English v. Public Employees Retirement Board

216 P.3d 342, 230 Or. App. 506, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1270
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 2, 2009
Docket125766, 129958; A135928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 P.3d 342 (English v. Public Employees Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
English v. Public Employees Retirement Board, 216 P.3d 342, 230 Or. App. 506, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1270 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*508 EDMONDS, P. J.

Petitioners seek review of a final order of the Public Employees Retirement Board (PERB) that denied their requests to change their retirement allowances and remove their designated beneficiaries. PERB denied petitioners’ requests because ORS 238.305(6) provides that a retired member of the Public Employees Retirement System (PERS) may change his or her retirement allowances only in situations involving death or divorce. Upon retirement, petitioners had designated their same-sex domestic partners as their beneficiaries. Because Oregon law did not allow petitioners to marry their same-sex domestic partners, petitioners were unable to divorce their domestic partners when their relationships ended. Accordingly, PERB denied petitioners’ requests to change their retirement allowances. On review for legal error, ORS 183.482(8)(a), we remand the final order for reconsideration.

We begin with a description of the statutory scheme to frame the issues before us. Upon retirement, a PERS member is entitled to receive a “service retirement allowance.” ORS 238.300. Within 60 days of receiving the first benefit payment, a PERS member can elect to convert his or her “service retirement allowance” into a “service retirement annuity.” ORS 238.305(1). A retired member may select from among six optional forms of service retirement annuities under ORS 238.305(1). The service retirement annuities at issue in this case are Option 1, Option 2A, and Option 3A, which are described in ORS 238.305(1).

Option 1 provides the PERS member the largest monthly benefit, but it is paid only for the lifetime of the member. Option 3A provides the PERS member a smaller monthly benefit; however, upon the member’s death, a surviving beneficiary receives a monthly benefit equal to one-half of the member’s monthly benefit for the duration of the beneficiary’s life. Finally, Option 2A provides the PERS member an even smaller monthly benefit; however, upon the member’s death, a surviving beneficiary receives a monthly benefit equal to the member’s full monthly benefit. ORS 238.305(1).

*509 A PERS member who, upon retirement, elects Options 2A or 3A may change that election in three circumstances. The first circumstance is described in ORS 238.305(5), which provides:

“The designation of a beneficiary, the election of an option or any other election or designation under subsection (1), (2), (3), or (4) of this section may be changed by the member within 60 days after the date of the first benefit payment, except that the designation of a beneficiary under Option 4 may be changed by the member at any time before the member’s death.”

The second and third circumstances are described in ORS 238.305(6), which provides that a member who has elected options 2A or 3A may receive what is called a “pop-up” election either upon the beneficiary’s death or upon divorce from the beneficiary:

“If a retired member has elected to receive a service retirement allowance under Option 2A or Option 3A * * * and if the beneficiary under that option dies after the expiration of the time within which the member could change the election of an option or if the beneficiary is the spouse of the member and the marriage relationship is terminated as provided by law * * * the member may elect to receive, in lieu of the optional form of allowance previously elected, the allowance that the member would have received on the effective date of retirement under Option 1 * *

In other words, if, after the member elects Option 2A or 3A, the beneficiary dies or the member and beneficiary divorce, then the “pop-up” is triggered, allowing the retired member to elect the service retirement annuity under Option 1, thereby increasing the member’s monthly benefit amount and removing the designated beneficiary.

Finally, ORS 238.305(10) provides that PERB may deny a “pop-up” election if “that denial is required to maintain” the Public Employees Retirement Fund’s tax-qualified status:

“The board may deny an election to convert a service retirement allowance under this section, a change of beneficiary under this section or a change in benefit options under this section if that denial is required to maintain the *510 status of the system and the Public Employees Retirement Fund as a qualified governmental retirement plan and trust under the Internal Revenue Code and under regulations adopted pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.”

With that background in mind, we turn to the facts of this case, which are undisputed. Petitioners, Pinkerton and English, are retired PERS members. Pinkerton retired in 1999, and she elected Option 3A, naming her long-time, same-sex domestic partner as her beneficiary. That relationship ended in 2005, and, in 2006, Pinkerton formally requested, under the “pop-up” election that PERS change her service retirement annuity from Option 3A to Option 1, a change that would have increased her monthly benefit amount and removed her beneficiary. Similarly, when English retired in 2002, she elected Option 2A and named her same-sex domestic partner of 23 years as her beneficiary. In 2005, after that relationship had ended, English requested under the “pop-up” election that PERS change her service retirement annuity from Option 2A to Option 1, which would have increased her monthly benefit amount and removed her beneficiary. The record establishes that both petitioners, before retirement, would have married their same-sex domestic partners had Oregon law allowed them to do so.

PERS denied petitioners’ requests to change their service retirement annuity elections. In separate Letters of Determination, PERS explained that, because the beneficiaries were still alive and neither petitioner married nor divorced their designated beneficiary, the “pop-up” election was not triggered under ORS 238.305(6). Indeed, PERS concluded, in its letter sent to Pinkerton’s attorney, that “the plain language of ORS 238.305(6) allows a ‘pop-up’ after entry of the judgment of divorce. Because Ms.

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Related

Sirois v. PERS
335 Or. App. 731 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 P.3d 342, 230 Or. App. 506, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-v-public-employees-retirement-board-orctapp-2009.