Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
The National Pension Fund maintained by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO (IAM), cancelled all past service credits for covered employees of the Central Tool Company after it discontinued its contributions to the Fund. The company now challenges this action as violative of Section [311]*311302(c)(5) of the Labor Management Relations Act.1 On cross-motions for summary-judgment, the District Court ruled that the cancellation was arbitrary and capricious, and for that reason contravened Section 302(c)(5), insofar as it materially affects Fund determinations on satisfaction of vesting requirements by Central Tool employees, but not to the extent that it decreases their accrued benefits under the governing plan.2 In our view, the case is controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in UMWA Health & Retirement Funds v. Robinson,3 the central teaching of which constrains us to hold that the termination of past service credits does not impinge upon Section 302(c)(5).
I
The Fund is a multi-employer,4 open-ended,5 defined benefit6 trust created in 1960 pursuant to an agreement and declaration of trust between the union and employers of employees represented by affiliated locals of the union.7 The Fund is administered by an equal number of union-designated and employer-selected trustees,8 and is financed by employers’ contributions made in accordance with collective bargaining agreements with union affiliates.9
Central Tool inaugurated its relations with the Fund by contributions effective July 1, 1970, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with IAM’s Local Lodge 147, the representative of some of Central Tool’s employees.10 The participation agreement between Central Tool and the local, which was expressly incorporated into the collective bargaining agreement, listed the payments that Central Tool would be required to make to the Fund “under the Agreement and Declaration of Trust dated May 1, 1960, as amended, which has been signed by the Employer and I.A.M. Lodge in the place provided at the end of such Agreement attached hereto.” 11 The terms of the pension plan agreement thus appear to have been incor[312]*312porated by reference in the collective bargaining contract. The pension plan agreement provided for determination of the accrued benefits and the vesting status of each covered employee on the basis of how much “service credit” the employee possessed. Service credits were to be ascertained in accordance with Benefit Plan A, which contained rules governing the collection, investment, and distribution of the contributions of participating employers.12 Benefit Plan A granted two types of service credit to covered employees. One was future service credit for the period during which they worked for an employer then contributing to the Fund on their behalf;13 the other was past service credit for any period prior thereto during which they worked for the same employer if the service continued up to the point at which the employer’s obligation to contribute to the Fund commenced.14
At the time Central Tool joined the plan,15 Benefit Plan A featured a rule, adopted by the Fund’s board of trustees pursuant to the original trust agreement, governing the amount of service credit to be retained by covered employees of employers who terminate their participation in the plan while continuing in the same or a similar line of business.16 Section 4 of Article IX of the plan provided then, as it does now, that such employees would keep all accrued future service credits but would forfeit all accrued past service credits.17
In 1978, Central Tool withdrew from the plan in accordance with a new collective bargaining agreement which provided that Central Tool would establish its own pension fund for covered employees and would guarantee benefits accrued by them under Benefit Plan A.18 Upon notification of Central Tool’s withdrawal, the Fund invoked the rule cancelling past service credits.19 Since Central Tool had undertaken in the 1978 collective bargaining agreement to act as guarantor against any loss of those benefits, the cancellation increased its liability under its own pension plan. Central Tool then brought this action against the Fund and its trustees assailing the plan’s [313]*313forfeiture provision, primarily under Section 302(c)(5).20
The District Court applied the principle, then extant in this circuit, that an eligibility rule of a Section 302(c)(5) trust fund, or its application adversely to a covered employee or group of employees, is invalid if it is arbitrary or capricious.21 Recognizing the strong interest of Central Tool employees in retaining pension benefits they could reasonably have believed to be vested,22 the court struck down the plan’s forfeiture provision insofar as it deprived employees of their status as vested beneficiaries under the plan.23 The court grounded this action upon the Fund’s failure to demonstrate that forfeitures of vested status either served an “overriding purpose”24 or were “actuarially necessary”25 to prevent employers from undermining the Fund by dumping unfunded liability — through early withdrawals from the plan — after their employees had acquired substantial past service credits. At the same time, the court upheld the cancellation of past service credits for purposes of accrual benefits,26 reasoning that any injury to Central Tool employees resulting from an incremental reduction in benefits was outweighed by the Fund’s legitimate interest in preserving ite financial integrity and the desirability of minimizing judicial alterations of a plan agreed upon through collective bargaining.27 Both sides now appeal.
The district courts of the United States and the United States courts of the Territories and possessions shall have jurisdiction, for cause shown, and subject to the provisions of section 381 of title 28 (relating to notice to opposite party) to restrain violations of this section, without regard to the provisions of section 17 of title 15 and section 52 of this title, and the provisions of chapter 6 of this title.
II
At the outset, we must determine whether Central Tool has standing to challenge the plan’s forfeiture rule under Section 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act.
The District Court derived its jurisdiction from Section 302(e), which in general terms authorizes federal district courts to “restrain violations” of Section 302.28 There is no provision, however, indicating who may sue or be sued thereunder.
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Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.
SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
The National Pension Fund maintained by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO (IAM), cancelled all past service credits for covered employees of the Central Tool Company after it discontinued its contributions to the Fund. The company now challenges this action as violative of Section [311]*311302(c)(5) of the Labor Management Relations Act.1 On cross-motions for summary-judgment, the District Court ruled that the cancellation was arbitrary and capricious, and for that reason contravened Section 302(c)(5), insofar as it materially affects Fund determinations on satisfaction of vesting requirements by Central Tool employees, but not to the extent that it decreases their accrued benefits under the governing plan.2 In our view, the case is controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in UMWA Health & Retirement Funds v. Robinson,3 the central teaching of which constrains us to hold that the termination of past service credits does not impinge upon Section 302(c)(5).
I
The Fund is a multi-employer,4 open-ended,5 defined benefit6 trust created in 1960 pursuant to an agreement and declaration of trust between the union and employers of employees represented by affiliated locals of the union.7 The Fund is administered by an equal number of union-designated and employer-selected trustees,8 and is financed by employers’ contributions made in accordance with collective bargaining agreements with union affiliates.9
Central Tool inaugurated its relations with the Fund by contributions effective July 1, 1970, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with IAM’s Local Lodge 147, the representative of some of Central Tool’s employees.10 The participation agreement between Central Tool and the local, which was expressly incorporated into the collective bargaining agreement, listed the payments that Central Tool would be required to make to the Fund “under the Agreement and Declaration of Trust dated May 1, 1960, as amended, which has been signed by the Employer and I.A.M. Lodge in the place provided at the end of such Agreement attached hereto.” 11 The terms of the pension plan agreement thus appear to have been incor[312]*312porated by reference in the collective bargaining contract. The pension plan agreement provided for determination of the accrued benefits and the vesting status of each covered employee on the basis of how much “service credit” the employee possessed. Service credits were to be ascertained in accordance with Benefit Plan A, which contained rules governing the collection, investment, and distribution of the contributions of participating employers.12 Benefit Plan A granted two types of service credit to covered employees. One was future service credit for the period during which they worked for an employer then contributing to the Fund on their behalf;13 the other was past service credit for any period prior thereto during which they worked for the same employer if the service continued up to the point at which the employer’s obligation to contribute to the Fund commenced.14
At the time Central Tool joined the plan,15 Benefit Plan A featured a rule, adopted by the Fund’s board of trustees pursuant to the original trust agreement, governing the amount of service credit to be retained by covered employees of employers who terminate their participation in the plan while continuing in the same or a similar line of business.16 Section 4 of Article IX of the plan provided then, as it does now, that such employees would keep all accrued future service credits but would forfeit all accrued past service credits.17
In 1978, Central Tool withdrew from the plan in accordance with a new collective bargaining agreement which provided that Central Tool would establish its own pension fund for covered employees and would guarantee benefits accrued by them under Benefit Plan A.18 Upon notification of Central Tool’s withdrawal, the Fund invoked the rule cancelling past service credits.19 Since Central Tool had undertaken in the 1978 collective bargaining agreement to act as guarantor against any loss of those benefits, the cancellation increased its liability under its own pension plan. Central Tool then brought this action against the Fund and its trustees assailing the plan’s [313]*313forfeiture provision, primarily under Section 302(c)(5).20
The District Court applied the principle, then extant in this circuit, that an eligibility rule of a Section 302(c)(5) trust fund, or its application adversely to a covered employee or group of employees, is invalid if it is arbitrary or capricious.21 Recognizing the strong interest of Central Tool employees in retaining pension benefits they could reasonably have believed to be vested,22 the court struck down the plan’s forfeiture provision insofar as it deprived employees of their status as vested beneficiaries under the plan.23 The court grounded this action upon the Fund’s failure to demonstrate that forfeitures of vested status either served an “overriding purpose”24 or were “actuarially necessary”25 to prevent employers from undermining the Fund by dumping unfunded liability — through early withdrawals from the plan — after their employees had acquired substantial past service credits. At the same time, the court upheld the cancellation of past service credits for purposes of accrual benefits,26 reasoning that any injury to Central Tool employees resulting from an incremental reduction in benefits was outweighed by the Fund’s legitimate interest in preserving ite financial integrity and the desirability of minimizing judicial alterations of a plan agreed upon through collective bargaining.27 Both sides now appeal.
The district courts of the United States and the United States courts of the Territories and possessions shall have jurisdiction, for cause shown, and subject to the provisions of section 381 of title 28 (relating to notice to opposite party) to restrain violations of this section, without regard to the provisions of section 17 of title 15 and section 52 of this title, and the provisions of chapter 6 of this title.
II
At the outset, we must determine whether Central Tool has standing to challenge the plan’s forfeiture rule under Section 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act.
The District Court derived its jurisdiction from Section 302(e), which in general terms authorizes federal district courts to “restrain violations” of Section 302.28 There is no provision, however, indicating who may sue or be sued thereunder. Filling this interstice, courts have construed Section 302(e) to permit a contributing employer to bring suit when it has suffered or will incur injury from enforcement of plan rules or administration of the trust.29
[314]*314In the case before us, a collective bargaining agreement has required Central Tool to establish a new pension plan preserving the accrued benefit entitlements of its employees under Benefit Plan A.30 Application of the plan’s forfeiture provision increases Central Tool’s liability under its plan, and thus produces an injury we think sufficient to allow Central Tool to maintain this action.
Ill
Section 302 prohibits an employer from paying anything of value to a union or other representative of employees unless the payment falls within one of the exceptions set forth therein.31 Section 302(c)(5) validates employer-financed employee trust funds, such as Benefit Plan A, if, among other things, they operate “for the sole and exclusive benefit of the employees of [the contributing] employer and their families and dependents — ”32 Central Tool asserts that the forfeiture provision in Benefit Plan A is arbitrary and capricious, and thus does not inure to the “sole and exclusive benefit” of those designated in Section 302(c)(5).33
The statutory requirement embodied in this language was addressed by the Supreme Court in UMWA Health & Retirement Funds v. Robinson.34 Resolution of Central Tool’s claim, of course, must square with that decision. Moreover, since the holding in Robinson was framed on the basis of and by explicit reference to the substantial caselaw that Section 302(c)(5) had previously generated, a survey of that body of jurisprudence is essential to sound application of Robinson to the contentions Central Tool now presses.
Before Robinson, federal courts often encountered challenges to eligibility rules, or the application of such rules, promulgated for Section 302(c)(5) trust funds. [315]*315With but few exceptions,35 these courts refused to interpret Sections 302(c)(5) and 302(e) as conferring general equity jurisdiction to enforce fiduciary duties of trustees with respect to these funds, or otherwise to supervise the Funds’ day-to-day administration.36 This limitation on the role of the judiciary reflected a number of considerations: fear of overextending judicial resources in an area traditionally governed by state law;37 concern about the absence of an explicit basis for such jurisdiction in the language or legislative history of Section 302;38 and apprehension that a criminal statute might be construed too broadly.39 Moreover, the legislative history of Section 302 provided some indication that Congress did not intend its enactment of this provision to establish comprehensive federal oversight of trust fund administration.40
Despite this reluctance to exercise jurisdiction under Section 302(e) broadly, the overwhelming majority of courts infused Section 302(c)(5) with a demand that trust fund administration not be arbitrary or capricious.41 Although some early cases did so without reference to particular statutory language,42 subsequent decisions identified Section 302(c)(5)’s command that qualifying trust funds must operate for the “sole and [316]*316exclusive benefit” of covered employees as the source of the requirement.43
Courts often justified the availability of judicial review for arbitrariness as necessary to protect the “structure” of trust funds under Section 302(c)(5), but frequently failed to articulate a consistent standard governing the scope or rigor of the analysis.44 While some courts limited review to challenges to eligibility rules on their face,45 others focused on the putative beneficiaries affected by the trustee action complained of, and denied review unless a size-able number faced injury.46 Still others expanded the scope of review to include lawsuits disputing the application of an otherwise valid requirement to a single employee,47 and courts occasionally utilized the arbitrary-or-capricious test to review trustee action alleged to be procedurally unfair.48 Although courts normally disturbed eligibility rules or trustee actions only if they lacked a rational relationship to distribution of benefits to covered employees or to protection of the long-run financial viability of the trust fund,49 some appeared to engage in a higher level of scrutiny to measure the validity of such rules or actions,50 thereby blurring even more the contours of the arbitrary-or-capricious standard.51
In sum, courts construed Section 302(e) not to authorize federal enforcement of trustees’ fiduciary obligations with respect to Section 302(c)(5) trust funds. At the [317]*317same time, however, they interpreted the “sole and exclusive benefit” language in the latter section to prohibit arbitrary or capricious action by fund trustees. Because of the inherently mercurial nature of this standard and judicial indecision as to its scope and rigor, courts ultimately proved unable entirely to avoid overseeing the day-to-day administration of employee trust funds.52
Close scrutiny of the caselaw just chronicled underlay the Supreme Court’s decision in Robinson. The plaintiffs challenged a trust fund eligibility rule, established in a collective bargaining agreement between the United Mine Workers of America and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association,53 as arbitrary and capricious and therefore violative of Section 302(c)(5).54 Reversing the judgment of this court in favor of the plaintiffs,55 the Supreme Court held that the Section 302(c)(5) directive at issue — that the trust fund must operate for the “sole and exclusive benefit of employees of [the contributing] employer, and their families and dependents”— does not establish a reasonableness requirement applicable to eligibility rules or benefit levels fixed by collective bargaining.56 The Court construed this provision to mean simply that employer contributions to the trust fund must inure solely to the benefit of protected employees and their families, and that the arbitrariness of the distribution scheme in general or of eligibility rules in particular was not a matter of judicial concern.57
Although the Robinson decision had the potential altogether to eviscerate the arbitrary-or-capricious standard vis-a-vis Section 302(c)(5), the Court carefully refrained from so broad a holding. Distinguishing prior cases in this circuit, the Court held that eligibility rules adopted through collective bargaining, rather than by trustees in their discretion, are not subject to a reasonableness requirement under Section 302(c)(5).58 It follows, of course, that if the [318]*318rule involved in the instant case was a product of collective bargaining, it is immune to invalidation under a reasonableness test. We turn, then, to an analysis of Robinson’s impact on this case.
IV
The origin of the forfeiture provision protested by Central Tool effectively precludes a simple or mechanical application of Robinson. Section 4 of Article IX was adopted by the fund trustees, under authority conferred by the original trust agreement, prior to Central Tool’s participation in the plan.59 The provision, however, straddles the distinction drawn by the Robinson Court; it was approved, if only implicitly, through collective bargaining with subscribing employers, including Central Tool. For three reasons we think a proper interpretation of Robinson dictates that the forfeiture provision here, like the eligibility rule upheld in Robinson, not answer to any reasonableness requirement under Section 302(c)(5).
First, we can discern no relevant difference, from the perspective of either contributing employers or covered employees, between (a) an eligibility rule established initially by a collective bargaining agreement and (b) a rule promulgated by fund trustees, as authorized in the original trust agreement, prior to the time an employer becomes a plan member pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement. In each case, the employer’s entry into the plan results from collective bargaining, and the rule is part and parcel thereof. Since Robinson makes clear that Section 302 does not authorize federal courts to use a reasonableness standard to test the substantive content of an agreement reached through collective bargaining,60 the forfeiture provision challenged by Central Tool merits no greater scrutiny on these fact than the eligibility rule upheld in Robinson.
Second, the Robinson Court limited the scope of its holding by distinguishing the two prior decisions of this circuit.61 Examination of these cases suggests that the only question left undecided in Robinson was whether federal courts have jurisdiction under Section 302(e) to entertain challenges by a contributing employer or a covered employee to discretionary trustee actions taken unilaterally after, not before, commencement of the employer’s contributory obligation.62
[319]*319In one of these cases, Kosty v. Lewis,*63 a miner challenged a resolution, adopted by pension fund trustees after his employer assumed its funding obligation,64 which deprived him of benefits accrued under the superseded eligibility rules.65 Reviewing the procedural “reasonableness of the [lack of] opportunity afforded to [those persons with accrued benefits] under current standards”66 to consider retirement before the effective date of the new standards, this court found it arbitrary and capricious to expect individuals to “work ... at their peril in terms of the possibility that pension eligibility might be wiped out ... by the sudden action of the Trustees in changing the requirements.”67 The Supreme Court’s express reference to Kosty68 militates, we think, for a construction of Robinson that recognizes the propriety of judicial review only of independent trustee revisions to a plan made after an employer signs on.69
[320]*320The second decision that Robinson distinguished, Pete v. UMWA Welfare & Retirement Fund,70 is consistent with this articulation of the scope of judicial review under Section 302(e). Pete involved a challenge by miners to a resolution by the trustees of the same UMWA trust fund, adopted after their employers had become participants in the plan, that deprived the miners of benefits they otherwise would have received.71 Although the court did not expressly limit its inquiry as in Kosty, the similarity of the trustees’ action in the two cases offers further support for our decision to utilize the rationale explicated in Kosty to inform our interpretation of Robinson.
The lack of explicit reference by this court in Pete or by the Supreme Court in Robinson to the rationale espoused in Kosty does not vitiate an interpretation of Robinson based thereon. The Robinson Court construed Section 302(c)(5) more restrictively than prior caselaw, and the cases chosen to illustrate the limits of the new interpretation could not have delineated the intended distinction with absolute precision or exhaustive prescience. We recognize the shortcomings inherent in any attempt to extract an understanding of Robinson from the cases limiting its holding, but we cannot ignore the deliberate selection of those cases as an indication of the Court’s intent to temper its decision. We thus take the narrow focus of both Kosty and Pete as support for the proposition that Robinson did not leave undecided, but instead repudiated, the jurisdiction of federal courts under Section 302(e) to adjudicate challenges to trustee action by contributing employers who became plan members pursuant to collective bargaining agreements after the disputed action occurred.
The third reason for our holding arises from the absence of any statutory contemplation of a reasonableness requirement as a means of protecting Central Tool’s employees from eligibility rules such as the forfeiture provision in issue here. The legislative history reveals that Section 302 was enacted, at least in part,72 to protect [321]*321covered employees from improper management of employee trust funds.73 This legislative objective may well have promoted the emergence of the arbitrary-or-capricious test under Section 302(c)(5) as the best, if not the only, means by which covered employees might be shielded from arbitrary trustee actions. In cases such as this one, however, this type of review is not necessary adequately to safeguard the interests of covered employees. The eligibility rule in question already was part of Benefit Plan A when IAM and Central Tool negotiated for the company’s participation in the plan. The company might have taken steps to counteract any perceived unfairness in its terms, and the union had the opportunity to shelter its members therefrom. Section 302(c)(5)(B) required the plan to be in writing and that it specify eligibility rules in detail,74 thus ensuring that both the company and the union had sufficient knowledge of the provision to act responsively at the time they entered into their collective bargaining agreement.
We conclude, then, that whatever protection employees may need under Section 302(c)(5) against arbitrary trustee actions occurring after their employer has become a plan participant is afforded by union representation, as facilitated by the requirements of Section 302(c)(5)(B),75 and obviates the need for judicial review of such challenges.76 In light additionally of Robinson’s observation that neither the statutory text nor the legislative history of Section 302(c)(5) warrants judicial scrutiny [322]*322of eligibility requirements fixed by collective bargaining under an arbitrary-or-capricious standard, we are persuaded that a forfeiture rule embedded in a benefit plan when an employer negotiates plan membership by collective bargaining — like eligibility rules fixed initially by collective bargaining — is not subject to a reasonableness requirement under Section 302(c)(5).77
For these reasons, we hold that the forfeiture provision challenged by Central Tool falls within the ambit of Robinson and outside our proper authority to review. Accordingly, we need not reach the question whether the forfeiture provision in suit is arbitrary or capricious. We affirm the judgment of the District Court that the forfeiture provision is valid for benefit-accrual purposes, and reverse the judgment that the provision is invalid under Section 302(c)(5) insofar as it deprives any Central Tool employee of vested status under Benefit Plan A.
So ordered.