Flanigan v. W. VA. PUB. EMPLOYEES'RET. SYST.

342 S.E.2d 414
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1986
Docket16999
StatusPublished

This text of 342 S.E.2d 414 (Flanigan v. W. VA. PUB. EMPLOYEES'RET. SYST.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanigan v. W. VA. PUB. EMPLOYEES'RET. SYST., 342 S.E.2d 414 (W. Va. 1986).

Opinion

342 S.E.2d 414 (1986)

Michael M. FLANIGAN
v.
WEST VIRGINIA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES' RETIREMENT SYSTEM, etc., A. James Manchin, et al., etc.

No. 16999.

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

March 25, 1986.

*416 Larry Harless, Morgantown, for appellant.

Atty. Gen. Charlie Brown, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen. Paul Richard Hull, Charleston, for appellee.

*415 McGRAW, Justice:

This is an original proceeding in mandamus. The petitioner, Michael M. Flanigan, seeks a writ mandating his enrollment in the West Virginia Public Employees Retirement System. The respondent West Virginia Public Employees Retirement System (hereinafter "PERS") is a public corporation created and maintained for the purpose of providing retirement, disability and survivor benefits for employees of the State of West Virginia and of other participating public employers within the State.[1] The other named respondents are the individual members of the Board of Trustees of PERS, statutorily responsible for the administration and management of the system.[2]

The material facts are undisputed. The petitioner is a 69-year-old magistrate of Mercer County. He has been elected to the position for three consecutive terms, serving as a magistrate since January 1, 1977. Prior to that time, from 1935 through 1976, he was employed as a school custodian by the Board of Education of Mercer County. His long tenure with the Board of Education was interrupted only once, by his service in the Navy during World War II. The petitioner also served Mercer County as a justice of the peace from 1973 through 1976.

At the end of 1976, the petitioner left his position with the school board in order to assume the full-time office of magistrate on January 1, 1977. The petitioner had been a contributing member of the State Teachers Retirement System (hereinafter "TRS" or "Teachers System") since its inception in 1941.[3] Accordingly, at the time of his leaving the employ of the school board he filed an application for retirement allowance based upon over four decades of *417 creditable service. Shortly after filing this application, the petitioner assumed the office of magistrate and sought advice pertaining to his pension rights and duties from his new employer. In a handwritten letter received by the State Court Administrator's Office on February 4, 1977, the petitioner stated that, "I am retiring from the employment for Mercer County Schools as of January 1, 1977, am entitled to draw retirement ... now that I am a magistrate, would you please advise if this is the correct way, or can I continue to pay, and can I draw retirement." By letter dated February 16, 1977, the Court Administrator's Office responded to the petitioner's inquiry.[4] Noting that he was currently eligible to receive benefits from the State Teachers Retirement Fund, the Administrator's Office advised that West Virginia law "excludes you from participating in the Public Employees' Retirement Fund once you have become eligible to participate in the Teachers' Retirement Fund. Therefore, you are not eligible to pay into the Public Employees' Retirement System for a three-year period and receive benefits from that System."[5]

Acting pursuant to this interpretation, the Court Administrator's Office did not enroll the petitioner in PERS. The petitioner, in apparent reliance upon this determination by his supervising employer, did not pursue his entitlement to participate in the Public Employees Retirement System and did not withdraw his yet unapproved retirement allowance application from the Teachers Retirement System. On March 16, 1977, the Executive Secretary for the Teachers Retirement Board approved the petitioner's application, certified him as having 41.542 years of retirement service credit, and set his monthly retirement allowance at $329.69. Pursuant to subsequent statutory cost-of-living supplements, that monthly allowance is currently $404.67.

In his petition, the petitioner seeks a writ directing the respondents to enroll him in PERS with service credit toward retirement based upon his aggregate years of credit accumulated under the Teachers System and his subsequent years of service as a magistrate.[6] Thus, the questions of law presented in this proceeding center upon whether the petitioner is entitled to enroll in the Public Employees Retirement System and, if so, under what terms and conditions.

At the outset we note that the determination of the petitioner's membership eligibility made by his supervisory employer, the Office of the State Court Administrator, was wrong. The membership provisions of the Public Employees Retirement Act permitted his participation in the system at the time he became a magistrate.[7]*418 The supervising employer, however, concluded that because the petitioner was eligible to begin drawing retirement benefits from the Teachers System, he was ineligible to become a member of PERS. Apparently, this conclusion was based upon a cursory reading of one section of the PERS Act, West Virginia Code § 5-10-17(b) (Supp.1985), which provided in 1977 (and still provides) that, "The membership of the retirement system shall not include any person who is a member of, or has been retired by, the State teachers retirement system...." However, as the employer's letter acknowledges, the petitioner at that point was merely "eligible to receive benefits" from the Teachers System and not yet retired by that system.

We do observe that under the original language of the TRS Act, subsequently reenacted without change, the petitioner, even after ceasing school board employment and no longer contributing to the fund, would nevertheless fit within the definition of a "member" of that system so long as he did not withdraw his accumulated contributions. See West Virginia Code § 18-7A-13(b) (1984 Replacement Vol.). However, this code provision, in place since the passage of the TRS Act in 1941 (see 1941 W.Va.Acts., Chap. 36), has since been vitiated by the passage of the Public Employees' and Teachers' Reciprocal Service Credit Act in 1965 (1965 W.Va.Acts, Chap. 130, codified at West Virginia Code § 5-13-1 et seq. (1979 Replacement Vol.)) permitting the use of credit from both systems to satisfy the length-of-service requirements for retirement under either system, with pro-rated annuities payable from both; and by the separate enactment of provisions in both acts permitting actual funded transfer of credit from one system to the other. Funded transfer of service credit from TRS into PERS was first permitted, on a limited basis, in 1963 (1963 W.Va.Acts, chap. 159, codified as amended at West Virginia Code 5-10-14(b) (Supp.1985)). Such transfers of PERS credit into TRS have been possible since 1974 (1974 W.Va.Acts Chap. 117, codified as amended at West Virginia Code § 18-7A-17 (Supp.1985)). Accordingly, the language excepting "member[s] of ... the State teachers retirement system" in West Virginia Code § 5-10-17(b), under the current statutory framework, refers to "active" (i.e., working and contributing) members of that system.

Indeed, in light of the reciprocal and transfer provisions, it can be stated that under either retirement act when a person, not retiring, ceases employment but leaves funds with the system, that person is, until reemployed and again contributing, not considered a "member" (i.e. active) of that system.

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Flanigan v. West Virginia Public Employees' Retirement System
342 S.E.2d 414 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1986)

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342 S.E.2d 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanigan-v-w-va-pub-employeesret-syst-wva-1986.