Clark v. State Teachers Retirement Sys.

2018 Ohio 4680
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
Docket18AP-105
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2018 Ohio 4680 (Clark v. State Teachers Retirement Sys.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. State Teachers Retirement Sys., 2018 Ohio 4680 (Ohio Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as Clark v. State Teachers Retirement Sys., 2018-Ohio-4680.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Brian C. Clark et al., :

Plaintiffs-Appellants, : No. 18AP-105 (C.P.C. No. 16CV-7360) v. : (REGULAR CALENDAR) State Teachers Retirement System, :

Defendant-Appellee. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on November 20, 2018

On brief: Cohen Rosenthal & Kramer LLP, Joshua R. Cohen and James B. Rosenthal; J. Randall Nye, for appellants. Argued: Joshua R. Cohen.

On brief: Tucker Ellis LLP, Karl A. Bekeny, Benjamin C. Sasse, Michael J. Ruttinger and Christine M. Snyder, for appellee. Argued: Karl A. Bekeny.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

TYACK, J.

{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants, Brian C. Clark, Steven Conn, B. David Ridpath, Zhaohui Xu, and John Zipp ("appellants"), appeal the February 2, 2018 judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas in favor of defendant-appellee, State Teachers Retirement System ("STRS"). For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas. I. Factual and Procedural History {¶ 2} This appeal involves a challenge to the amount STRS collects as a "mitigating rate" from employers who have employees enrolled in alternative retirement plans ("ARPs") instead of the traditional defined benefit plan provided by STRS. No. 18AP-105 2

{¶ 3} Under Ohio law, full-time employees of public institutions of higher education who would otherwise be subject to STRS, may elect to participate in an ARP rather than the public retirement system that otherwise covers the employee. The ARP must be a defined contribution plan qualified under section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code that provides retirement and death benefits through a number of investment options. R.C. 3305.02. The ARP provides increased flexibility and portability in the participants' retirement investments. As with the traditional defined benefit plan, both the employer and employee contribute a percentage of the employee's compensation to the plan (currently 14 percent). But unlike the STRS defined benefit plan, ARP participants have individual accounts into which both employee and employer contributions are paid. Participants then choose how to invest the contributions from a set of investment options. What they receive in retirement is dependent on the returns generated by the contributions made to their ARPs. {¶ 4} STRS members who are not employees of a public institution of higher education have the option of a defined contribution plan ("DC Plan"). Under this plan, which operates similarly to an ARP, teachers can choose investment options for the funds they and their employers contribute towards their retirement. The benefits they receive depend on the return generated by those investments. {¶ 5} If an employee is enrolled in an ARP or the DC Plan, not all of the employer contribution goes to the employee's individual account. The employer must contribute a portion of its employer contribution to STRS to offset any negative financial impact of the ARP or DC Plan participation on the state retirement system. The contribution is known as the "mitigating rate." R.C. 3305.06(D); R.C. 3307.84. This appeal presents an issue of statutory construction related to the mitigating rate. Appellants' claim is premised on provisions of the Ohio Revised Code that were amended and subsequently repealed in 2017. The statutes relevant to this appeal are those that were in force in July 2013. {¶ 6} R.C. 3305.06(D) originally set the mitigating rate for ARPs at 6 percent. The statute authorized the Ohio Retirement Study Council ("ORSC")1 to automatically adjust this figure to reflect determinations made by triennial actuarial studies for purposes of

1 The ORSC performs oversight functions for the various state retirement systems. R.C. 171.03. No. 18AP-105 3

assessing an appropriate mitigating rate. Only one such study was ever conducted resulting in a mitigating rate of 5.76 percent in 2000. In 2001, R.C. 3305.06 was amended to eliminate any automatic adjustment to the ARP mitigating rate, and gave ORSC the power to increase or decrease the rate based on actuarial studies. The amended statute provided that the percentage shall be 6 percent, except that the percentage may be adjusted by the ORSC to reflect determinations made by triennial actuarial studies conducted under R.C. 171.07. {¶ 7} The mitigating rate for the DC Plan was controlled differently. The legislature gave STRS the authority to control the mitigating rate subject to actuarial studies. R.C. 3307.84. In 2000, upon the creation of the DC Plan, STRS commissioned an actuarial study which set the DC Plan mitigating rate at 3.5 percent. In addition, the General Assembly enacted R.C. 3305.061, which prohibited the ARP mitigating rate from exceeding STRS's mitigating rate for its DC Plan. This resulted in the ARP rate becoming 3.5 percent, notwithstanding the ARP rate set by ORSC was higher at 5.76 percent. {¶ 8} The DC Plan rate and the ARP rate remained the same until July 2013, when STRS raised the mitigating rate for the DC Plan to 4.5 percent. STRS determined the ARP mitigating rate should also be raised to 4.5 percent to match the DC Plan based on its interpretation of R.C. 3305.061. {¶ 9} In 2015, the General Assembly enacted R.C. 3305.062 which set the mitigating rate for ARPs at 4.5 percent. That statue was subsequently repealed and, in 2017, the system was changed to delegate the authority for calculating and setting the mitigating rates for ARPs and the DC Plan to STRS based on independent actuarial studies. R.C. 3305.061, the statute at issue in this appeal, was repealed by 2016 H.B. No. 520, Section 2, effective April 6, 2017. {¶ 10} Appellants are a group of faculty members at Ohio's public colleges and universities who have opted for an ARP in lieu of participating in the traditional defined benefit plan provided by STRS. Appellants filed this action against STRS on August 8, 2016. Appellants sued for equitable restitution of the amounts collected by STRS when the mitigating rate was changed from 3.5 percent to 4.5 percent in July 2013 until the implementation of R.C. 3305.062 in September 2015. The appellants alleged that STRS unlawfully implemented this increase and unjustly enriched itself by doing so. No. 18AP-105 4

{¶ 11} The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. STRS took the position that the July 2013 ARP mitigating rate increase was required by operation of law under R.C. 3305.061. The appellants took the position that the rate increase was unlawful because only the ORSC had the authority to raise the mitigating rate for ARPs during this time. Furthermore, appellants argued that R.C. 3305.061 did not require parity between the DC Plan mitigating rate and the ARP mitigating rate, nor did it forbid the DC Plan rate from exceeding the ARP rate. {¶ 12} The trial court granted STRS's motion for summary judgment on February 2, 2018. At the same time, it denied appellants' motion for summary judgment and dismissed as moot appellants' motion for class certification and appointment of class counsel. {¶ 13} The trial court found that when ORSC failed to conduct the triennial actuarial studies required under R.C. 171.07, the actual ARP mitigating rate reverted to the original 6 percent rate designated under R.C. 3305.06. The court then reasoned that as long as the DC Plan mitigating rate was less than 6 percent, the "effective" ARP mitigating rate must be the same as the defined contribution plan mitigating rate pursuant to R.C. 3305.061. Thus, when STRS raised the defined contribution plan mitigating rate to 4.5 percent in July 2013, STRS could collect a 4.5 percent mitigating rate on ARPs, but no more, pursuant to R.C. 3305.061. II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 4680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-teachers-retirement-sys-ohioctapp-2018.