 20 U.S.C. § 1078 by conditioning an agency’s “contractual right” to administrative cost allowances and reimbursement payments on compliance with the transfer requirements of section 1072(e).
The obligation to transfer surplus funds was not absolute. A guaranty agency could request that the requirement be waived.
See
20 U.S.C. § 1072(e)(3)(A).
In February 1988, based upon financial data reported by RIHEAA concerning its finances in fiscal 1986 and 1987, 3 the Secretary notified the agency of his determination that the amount of its excess reserves was $6,740,725. RIHEAA did not dispute the calculation, but requested a waiver based on all three grounds contemplated in section 1072(e)(3)(A). After the Secretary denied this request, RIHEAA took a different tack. It again requested a waiver, this time claiming a mistake; the financial data previously supplied by it (and certified as correct) was, RIHEAA said, substantially inflated. After receiving new reports from RIHEAA’s auditors, the Secretary denied the second waiver request. Assuming the revised figures to be accurate, he recomputed the excess reserve amount to be $2,785,156 and proceeded to sequester this sum by holding back payments otherwise due.
Displeased, RIHEAA sued the Secretary and the federal Department of Education (DOE) in the district court, seeking to enjoin them from shortstopping further payments and to recover the monies previously withheld. In due course, both sides moved for summary judgment. The district court ruled in the plaintiff’s favor, granting the requested injunction and entering a judgment of recoupment in the amount of $2,785,156. This appeal followed.
II. RETROSPECTIVE ENFORCEABILITY OF THE 1987 AMENDMENTS
The court below concluded that the amendment to 20 U.S.C. § 1078(c)(1)(A), conditioning agencies’ contractual rights to reimbursement on compliance with the “reserve transfer” provisions of section 1072(e), impermissibly abrogated RI-HEAA’s vested right to receive such payments insofar as it attempted to reach reimbursement obligations on loans underwritten before the amendment’s effective date:
The flaw in the Secretary’s position is that he fails to distinguish between losses incurred on loans guaranteed by the Authority before the 1987 Amendments were adopted and those incurred on loans guaranteed after that time. While the new condition regarding “elimination” of “excess” reserves may apply prospectively to loans guaranteed after its enactment, the Secretary does not cite any provision in the Budget Act indicating that Congress intended to apply it retroactively to negate or restrict a guaranty agency’s right to reimbursement with loans previously guaranteed.
RIHEAA I,
We need not tarry long over this aspect of the appeal. The issue boils down to whether the 1987 amendments unconstitutionally abridged RIHEAA’s contractual right to receive reinsurance payments on loans guaranteed prior to OBRA’s effective date. Four of our sister circuits have recently considered the identical question, answered it in the negative, and written at varying lengths on the subject.
See supra
p. 846 (listing cases). All of these courts have concluded that no unconstitutional abridgement occurred. We find these opin
It is without question that, under appropriate circumstances, a contractual right against the United States can constitute a vested right.
See, e.g., Perry v. United States,
It is clear, nevertheless, that not all contract rights are created equal. The question of whether a statutorily spawned contract right is a vested property right for purposes of the fifth amendment turns on whether Congress reserved power to modify the terms of the contract.
See Education Assistance Corp.,
The
Bowen
Court did not limit its analysis to cases involving express reservations of legislative authority. To the precise contrary, the Justices took pains to warn that, ordinarily, courts should be reluctant to construe an Act of Congress in a manner that would foreclose Congress’ sovereign power.
Id.
at 52,
We believe that
Bowen’s
lessons are controlling here. Although Congress did not expressly reserve its right to amend or repeal the Higher Education Act, the
Bowen
factors strongly suggest that such a right was implied. In the first place, nowhere in the Act did Congress hint, let alone state in “unmistakable terms,” that it intended to surrender its sovereign power to amend the Act’s provisions from time to time, as changing conditions might indicate. In the second place, there is nothing in the structure, content, or language of the Act from which such a surrender can
[T]he public nature of the reserve funds themselves, coupled with the express contractual reservation of the power to amend the terms of the GSL program and the fact that the legislative changes involve a comprehensive federal/state social welfare program, forecloses a finding that the state agencies have obtained unalterable vested property rights to certain payments.
South Carolina State Educ. Assistance Auth.,
We are fortified in this conclusion by the realization that, unlike the situation in
Bowen,
where the contractual right to withdraw from the system was repealed entirely, RIHEAA’s rights to reinsurance payments were not unilaterally terminated by the statutory change. Those rights remained intact, albeit on altered terms. Therefore, the plaintiffs contractual entitlement to stipendiary reimbursement was not abrogated by the 1987 amendments; it was simply conditioned on compliance with the excess reserve provisions. We believe that such a distinction has considerable importance in constitutional terms.
See, e.g., Sinking Fund Cases,
The sockdolager, of course, is that while the Act may be silent on reserved power, the contracts executed between the Secretary and RIHEAA speak volumes. Those agreements state repeatedly, and in the plainest language, that the agency’s rights will be subject to “all changes in the Act or regulations in accordance with their respective effective dates.” As a matter of contract alone, then, RIHEAA was on clear notice that the Secretary had reserved the right to superimpose subsequent statutory amendments on the preexisting contractual arrangements between the parties. And the Secretary’s construction of the Act as authorizing such clauses, being plausible and consistent with the statutory text, deserves deference.
See, e.g., Clarke v. Securities Industry Ass’n,
To be sure, the courts that have preceded us, although reaching a common destination, have taken two divergent roads. The Seventh and Eighth Circuits,
see respectively Great Lakes Higher Educ. Corp.,
We need not paint the lily. “Regulation of property rights does not ‘take’ private property when an individual’s reasonable, investment-backed expectations can continue to be realized as long as he complies with reasonable regulatory restrictions the legislature has imposed.”
United States v. Locke,
III. RIHEAA’S ENTITLEMENT TO A WAIVER
We move next to the district court’s alternative holding that, apart from any constitutional infirmity, the Secretary “acted arbitrarily and contrary to law in denying RIHEAA’s waiver request.”
RIHEAA I,
A. The Relevant Circumstances.
We start by elucidating in some detail the circumstances under which RIHEAA requested successive waivers of the Secretary’s directives that it remit surplus reserves. We recount the facts as they appear in the administrative record.
On February 16, 1988, the Secretary informed RIHEAA that it was required to transfer $6,740,725 in excess cash reserves to DOE. Within the month, RIHEAA applied for the first waiver, claiming financial hardship and stating, inter alia, that it was contractually bound to participating lenders to “maintain a reserve of cash or marketable securities of at least 1% against the unpaid principal of all outstanding loans.” According to RIHEAA’s waiver application, this commitment translated into a required reserve of no less than $2,240,000. The application did not allude, directly or indirectly, to the PLUS program or to any arrangements with RISLA.
The Secretary denied the requested waiver on October 20, 1988. He concluded that RIHEAA had shown neither a significant deterioration in its financial position nor a sufficient change in economic circumstances since the end of fiscal 1986. The Secretary noted, as a point of emphasis, that the agency’s total reserves had actually increased between 1986 ($9,995,388) and 1987 ($10,097,270). Accordingly, the Secretary denied relief under subsections (i) and (ii), respectively, of section 1072(e)(3)(A). These determinations have not been seriously challenged. They were, and are, clearly supportable.
Despite the denial of its waiver request, RIHEAA stubbornly refused to part with any lucre. Not to be outdone, the Secretary stated that he would withhold reinsurance payments otherwise due until the full amount of the putative debt was recovered. On October 27, RIHEAA shifted gears, mounting a new waiver initiative. It informed the Secretary that the financial statements it had previously submitted were incorrect. Because the Secretary’s “calculations were apparently based solely on [RIHEAA’s] 1986 and 1987 [financial] reports,” and the reports were erroneous, RIHEAA contended that the Secretary’s determination of the excess reserve amount was “grossly overstated.” RI-HEAA promised to provide the Secretary with amended reports and asked that any setoff be deferred until new data could be assembled and examined. The Secretary invited RIHEAA to submit corrected figures, but declined to defer action.
RIHEAA submitted its revised financial statements for 1986 and 1987 on January 4, 1989. According to the neoteric reports, the agency’s cash reserve was $6,885,096 on September 30, 1986 (as opposed to $9,995,388, as stated earlier) and $4,513,343 on September 30, 1987 (as opposed to $10,-097,270, as stated earlier). Based on the recast numbers, RIHEAA requested that the Secretary reconsider his prior calculation of an excess reserve amount. At the same time, RIHEAA petitioned for a second waiver, this time on a new and different ground:
RIHEAA is required to maintain a 2% reserve based on its agreements with the Rhode Island Student Loan Authority executed in 1981 ... and thus was required to have $6.2 million in reserve on September 30, 1986 and $6.4 million in reserve on September 30, 1987. Since RI-HEAA’s reserves ... were $6,885,096 on September 30, 1986 and $4,513,343 on September 30, 1987, RIHEAA, in fact, does not have any “excess cash reserves.”
At the time of this second waiver request, no mention was made of the loan contracts requiring RIHEAA to maintain a 1% reserve.
The Secretary responded to both of RI-HEAA’s beseechments on February 2, 1989. He granted the agency’s first request, agreeing to “treat the corrected data as if it had been available when the original decision was made.” Using those figures, the Secretary recalculated the excess reserve amount to be $2,785,156. With respect to the new waiver request, the Secretary temporized. He pointed out that RI-HEAA had “not provide[d] any details of the contract” which allegedly required the 2% reserve, and invited RIHEAA to come forward with any and all information germane to this topic.
RIHEAA responded on February 9, submitting two agreements which, on their face, obligated it to maintain a 2% reserve. Both agreements ran to the benefit of RIS-LA.
5
While mentioning that these contracts were “in addition to the Agreements to Guarantee Loans ... previously sub
On March 22, the Secretary replied. He informed RIHEAA that it had failed to “provide[ ] the information needed to evaluate its claims regarding contractual obligations.” The Secretary asked for documentation regarding the nature of RI-HEAA’s relationship with the signatories of the 2% reserve contracts. And the Secretary asked RIHEAA a pointed question: “Has RIHEAA ever provided any reports to lenders or secondary markets regarding its cash reserves?” The Secretary’s query was followed by a request to transmit copies of any such reports. RIHEAA replied to the Secretary’s question on May 3, 1989. It supplied no further documentation. Its executive director wrote:
RIHEAA has not transmitted the corrected reports to the lenders or secondary markets since the [DOE’s] acceptance of the corrected reports [on March 22, 1989]; thus there would be no reason for the lenders or secondary market to further question our reserves.
The Secretary rendered his final decision on May 26. He denied RIHEAA’s second waiver request for two reasons. First, the plaintiff “did not provide any evidence that lenders or the secondary market monitored or enforced the two percent reserve provi-sion_” Second, RIHEAA’s revised figures indicated that it was already in breach of the 2% reserve requirement during 1987 and 1988; therefore, requiring the agency to pay over reserve funds would not compel it to violate these obligations. Cf, e.g., W. Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part III (“[a] man can die but once”).
B. Procedural Posture.
In its complaint for judicial review of agency action, 6 RIHEAA attempted to assert seven statements of claim. The first five counts outlined assorted challenges to the Secretary’s application of the 1987 amendments. Our earlier discussion of the amendments’ operation makes it clear that these five statements of claim were unavailing. See supra Part II. The sixth count raised a procedural due process question, not pressed in subsequent proceedings. Thus, the “waiver denial” challenge must derive its sustenance from count 7.
Count 7 challenged the October 20, 1988, denial of RIHEAA’s first waiver request as “arbitrary ... capricious ... an abuse of discretion ... and ... not in accordance with law.” Nowhere in this statement of claim did RIHEAA take issue with the Secretary’s May 26, 1989, denial of its second waiver request. This was understandable as an initial matter, since the complaint was drafted and filed in January 1989, see supra note 6, before the second waiver request was determined. What is less understandable is that, after the second request was denied in May of 1989, the complaint was never amended to encompass that development. To make matters fuzzier, the district court, for reasons not immediately apparent from the appellate record (but likely at the parties’ behest), ignored the Secretary’s denial of the first (properly pleaded) waiver request, and instead concentrated on the second (unpleaded) waiver request.
We pause on the threshold to state our concern over the lack of attention paid by the parties to the failure to plead the issue now presented for appellate review. Having paused, however, we proceed. The appellants have not assigned error to this omission on appeal, and we, like the court below, can only treat the pleadings as having been amended through the parties' silence to conform to the arguments advanced and to the proof (including supplementation of the administrative record).
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b);
see also Lynch v. Dukakis,
C. The Second Waiver Request.
Judicial review of the Secretary’s denial of the waiver is governed by the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), which authorizes a court to set aside an agency decision only if it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” This standard of review is a generous one. Absent mistake of law, reversal will lie only if the Secretary’s action lacked a rational basis.
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co.,
We believe that, insofar as the second waiver request implicated the
2%
reserve requirement, the Secretary was plainly warranted in denying it on the basis of RIHEAA’s unwillingness to furnish relevant information. The district court, which determined that the Secretary had an insufficient basis for concluding that the
2%
requirement was purely cosmetic, seems to have fitted the shoe to the wrong foot. The court reasoned that because both RI-HEAA and its lenders had reason to believe before the audit that RIHEAA’s reserves were ample, the lack of monitoring was explicable.
See RIHEAA I,
The stage being set in that fashion, RI-HEAA’s stonewalling rings down the curtain. It is unquestioned that the Secretary appropriately demanded the production of “pertinent information” regarding the agreements in question. It is equally beyond cavil that the Secretary never received the substantiation which he sought. As a regulated entity, RIHEAA bore the burden of proving its entitlement to a waiver.
See, e.g., Ashland Exploration, Inc. v. F.E.R.C.,
Sustaining the Secretary’s rejection of the 2% reserve requirement does not completely solve the puzzle. The district court also berated the Secretary for disposing of the second waiver petition without addressing RIHEAA’s 1% reserve obligations.
RIHEAA I,
On appeal, the Secretary argues that the issue of whether RIHEAA would have been compelled to violate its 1% reserve obligations was not properly raised in the course of the second waiver request. The district court gave this argument short shrift, but we think it has some substance. For one thing, RIHEAA did not expressly raise the issue of its 1% reserve obligations at any time after its first waiver request was denied on October 20, 1988. For another thing, the plaintiff’s later submittal of recast financial information altered the contours of the playing field in a highly material respect. As RIHEAA itself argued, once the Secretary accepted the new figures, all of the Secretary’s prior calculations became obsolete. It does not seem unreasonable, therefore, that the Secretary might construe RIHEAA’s second waiver request as self-contained, i.e., a new and independent application based on the revised data, reasonably expecting that any issues RIHEAA wanted considered in light of that data would be explicitly raised.
On the other hand, we are troubled by the Secretary’s bland assumption that he had no duty to consider the loan agreements that contained the 1% reserve requirement. Copies of these contracts were already in the Secretary’s possession and acceptance of the new figures did not alter their terms. Moreover, it seems somewhat unrealistic for the Secretary to assume, without further inquiry, that RIHEAA’s intense focus on the issue of its 2% reserve obligations implied that it was foregoing any other arguments in support of the second waiver request — especially a previously-documented argument of exactly the same genre as the “2% reserve” argument. Though the plaintiff asked for the full (2%) loaf, there was no good reason to suspect that, if push came to shove, the plaintiff would not have considered half a loaf (1%) as better than no loaf at all.
Faced with this paradox, we do not fault the district court for concluding that the Secretary should have passed upon the 1% issue. We think that a regulator, charged with the responsibility of determining whether certain funds should be retained by a state agency or transferred to federal coffers, ought to display some reasonable liberality in interpreting waiver requests so as to achieve fairness and effectuate congressional intent. In short, the 1% reserve issue, although not raised with classic precision, was arguably “raised with sufficient specificity and clarity” to warrant administrative consideration.
Wallace v. Department of the Air Force,
We find the district court’s next decision — that a waiver was exigible on this ground,
RIHEAA I,
The second rule to which we make reference explains the basis for the first rule. It is apodictic that a reviewing court should accord an agency’s decision considerable deference when that decision involves a technical question within the field of the agency’s expertise.
See Lile v. University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics,
Nor would a remand be an empty exercise here. Without attempting to exhaust the scenarios, we sketch two possibilities. First, as the Secretary has pointed out, the lender contracts calling for a 1% reserve allowed that reserve to consist of “cash or marketable securities.” Yet, the recast financial reports were unilluminating as to the presence or absence of marketable securities, and RIHEAA, in connection with the second waiver request, never furnished the Secretary with any information concerning the value of its marketable securities. Thus, absent further factfinding, it cannot be stated with any assurance whether the transfer-of-funds directive would have run afoul of the reserve obligations contained in those agreements. Second, just as RIHEAA’s apparent withholding of its corrected financial reports from RISLA and the PLUS lenders had evidentiary force, see supra pp. 855-856, how RIHEAA dealt with the lenders whose contracts required a 1% reserve might well bear on the merits of the waiver request.
We need go no further. Especially where, as in this case, the administrative record has not been fully developed, a reviewing court should hesitate to speculate about matters which should have been, but were not, addressed by the agency. Here, mindful that Congress has vested administration of the GSLP in the Secretary, and that the entire array of relevant factors underlying the waiver question were not duly considered, we think that the second waiver request should have been remanded for further consideration.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we conclude that the district court erred both in
Reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded. Costs in favor of appellants.
Notes
. Prior to 1977, Rhode Island’s state-sponsored agency was the Rhode Island Higher Education Assistance Corporation. The reasons for the changeover are immaterial to our inquiry.
. Section 1072(e) was not meant to effect a permanent programmatic change. Its provisions expired automatically on September 30, 1989.
. RIHEAA operated on a fiscal year, ending on September 30.
.
See Bowen,
. Subsequent to this submission of February 9, 1989, but prior to the Secretary's final decision on May 26, 1989, RIHEAA submitted another agreement, between it and a lender participating in the PLUS program, containing a similar obligation.
. The plaintiffs action was commenced by a complaint filed in the district court on January 9, 1989. On January 30, 1989, the plaintiff amended its complaint. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) (permitting party to “amend the party’s pleading once as a matter of course before a responsive pleading is served"). Consequently, our discussion centers on the amended complaint.
. Insofar as the plaintiffs waiver argument prescinded from its obligations to RISLA, it strikes us as somewhat disingenuous. Although not mentioned by the Secretary, we take judicial notice of the fact that RISLA and RIHEAA operate with firmly interlocked boards of directors, such that the appointed members of RIHEAA’s board, who constitute a majority of its directors, see R.I.Gen.Laws § 16-57-7(a), serve ex officio as the only members of RISLA's governing board, see R.I.Gen.Laws § 16-62-7(a). In reality, then, the 2% reserve requirement, to the extent that it depended on RIHEAA's commitment to RISLA, was self-imposed.
