Court Opinion

ID: 9427909
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:22:14.221588+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:23:10.462597
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Stevens
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On September 2, 1974, following almost a decade of studying the Nation’s private pension plans, Congress enacted the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 88 Stat. 829, 29 U. S. C. § 1001 et seq. As a predicate for this comprehensive and reticulated statute,1 Congress made de*362tailed findings which recited, in part, “that the continued well-being and security of millions of employees and their dependents are directly affected by these plans; [and] that owing to the termination of plans before requisite funds have been accumulated, employees and their beneficiaries have been deprived of anticipated benefits. . . .” ERISA § 2 (a), 29 U. S. C. § 1001 (a). As one of the means of protecting the interests of beneficiaries, Title IY of ERISA created a plan termination insurance program that became effective in successive stages. The question in this case is whether former employees of petitioner with vested interests in a plan that terminated the day before much of ERISA became fully effective are covered by the insurance program notwithstanding a provision in the plan limiting their benefits to the assets in the pension fund.
Stated in statutory terms, the question is whether a plan provision that limits otherwise defined, vested benefits to the amounts that can be provided by the assets of the fund prevents such benefits from being characterized as “nonforfeitable” within the meaning of § 4022 (a) of ERISA, 29 U. S. C. § 1322 (a).2 If the benefits are “nonforfeitable,” they are insured by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) under Title IV.3 And if insurance is payable to the *363former employees, the PBGC has a statutory right under § 4062 (b) to reimbursement from the employer.4 It was petitioner’s interest in avoiding liability for such reimbursement that gave rise to this action for declaratory and injunc-tive relief.
The relevant facts are undisputed. In 1960, pursuant to a collective-bargaining agreement, petitioner established a pension plan covering employees represented by the respondent union at its Chicago plant. The plan, as amended from time to time, provided for the payment of monthly benefits computed on the basis of age and years of service at the time of retirement.5 Benefits became “vested” — that is to say, the *364employee’s right to the benefit would survive a termination of his employment — after either 10 or 15 years of service. The 15-year vesting provisions would not have complied with the minimum vesting standards in Title I of ERISA that were to become effective on January 1, 1976,6 the day after termination of the plan.
Petitioner agreed to, and did, make regular contributions sufficient to cover accruing liabilities, to pay administrative expenses, and to amortize past service liability over a 30-year period.7 Consistent with the agreement and with accepted actuarial practice, it was anticipated that the plan would not be completely funded until 1990.
Petitioner retained the right to terminate the plan when the collective-bargaining agreement expired merely by giving 90 days’ notice of intent to do so. The agreement specified that upon termination the available funds, after payment of expenses, would be distributed to beneficiaries, classified by age and seniority, but only to the extent that assets were *365available. The critical provision of the agreement, Art. V, § 3, stated :
“Benefits provided for herein shall be only such benefits as can be provided by the assets of the fund. In the event of termination of this Plan, there shall be no liability or obligation on the part of the Company to make any further contributions to the Trustee except such contributions, if any, as on the effective date of such termination, may then be accrued but unpaid.” App. 24.8
In 1975 petitioner decided to close its Chicago plant. Its collective-bargaining agreement expired on October 31, 1975, and it terminated the pension plan covering the persons employed at that plant on December 31, 1975, the day before ERISA would have required significant changes in at least the vesting provisions of the plan. At that time 135 employees had accrued benefits with an average value of approximately $77 per month. Those benefits were concededly “vested in a contractual sense.” 9 The assets in the fund were sufficient to pay only about 35% of the vested benefits.
In 1976 petitioner filed an action against the PBGC, seeking a declaration that it has no liability under ERISA for any failure of the plan to pay all of the vested benefits in full, *366and an order enjoining the PBGC from taking actions inconsistent with that declaration. The District Court accepted petitioner’s contentions that the limitation of liability clause in the plan was valid on the date of termination, that the clause prevented the benefits at issue from being characterized as “nonforfeitable,” and that petitioner was therefore entitled to summary judgment. 436 F. Supp. 1334 (ND Ill. 1977).
The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed. 592 F. 2d 947 (1979). Relying on the definition of “nonforfeitable” in Title I of ERISA,10 the court concluded that the limitation of liability clause merely affected the extent to which the benefits could be collected, without qualifying the employees’ rights against the plan. This conclusion was buttressed *367by a comprehensive review of the legislative history in which Judge Sprecher noted that the words “vested” and “nonfor-feitable” had been used interchangeably throughout the congressional reports and debates, that the specific purpose of Title IV insurance was to protect employees from the kind of risk presented here (insufficient funds in the plan to cover vested benefits at termination), and that a contrary holding “would totally subvert the Congressional intent.” 11
Having construed the statute as it did, the Court of Appeals was required to confront petitioner’s constitutional argument that the imposition of a retroactive liability for the payment of unfunded, vested benefits that was not assumed under the collective-bargaining agreement, violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The Court of Appeals agreed that ERISA was not wholly prospective in that it applies to pension plans in existence before the effective date of the Act. It concluded, however, that Congress had adequately tempered the Act’s burdens on employers and that those burdens were sufficiently justified by the public purposes supporting the legislation.12
*368The petition for certiorari sought review of both the constitutional question and the question whether the statute had been properly construed to impose continuing liability on an employer that had lawfully terminated its plan prior to the effective date of the minimum vesting standards contained in Title I of ERISA. We granted certiorari, but limited our review to the statutory question. 442 U. S. 940.
Petitioner urges us to adopt a construction of the statute that would avoid the necessity of confronting constitutional questions,13 and correctly points out that new rules applying *369to pension funds “should not be applied retroactively unless the legislature has plainly commanded that result.” Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power v. Manhart, 435 U. S. 702, 721. But petitioner’s argument for reversal relies primarily on the language of the statutory definition of “nonforfeitable” contained in Title I, see n. 10, supra. If the Title I definition determines which benefits are insured under Title IV, benefits are not insured unless they are “unconditional” and “legally enforceable against the plan.” Since petitioner’s plan expressly states that benefits “shall be only such benefits as can be provided by the assets of the fund,” petitioner argues that those elements of the statutory definition are not satisfied. Therefore, the benefits are forfeitable and necessarily unin-surable. Thus, petitioner concludes, it is not liable to anyone under the statute for the fund’s inability to cover all vested benefits. Petitioner submits that this result is consonant with Congress’ decision to postpone the effective date of the minimum vesting and funding requirements of Title I until January 1, 1976. Petitioner interprets that postponement as having been intended, among other things, to allow employers the opportunity to avoid the harsh consequences of the statute’s retroactive application by freely terminating their plans at any time prior to that date.
We must reject petitioner’s argument. We first note that the plan provision on which petitioner relies, supra, at 365, read as a whole, merely disclaims direct employer liability and imposes no condition on the benefits. See n. 8, supra, and n. 17, infra. Thus, petitioner’s argument is not supported by a purely literal reading of the definition on which it relies and is inconsistent with the clear language, structure and purpose of Title IV. Since, we construe petitioner’s plan as containing only an employer liability disclaimer clause, we cannot accept its statutory argument without virtually eviscerating Title IV as applied to plans terminating prior to January 1, 1976. Such a result not only would be contrary to the four-stage phase-in of the program of insurance and employer *370liability designed by Congress, but also would impose an extraordinarily harsh and plainly unintended burden on employers by operation of Title I after that date. We first consider petitioner’s textual argument divorced from the statute as a whole; we next examine the structure and history of Title IV; and we finally explain how petitioner’s proposed construction would distort the orderly phase-in of the statutory program designed by Congress.
I
The statutory issue presented in the case is whether petitioner’s employees’ benefits are “nonforfeitable . . . under the terms of a plan” within the meaning of § 4022 (a) of the Act. See n. 2, supra. Petitioner concedes that its employees’ benefits are “vested in a contractual sense.” The question is whether such benefits were insured under Title IV when the plan was terminated even though the plan expressly provided that petitioner was not liable if the plan’s assets were insufficient to cover them.
The key statutory term, “nonforfeitable benefits,” is nowhere defined in Title IV. Petitioner relies on the definition of “nonforfeitable” in Title I, § 3 (19), see n. 10, supra. But definitions in that section are not necessarily applicable to Title IV, because they are limited by the introductory phrase, “For purposes of this title.”14 Nothing in the statute or its legislative history tells us why the Title I definition of “non-*371forfeitable” is not made expressly applicable to Title IV. The legislative history does disclose, however, that earlier versions of what finally emerged as the Title I definition would unquestionably have covered the benefits at stake in this litigation, and that those earlier versions applied to the entire Act including the termination insurance provisions.15 If we assume that the original intent to have the definition apply to the entire statute survived the unexplained changes in the form of the definition, we should likewise assume that no change was intended in the substantive coverage of the insurance program. Indeed, as we shall demonstrate,16 the latter assumption is supported by the legislative history. But even assuming, arguendo, that the Title I definition controls and even if the legislative history were less clear than it is, three aspects of the Title I definition itself refute petitioner’s argument that the “nonforfeitable” character of a participant’s rights should be determined by focusing on whether the employer is liable for any deficiency in the fund’s assets.
First, the principal subject of the definition is the word “claim”; it is the claim to the benefit, rather than the benefit itself, that must be “unconditional” and “legally enforceable against the plan.” It is self-evident that a claim may remain valid and legally enforceable even though, as a practical matter, it may not be collectible from the assets of the obligor.
Second, the statutory definition refers to enforceability against “the plan.” The only practical significance of the contractual provision limiting liability is to provide protection *372for the employer. With or without such a clause, the pension fund could pay no more than the amount of assets on hand. Giving the employer protection against liability does not qualify the beneficiary’s rights against the plan itself.17
Third, the term “forfeiture” normally connotes a total loss in consequence of some event rather than a limit on the value of a person’s rights. Each of the examples of a plan provision that is expressly described as not causing a forfeiture listed in §203 (a) (3), see n. 10, supra, describes an event — such as *373death or temporary re-employment — that might otherwise be construed as causing a forfeiture of the entire benefit. It is therefore surely consistent with the statutory definition of “nonforfeitable” to view it as describing the quality of the participant’s right to a pension rather than a limit on the amount he may collect.
This reading of the Title I definition accords with the interpretation of the term “nonforfeitable” in Title IV adopted by the agency responsible for administering the Title IV insurance program. The PBGC has promulgated regulations containing a completely unambiguous definition of the term18 and has been paying benefits to over 12,000 participants in terminated plans on the basis of this understanding of its statutory responsibilities.19 We surely may not reject this *374contemporary construction of the statute by the PBGC20 without a careful examination of Title IV and its underlying legislative history to see what benefits Congress intended to insure.
II
One of Congress’ central purposes in enacting this complex legislation was to prevent the “great personal tragedy”21 suffered by employees whose vested benefits are not paid when pension plans are terminated.22 Congress found “that owing *375to the inadequacy of current minimum standards, the soundness and stability of plans with respect to adequate funds to pay promised benefits may be endangered; that owing to the termination of plans before requisite funds have been accumulated, employees and their beneficiaries have been deprived of anticipated benefits.” ERISA §2 (a), 88 Stat. 832, 29 U. S. C. § 1001 (a). Congress wanted to correct this condition by making sure that if a worker has been promised a defined pension benefit upon retirement — and if he has fulfilled whatever conditions are required to obtain a vested benefit — he actually will receive it. The termination insurance program is a major part of Congress’ response to the problem. Congress provided for a minimum funding schedule and prescribed standards of conduct for plan administrators to make as certain as possible that pension fund assets would be adequate. But if a plan nonetheless terminates without sufficient assets to pay all vested benefits, the PBGC is required to pay them — within certain dollar limitations not applicable here — 23 from funds established by that corporation.
*376Throughout the entire legislative history, from the initial proposals to the Conference Report, the legislators consistently described the class of pension benefits to be insured as “vested benefits.” 24 Petitioner recognizes, as it must, that the terms “vested” and “nonforfeitable” were used synonymously.25 *377Since Title IV neither uses nor defines the term “vested,” 26 it is reasonable to infer that the term “nonforfeitable” was intended to describe benefits that were generally considered *378“vested” prior to the statute. And it is clear that the normal usage in the pension field was that even if the actual realization of expected benefits might depend on the sufficiency of plan assets, they were nonetheless considered vested.27
There is no evidence that Congress intended to exclude otherwise vested benefits from the insurance program solely because the employer had disclaimed liability for any deficiency in the pension fund. Indeed, there is strong evidence to the contrary. Congress understood that pension plans ordinarily contained disclaimer provisions of the sort petitioner relies on here.28 Given that understanding, the Title *379IV insurance program would have been wholly inapplicable to most pension plans. Since only the few plans in which the employer had not disclaimed liability would have been covered, the only purpose in providing any insurance at all would be to protect employees against the risk of employer insolvency.29
But §4062 (b)(2), 29 U. S. C. § 1362 (b)(2), see n. 4, supra — the reimbursement provision — demonstrates that insolvency was certainly not the only focus of Congress’ concern. The very fact that § 4062 (b)(2) requires employers to reimburse the PBGC for the payment of insured benefits makes it clear that Congress not only was worried about plan terminations resulting from business failures but also was concerned about the termination of underfunded plans by solvent employers.30 Of even greater significance is the pro*380vision limiting the amount of employer liability for reimbursement to 30% of the employer’s net worth. The 30% limit plainly contemplates the situation in which the employer has disclaimed direct liability; for if the employer were directly liable to the employees for the full amount of any funding deficiency, the 30% limitation would serve no useful purpose.31 That this 30% limit would be meaningless unless the employer has disclaimed direct liability surely demonstrates that Congress did not intend such a disclaimer to *381render otherwise vested benefits “forfeitable” within the meaning of § 4022.32
Petitioner’s reading of the statute would limit any meaningful application of the insurance program prior to January 1, 1976, to only those cases involving insolvent employers that had not disclaimed direct liability. Since the legislative history clearly shows that Congress intended to cover terminations by solvent employers, and further shows that disclaimer clauses were widely used, petitioner is ultimately contending that Congress did not intend to create any significant employer reimbursement liability prior to January 1, 1976. This argument, however, is foreclosed by á consideration of the statutory provisions for successive increases in the burdens associated with plan terminations. Congress clearly did not offer employers an opportunity to make cost-free terminations at any time prior to January 1, 1976. Quite the contrary, one *382of the express purposes of ERISA was to discourage plan terminations. See n. 3, supra.
1 — 1 HH
We have previously noted the care with which Congress approached the problem of retroactivity in ERISA. See Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power v. Manhart, 435 U. S., at 721-722, n. 40. Congress provided that Title IV should have an increasingly severe yet carefully limited impact on employers during four successive periods of time for single-employer plans. During each of these periods, however, it extended the same insurance protection to those beneficiaries of terminated plans having vested benefits under the terms of the plans.
Title IV became effective as soon as ERISA was enacted on September 2, 1974, § 4082 (a), 29 U. S. C. § 1381 (a), and indeed was expressly made partially retroactive in order to provide insurance coverage to participants whose plans terminated after June 30, 1974, § 4082 (b), 29 U. S. C. § 1381 (b). The measure of coverage, at the outset, was the difference between the employee’s vested benefits under the terms of the plan (subject to the dollar limitations in § 4022 (b)(3), see n. 23, supra) and the amount that could be paid from the terminated plan’s assets. However, the employer liability provision, § 4062, was not made effective at all during this initial period — June 30 to September 2, 1974. The PBGC was thus given no right to recover any part of the insured deficiencies from employers that terminated their plans before the Act became effective.33
*383The second period lasted for 270 days after the enactment of ERISA, or until the end of May 1975. Again, the PBGC provided insurance coverage for most underfunded nonfor-feitable benefits under the terms of a pension plan terminated during this period. But two important additional provisions became effective: § 4062 (b), the section creating employer liability to the PBGC, and §4004 (f)(4), 88 Stat. 1009, 29 U. S. C. § 1304 (f)(4).34 The latter authorized the PBGC to waive entirely, or to reduce, its right to recover insurance payments from any employer who could establish unreasonable hardship in situations in which the employer was not able, as a practical matter, to continue its plan in effect. Section 4004 (f) (4) unequivocally demonstrates that Congress had deliberately imposed a new liability upon an employer that terminated its plan during the first nine months of the operation of the Act. If the employer had a pre-existing contractual liability, there would have been no effective way for the PBGC to mitigate it in hardship cases, since the PBGC could not stop the employees from suing the employer directly. Moreover, there would have been no need for insurance except in cases of insolvency, and in such cases there would have been no practical reason for mitigation because recovery from the employer would have been impossible in any event. On the other hand, in the typical case in which the employer had protected itself from any contractual liability, the only possible source of employer liability was *384§ 4062’s provision for the recovery by the PBGC of insurance payments made on account of unsatisfied nonforfeitable benefits. Petitioner’s definition of nonforfeitable benefits as excluding from Title IV coverage all benefits for which the employer is not directly liable would have made § 4004 (f) (4) totally inapplicable in the only cases in which it could have possibly made any difference.
The third period lasted for about seven months until December 31, 1975, the termination date of petitioner’s plan. Having terminated more than 270 days after the Act became effective, petitioner was not eligible for a hardship waiver. Its contingent liability, however, was smaller than it would have been had it terminated its plan in the fourth period. During the third period, the terms of the pension plan still measured the outer limits of the unfunded liability. Had petitioner waited another day to terminate, Title I’s vesting standards would have become effective, thereby increasing the number of employees whose benefits would have become vested, see n. 6, supra, and therefore insurable under Title IV. Petitioner avoided this additional liability by terminating in the third period.
Under petitioner’s reading of the statute, there was a much more dramatic difference between the third period and the fourth period than we have just described. The argument that an employer liability disclaimer clause renders a plan’s benefits forfeitable has two draconian consequences: first, it makes the Title IV insurance program entirely inapplicable to most terminations before January 1, 1976; second, it makes such disclaimer clauses entirely invalid on and after that date. This latter conclusion flows directly from Title I’s command that all covered pension plans provide nonforfeitable benefits on and after January 1, 1976. See n. 10, supra.
But Congress plainly did not intend to prevent employers from limiting their potential direct liability to their em*385ployees. There is not a word in the statute or its legislative history suggesting that Congress ever intended to outlaw the use of such clauses.35 On the contrary, the inclusion of a limit on an employer’s contingent reimbursement liability to the PBGC measured by 30% of its net worth would be inexplicable if Congress had intended to deny employers any right to place a contractual limit on their direct liability to their employees. We stress that petitioner’s construction of the statute would therefore render meaningless §4062 (b)’s 30% net worth limit on the employer’s contingent liability to the PBGC for all terminations occurring after January 1, 1976. In light of the careful attention paid to when various provisions were to be effective, Congress surely would have made explicit any intent to limit this important provision to a mere transitionary role. It bears emphasis that Congress declined to adopt the suggestion that corporate assets be committed to guarantee any pension obligations which exist at termination.36 The 30% provision was designed as a softer measure.37
In sum, petitioner reads the statute as authorizing cost-free terminations prior to January 1, 1976, and full liability for all promised benefits thereafter with neither dollar nor *386net worth limitations. We are convinced that Congress envisioned a quite different scheme. Congress intended to discourage unnecessary terminations even during the phase-in period, and to place a reasonable ceiling on the potential cost of terminations during the principal life of the Act — the period after January 1, 1976. Although the impact of our holding on petitioner and others who lawfully terminated plans during the second half of 1975 may seem harsh, we have no doubt as to what Congress intended. We cannot give the statute a special reading for that brief period without distorting it for the remainder of its statutory life.
Accordingly, the judgment is

Affirmed.

 Title I of ERISA, § 2 ei seq., 29 U. S. C. § 1001 et seq., requires administrators of all covered pension plans to file periodic reports with the Secretary of Labor, mandates minimum participation, vesting and funding schedules, establishes standards of fiduciary conduct for plan administrators, and provides for civil and criminal enforcement of the Act. Title II, ERISA § 1001 et seq., amended various provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 pertaining to qualification of pension plans for special tax treatment, in order, among other things, to conform to the standards set forth in Title I. Title III, ERISA §§3001-3043, 29 U. S. C. §1201 et seq., contains provisions designed to coordinate enforcement efforts of different federal departments, and provides for further study of the field. And, most relevant in this case, Title IV, ERISA §§ 4001-4082, 29 U. S. C. § 1301 et seq., created the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) *362and a termination insurance program to protect employees against the loss of “nonforfeitable” benefits upon termination of pension plans that lack sufficient funds to pay such benefits in full.

 That section provides, in part:
“Subject to the [dollar] limitations contained in subsection (b) [see n. 23, infra], the [PBGC] shall guarantee the payment of all nonforfeitable benefits (other than benefits becoming nonforfeitable solely on account of the termination of a plan) under the terms of a plan which terminates at a time when section 4021 applies to it.” 88 Stat. 1016.

 Section 4002 (a), 88 Stat. 1004, 29 U. S. C. § 1302 (a), provides:
“There is established within the Department of Labor a body corporate to be known as the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. In carrying out its functions under this title, the corporation shall be administered by the chairman of the board of directors in accordance with poli*363cies established by the board. The purposes of this title, which are to be carried out by the corporation, are—
"(1) to encourage the continuation and maintenance of voluntary private pension plans for the benefit of their participants,
"(2) to provide for' the timely and uninterrupted payment of pension benefits to participants and beneficiaries under plans to which this title applies, and
“(3) to maintain premiums established by the corporation under section 4006 at the lowest level consistent with carrying out its obligations under this title.”

 Section 4062 (b), 88 Stat. 1029, 29 U. S. C. § 1362 (b), provides in part:
“Any employer to which this section applies shall be liable to the corporation, in an amount equal to the lesser of—
“(1) the excess of—
“(A) the current value of the plan’s benefits guaranteed under this title on the date of termination over
"(B) the current value of the plan’s assets allocable to such benefits on the date of termination, or
“(2) 30 percent of the net worth of the employer. . . .”
In other words, the employer must reimburse the PBGC for payments made from PBGC funds to cover nonforfeitable benefits to the extent that the pension fund was unable to pay them, but in no event is the employer liable to the PBGC for more than 30% of its net worth.

 Like the plan described in Alabama Power Co. v. Davis, 431 U. S. 581, 593, n. 18, “ [petitioner's plan is a 'defined benefit’ plan, under which *364the benefits to be received by employees are fixed and the employer’s contribution is adjusted to whatever level is necessary to provide those benefits. The other basic type of pension is a 'defined contribution’ plan, under which the employer’s contribution is fixed and the employee receives whatever level of benefits the amount contributed on his behalf will provide.” ERISA’s termination insurance program does not apply to defined contribution plans, see §4021 (b)(1), 29 U. S. C. §1321 (b)(1), for the reason that under such plans, by definition, there can never be an insufficiency of funds in the plan to cover promised benefits.

 ERISA §211 (b)(2), 29 U. S. C. §1061 (b)(2). The provision for vesting of normal and early retirement rights after 10 years of service would have complied with the new standards unless, as petitioner argues, the clause disclaiming direct liability of the employer for benefits not sufficiently covered by the pension fund prevented the benefits from being “nonforfeitable” within the meaning of ERISA § 3 (19), 29 U. S. C. § 1002 (19). See discussion in n. 10, and Part III, infra, at 384-385.

 Persons employed by the company when the plan was created were entitled to credit for their prior years of employment in calculating both their eligibility for pensions and the amount of their benefits on retirement.

 By quoting only the first of these two sentences, Mr. Justice Stewart’s dissenting opinion creates the impression that this provision is part of the plan’s definition of benefits. Reading the two sentences together, however, makes it clear that the provision is simply a typical disclaimer of employer liability for any deficiency in the assets of the fund.
Mr. Justice Stewart’s dissenting opinion quotes at length from Art. X, § 3, the plan provision determining the order of distribution of fund assets upon termination. Post, at 389-390, n. 7. Again, that provision does not purport to be a part of the definition of benefits, but simply provides a schedule for the distribution of benefits upon termination. Moreover, the dissent is quite wrong in stating that this distribution provision may have become illegal after December 31, 1975, post, at 390, n. 8. If that provision has been superseded, it was by § 4044, 29 U. S. C. § 1344, see n. 32, infra, which became effective on September 2,1974.

 Brief for Petitioner 28.

 The definition section of Title I, § 3, 88 Stat. 833, 836, 29 U. S. C. § 1002, provides that “[f]or purposes of this title:

“(19) The term 'nonforfeitable’ when used with respect to a pension benefit or right means a claim obtained by a participant or his beneficiary to that part of an immediate or deferred benefit under a pension plan which arises from the participant’s service, which is unconditional, and which is legally enforceable against the plan. For purposes of this paragraph, a right to an accrued benefit derived from employer contributions shall not be treated as forfeitable merely because the plan contains a provision described in section 203 (a)(3).”
Section 203 (a) (3), 29 U. S. C. § 1053 (a) (3), also part of Title I, provides that the right to accrued benefits shall not be treated as forfeitable merely because the plan provides that they are not payable under certain specified conditions, such as the death or temporary re-employment of the participant. None of the listed conditions relates to insufficient funding.
Section 203 (a) is a central provision in ERISA. It requires generally that a plan treat an employee’s benefits, to the extent that they have vested by virtue of his having fulfilled age and length of service requirements no greater than those specified in § 203 (a) (2), as not subject to forfeiture. A provision in a plan which purports to sanction forfeiture of vested benefits for any reason, other than one listed in subsection (a)(3), would violate this section after January 1, 1976, its effective date. Thus, if we were to accept petitioner’s argument that the limitation of direct liability clause renders the vested benefits forfeitable within the meaning of the Title I definition, that clause would be invalid after January 1, 1976.

 592 F. 2d, at 958.

 “Perhaps the most important facts distinguishing ERISA from the Minnesota statute in Allied Structural Steel [Co. v. Spannaus, 438 U. S. 234,] are those revealing the Congressional attempt to moderate the impact of the liability imposed. Title IV provisions represent a rational attempt to impose liability only to the extent necessary to achieve the legislative purpose. Congress concluded that it was necessary to insure unfunded vested benefits and established a federal corporation for that purpose. However, it was also determined that it would not be possible to maintain an effective insurance program without imposing some liability on employers. The abuses employer liability was designed to cure included terminations motivated by a desire to avoid the continued burden of funding. Ill Legislative History at 4741 (remarks of Sen. Williams); II Legislative History at 3382 (remarks of Rep. Gaydos). Congress was also concerned that without the risk of liability, employers might use promises of higher retirement benefits for bargaining leverage, knowing that the PBGC would be required to fulfill the promise. S. Rep. No. 93-383, I Legislative History at 1155. It was also believed that to impose liability *368would cause employers to assume a more responsible funding schedule. II Legislative History at 1873 (remarks of Sen. Griffin). These first two considerations would not have been relevant in the Minnesota scheme because no agency was established to assume primary responsibility for the payment of benefits.
"Acknowledging that employers on the verge of bankruptcy would be unlikely to terminate pension plans solely to take advantage of termination insurance, Congress provided net worth limitations on the amount of potential liability. 29 U. S. C. § 1362. Congress also devised other provisions to temper the burdens imposed. Employers will not necessarily be liable for the full amount of benefits promised in the plan, since Congress set a level on the amount of benefits guaranteed. 29 U. S. C. § 1322 (b) (3). In Section 1323 Congress required the PBGC to provide optional insurance to an employer who desires to protect against this contingent liability. Finally, Title IV grants the PBGC discretion to arrange reasonable terms for the payment of liability. 29 U. S. C. § 1367. Thus Title IV of ERISA, unlike the statutes invalidated under Due Process or the Contract Clause does have 'limitations as to time, amount, circumstances, [and] need.’ W. B. Worthen Co. v. Thomas, 292 U. S. [426,] 434. . . .
“The record supporting the enactment of ERISA, wholly unlike that present in Allied Structured Steel, demonstrates that 'the presumption favoring “legislative judgment as to the necessity and reasonableness of a particular measure’” must be allowed to govern here. 438 U. S., at 247. . . . Turner Elkhorn Mining, 428 U. S., at 18, 19 ... ; Williamson v. Lee Optical Co., 348 U. S. 483, 488 .. . (1955). Title IV of ERISA satisfies Nachman’s rights to Due Process.” 592 F. 2d, at 962-963 (footnotes omitted).

 See, e. g., Rescue Army v. Municipal Court, 331 U. S. 549, 568-569.

 The argument that the definition of “nonforfeitable” in § 3 (19) is directly applicable only in Title I is reinforced by the fact that Title I definitions are occasionally expressly incorporated by reference in Title IV. See, e. g., § 4021 (a) (1), 29 U. S. C. § 1321 (a) (1), which provides in part, “this section applies to any plan . . . which, for a plan year ... is an employee pension benefit plan (as defined in paragraph (2) of section 3 of this Act). . . .” This specific incorporation suggests that Title I definitions do not apply elsewhere in the Act of their own force, though they may otherwise reflect the meaning of the terms defined as used in other Titles.

 For example, the bill originally introduced in the House defined “nonforfeitable pension benefit” as “a legal claim obtained by a participant or his beneficiary to that part of an immediate or deferred pension benefit, which notwithstanding any conditions subsequent which could affect receipt of any benefit flowing from such right, arises from the participant’s service and is no longer contingent on continued service.” H. R. 2, 93d Cong., 1st Sess., § 3 (20) (1973), 1 Legislative History of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., 12 (Comm. Print 1976) (hereinafter Leg. Hist.).

 See nn. 24r-27, infra.

 The dissenting opinions rely entirely on the form of the contractual provision protecting the employer against liability beyond its agreed contributions. Thus, if instead of stating that the benefits "shall be only such benefits as can be provided by the assets of the fund” the plan had said the benefits “shall only be recoverable from the assets of the fund,” the dissenters would presumably agree that the benefits would be insured under Title IV. Nothing in the statute or its legislative history suggests that Congress intended the rights of the employees to hinge on any such purely formal difference between two plan provisions that would have precisely the same legal significance apart from the statute.
Indeed, under the dissenters’ reading of the plan provision, insurance coverage would be unavailable regardless of the reason for the fund’s inability to pay the vested benefits in full; whether the shortage resulted from insolvency of the employer, a defalcation by the trustees of the fund, or the unilateral termination before the plan was fully funded, Title IV insurance would be simply unavailable.
In the text, we explain at length why a clause limiting an employer’s liability does not make otherwise vested benefits forfeitable within the meaning of the Act. The dissenters do not question the validity of any part of that explanation. Since what Mr. Justice Stewart describes as an “asset-sufficiency limitation,” post, at 391, in the context of this case, is merely an example of such a clause, our explanation applies with full force to that formulation. Merely to assert that there is a “world of difference” between two forms of employer protection — without considering whether there is any reason to believe Congress intended such a difference to govern the availability of insurance protection for employees — is an unacceptable approach to the problem of statutory construction presented by this case. Understandably, the dissenting opinions do not suggest that there is anything in the legislative history of ERISA to support the view that the availability of insurance coverage should turn on the form of a plan provision disclaiming employer liability for unfunded benefits.

 The definition promulgated by the PBGC states that “a benefit payable with respect to a participant is considered to be nonforfeitable, if on the date of termination of the plan the participant (or beneficiary) has satisfied all of the conditions required of him under the provisions of the plan to establish entitlement to the benefit, except the submission of a formal application, retirement, [or] the completion of a required waiting period. . . .” 29 CFR §2605.6 (a) (1979).
Petitioner all but concedes that it loses if this definition accurately reflects the meaning of “nonforfeitable” in Title IV. Petitioner argues, in a footnote in its brief, that the word, “payable,” modifies “benefit” in such a way as to exclude the benefits under its plan since liability of the employer to pay them was expressly disclaimed. If that is what the PBGC intended when it promulgated its definition, it has certainly chosen a strangely vague manner of making that intent known.

 The Treasury Department’s definition of “nonforfeitable,” 26 CFR § 1.411 (a)-4 (a) (1979), provides in part:
“Rights which are conditioned upon a sufficiency of plan assets in the event of a termination or partial termination are considered to be for-feitable because of such condition. However, a plan does not violate the nonforfeitability requirements merely because in the event of a termination an employee does not have any recourse toward satisfaction of his nonforfeitable benefits from other than the plan assets or the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.”
Because we read petitioner’s plan as containing only an employer liability disclaimer clause, this case is clearly governed only by the second quoted *374sentence of the regulation. Moreover, we assume this accords with the Treasury Department’s views, since the PBGC’s brief was approved by the Treasury Department. See also n. 36, infra. Of course, a provision in a plan which is construed as a condition, the failure of which would cause a forfeiture, would be invalid after January 1, 1976. See n. 10, supra.

 Cf., e. g., E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Collins, 432 U. S. 46, 55.

 The quotation is from a statement by Senator Bentsen, the member of the Senate Committee on Finance most active in sponsoring ERISA, reprinted in 3 Leg. Hist. 4793.

 See, e. g., the following statement by Senator Williams, a sponsor of the Senate version of ERISA:
“Another reason why so many employees have found their pension expectations to be illusory is that the employer may shut down, and if there are insufficient funds to meet the vested claims of the participants, they have no recourse.
“A classic case, of course, is the shutdown of Studebaker operations in South Bend, Ind., in 1963, with the result that 4,500 workers lost 85 percent of their vested benefits because the plan had insufficient assets to pay its liabilities.
“While- this was a spectacularly tragic instance, it was by no means unique. Last year, for example, P. Ballantine and Sons, a substantial contributor to a multiemployer plan, sold its operations and withdrew from the plan.
“Because the plan did not have sufficient assets to cover vested liabilities, several hundred employees, with as many as 30 years service, will lose a substantial portion of their vested benefits.
“These, of course, are by no means isolated cases. According to a recently-issued study by the Departments of Labor and Treasury, over 19,000 workers lost vested benefits last year because of the termination of insufficiently funded plans.” 2 Leg. Hist. 1599-1600.

 Section 4022 (b)(3), 88 Stat. 1017, 29 U. S. C. §1322 (b)(3), provides:
“The amount of monthly benefits described in subsection (a) provided by a plan, which are guaranteed under this section with respect to a participant, shall not have an actuarial value which exceeds the actuarial value of a monthly benefit in the form of a life annuity commencing at age 65 equal to the lesser of—
“(A) his average monthly gross income from his employer during the 5 consecutive calendar year period (or, if less, during the number of calendar years in such period in which he actively participates in the plan) during which his gross income from the employer was greater than during any other such period with that employer determined by dividing V12 of the sum of all such gross income by the number of such calendar years in which he had such gross income, or
“(B) $750 multipliéd by a fraction, the numerator of which is the contribution and benefit base (determined under section 230 of the Social Security Act) in effect at the time the plan terminates and the denomina*376tor of which is such contribution and benefit base in effect in calendar year 1974.
“The provisions of this paragraph do not apply to non-basic benefits.”
In other words, Title IV generally limits guaranteed benefits to a worker’s average monthly wage over the worker's best five years with the employer or $750 per month (adjusted for cost of living), whichever is lower. The last quoted sentence reflects that the PBGC is authorized to guarantee the payment of greater benefits, but is not required to do so. See § 4022 (c), 29 U. S. C. § 1322 (c).

 See, e. g., S. Rep. No. 93-127, pp. 2, 24 (1973), 1 Leg. Hist, 588, 610; H. R. Rep. No. 93-533, pp. 2, 14, 25 (1973), 2 Leg. Hist. 2349, 2361, 2372; Summary of Differences between the Senate and the House Version of H. R. 2, pp. 7-9 (1974), in 3 Leg. Hist, 5213-5215; H. R. Conf. Rep. No. 93-1280, p. 368 (1974), 3 Leg. Hist. 4635: “Under the conference substitute [which was adopted by both Houses], vested retirement benefits guaranteed by the plan (other than benefits vesting only because of the termination) are to be covered to the extent of the insurance limitations. . . .” Mr. Justice Stewart’s dissent acknowledges this language from the Conference Report, post, at 393, but draws an unsupportable inference from it. He emphasizes that it is only “ ‘vested retirement benefits guaranteed, by the plan’ ” that are insured. The emphasized language was used by the Conference Committee, however, not to describe the nature of vested benefits that were to be insured under Title IV, but to distinguish the rejected narrower House provision, under which only those benefits that Title I of ERISA required to be vested would be insured. H. R. Conf. Rep. No. 93-1280, supra, at 368, 3 Leg. Hist, 4635. See also 592 F. 2d, at 954, n. 9. Thus, the quoted language, which tracks the language of § 4022 verbatim — except that “vested” is used in place of “nonforfeitable” — merely underscores the intent to insure all vested benefits.

 Brief for Petitioner 28-29: “the Congressional history shows the use of the word ‘vested’ interchangeably with the word ‘nonforfeitable’. . . .”
See also the definition contained in S. 4 as reported on April 18, .1973, § 3 (26), 1 Leg. Hist. 494r-495, which, when proposed, applied to the *377entire Act including the termination insurance provisions: “ ‘Nonforfeitable right’ or ‘vested right’ means a legal claim obtained to that part of an immediate or deferred life annuity which notwithstanding any conditions subsequent which could affect receipt of any benefit flowing from such right, arises from the participant’s covered service under the plan, and is no longer contingent on the participant remaining covered by the plan.”
In that same version of the bill, the predecessor of §4022 stated that the “insurance program shall insure participants . . . against loss of benefits derived from vested rights. . . S. 4 § 402 (a), 1 Leg. Hist. 532.
There is no explanation in the legislative history for the substitution of “nonforfeitable” for “vested.” Since it is clear from the remainder of the legislative history that "vested” benefits were to be insured, we view the substitution of “nonforfeitable” for “vested” as formal only. The Court of Appeals’ explanation for the substitution is plausible: “The substitution of terms might be explained by reference to the testimony of members from the Department of Labor at the hearings. The Department testified in 1973 that ‘there is a problem of defining the accrued benefit which will be insured. . . . [W]e probably need to get some consistency between accrued benefits definition for purposes of Internal Revenue as well as for purposes of termination insurance.’ Hearings before the Subcommittee on Private Pension Plans of the Senate Committee on Finance, 93rd Cong., 1st Sess., Part I at 437. Senator Bentsen responded with some interest in consistent definitions, although emphasizing it was vested benefits Congress intended to insure. Id., at 443. The Internal Revenue Code used the word ‘nonforfeitable,’ rather than ‘vested,’ in its regulation of plan terminations pre-ERISA. See Treas. Reg. § 1.401-6 (1963).” 592 F. 2d, at 955, n. 10.

 There is a Title I definition of “vested liabilities,” which provides that, “[t]he term ‘vested liabilities’ means the present value of the immediate or deferred benefits available at normal retirement age for participants and their beneficiaries which are nonforfeitable.” ERISA § 3 (25), 88 St-at. 837, 29 U. S. C. § 1002 (25). Although, as noted earlier, see n. 14, supra, Title I definitions are not directly applicable to Title IV, it suffices to say that the synonymous use of “vested” and “nonforfeitable” in this definition as well as throughout the legislative history does not make any easier petitioner’s task of distinguishing the two terms for Title IV purposes.

 “Under the pre-ERISA terminology, one author clarified that although benefit claims in fact were conditioned on the availability of funds in the trust, they were not to be considered conditional rights:
“ Tn a basic contradiction to the pure legal concept of vesting, the Benefit under a pension plan that is described as vested, is, in the usual ease . . . contingent . . . upon survival . . . [and] upon the availability of assets in the plan. In principle, however, this is no different from some other types of vested property rights such as those embodied in bonds and promissory notes that may not be honored at maturity because of the financial condition of the promisor. In essence, therefore, the vesting of a pension benefit simply means that the realization of the benefit is no longer contingent upon the individual’s remaining in the service óf the employer to normal retirement age.’
“D. McGill, Preservation of Pension Benefit Rights, 6 (1972). See also Departments of Treasury and Labor, Study of Pension Plan Terminations 1972, 19 (1973).” 592 F. 2d, at 953-954.

 See S. Rep. No. 92-634, Interim Report of Activities of the Private Welfare and Pension Plan Study, 1971, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, p. 74 (1972): “Employers ordinarily have no financial responsibility for pension payments beyond the contributions they are committed to make.”
See also remarks of Representative Erlenborn, 2 Leg. Hist. 3388:
“At the present time the legal foundation of pension plans is that the employer sets up a pension trust and promises to make periodic contributions into that trust. If there are sufficient assets, the employee will get the pension that has been described; if there are not, he does not get it; he gets something less. But the employer up until the present time gen*379erally has not made a promise to pay the pension, only to make periodic contributions.”
Cf. S. Rep. No. 93-127, p. 10 (1973), 1 Leg. Hist. 596, noting that some “critics have proposed that corporate assets be committed to guarantee any pension obligations which exist at termination,” which implies that the problem was largely due to the absence of any direct guarantee by the employer. That proposal was not adopted. Congress opted instead for the insurance system run by the PBGC, with limited employer liability over to the PBGC.
Cf. also Affidavit of Joseph E. Ellinger, Director of the Office of Pro-gram Operations of the PBGC: “Since September 2, 1974, the PBGC has assumed liability for approximately 136 insufficient pension plans terminating on or before December 31, 1975. ... Of these plans, approximately 78 have limitation-of-liability provisions like the pension plan involved in this lawsuit.” App. 74.

 Under petitioner’s view, unless the employer is directly liable, the benefits are uninsured. Accepting that view, it would only be in a case in which an employer is insolvent that the insurance program would make any practical difference, since otherwise the employee could sue the employer directly.

 See remarks of Senator Williams following the conference, 3 Leg. Hist. 4741-4742: “Since there would be a possibility of abuse by solvent employers who terminate a plan and shift the financial burden to the *380insurance program, notwithstanding their own financial ability to continue funding the plan, the conference bill imposes liability on employers whose plans terminate, to reimburse the program for benefits paid by the corporation. This liability extends to 30 percent of the employer’s net worth.”
Congress was not acting in a vacuum. The threat of terminations of underfunded plans by solvent employers was quite real. In a 1972 study of pension plan terminations, published in 1973 by the Departments of the Treasury and Labor, it was reported, p. 55, that “the great majority of claimants with losses, including high-priority claimants, are in plans of employers whose net worth substantially exceeds benefit losses.” Indeed, “[o]ver-alI, only 3 percent of claimants with losses were in plans where employer net worth was less than the value of benefits lost while 71 percent of the claimants with losses were in plans where employer net worth was at least 1,000 percent of claimant losses.” Id., at 61. This study was repeatedly relied on by Congress. See, e. g., S. Rep. No. 93-127, p. 10 (1973), 1 Leg. Hist. 596; remarks of Senator Williams, n. 22, supra; remarks of Representative Thompson, one of the House conferees on the final bill, 3 Leg. Hist. 4665.
The 30% limitation reflects the fear expressed during the debates that if too great a burden is placed directly on employers, growth of pension plans would be discouraged. See remarks of Representative Erlenbom, 2 id., at 3403.

 If the employer pays the unfunded portion of the benefits, there would be no need for insurance and, of course, no need for any reimbursement at all. On the other hand, if the employer is liable to the employees but has insufficient assets to pay the full benefits, there obviously would be insufficient funds to reimburse the PBGC and the 30% limit would therefore be irrelevant.

 Another indication that benefits are not forfeitable within the meaning of Title IV solely because the employer has disclaimed direct liability is § 4044, 29 U. S. C. § 1344, which establishes the priority scheme for allocation of assets upon termination. The fifth priority is “all other non-forfeitable benefits under the plan.” That implies that the four prior categories all involve nonforfeitable benefits as well, as one might expect. Subsection (b) (2) states the rule that if the assets “are insufficient to satisfy in full the benefits of all individuals [in any of the first four categories], . . . the assets shall be allocated pro rata among such individuals on the basis of present value (as of the termination date) of their respective benefits. . . .” Since this section thus contemplates that there may be insufficient funds in the plan to pay nonforfeitable benefits, it must be that benefits are not to be classified as forfeitable.solely because there are insufficient funds to pay them. And it would make no sense administratively to provide for automatic pro rata distribution, as this section does, unless no additional funds are expected directly from the employer. If the employer is directly liable, it would make more sense to make any pro rata distribution after adding to the assets of the fund whatever funds could be gleaned directly from the employer. Therefore, this section indicates that Congress thought that benefits may be nonfor-feitable even if an employer has disclaimed direct liability.

 Since a disclaimer clause would protect an employer from liability to its employees, and since there was no contingent liability to the PBGC on account of terminations during this initial period in any event, it is difficult to identify a rational basis for conditioning the availability of plan termination insurance in this period on the absence of a disclaimer clause.

 “(f) In addition to its other powers under this title, for only the first 270 days after the date of enactment of this Act the corporation may—

“(4) waive the application of the provisions of sections 4062, 4063, and 4064 to, or reduce the liability imposed under such sections on, any employer with respect to a plan terminating during that 270 day period if the corporation determines that such waiver or reduction is necessary to avoid unreasonable hardship in any case in which the employer was not able, as a practical matter, to continue the plan.”

 Indeed, since their use has unquestionably contributed to the growth of private pension plans, their prohibition would be inconsistent with Congress’ repeatedly expressed intent to encourage the maintenance of pension plans.

 See n. 28, supra. The Internal Revenue Service has included an employer liability disclaimer clause in a model pension plan issued for guidance in drafting post-1976 plans. See CCH 1977 Pension Plan Guide ¶ 30,782.96.

 Further, under the reading of the statute we adopt, in the usual case an employer could not be liable for underfunded benefits beyond the dollar limitations on PBGC insurance payments. See n. 23, supra. But if an employer liability disclaimer clause were to be deemed invalid after January 1, 1976, those limits would not be applicable to protect the employer in lawsuits by employees brought directly against it.