Boston Retirement Board v. McCormick

189 N.E.2d 204, 345 Mass. 692, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 732
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 2, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 189 N.E.2d 204 (Boston Retirement Board v. McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Retirement Board v. McCormick, 189 N.E.2d 204, 345 Mass. 692, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 732 (Mass. 1963).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The board seeks declaratory relief. The parties have agreed that the facts alleged in the bill are all the material facts and that inferences may be drawn as if the bill were a case stated. The case has been reported without decision. Mrs. McCormick became a thirty-hour-a-week floor-duty nurse in the Boston hospital department and a member of the Boston retirement system, effective June 2,1954. See G. L. c. 32, §§ 1-28; St. 1947, c. 520. She *693 received, through exposure to tuberculosis bacilli in the course of her employment during July and August, 1955, an injury compensable under the workmen’s compensation provisions of Gr. L. c. 152, liability for which was redeemed by the city by a lump sum payment in March, 1960.

On October 5, 1955, Mrs. McCormick was granted a leave of absence for illness to March 5, 1956, which was successively extended to March 7, 1958. When she then neither returned to work nor requested a further leave, ‘ ‘ she was automatically terminated as a . . . nurse.”

On a prescribed form 1 filed with the board about May 6, 1958, she “requested that she be paid the amount of her accumulated total [retirement] deductions.” This payment was made about May 19,1958.

At the time she filed this form with the board, “she had become totally and permanently incapacitated for further duty before attaining the maximum age for her group by reason of a personal injury sustained as a result of, and while in the performance of, her duties at a definite place and at a definite time after the date of her becoming a member, without serious and wilful misconduct on her part.” About August 2,1960, her counsel wrote to the board claiming for her accidental disability “retirement benefits for total and permanent incapacity . . . and requesting [an] official application form.” The board received “a formal application for an accidental disability retirement, which . . . [Mrs. McCormick] withdrew on July 6, 1961, to eliminate questions as to the necessity of a tender of repayment *694 of refunded accumulated total deductions as condition precedent to application.” On that same day, she (without having become again employed by the city) “tendered to the . . . [board] : (1) the amount of her accumulated total deductions which had been paid to her . . . about May 19, 1958, together with . . . interest; and (2) an application for an accidental disability retirement allowance. ’ ’ The board has “refused to accept such tenders contending . . . that it is neither mandatory upon . . . [it], nor within . . . [its] power, to accept such tenders.” The board further contends that Mrs. McCormick is barred from any retirement allowance by the instrument executed by her on May 6,1958.

General Laws c. 32, § 7 (as amended through St. 1951, c. 545, § l), 2 provides for an accidental disability retirement allowance made up of two principal components. The first is a yearly pension “equal to two thirds of the average annual rate of . . . [the] regular compensation” for the twelve months period for which the member last received regular compensation prior to his or her retirement. See §7 (2) (a) (ii). There is an additional pension where there are dependents of the member. See § 7 (2) (a) (iii). The other principal component is an annuity equal to the regular life annuity specified in § 12 (2), option (a), clause (i), the value of which “on the date such allowance becomes effective shall be the actuarial equivalent of . . . [the member’s] accumulated regular deductions, if any, on such *695 date.” See § 7 (2) (a) (i). Pensions to members are paid from the pension fund of the system. See § 22 (3). The annuity is paid from the annuity reserve fund existing under § 22 (2), to which upon the retirement of a member, see § 22 (1), clause (1), his accumulated total deductions shall be transferred from his account in the system’s annuity savings fund.

The present controversy appears to have arisen not only because of the great complexity of the relevant provisions of c. 32, but also because, when Mrs. McCormick requested the return of her accumulated total deductions, she had not claimed an accidental disability retirement allowance. The agreed facts indicate that she then could reasonably have claimed one. Whether either she or the board then knew of her potential claim does not appear. In view of the substantial pension to which she was entitled as part of this disability retirement allowance, we infer that, if she had then known of her claim and of her total disability, Mrs. McCormick would have sought the retirement allowance rather than the return of her accumulated deductions. We must determine whether under c. 32 the action which she then took now bars her (without consideration of possible relief for mutual mistake, see Reggio v. Warren, 207 Mass. 525, 533-538; see also Piea Realty Co. Inc. v. Papuzynski, 342 Mass. 240, 248) from obtaining at least the pension portion of her disability allowance.

Mrs. McCormick under § 3 (1) (a) (i) continued to be a “member in service” of the retirement system during her leaves of absence. See Gannon v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd. 338 Mass. 628, 631. See also § 14 (1) (a) and (c). Upon the automatic termination of her employment on March 7, 1958 (as a “member in service whose employment has been terminated . . . entitled to any . . . potential retirement allowance or to a return of . . . [her] accumulated total deductions” under §§ 1-28), she became a “member inactive.” See c. 32, § 3 (1) (a) (ii). This description of her status in the system does not “serve to deprive . . . [her] of any . . . rights or privileges” under *696 §§ 1-28. See § 3 (1) (c), which also provides that a “member shall retain . . . membership in the system so long as . . . living and entitled to any . . . potential benefit therein.” Upon the agreed facts, Mrs. McCormick was at least entitled to a “potential retirement allowance.”

For another reason, also, Mrs. McCormick was entitled to remain a member of the system. On May 6, 1958, when she asked for the return of her accumulated total deductions, she was entitled to workmen’s compensation payments. The city’s liability for these was redeemed by a lump sum payment in March, 1960. The amount of this payment does not appear in the record, but the board, in its brief, assumes (although it does not expressly concede) that, even as late as July 6, 1961, the period over which the lump sum was to be allocated pursuant to § 14 (1) (c), had not expired. During that period she retained by virtue of § 14 (1) (a), first paragraph, “all the rights of a member in service” until a retirement allowance should become effective for her. 3

Certain situations in which a member of a system may obtain return of her accumulated total deductions are listed in § 10 (4), as it appears in St. 1945, c. 658, § l.3 4 The second sentence of § 10 (4) affirmatively authorizes certain members to be paid the amount of their accumulated total deductions. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
189 N.E.2d 204, 345 Mass. 692, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-retirement-board-v-mccormick-mass-1963.