Williаm 0. Schism and Robert L. Reinlie (the retirees) appeal the grant of summary judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida in favor of the government that they are not entitled to free, lifetime health care, and the denial of summary judgment to the retirees. The district court also denied their motion for certification of a class of all military retirees, aged 65 and over, who are receiving social security, are enrolled in Medicare Part B, and who began their service or made service career decisions before 1956, which they do not appeal.
See Schism v. United States,
Background
Schism and Reinlie are retired veterans over 65 years of age, who each had more than twenty years of active military service. They began their service in 1943 and 1942 and retired in 1979 and 1968, respectively. The retirees contend that the government induced service in the military with the promise that, upon retirement, service members and their dependents would be entitled to free, lifetime health care. They argue that having fulfilled their part of the bargain by serving for twenty or mоre years, they have a contractual right, as well as a property right under the Fifth Amendment arising from their contractual right, to free, lifetime health care. The retirees contend that the government reneged on its promise and failed to provide the promised health care benefits without cost.
In rejecting the retirees’ claims, the district court observed that “[i]t is obvious ... [that] recruiters made promises to potential recruits that they could obtain lifetime medical care for themselves and their dependents by joining the armed forces and fulfilling certain service obligations,” id. at 1294, and “[t]here is no question that factual reprеsentations were made.... The issue simply is whether those representations are contractually binding.” id. at 1292. The government admits that the “recruiters made good faith representations to potential recruits that, upon retirement, they and their dependents would *1283 receive free, lifetime medical care .. and that Congress has acknowledged a moral obligation to “provide health care to military retirees who believed they were promised lifetime health care in exchange for a lifetime of military service.” S.Rep. No. 105-29, at 295 (1997). The district court held, however, that the government’s representations were not contractually binding because they were in conflict with thе military regulations that determined the health care benefits of the retirees and their dependents.
Prior to 1956, the military departments
1
regulated medical benefits for retired members and their dependents pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 301 which provides that “[t]he head of an Executive department or military department may prescribe regulations for the government of his department, the conduct of its employees, the distribution and performance of its business, and the custody, use, and preservation of its records, papers, and property.” 5 U.S.C. § 301 (1994);
see also Chrysler Corp. v. Brown,
In 1943, the year Schism enlisted in the Navy, health care for retired Navy personnel was governed by United States Navy Regulations (“NAVREGS”) from 1920. Article 1830 of the NA-VREGS provided:
Authority for admission to an Army and Navy general hospital may be obtained by all persons of the Navy and Marine Corps, on the active and retired lists, from the Surgeon General of the Navy on the report of a board of medical survey or, when that is impracticable, on the certificate of a naval medical officer, clearly stating the applicant’s disability.... The length of treatment in hospital will be determined by the medical officer in command thereof. [Article 1832 NA-VREGS (1920).]
Importantly, the cost of treatment at a military hospital was deducted from the patient’s pension. See Article 1832. Additional guidance was provided by the Navy’s Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, which published the Manual of the Medical Department of the United States Navy (“MEDMAN”). Under Section 3168 of the 1943 MEDMAN:
Retired officers and enlisted men, inactive, are not entitled to civilian medical and hospital treatment at Government expense. They are entitled to treatment in naval hospitals and by naval medical officers when available upon application, but no expenses for travel in connection with such treatment may be allowed. [§ 3168 MED-MAN (1943).]
Section 4132.1 of the 1945 MEDMAN provided that “[a] retired officer of the Regular Navy or Marine Corps not on active duty shall, if in need of hospital care, be admitted to any naval hospital upon the application of the individual and presentation of suitable identification.” In 1952, the MEDMAN was revised to provide that retirees:
“[M]ay be, upon request, furnished required medical and dental care and adjuncts thereto in any medical facility of a uniformed service ... subject to mission requirements and the availability of space, facilities, and capabili *1284 ties of the medical staff or dental staff as determined by the local medical or dental authorities.” (§ 20-6, MED-MAN 1952)
In 1942, when plaintiff Reinlie enlisted in the United States Army, health care for retired soldiers was governed by Army Regulations (“AR”) 40-505 and 40-590. Paragraph 2(b)(2) of AR 40-505 provided that “the Army will, usually through its own facilities, provide medical attendance to ... [p]ersons who are on the retired list of the Regular Army and who report in person at any Army dispensary or hospital, provided sufficient accommodations are available for their treatment.” [ ] Paragraphs 6 and 6(b)(1) of AR 40-590 provided:
When suitable faсilities for hospitalization are available, sick and injured persons as enumerated in (b) below may be admitted to Army hospitals ....
* * * * * *
(b)(1) Officers, Army nurses, warrant officers, cadets of the United States Military Academy, pay clerks, and enlisted men in the Army; also contract surgeons serving full time. The admission of retired personnel on inactive status will be limited to cases which in the judgment of the commanding officer of the hospital will be benefited by hospitalization for a reasonable time. Those requiring merely domiciliary care by reason of age or chronic invalidism will not be admitted.... [AR 40-590 ¶¶ 6, 6b(l) (1935).]
AR 40-505 and AR 40-590 were still in effect in essentially the same form at the time Schism entеred the Army in 1947.
The Air Force followed Army regulations from its formation in 1947 until Air Force Regulation (“AFR”) 160-73 was promulgated in 1951. See National Security Act of 1947, P.L. No. 253, 61 Stat. 495 (1947). Paragraph (14)(h) of AFR 160-73, which was in effect up until Schism entered continuous active service in 1956, provided:
The hospitalization of retired inactive Armed Forces personnel listed below will be limited to cases which in the judgment of the hospital commander will be benefited by hospitalization for a reasonable length of time. Persons desiring medical care must furnish evidence of eligibility satisfactory to the hospital commander concerned. Those requiring merely domiciliary-type care becаuse of age or chronic invalidism will not be admitted. [AFR 160-73 ¶ 14(h) (1951).]
Schism,
“[I]t is those pre 1956 statutes and regulations that affect the viability of the plaintiffs’ claims, rather than Section 1074(b).”
Schism,
In addition tо the regulatory scheme, the district court examined other publications which reiterate some of the same factual representations, and provide an historical overview of the actions of the government, with regard to retired member’s health care. The government arranged for care of sick and disabled seamen beginning as early as 1798, with the creation of the Naval Hospital Fund.
See
*1285
§ 21-1 MEDMAN (1922). In 1832, Congress appointed the Secretary of the Navy as sole trustee of this fund and authorized him to prescribe regulations for naval hospitals.
See Schism,
In 1956, Congress enacted the Dependents’ Medical Care Act, Pub.L. No. 84-569, 70 Stat. 250 (codified in relevant part at 10 U.S.C. § 1074(b)), which provided that: “Medical and dental care in any medical facility of the uniformed services may, under regulations prescribed jointly by the Secretaries of Defense and Health, Education and Welfare, be furnished upon request and subject to the availability of space, facilities, and capabilities of the medical staff, to retired members of the uniformed services.” 10 U.S.C. § 1074(b) (emphasis added); see also 10 U.S.C. § 1076(b) (subjecting medical and dental care for dependents of retirees to the same restrictions). Pursuant to this statute, health care benefits for retirees became subject to the availability of space, facilities, and staff capabilities at military medical facilities. As demand for medical care exceeded the capacity of military medical facilities, some retirees and their dependents were turned away based on this statutory provision.
In 1966, Congress enacted 10 U.S.C. § 1086, which authorized military departments to contract for the provision of civilian health care for retirees and their dependents. Pursuant to this statute, upon reaching age 65, retired members and dependents lose their eligibility for this health care and must rely on the health care benefits provided through Medicare under the Social Security Act. Medicare benefits consist of two parts. Part A, to which persons 65 or older are automatically entitled, provides basic hospital insurance. See 42 U.S.C. § 1395c (1994). Part B provides certain physician’s services, home health services, laboratory services, and other services not covered under Part A. See id. § 1395k. To obtain benefits under Part B, retirees must еnroll, and monthly premiums are deducted from the retiree’s social security payments. See id. §§ 1395j, 1395s. In 2000, Congress revisited the issue of health care for military retirees and passed legislation to provide health care for Medicare-eligible military retirees and their families. Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001, Pub.L. 106-398, § 712, 114 Stat. 1654, 1654A-426-33 (2000). See also 146 Cong. Rec. H9642 (daily ed. Oct. 11, 2000) (“This conference report provides permanent lifetime TRI-CARE eligibility for Medicare-eligible military retirees and their families beginning in fiscal year 2002.... ”).
Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo, T & M Distributors, Inc. v. United States,
The retirees contend that the government breached its implied-in-fact contract with them by requiring them to advert to health care benefits under Medicare. An implied-in-fact contract is one “founded upon a meeting of minds, which, although not embodied in an express contract, is inferred, as a fact, from conduct of the parties showing, in the light of the surrounding circumstances, their tacit undei'standing.”
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United States,
(1) Mutuality of Intent to Contract
In order to recruit, train, and maintain a military force, the secretaries of the military departments are delegated authority to create compensation and benefits packages for service members. See 5 U.S.C. § 301. The military has used promises of free, lifetime health care to recruit and retain personnel to perform hazardous duties, often for less pay than they could have received in the civilian sectоr. The government concedes that “recruiters made good faith representations to potential recruits that, upon retirement, they and their dependents would receive free, lifetime medical care.” In fact, the record shows that the Army made these promises in its recruiting brochures as recently as the 1990’s. See “Army Benefits” brochure, Department of the Army, U.S.G.P.0.1992, 643-711 (“Health care is provided to you and your family members while you are in the Army, and for the rest of your life if you serve a minimum of 20 years of active Federal service to earn your retirement.”).
Based on the Secretary of the Navy’s letter in 1945, it is apparent that the recruiters mаde these promises at the direction of the secretaries. In determining whether the government intended to contract, we presume that the secretaries carried out their duties in good faith and in accordance with law when making these promises.
See United States v. Chemical Foundation, Inc.,
(2) Consideration
There was consideration in the mutuality of obligation: the retirees serve in the armed forces for twenty or more years; the government provides free health care to them and their dependents for the remainder of their lives. In
Barker v. Kansas,
No one disputes that Congress may prospectively reduce the pay of members of the Armed Forces, even if that reduction deprived members of benefits they had expected to be able to earn. Cf. Bell v. United States,366 U.S. 393 ,81 S.Ct. 1230 ,6 L.Ed.2d 365 (1961); United States v. Dickerson,310 U.S. 554 ,60 S.Ct. 1034 ,84 L.Ed. 1356 (1940). It is quite a different matter, however, for Congress to deprive a service member of pay due for services already performed, but still owing. In that case, the congressional action would appear in a different constitutional light. Cf. Lynch v. United States,292 U.S. 571 ,54 S.Ct. 840 ,78 L.Ed. 1434 (1934); Perry v. United States,294 U.S. 330 ,55 S.Ct. 432 ,79 L.Ed. 912 (1935).
United States v. Larionoff,
(3) Unambiguous Offer and Acceptance
The retirees submitted affidavits from former recruiters describing the specific offers made to prosрective recruits and service members to persuade them to enlist, reenlist or to continue their military career until retirement, in some cases indicating that the benefits should be considered as part of their compensation.
See
Border Aff. (“I specifically remember one incident that has always stood out in my mind. On an [Inspector General] Inspection in January 1949, [several officers] gave eight recruiters in Denver a talk on the benefits of permanent health care and free medicine that we would be entitled to for the rest of our lives. We were told that we had to consider this as a
part of our pay.”).
According to the district court, “[i]t is obvious ... recruiters made promises to potential recruits that they could obtain lifetime medical care for themselves and their dependents by joining the armed forces and fulfilling certain service obligations.”
Schism,
During last year’s debates surrounding the 2001 Defense Authorization Act, the *1288 offers of free, lifetime health care made to retirees such as Schism and Reinlie were often recognized. See, e.g., 146 Cong. Rec. H3322 (daily ed. May 18, 2000) (statement of Rep. Frost) (“[Rep. Shows] has introduced legislation that would fulfill a promise that has been made to every member of the armed services: Stay in 20 years and they will receive healthcare for the rest of them life.”); 146 Cong. Reс. S4621 (daily ed. June 7, 2000) (statement of Sen. Johnson) (“We all know the history: For decades, men and women who joined the military were promised lifetime health care coverage for themselves and their families. They were told, in effect, if you disrupt your family, if you work for low pay, if you endanger your life and limb, we will in turn guarantee lifetime health benefits. Testimony from military recruiters themselves, along with copies of recruitment literature dating back to World War II, show that health care was promised to active duty personnel and their families upon the personnel’s retirement.”); 146 Cong. Rec. S10336 (daily ed. Oct. 12, 2000) (statement of Sen. Warner) (“I am pleased to annоunce that the conference report to accompany the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 includes a permanent health care benefit for retirees-modeled on the Senate bill. I am delighted that we have honored the commitment of health care for life that was made to those who proudly served this nation. This is long overdue.”). We agree that the government made an unambiguous offer of free, lifetime health care, and that the retirees accepted that offer by their performance of career military service. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 45(1) (1981).
(4) Authority to Bind the Government
The government argues that any promise of free, lifetime health care is unenforceable for lack of express authority from Congress. In support, it cites
Federal Crop Ins. Corp. v. Merrill,
Merrill recognizes that legal authority may be delegated to agencies. The statute under which the military departments regulated military health care, 5 U.S.C. § 301, delegated broad legal authority to the secretaries to govern their respective military departments. Before 1956, promises of free, lifetime health care were well within the discretion and power of the secretaries. Funding by Congress of the military’s health care system confirmed this broad delegation. Congressional delegation of authority along with the absence of any contrary statutes or regulations in force at the time the retirees entered military service, gives the promises of free, lifetime health care made by recruiters, under the authority of the secretaries, the force of law and creates an implied-in-fact contract binding upon the government.
In
Lynch v. United States,
the Supreme Court examined Congress’ ability to avoid paying out benefits promised under a contract and contrasted it with congressional power over gratuities which can “be redistributed or withdrawn at any time in the discretion of Congress.”
This court has addressed a claim to free, lifetime health care brought by military retirees on another occasion. In
Sebastain
2
v. United States,
The Sebastain retirees made no claim of implied-in-fact contract, nor did they provide evidence, as in the record here, to support such a claim. To prevail on a taking claim under the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution (the sole theory in Se-bastain), there must first be a protected property interest; thus, the court’s analysis must be read in terms of determining whether the governing statutes and regulations, in and of themselves, establish a protected propеrty interest. That is not the issue here. 5 U.S.C. § 301 and the military regulations may not establish a protected property right under the Fifth Amendment, but they are evidence of the broad authority the military secretaries had to manage their departments, including creating packages of incentives to recruit and retain personnel for hazardous military duties, and to bind the government to contracts in furtherance of their statutory function to recruit service members. See, e.g., 10 U.S.C. §§ 3013, 5013, 8013 (1994) (The secretaries have “the authority necessary to conduct, all affairs of the Department[s] ..., including the following functions: (1) Recruiting....”).
We see no meaningful difference between the situation in Larionoff, where the statute explicitly authorized the reenlistment bоnus, and the present situation, where 5 U.S.C. § 301 delegates broad au *1290 thority to the secretaries to recruit service members; and the secretaries, through them agents the recruiters, promised free, lifetime health care to those who met certain service obligations. Prior to the enactment of 10 U.S.C. § 1074(b) in 1956, the secretaries had such authority and nothing-in the law or regulations precluded them from contracting to provide these benefits in exchange for twenty years of service. Though the authority from Congress was delegated rather than direct, the implied-in-fact contract to provide free, lifetime health care between Rеinlie and Schism and the government is no less binding on the government than the promise to pay a reenlistment bonus in Larionoff whose amount was based on a formula set well before the time at which it was to be paid.
When the government forced the retirees to rely on Medicare, it breached the implied-in-fact contract. In
Winstar Corp. v. United States,
In
Winstar,
the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, a federal agency acting under delegated Congressional authority, entered into agreements with several thrifts “to accord them particular regulatory treatment in exchange for their assumption of liabilities that threatened to produce claims against the Government as insurer.”
Winstar,
Here, the secretaries, acting under congressional authority delegated by 5 U.S.C. § 301, made implied-in-fact contracts to provide Schism and Reinlie and their dependents with free, lifetime health care provided they served for twenty years. This created a contractual right to that medical care that the passage of 10 U.S.C. §§ 1074(b) and 1076(b) could not divest. The notion that the fedеral government could avoid a contractual obligation through subsequent legislation would conflict with the government’s “own long-run interest as a reliable contracting partner in the myriad of workaday transactions of its agencies.”
Winstar,
The retirees entered active duty in the armed forces and completed at least twenty years service on the good faith belief that the government would fulfill its promises. The terms of the contract were set when the retirees еntered the service and fulfilled their obligation. The government cannot unilaterally amend the contract terms now. “In contracts involving the government, as with all contractual relationships, rights vest and contract terms become binding when, after arms length negotiation, all parties to the contract agree to exchange real obligations for real benefits.”
Winstar,
Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida is reversed and the case is remanded for determination of damages.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The National Security Act Amendments of 1949, Pub.L. No. 81-216, § 4, 63 Stat. 578, created the Department of Defense and redes-ignated the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, which had been executive departments, as military departments.
. Lead appellant’s name is misspelled; it should be Sebastian. However, while we will use the name as printed in the Federal Reporter, it should be noted that the case name is Sebastain v. United States in the prior and subsequent history.
. In light of Sebastain, we decline to address the retirees’ claim under the Fifth Amend-m'ent of the Constitution.
