In this case we must determine whether appellants have a cause of action in contract to recover monies used to fund railroad retirement benefits. Appellants, who are Canadian employees, allege that a 1973 Memorandum of Understanding between railroad management and railroad labor invested them with a contractual entitlement to pension contributions that the employer, CSX Transportation, Inc., is no longer required by statute to make. The district court held that the Memorandum created contract rights in appellants, but denied them recovery because it was foreseeable that the Foreign Service Exclusion of the Railroad Retirement and Tax Acts could render the contract impossible to perform. We hold that appellants’ rights to railroad retirement benefits are wholly statutory and that the Memorandum of Understanding created no enforceable rights in appellants to receive monies used to fund such benefits. In so holding, we affirm the judgment of the district court on other grounds.
I.
Appellants John Vollmar and James Mitchell, who are representatives of a class conditionally certified under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2),
In Part A of the Memorandum, entitled “Railroad Retirement Legislation,” the parties agreed to support legislative reform of the railroad retirement system. The proposed amendments would reduce the employees’ share of the retirement tax burden by shifting a portion of that tax burden to the carriers. This would have the effect of increasing employee take-home pay. In return, the parties agreed in Part B of their Memorandum, entitled “Collective Bargaining Agreements,” that the employees would settle in their forthcoming negotiations for a wage increase of four percent. Part A of the Memorandum was implemented, in large part, by the Railroad Retirement Act Amendments of 1973, Pub.L. No. 93-69, 87 Stat. 162 (1973), and Part B by collective bargaining agreements which remained in effect from April 27, 1973, until December 31, 1974.
In 1978, the Canadian government issued regulations implementing changes in the Canadian Immigration Act. These regulations, which in effect required railroads operating in Canada to accord a hiring preference to Canadian citizens, were construed by the Internal Revenue Service to trigger the Foreign Service Exclusion of the Railroad Retirement and Railroad Retirement Tax Acts. See Rev.Rul. 83-184, 1983-
The effect of these rulings was that work performed by Canadian employees for U.S. railroads in Canada would no longer be credited toward the 120-month vesting requirement of the Railroad Retirement Act, effective January 1, 1983, and that railroad employers owed no retirement taxes with respect to such service. Canadian employees could elect to leave their taxes in the system and retain their credit toward retirement. Alternatively, employees could receive a refund of taxes they had paid into the system in which case they would receive no credit for service to the extent of any refund. Vollmar and Mitchell received refunds of their retirement taxes — an option not available to U.S. workers — which they applied to a Canadian Registered Retirement Savings Plan. Similarly, U.S. carriers such as CSXT could apply for a refund of railroad retirement taxes which they had contributed. CSXT received a refund, including interest, totalling approximately $7.3 million.
Appellants brought this action against CSXT in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, seeking damages and injunctive relief for breach of contract and unjust enrichment. They claimed that CSXT failed to make contributions toward their railroad retire
The district court found that the 1973 Memorandum of Understanding created enforceable contract rights in appellants. However, the court reasoned that the applicability of the Foreign Service Exclusion, which made the contract impossible to perform, was foreseeable at the time the contract was made. The court concluded that appellants are not entitled to restitution because they should have anticipated that changes in Canadian law could cause Canadian employees to be excluded from the railroad retirement system. The court rejected as inapplicable appellants’ theory of unjust enrichment because it found that express contract rights existed. Vollmar v. CSX Transportation, Inc.,
II.
Appellants claim that the 1973 Memorandum of Understanding gives them a contractual entitlement to receive, in cash, the amount of the railroad retirement taxes originally paid by CSXT on their behalf and subsequently refunded to CSXT, as well as the amount CSXT would have had to continue to pay, absent the operation of the Foreign Service Exclusion. We disagree. Appellants’ entitlement to retirement benefits is purely statutory. Consequently, the operation of the Foreign Service Exclusion relieves CSXT of any legal obligation for appellants’ retirement benefits or their equivalent.
The very nature of the railroad retirement scheme makes it clear that “[ljike Social Security, and unlike most private pension plans,” railroad retirement benefits are statutory rather than contractual. Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo,
The 1973 Memorandum of Understanding represented nothing more than a political compromise. It reflects the fact that labor and management agreed to support legislation that would shift some of the employees’ tax burden for railroad retirement benefits to the employer. However, the ultimate success of that agreement depended upon the independent decision of Congress to enact its terms. Moreover, once embodied in statute, the arrangement was at all times subject to the option of Congress to alter the statutory scheme, Hisquierdo,
The fact that labor and management make joint legislative recommendations does not transform statutory rights into contractual ones when Congress enacts legislation reflecting their agreement. In fact, much “labor legislation is a product of political agreements between labor, the carriers, and government.” Ry. Labor Executives’ Ass’n (RLEA) v. United States,
Here the position urged by appellants would abrogate Congress’ attempt in the Foreign Service Exclusion to protect the interests of American railroad employees working abroad. The exclusion from retirement credits applies to foreign employees whose country of residence requires preferential hiring of its citizens, resulting in American workers not being on an “equal footing” with their foreign counterparts. See RLEA,
III.
Appellants also claim recovery in quasi-contract,
The 1973 Memorandum of Understanding has created no contractual entitlement to the monies sought by appellants, and the operation of the Foreign Service Exclusion has foreclosed any avenue of statutory relief. This conclusion is wholly sufficient to resolve this case. We find it unnecessary to reach the other questions raised by the district court. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district judge certified the class conditionally because appellees dispute appellants’ standing, as individuals in a unionized industry, to assert the claims.
. CSXT also contended that, in any case, appellants’ claims were procedurally barred because: (1) only the unions, not appellants, had standing to pursue these claims; (2) appellants’ claims should have been arbitrated; (3) appellants’ claims were time barred by any applicable statute of limitations. Because we find that no contract rights existed, we find it unnecessary to address these issues.
. The district court dismissed appellants’ unjust enrichment claim, which was, technically speaking, not appealed. However, the quasi-contract theory was discussed at oral argument and the claim of restitution which appellants press in their brief bears a sufficiently close relationship to recovery in quasi-contract that we address it here.
