Farrier v. Teacher's Retirement Board

2005 MT 229, 120 P.3d 390, 328 Mont. 375, 2005 Mont. LEXIS 397
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 2005
Docket04-760
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2005 MT 229 (Farrier v. Teacher's Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrier v. Teacher's Retirement Board, 2005 MT 229, 120 P.3d 390, 328 Mont. 375, 2005 Mont. LEXIS 397 (Mo. 2005).

Opinions

JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Appellant Teacher’s Retirement Board (TRB) appeals from an order entered by the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, granting summary judgment in favor of Respondent Merle Farrier (Farrier). Farrier, a former employee of the Hot Springs School District and a current employee of the University of Montana (University), challenged the statutory scheme governing the eligibility for public pensions of those employees who work for a local school district, retire, and then begin work at the University. The District Court found that the statutory proscription that prevents a retired teacher from receiving retirement benefits from a state sponsored retirement program while he or she remains an employee of the University and a contributing member of another private retirement program violates the right to equal protection. We reverse.

¶2 We must address whether the District Court properly determined that § 19-21-202, MCA, and Rule 2.44.305, ARM, violated Farrier’s right to equal protection under the Montana Constitution.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶3 The determination of Farrier’s retirement benefits provides the underlying facts upon which TRB bases this appeal. Our decision in Farrier v. Teacher’s Retirement Board, 2003 MT 278, 317 Mont. 509, 78 P.3d 1207, sets forth the details of the determination proceedings and subsequent appeals.

¶4 To summarize, Farrier retired in 1999 after thirty years of teaching in the Hot Springs School District. At that time he remained fully vested in certain retirement benefits from the Teacher’s Retirement System (TRS), which is part of Montana’s pension system for state and local employees. In 1993, while still a full-time teacher for the school district, Farrier accepted a part-time position as a visiting professor at the University and elected to pay his University retirement benefits into the Optional Retirement Program (ORP) instead of TRS. Farrier accepted a full-time teaching position at the University after he retired.

¶5 Farrier’s employment with the University triggered the application of two inter-locking provisions of Montana’s teacher retirement system: Section 19-21-202, MCA, and Rule 2.44.305, ARM. First, §19-21-202, MCA, restricts a teacher’s participation in TRS if he or she is employed by the University and elects to enroll in ORP. The [377]*377statute deems ‘inactive” any TRS member who enrolls in ORP and prohibits the receipt of benefits until such time as that member qualifies or terminates employment in the second job. Second, Rule 2.44.305, ARM, prohibits members of the University system who elect to participate in ORP from receiving TRS retirement benefits until they have terminated their employment. This provision permits teaching retirees returning to employment within the University and electing to participate in ORP to be reinstated to the status of an inactive vested member of TRS.

¶6 Taken together, these provisions require a retired local teacher who accepts a subsequent job at the University to choose, during the period he or she receives a salary from the second job, between (1) not receiving retirement benefits from the first job but accruing additional retirement benefits from the second job, or (2) receiving retirement benefits from the first job but not accruing further benefits from the second job. Indeed, the University contract provided Farrier the opportunity to make a one-time election to pay his retirement benefits into either TRS or ORP and contained the following acknowledgment: “I understand that by this election I become ineligible to be an active member of [TRS] or to receive monthly benefits as provided by Title 19, Chapter 4, M.C.A. while I remain eligible to participate in the [ORP].” This choice between receiving the first pension and accruing the second is required only by retired teachers who accept a subsequent job at the University, not when retired teachers accept a second public job. As such, Farrier retained the option of continuing to pay into TRS from his University employment and build his retirement through it, or to start a new membership in ORP. He chose the ORP option.

¶7 Farrier began receiving TRS retirement benefits in July 1999. TRB learned three months later that Farrier had accepted a full-time teaching position at the University, deemed him “inactive,” and therefore suspended his benefits until the cessation of his employment. Farrier first contested TRB’s decision to suspend his benefits to a hearing examiner and then to the District Court. He argued that his full-time employment with the University and ORP election failed to prohibit the inurement of his TRS monthly benefits. He further contended that the statutory prohibition on receiving TRS benefits while employed at the University and participating in ORP violated his right to equal protection under the Montana Constitution.

¶8 We ultimately determined that Farrier should remain classified as an inactive member of TRS and thus ineligible to receive benefits while employed full-time by the University and contributing to ORP. [378]*378Farrier, ¶ 42. We declined to reach his equal protection argument and remanded the matter to the District Court on the grounds that neither the District Court in its order, nor the parties in their briefs, had informed the Court as to which particular statutes proved unconstitutional. Farrier, ¶ 44.

¶9 The District Court concluded on remand that no rational basis existed for treating Farrier differently from similarly situated retired teachers who proceeded to work in other public employment and lawfully received benefits from a different retirement system. Specifically, the court contrasted the application of §19-21-202, MCA, and Rule 2.44.305, ARM, to retired teachers who accepted a second job with the University and elected to participate in ORP, with another retiree who obtained non-teaching public employment and participated in other state or private retirement programs. The District Court determined that the statutory scheme incorrectly deemed inactive the retired teacher by operation of law while the non-teaching public employee remained eligible to receive monthly TRS benefits and other pension benefits. The court concluded that the legislature’s classification proved arbitrary and the statutory proscription denied Farrier the equal protection of the law. This appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶10 We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo, based on the same criteria applied by the district court. Counterpoint, Inc. v. Essex Ins. Co., 1998 MT 251, ¶ 7, 291 Mont. 189, ¶ 7, 967 P.2d 393, ¶ 7 (citation omitted). As the material facts here remain uncontroverted, we limit our review to questions of law. Brabeck v. Employers Mut. Cas. Co., 2000 MT 373, ¶ 8, 303 Mont. 468, ¶ 8, 16 P.3d 355, ¶ 8.

DISCUSSION

¶11 TRB argues that the District Court incorrectly determined that § 19-21-202, MCA, and Rule 2.44.305, ARM, treat inactive TRS beneficiaries disparately without serving a legitimate state purpose. TRB maintains that the legislature reasonably designed its retirement systems to condition receipt of retirement benefits on the employment decisions of its members in order to diminish the potential adverse impact on TRS’s funding structure.

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Bluebook (online)
2005 MT 229, 120 P.3d 390, 328 Mont. 375, 2005 Mont. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrier-v-teachers-retirement-board-mont-2005.