Barnstable County Retirement Board v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board

683 N.E.2d 290, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 341, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 179
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1997
DocketNo. 96-P-414
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 683 N.E.2d 290 (Barnstable County Retirement Board v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnstable County Retirement Board v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board, 683 N.E.2d 290, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 341, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 179 (Mass. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Ireland, J.

The parties dispute the method by which certain management fees that have been refunded by an investment management company to the Barnstable County retirement board (board) should be accounted for and recorded in the board’s books. The board contends that the refunds, which represent a portion of the total amount of management fees that [342]*342the board paid to an investment management company, should be logged in its books as investment income to show a net positive return on the investment funds that the company handled for the board. The defendants, the Contributory Retirement Appeal Board (CRAB) and the Public Employee Retirement Administration (PERA), contend otherwise. According to them, the refunded management fees are just that: uninvested money that was paid back to the board, dollar for dollar, by the investment management company for the board’s overpayment of management fees. In other words, the board did not, according to CRAB and PERA, actually make money on that portion of its funds; it merely received a refund of its own uninvested principal.

The amount in this particular case is small: $27,000 in refunds received by the board in 1991 for management fees that it paid to the company in 1987, plus $11,000 in interest on those fees. But we are told that the stakes are actually much higher. Significantly greater refunds from that particular company, totaling well over $1,500,000, are also in the pipeline. In addition, some twenty other local retirement boards have had their investment funds managed by that company, and they, too, are due to receive, or have already received substantial refunds of management fees. CRAB and PERA further point out that the various retirement boards around the Commonwealth are rated by PERA according to their individual performances in investing their members’ pension funds. Allowing the board to show as investment income or a return on investment fees that have been refunded to it, according to CRAB and PERA, would throw PERA’s rating system into disarray by distorting the board’s performance.

PERA’s and CRAB’s position in this controversy is memorialized in CRAB’s administrative decision of March 21, 1994, which the board appealed to the Superior Court pursuant to the State Administrative Procedure Act, G. L. c. 30A, § 14. In a memorandum of decision, a Superior Court judge reasoned that the refunded management fees “can be characterized as a penalty, or a make good [by the investment management company]”; but that, however characterized, the refunds were the result of the board’s initial decision to invest with the company and should, therefore, show up as a return on that investment. The judge reversed CRAB’s decision and entered judgment in the board’s favor that the total amount of the refund [343]*343was, in fact, a return on the board’s investment with the company.

We affirm CRAB’s decision and, in so doing, reverse the judgment of the Superior Court. Refusal to allow the board to include refunded administrative fees and interest thereon as a return or yield on the board’s investments was not arbitrary or capricious within the meaning of the State Administrative Procedure Act, G. L. c. 30A, § 14, and was consistent with PERA’s over-all statutory responsibility to prescribe reasonable and uniform benchmarks for measuring individual retirement boards’ returns on their invested pension funds.

Factual background. Beginning in about 1986, the board retained Aetna Life Insurance Company (Aetna) to manage a significant portion of the board’s pension funds. The board paid Aetna management fees representing a percentage of the total amount of pension funds that Aetna was going to handle. The management fees were paid out of the board’s investment income account. Aetna, in turn, redirected portions of the management fees in the form of commissions to one Carmen Elio and various investment companies controlled by Elio. When the matter of such “split” commissions and Elio’s investment activities in general came under the scrutiny of the Attorney General and the United States Attorney, Aetna, although it admitted no wrongdoing, agreed in September, 1991, to refund to the board (and to other retirement boards) a portion of its management fees as “an accommodation” and “to avoid even the appearance of impropriety.”

Aetna’s first refund to the board in 1991 was for $38,000 ($27,000 for management fees paid for 1987, plus $11,000 interest, more or less, on those fees). That payment was followed in 1992 by another payment to the board of $1,117,000, and in 1993, by a third payment of $586,276. Like the first payment, the 1992 and 1993 payments included a substantial amount in interest.2

In February, 1992, acting pursuant to its authority under G. L. c. 32, § 21(1)(«), as appearing in St. 1982, c. 630, § 25, to “prescribe and supervise methods of accounting and record-keeping” for the Commonwealth’s public retirement systems, PERA issued a memorandum to all local retirement systems [344]*344that had received refunds from Aetna, including the board, instructing them that the refunds were to be regarded as a miscellaneous cash receipt and should be logged according to PERA’s accounting manual as, “Investment income received, reimbursement of management fees.” PERA’s memorandum further instructed that, while the refunded money could be restored to the board’s investment income account from which it had originally been paid, the money should not be counted in the board’s books or in its annual report to investors as a return on invested pension funds.

The board asked PERA to reconsider its decision to exclude the refunds from the calculation of its return on investment. PERA declined, but it did tell the board that the 1991 PERA investment report would include a special notation that the investment return records did not include Aetna’s refunds of management fees. Pursuant to G. L. c. 32, § 16(4), the board sought review by CRAB of PERA’s decision. CRAB assigned the matter to an administrative magistrate from the Division of Administrative Law Appeals (DALA) who, after a hearing, ruled in favor of the board. Specifically, the magistrate found that PERA’s decision was arbitrary and inconsistent with its prior and subsequent interpretation of its own rules and regulations. The magistrate also found that PERA’s instructions to the board on how it should account for the refunds amounted to an exercise of discretionary authority by PERA respecting the management and control of pension funds, thus making PERA a fiduciary of the board and potentially liable to it for any investment losses.

In its final administrative decision on the matter, CRAB reversed several of the magistrate’s rulings, including the one that PERA had acted as' a fiduciary. More important, CRAB affirmed PERA’s original ruling that the refunded management fees that the board received in 1991 were not the result of investment activity by the board in that year and, therefore, could not be treated as a return on investment. The Superior Court judge, in turn, vacated CRAB’s decision as arbitrary and capricious and reinstated the magistrate’s decision in favor of the board.

Discussion. Under G. L. c. 30A, § 14(7), a reviewing court may set aside the agency’s decision if the decision is unsupported by substantial evidence, or is arbitrary, capricious, or “not in accordance with law.” See Retire-[345]*345merit Bd. of Somerville v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 38 Mass. App. Ct. 673, 676-677 (1995).

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Bluebook (online)
683 N.E.2d 290, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 341, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnstable-county-retirement-board-v-contributory-retirement-appeal-board-massappct-1997.