Respondent enlisted members of the United States Navy and others
similarly situated, who agreed to extend their enlistments at a
time when a statute provided for a Variable Re-enlistment Bonus
(VRB), in addition to the Regular Re-enlistment Bonus (RRB), for
members of the Armed Forces whose ratings were classified as a
"critical military skill"
held entitled to VRB's
determined according to the award level in effect at the time they
agreed to extend their enlistments, notwithstanding that the Navy
eliminated their ratings from the "critical military skill" list
before they began serving their extended enlistments, and that the
statutes authorizing the RRB and VRB were repealed and a new
Selective Re-enlistment Bonus (SRB) substituted before one of the
respondents began to serve his extended enlistment. Pp.
431 U. S.
869-882.
(a) Implementing regulations requiring that the amount of the
VRB to be awarded to an enlisted member who extended his enlistment
be determined by reference to the award level in effect at the time
he began to serve his extended enlistment, rather than at the time
he agreed to the extension, are invalid as being contrary to
Congress' purpose, as manifested by the legislative history, in
enacting the VRB program as an inducement to selected service
members to extend their period of service. Whether a service member
reenlists or agrees to extend his enlistment, the VRB could only be
effective as a selective incentive to extension of service if, at
the time he made his decision, the service member could count on
receiving it if he elected to remain in the service. Pp.
431 U. S.
869-877.
(b) There is nothing in either the language or legislative
history of the statute repealing the RRB and VRB system and
establishing a new bonus system to show any intention on the part
of Congress to affect the rights of those service members who had
extended their enlistments and became entitled to receive VRB's.
Pp.
431 U. S.
878-882.
175 U.S. App D.C. 32, 533 F.2d 1167, affirmed.
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, MARSHALL, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. WHITE, J filed
a dissenting
Page 431 U. S. 865
opinion, in which BURGER, C.J., and BLACKMUN and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
joined,
post, p.
431 U. S.
882.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Seven enlisted members of the United States Navy brought this
class action in the District Court for the District of Columbia
under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2), alleging that their
agreements to extend their enlistments, made at various times from
1968 to 1970, entitled each of them to payment of a reenlistment
bonus. The District Court ordered that the bonuses be paid,
365 F.
Supp. 140 (1973), and the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit affirmed. 175 U.S.App.D.C. 32, 533 F.2d 1167
(1976). We granted certiorari, 429 U.S. 997 (1976). We affirm.
I
From early in our history, Congress has provided by statute for
payment of a reenlistment bonus to members of the Armed Services
who reenlisted upon expiration of their term of service, or who
agreed to extend their period of service before its expiration.
[
Footnote 1] Prior to the
enactment of Pub.L. No. 89-132, 79 Stat. 547 (1965), this bonus was
determined for an enlistee's first reenlistment or extension of
enlistment by multiplying his monthly pay at the time of expiration
of the initial period
Page 431 U. S. 866
of service by the number of years specified in the reenlistment
agreement.
See former 37 U.S.C. §§ 308(a), (b).
The perceived defect of this system was that "it failed to vary
the monetary incentive for reenlistment according to the needs of
the armed services for personnel with particular skills." 175
U.S.App.D.C. at 38, 533 F.2d at 1173. Consequently, Congress
enacted former 37 U.S.C. § 308(g), which authorized the services to
provide, in addition to the Regular Re-enlistment Bonus (RRB) just
described, a Variable Re-enlistment Bonus (VRB) to members of the
Armed Services whose particular skills were in short supply. The
VRB was to be a multiple, no greater than four, of the RB.
[
Footnote 2]
This program was in effect when respondent Nicholas J. Larionoff
enlisted in the Navy for four years on June 23,
Page 431 U. S. 867
1969. [
Footnote 3] Shortly
after his enlistment, Larionoff chose to participate in a Navy
training program, completion of which would qualify him for the
service rating "Communications Technician -- Maintenance" (CTM). At
that time, as Larionoff was aware, [
Footnote 4] the CTM rating was classified by Navy
regulations as a "critical military skill," whose holders were
eligible upon reenlistment or extension of enlistment for payment
of a VRB in the amount of four times the RRB, the highest allowable
rate. Before entering the training program, which entailed a
six-year service obligation, Larionoff entered a written agreement
to extend his enlistment "in consideration of the pay, allowances,
and benefits which will accrue to me during the continuance of my
service." Larionoff successfully completed the program, and was
advanced to the CTM rating, expecting to receive a VRB upon
entering the period of his extended enlistment on June 23, 1973.
[
Footnote 5]
Page 431 U. S. 868
On March 24, 1972, however, the Navy announced that, effective
July 1, 1972, the CTM rating would no longer be considered a
"critical military skill" eligible for a VRB. When Larionoff,
through his congressional representatives, inquired into his
continued eligibility for a VRB, he was informed that, since the
CTM rating was no longer listed, he would not receive the expected
bonus. Accordingly, in March, 1973, respondents filed this lawsuit,
and, in September of that year, the District Court certified a
class and granted summary judgment for respondents, ordering
payment of the disputed VRB's.
While the Government's appeal of this order was pending in the
Court of Appeals, Congress repealed the statutes authorizing both
the RRB and the VRB, and substituted a new Selective Re-enlistment
Bonus (SRB), effective June 1, 1974. Armed Forces Enlisted
Personnel Bonus Revision Act of 1974, 88 Stat. 119, 37 U.S.C. § 308
(1970 ed., Supp. V). The Government concedes that this action had
no effect on six of the named respondents; like Larionoff, they
were scheduled to begin serving their extended enlistments prior to
the effective date of the Act, and therefore should have received
their VRB's, if at all, while the program was still in effect.
[
Footnote 6] Respondent Johnnie
S. Johnson, however, first enlisted in the Navy in August, 1970,
and did not begin serving his extended enlistment until August,
1974. The Court of Appeals was thus confronted with two questions:
(1) whether Larionoff and those in his position were entitled to
receive VRB's despite the Navy's elimination of their rating from
the eligible list in the period after their agreement to extend
their enlistments but before they began serving those extensions;
and (2) whether Johnson and others in his situation were entitled
to receive VRB's despite the repeal of the VRB program in the
same
Page 431 U. S. 869
period. The Court of Appeals held that both were entitled to
receive VRB's.
II
A
Both the Government and respondents recognize that "[a]
soldier's entitlement to pay is dependent upon statutory right,"
Bell v. United States, 366 U. S. 393,
366 U. S. 401
(1961), and that, accordingly, the rights of the affected service
members must be determined by reference to the statutes and
regulations governing the VRB, rather than to ordinary contract
principles. [
Footnote 7] In
this case, the relevant statute, former 37 U.S.C. § 308(g),
provided:
"Under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of Defense,
. . . a member who is designated as having a critical military
skill and who is entitled to [an RRB] upon his first reenlistment
may be paid an additional amount not more than four times the
amount of [the RRB]."
The regulations governing individual eligibility were set forth
in Department of Defense Instruction 1304.15, � V.B.1 (Sept. 3,
1970). [
Footnote 8]
Page 431 U. S. 870
The Government contends that these eligibility criteria are to
be applied as of the time the enlisted member completes service of
his original enlistment and enters into the extended
Page 431 U. S. 871
enlistment. This is a reasonable construction, since the statute
requires that the VRB not be paid until that time.
See
n 5,
supra. At that
time, it is argued, respondents did not satisfy two related
criteria prescribed by � V.B.1, although it is conceded they met
the others. First, they were not then "serving . . . in a military
specialty designated" as a critical military skill, � V.B.1.a,
since the CTM rating was by that time no longer so designated;
second, they had not "[a]ttain[ed] eligibility prior to the
effective date of termination of awards" for the CTM rating. �
V.B.1.f.
The Government also relies upon the regulations governing the
amount of the award to be received. Under Department of Defense
Directive 1304.14, � IV.F (Sept. 3, 1970):
"When a military skill is designated for reduction or
termination of award an effective date for reduction or termination
of awards shall be established and announced to the field at least
90 days in advance.
All awards on or after that effective date
in military skills designated for reduction of award level will be
at the level effective that date and no new awards will be made on
or after the effective date in military skills designated for
termination of awards. [
Footnote 9]"
(Emphasis added.) Similarly, Department of Defense Instruction
1304.15,
supra, � VI.A, stated:
"Members serving in a military specialty designated for
reduction or termination of award under the provisions of
subsection IV.F. of [Directive 1304.14,
supra] will
receive the award level effective on the date of their reenlistment
or extension of enlistment, except as provided in paragraph
V.B.1.f. above. [
Footnote
10] "
Page 431 U. S. 872
The Government argues that these regulations, read together,
establish that respondents were entitled to receive only the VRB in
effect for their service rating at the time the period of their
original enlistment ended, and the extended enlistment began
These regulations, as the Court of Appeals pointed out and the
Government freely concedes, contain a number of ambiguities.
See 175 U.S.App.D.C. at 40-42, 533 F.2d at 1175-1177. We
need not tarry, however, over the various ambiguous terms and
complex interrelations of the regulations. In construing
administrative regulations,
"the ultimate criterion is the administrative interpretation,
which becomes of controlling weight unless it is plainly erroneous
or inconsistent with the regulation."
Bowles v. Seminole Rock Co., 325 U.
S. 410,
325 U. S. 414
(1945).
See also INS v. Stanisic, 395 U. S.
62 (1969). The Government represents, and respondents do
not seriously dispute, that, throughout the period in which the VRB
program was in effect, the Navy interpreted the Department of
Defense regulations as entitling an enlisted member who extends his
enlistment to the VRB level, if any, in effect at the time he began
to serve the extended enlistment. [
Footnote 11] Since this interpretation
Page 431 U. S. 873
is not plainly inconsistent with the wording of the regulations,
we accept the Government's reading of those regulations as
correct.
B
This, however, does not end our inquiry. For regulations, in
order to be valid, must be consistent with the statute under which
they are promulgated. [
Footnote
12] We are persuaded that, insofar as they required that the
amount of the VRB to be awarded to a service member who extended
his enlistment was to be determined by reference to the award level
in effect at the time he began to serve the extension, rather than
at the time he agreed to it, the relevant regulations were contrary
to the manifest purposes of Congress in enacting the VRB program,
and hence invalid. [
Footnote
13]
The legislative history of the VRB statute makes those
congressional purposes crystal clear. As noted above, the
reenlistment bonus scheme in effect before 1965, which relied
entirely on the RRB, was criticized for providing the same
reenlistment incentive to all members of the Armed Services,
regardless of the need for their skills. The Defense Department
desired greater flexibility in calibrating reenlistment incentives
to its manpower needs. The additional expenditures
Page 431 U. S. 874
for the VRB were expected to save money in the long run, since
payment of the higher reenlistment bonus would enable the Armed
Forces to retain highly skilled individuals whose training had
required a considerable investment. [
Footnote 14] Members of Congress in the floor debates
clearly recognized the wisdom of offering such incentives.
[
Footnote 15]
The VRB was thus intended to induce selected service members to
extend their period of service beyond their original enlistment. Of
course, the general pay raise for the military included in the same
Act was also intended to have a similar effect, by making a
military career generally more attractive. [
Footnote 16] But the VRB was expected to be a
very specific sort of incentive, not only because it was aimed at a
selected group of particularly desirable service members, but also
because it offered an incentive "at just the time that it will be
most effective, when an individual decides whether or not to
reenlist." Remarks of Rep. Nedzi, 111 Cong.Rec. 1721 (1965). The
then Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara, made the same point
to the House Armed Services Committee, in contrasting the VRB to
"proficiency pay," which provides increased pay to service members
with critical skills:
"We believe a more efficient way to provide additional
reenlistment incentives to selected first-termers in especially
high demand is by using a variable reenlistment bonus.
Monetary
rewards are thereby concentrated at the first reenlistment decision
point, obtaining the greatest return per dollar spent on the
retention of personnel."
Hearings on Military Pay Bills before the House Committee
Page 431 U. S. 875
on Armed Services, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 2545 (June 7, 1965)
(House Hearings). (Emphasis added.) The then Assistant Secretary of
Defense, Norman S. Paul, also distinguished the VRB from ordinary
pay, stating that, with the VRB, the military hoped "to cure a
separate specific problem by specific means, rather than overall
pay." Hearings on Military Pay Increase before the Senate Committee
on Armed Services, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 41 (July 29, 1965)
(Senate Hearings). The timing of the VRB was crucial to this
intention:
"At the end of his first term of reenlistment [
sic], he
is trying to make up his mind whether to stay in the military. And
we think that the added bonus may push him over the line into
staying with us, which is what we want to see happening."
Id. at 40. [
Footnote
17] It is true that, in discussing the VRB, Congress focused on
the service member who reaches the end of his enlistment, and is
faced with the decision "whether or not to
reenlist."
(Emphasis added.) Remarks of Rep. Nedzi,
supra. But, as
Congress has recognized in providing that "[a] member of the [Armed
Forces] who extends his enlistment . . . is entitled to the same
pay and allowances as though he had reenlisted," 37 U.S.C. § 906,
precisely the same reasoning applies to the decision to extend
enlistment as to the decision to reenlist. In either case, the VRB
could only be effective as a selective incentive to extension of
service if at the time he made his
Page 431 U. S. 876
decision the service member could count on receiving it if he
elected to remain in the service.
This is very apparent when the VRB program is examined from the
perspective of an individual who is at the point of deciding
whether or not to extend an enlistment due to expire at some future
date. At the time he makes this decision, he is aware that his
rating or expected rating is classified as a critical military
skill eligible for a VRB at a particular level. Under the plan as
envisioned by Congress, and as applied by the Navy in the case of
reenlistments, the incentive operates "at just the time it will be
most effective," because the service member knows that, if he
remains in the service, he will receive a VRB at the prescribed
level. But under the contested regulations, the service member has
no such reassurance. Whether or not his rating is eligible for a
VRB now, it may not be at the future date on which his first
enlistment expires. [
Footnote
18] His "incentive" to extend his enlistment is the purely
hypothetical possibility that he might receive a VRB if there is a
personnel shortage in his skill on that date. On the other hand, if
he nevertheless extends his enlistment, and if the VRB level for
his rating is increased in the interval before his original term
expires, he will receive a higher award than that which sufficed to
induce his decision to remain in the service -- from the standpoint
of Congress' purposes, a totally gratuitous award. [
Footnote 19]
Page 431 U. S. 877
The clear intention of Congress to enact a program that
"concentrates monetary incentives at the first reenlistment
decision point where the greatest returns per retention dollar can
be expected," Senate Hearings 26 (statement of Asst. Secy. Paul),
could only be effectuated if the enlisted member at the decision
point had some certainty about the incentive being offered.
Instead, the challenged regulations provided for a virtual lottery.
[
Footnote 20] We therefore
hold that, insofar as the Defense Department regulations required
that the amount of the VRB to be paid to a service member who was
otherwise eligible to receive one be determined by the award level
as of the time he began to serve his extended enlistment, they are
in clear conflict with the congressional intention in enacting the
VRB program, and hence invalid. Because Congress intended to
provide at the reenlistment decision point a promise of a
reasonably certain and specific bonus for extending service in the
Armed Forces, Larionoff and the members of his class are entitled,
as the Court of Appeals held, to payment of VRB's determined
according to the award levels in effect at the time they agreed to
extend their enlistments.
Page 431 U. S. 878
III
This brings us to the further question of respondent Johnson's
entitlement to a VRB. At the time he agreed to extend his
enlistment, the VRB program was in effect, and his CTM rating was
classified as a critical military skill. Before he began serving
the extended enlistment period, however, Congress repealed the RRB
and VRB system, and substituted the new SRB. 88 Stat. 119, 37
U.S.C. § 308 (1970 ed., Supp. V). The Government contends that,
since the VRB had been abolished before Johnson became eligible to
receive one, he is not entitled to receive a bonus. The Court of
Appeals rejected this argument. [
Footnote 21]
What we have said above as to Larionoff goes far toward
answering this question. The intention of Congress in enacting the
VRB was specifically to promise to those who
Page 431 U. S. 879
extended their enlistments that a VRB award would be paid to
them at the expiration of their original enlistment in return for
their commitment to lengthen their period of service. [
Footnote 22] When Johnson made that
commitment, by entering an agreement to extend his enlistment, he,
like Larionoff, became entitled to receive at some future date a
VRB at the award level then in effect (provided that he met the
other eligibility criteria). Thus, unless Congress intended, in
repealing the VRB program in 1974, to divest Johnson of the rights
he had already earned, and constitutionally could do so, the
prospective repeal of the program could not affect his right to
receive a RB, even though the date on which the bonus was to be
paid had not yet arrived.
Of course, if Congress had such an intent, serious
constitutional questions would be presented. 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
(1961);
United States v. Dickerson, 310 U.
S. 554 (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
(1934);
Perry v. United States, 294 U.
S. 330 (1935). In view of these problems, we would not
lightly conclude, in the absence of a clear expression of
congressional intent, that, in amending 37 U.S.C. § 308 and
establishing a new bonus system, Congress intended to affect the
rights of those service members who had extended their enlistments
and become entitled to receive VRB's.
Nothing in the language of the 1974 Act or its legislative
history expresses such an intention. The Act makes no reference
Page 431 U. S. 880
whatever to service members who have become entitled to payment
of a VRB by extending their enlistments. There is no prohibition of
further payments of VRB's to those already entitled to them,
[
Footnote 23] the Act simply
replaces the old § 308 with a new one that authorizes SRB's, rather
than RRB's and VRB's. Nor does the legislative history express any
intention to effect such a prohibition. No paramount power of the
Congress or important national interest justifying interference
with contractual entitlements is invoked.
The Courts of Appeals that have upheld the Government's position
have relied on two indications of a congressional intent to affect
the rights of Johnson and his class. First, the 1974 Act expressly
preserves the right of all service members on active duty as of the
effective date of the Act to receive upon reenlistment the RRB's
they would have been entitled to before passage of the Act. Pub L.
No. 93-277, § 3, [
Footnote
24] 88
Page 431 U. S. 881
Stat. 121. The failure to include a similar saving clause as to
VRB's, it is argued, indicates that Congress intended to abolish
them entirely. But the saving clause for RRB's does not merely
preserve them for those who had already extended their enlistments,
but assures RRB's upon reenlistment to any service member then on
active duty. The failure to enact a similar provision as to VRB's
indicates only that Congress did not intend that VRB's be paid to
those service members who reenlisted after the effective date of
the Act, and has no bearing on those who had already extended their
enlistments and become entitled to VRB's.
Second, reference is made to a portion of the Conference Report
on the Act, indicating a congressional "understanding" that service
members, like Johnson, who had already entered two-year extensions
of enlistment could become eligible for an SRB by canceling the
extension and replacing it with a four-year extension.
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 9985, pp. 5 (1974). [
Footnote 25] This, it is argued, indicates that
Congress had
Page 431 U. S. 882
considered the possible unfairness that eliminating the VRB
could work on members such as Johnson, and felt that it had made
sufficient provision for them by making them eligible, upon a
further extension of their commitment, for an SRB. But the Report
does not refer to the possible unfairness of eliminating the VRB
payable to those service members with whom it deals; rather, it
refers to the Navy's concern that language in the legislative
history might cast doubt on a commitment the Navy had made
"to a man with a four-year enlistment and a two-year extension
that he can cancel the two-year extension and reenlist for four
years and receive a reenlistment bonus for the four-year
reenlistment."
Id. at 4. The Report removes any doubts about the
validity of that commitment. The only relevance of the Report to
the problem before us is that it demonstrates that Congress was
responsive to the "concern that the language of the bill might be
interpreted to require it to abrogate an understanding" between the
Armed Forces and enlistees,
ibid., making it less, rather
than more, likely that Congress intended the 1974 Act to abrogate
Johnson's entitlement to a VRB by implication.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The Court of Appeals opinion traces the history of this policy
from 1795 to the present. 175 U.S.App.D.C. at 37-38, and n. 16, 533
F.2d at 1172-1173, and n. 16.
[
Footnote 2]
Former 37 U.S.C. § 308(g), 79 Stat. 547, provided as
follows:
"(g) Under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of
Defense, or the Secretary of the Treasury with respect to the Coast
Guard when it is not operating as a service in the Navy, a member
who is designated as having a critical military skill and who is
entitled to a bonus computed under subsection (a) of this section
upon his first reenlistment may be paid an additional amount not
more than four times the amount of that bonus. The additional
amount shall be paid in equal yearly installments in each year of
the reenlistment period. However, in meritorious cases the
additional amount may be paid in fewer installments if the
Secretary concerned determines it to be in the best interest of the
members. An amount paid under this subsection does not count
against the limitation prescribed by subsection (c) of this section
on the total amount that may be paid under this section."
Under the Department of Defense regulations implementing the VRB
program, multiples of one to four times the RRB were assigned
depending on the relative urgency of the services' need for
particular skills, as measured by personnel shortages and the cost
of training replacement personnel. Department of Defense Directive
1304.14, IV.D.1.a, b (Sept. 3, 1970); Department of Defense
Instruction 1304.15, IV.D, V.A.1, 2 (Sept. 3, 1970).
Under 37 U.S.C. § 906, "[a] member of the [Armed Forces] who
extends his enlistment . . . is entitled to the same pay and
allowances as though he had reenlisted."
[
Footnote 3]
Except as noted below with specific reference to respondent
Johnnie S. Johnson, the facts relating to Larionoff are typical of
those concerning the other named respondents.
[
Footnote 4]
Larionoff was informed of the existence of the VRB program, and
its applicability to the CTM program, by a Navy "classifier" who
interviewed him to determine what field within the service he
should enter. Several of the other named respondents were also told
of the existence of the VRB program, and, in some instances, the
amount of the VRB they could expect to receive was calculated for
them by Navy personnel, without any indication that the amount
might be reduced. 175 U.S.App.D.C. at 35, 36, and nn. 6, 11, 533
F.2d at 1170, 1171, and nn. 6, 11. These facts, contained in
affidavits filed by respondents, are undisputed; while an affidavit
introduced by the Government states that
"it is not the policy of the Department of the Navy to promise
specific eligibility for Variable Reenlistment Bonus, nor is any
official authorized to make such a promise in counseling with a
prospective enlistee,"
there is no dispute that, in particular cases, individual
service members might, inadvertently or otherwise, be left with the
impression that a VRB had been promised.
[
Footnote 5]
Under former 37 U.S.C. § 308(g), the VRB was paid "in equal
yearly installments in each year of the reenlistment period."
[
Footnote 6]
But see n23,
infra.
[
Footnote 7]
Indeed, this is implicitly recognized in the contracts executed
by the named respondents, which state that they agree to extend
their enlistments "in consideration of the pay, allowances, and
benefits which will accrue to me during the continuance of my
service," rather than stating any fixed compensation.
[
Footnote 8]
This regulation provided:
"B.
Individual Eligibility for Receipt of Awards"
"1.
Variable Reenlistment Bonus. An enlisted member is
eligible to receive a Variable Reenlistment Bonus if he meets all
the following conditions:"
"a. Is qualified and serving on active duty in a military
specialty designated under provisions of paragraph V.A.2. above for
award of the Variable Reenlistment Bonus. Members paid a Variable
Reenlistment Bonus shall continue to serve in the military
specialty which qualified them for the bonus unless the Secretary
of a Military Department determines that a waiver of this
restriction is necessary in the interest of the Military Service
concerned."
"b. Has completed at least 21 months of continuous active
service other than active duty for training immediately prior to
discharge, release from active duty, or extension of
enlistment."
"c. Is serving in pay grade E-3 or higher."
"d. Reenlists in a regular component of the Military Service
concerned within three (3) months (or within a lesser period if so
prescribed by the Secretary of the Military Department concerned)
after the date of his discharge or release from compulsory or
voluntary active duty (other than for training), or extends his
enlistment, so that the reenlistment or enlistment as extended
provides a total period of continuous active service of not less
than sixty-nine (69) months."
"(1) The reenlistment or extension of enlistment must be a first
reenlistment or extension for which a reenlistment bonus is
payable."
"(2) No reenlistment or extension accomplished for any purpose
other than continued active service in the designated military
specialty shall qualify a member for receipt of the Variable
Reenlistment Bonus."
"(3) Continued active service in a designated military specialty
shall include normal skill progression as defined in the respective
Military Service classification manuals."
"e. Has not more than eight years of total active service at the
time of reenlistment or extension of enlistment."
"f. Attains eligibility prior to the effective date of
termination of awards in any military specialty designated for
termination of the award. Member must attain eligibility prior to
the effective date of a reduction of award level to be eligible for
the higher award level. Eligibility attained through any
modification of an existing service obligation, including any early
discharge granted pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 1171, must have been
attained prior to the date the authority approving the modification
was notified of the prospective termination or reduction of award
in the military specialty."
"g. Meets such additional eligibility criteria as may be
prescribed by the Secretary of the Military Department
concerned."
Instruction 1304.15 has been canceled by Department of Defense
Instruction 1304.22 (June 1975).
[
Footnote 9]
Directive 1304.14 has been canceled by Department of Defense
Directive 1304.21 (June 1975).
[
Footnote 10]
The reference is apparently to the last sentence of � VB.1.f,
supra, n 8, which
provided:
"Eligibility attained through any modification of an existing
service obligation . . . must have been attained prior to the date
the authority approving the modification was notified of the
prospective termination or reduction of award. . . ."
The Court of Appeals interpreted this provision as intended to
prevent service members from qualifying for a soon-to-be-reduced
benefit level by agreeing to extend their enlistments in the
interval between the announcement of the reduction in award level
and the effective date of the change, and hence an implicit
recognition that, in the absence of such a provision, service
members in that position would be entitled to the higher benefit
level. 175 U.S.App.D.C. at 41-42, 533 F.2d at 1176-1177. The
Government argues, however that the purpose of � V.B.1.f was to
reach the much smaller group of service members who would be in a
position both to agree to extend their enlistment and to begin
serving the extension within the relevant period. Tr. of Oral Arg.
15-16.
[
Footnote 11]
This has apparently been the practice regardless of whether that
level was higher or lower than that in effect when the service
member agreed to extend his enlistment.
Id. at 45.
[
Footnote 12]
"The power of an administrative officer or board to administer a
federal statute and to prescribe rules and regulations to that end
is . . . [only] the power to adopt regulations to carry into effect
the will of Congress as expressed by the statute. A regulation
which does not do this, but operates to create a rule out of
harmony with the statute, is a mere nullity."
Manhattan General Equip. Co. v. Commissioner,
297 U. S. 129,
297 U. S. 134
(1936).
See, e.g., Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
425 U. S. 185,
425 U. S.
213-214 (1976);
Dixon v. United States,
381 U. S. 68,
381 U. S. 74
(1965)
[
Footnote 13]
This argument was clearly raised in the briefs in the Court of
Appeals, Brief for Plaintiffs-Appellees (Cross-Appellants) 13,
Larionoff v. United States, Nos. 74-1211 and 74-1212, and
in this Court, Brief for Respondents 15-18. We therefore do not
regard the somewhat inconclusive colloquy at oral argument,
see Tr. of Oral Arg. 29-33, as abandoning it.
[
Footnote 14]
H.R. Rep. No. 549, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 47 (1965); S.Rep. No.
544, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 14 (1965).
[
Footnote 15]
See, e.g., remarks of Rep. Morton, 111 Cong.Rec. 17206
(1965); remarks of Rep. Bennett,
ibid.; remarks of Rep.
Dole,
id. at 17209; remarks of Sen. Ruell,
id. at
20034.
[
Footnote 16]
See, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 549,
supra at 5-6;
S.Rep. No. 544,
supra at 1-4.
[
Footnote 17]
The argument that the VRB would be particularly effective as an
inducement to reenlist because it would be provided at the
"decision point" is a constant theme through the hearings, the
committee reports, and the floor debates.
See House
Hearings 2545, 2584 (statements of Secy. McNamara), 2671 (colloquy
of Rep. Stratton and Gen. Greene); Senate Hearings 19 (statement of
Secy. McNamara), 26, 40, 44 (statements of Asst. Secy. Paul);
H.R.Rep. No. 549, supra
at 47; S.Rep. No. 544, supra at
14; 111 Cong.Rec. 17201 (1965) (remarks of Rep. Nedzi).
[
Footnote 18]
Indeed, as the Court of Appeals pointed out, 175 U.S.App.D.C. at
43-44, n. 32, 533 F.2d at 1178-1179, n. 32, because the regulations
governing the VRB program required the various services to
undertake an annual review of the military specialties in which
personnel shortages existed for the purpose of adjusting VRB award
levels, Department of Defense Directive 1304.14, � IV.F.1, the
service member, by his very decision to extend his enlistment,
would contribute to the likelihood that, by the time his initial
enlistment expired, his skill would no longer be in short supply,
and the VRB he had expected would therefore have been reduced or
eliminated.
[
Footnote 19]
The effects of the challenged regulations would, of course, be
less than clear to the service member deciding whether or not to
extend his enlistment, and, given the complexity and ambiguity of
the regulations, and the resulting possibility that they could be
misconstrued by Navy recruiters as well as by the enlistees
themselves, it would not be surprising if many service members,
like some of the respondents here,
see n 4,
supra, came to believe that by
extending their enlistments they had acquired a vested right to a
VRB. To the extent that such beliefs had been fostered, upholding
the regulations would perpetrate a considerable injustice.
[
Footnote 20]
Of course, the enlisted service member agreeing to extend his
enlistment could not have been entirely certain of the amount of
his future VRB. First, the VRB was calculated according to a
formula based on the amount of the RRB, which, in turn, depended on
the reenlistee's basic pay upon entering the reenlistment period.
At the time he agreed to extend his enlistment, the service member
could not have been sure what that amount would be; Congress could
alter military pay scales, or the member might be promoted or
demoted, and hence his pay might change, in the interval. Second,
the VRB, by both statute and regulation, was not actually paid
until the service member began serving his extended enlistment, and
even then was ordinarily paid in yearly installments. If for some
reason the enlistee did not complete service of his extension,
remaining installments were not paid, and overpayments were
recouped. Department of Defense Directive 1304.14, � IV.G. Finally,
receipt of any VRB at all depended on the service member's
completing the requirements for eligibility before expiration of
the original enlistment.
See Department of Defense
Instruction 1304.15, � V.B.1, n. 8. Thus, the VRB as applied to
service members extending their enlistments, as opposed to those
reenlisting, was always somewhat contingent. But there is a
significant difference between this sort of contingency, which was
inherent in the nature of the program and in any event involved
marginal effects on the amount of the award or the occurrence of
rather speculative events, and the sort of uncertainty the
contested regulations inject into the program, which rendered the
primary determinant of the VRB entirely unpredictable at the time
the decision to extend enlistment was made.
[
Footnote 21]
The decision of the Court of Appeals on this point is in
conflict with the decisions in
Collins v. Rumsfeld, 542
F.2d 1109 (CA9 1976),
cert. pending sub nom. Saylors v. United
States, No. 76-677; and
Carini v. United States, 528
F.2d 738 (CA4 1975),
cert. pending, No. 75-1695.
[
Footnote 22]
As noted,
n 20,
supra, the precise amount of the award remained somewhat
uncertain, and the award was contingent on the enlisted member's
meeting certain eligibility conditions.
[
Footnote 23]
The Government's concession that the 1974 Act does not affect
respondents other than Johnson implicitly admits that the Act
permits such payments. Three other named respondents entered their
two-year extension periods after June 1, 1973. Since the VRB was
paid in yearly installments,
n
5,
supra, these three would presumably still have
installments due on their VRB after the Act became effective on
June 1, 1974.
[
Footnote 24]
This section provides:
"Notwithstanding section 308 of title 37, United States Code, as
amended by this Act, a member of a uniformed service on active duty
on the effective date of this Act, who would have been eligible, at
the end of his current or subsequent enlistment, for the
reenlistment bonus prescribed in section 308(a) or (d) of that
title, as it existed on the day before the effective date of this
Act, shall continue to be eligible for the reenlistment bonus under
that section as it existed on the day before the effective date of
this Act. If a member is also eligible for the reenlistment bonus
prescribed in that section as amended by this Act, he may elect to
receive either one of those reenlistment bonuses. However, a
member's eligibility under section 308(a) or (d) of that title, as
it exited on the day before the effective date of this Act,
terminates when he has received a total of $2,000 in reenlistment
bonus payments, received under either section 308(a) or (d) of that
title as it existed on the day before the effective date of this
Act, or under section 308 of that title, as amended by this Act, or
from a combination of both."
[
Footnote 25]
The relevant portion of the Conference Report referred to in the
text states:
"
Clarification of interpretation of bill language"
"The House committee in reporting the bill indicated its
intention that bonuses not be authorized for personnel for existing
obligated service. There was brought to the attention of the
conferees a problem that would exist, particularly in the Navy
nuclear power field, under the House interpretation of the language
of the bill. In cases where commitment has been made to a man with
a four-year enlistment and a two-year extension, he can cancel the
two-year extension and reenlist for four years and receive a
reenlistment bonus for the four-year reenlistment. The Navy
expressed great concern that the language of the bill might be
interpreted to require it to abrogate an understanding it had with
enlistees and would operate in such a way as to cause serious
retention problems in its most critical career field. The
conferees, therefore, want it understood that, while it normally
does not expect bonuses to be paid for services for which there was
an existing obligation, it is consistent with the conferees'
understanding that full entitlement to SRB will be authorized for
personnel who have already agreed to an extension period prior to
the enactment of the legislation if they subsequently cancel this
extension prior to its becoming operative and reenlist for a period
of at least two years beyond the period of the canceled extension.
Nothing in the bill should operate to deny the Chief of Naval
Operations the authority to extend SRB entitlement to nuclear power
operators, if hey subsequently can cancel any outstanding extension
period prior to its becoming operative and reenlist for a period of
at least two years beyond the period of the canceled
extension."
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
BLACKMUN, and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
Like the Court, I accept the Government's interpretation of the
relevant Navy Department regulations, but I do not agree
Page 431 U. S. 883
with the majority's view that, because Congress intended by the
VRB legislation irrevocably to promise a reenlistment bonus to
those who agreed in advance to reenlist, the regulations are
invalid. As I see it, the legislation was not part of the
reenlistment agreement, which was executed in consideration of the
pay, allowances, and benefits that would accrue during a
continuance of the reenlistee's service. Those who executed
reenlistment agreements had no vested right in any particular level
of pay, in any particular allowance or benefit, or in any
particular total package of pay, allowances, or benefits. In this
respect, I am in essential agreement with Judge Haynsworth's
opinion for the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in
Carini v. United States, 528 F.2d 738 (1975), which
concluded that cancellation of the VRB prior to the beginning of a
reenlistment period was not forbidden by law. I respectfully
dissent.