Kayla Vaughn v. Public Employees' Retirement System of Mississippi

182 So. 3d 433, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 559, 2015 WL 7074578
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2015
Docket2013-CT-01179-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 So. 3d 433 (Kayla Vaughn v. Public Employees' Retirement System of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kayla Vaughn v. Public Employees' Retirement System of Mississippi, 182 So. 3d 433, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 559, 2015 WL 7074578 (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

KING, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Kayla Vaughn appeals the decisions of Mississippi’s Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS), the Hinds County Circuit Court, and the Court of Appeals, in which she says she was denied the benefits due to a member of PERS. The retiree died prior to collecting benefits, and her beneficiary died prior to collecting all of the retiree’s benefits. As the surviving family member of the beneficiary, but not of the retiree, Kayla asserts that she is entitled to the remaining benefits. While PERS, the Hinds County Circuit Court, and the Court of Appeals erred by applying the current versions of the PERS statutes, rather than the version in force when the retiree made her elections, we ultimately find that such error was *435 harmless, and thus affirm the judgments of each of these entities in result only.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 1

■ - ¶ 2. Marjorie Kahn was a state employee and consequent member of PERS. In Oc-tdber 1999, she applied for, disability retirement. Like .other applicants, she was given a choice of payment options. She chose “Option 4-B.” See Miss.Code Ann. § 25-11-115(1) (Rev.l999)„ Under this option, Marjorie would receive “[a] reduced retirement allowance” throughout her life in exchange for “the further guarantee of payment to the named beneficiary, beneficiaries, or to the estate, for a specified number of years certain.”' Id. And if she or her last designated beneficiary died “prior to receiving all' guaranteed payments due,” then/‘the actuarial equivalent of the remaining payments would be paid to the estate of the retired as intestate property.” Id.

Marjorie named her daughter, Heather Vaughn, as her' beneficiary. Marjorie named no other contingent beneficiary. Soon after making these elections,'Marjorie died. So under Option 4-B, PERS began making monthly payments to Heather in the amount of $922.63, guaranteeing these monthly payments for twenty years, through October 2019.
Six months after Marjorie’s death, .the Legislature amended section 25-11-115(1). The revised Option 4-B directed PERS, in the event “the retired member or the last designated beneficiary both die before receiving all guaranteed payments due,” to pay “the actuarial equivalent of the remaining payments ... under [the newly created] Section 25-11-117.1(1)[.]” Miss.Code Ann'. § 25-11-115(1) (Rev.2010) (citing Miss.Code Ann. § 25-11-117.1(1) (Rev.2010), enacted by 2000 Miss. Laws, Ch. 628, § 2 (H.B. 1281)).
In August 2011, Heather also died. Traveling under revised Option 4-B, PERS calculated the actuarial equivalent of the more ’than eight years of remaining guaranteed payments to be $110,163. PERS then looked to section 25-11-117.1(1), which, according to PERS, directed it to pay the' remaining money to Marjorie’s statutory successors.!] So PERS contacted Marjorie’s family to determiné which of Marjorie’s surviving family members were entitled to this payment.
PERS also contacted Heather’s' family, "informing them that, based on subsection (2) of section 25-11-117.1, they were entitled to a prorated cost-of-living adjustment for the portion of the 2011-2012 fiscal year when Heather was still alive and received monthly payments. See Miss.Code Ann. § 25-ll-117.1(2).[ ]
At this point, Heather’s [paternal] half-sistér, Kayla Vaughn, objected to PERS distributing the actuarial equivalent of the remaining payments to Marjorie’s státutory successors. Instead, Kayla insisted that even though she is not related to Marjorie,[ ] PERS should give her the remainder of Marjorie’s retirement benefits.
As Kayla saw it, the $110,163 should have been paid to Heather’s statutory successors under section 25-11-117.1(2), not retiree Marjorie’s statutory successors under .section 25-11-117.1(1). When PERS rejected her position, Kayla asked for and was granted an administrative hearing before the Claims *436 Committee for the PERS Board of Trus.tees. See' Miss.Code Ann. '§ 25-11-120(1) (Rev.2010). The Committee confirmed the $110,163 was to be paid to Marjorie’s successors under subsection (1), not Heather’s successors under subsection (2). And the Board of Trustees adopted the Committee’s recommendation.
. . Kayla then appealed to the ■ Hinds County Circuit Court. See Miss.Code Ann. §. 25-11-120(2). The circuit court affirmed PERS’s decision. But the court did grant Kayla’s request to enjoin PERS from disbursing the $110,163 to Marjorie’s successors until Kayla’s appeal ... is finally resolved.

Vaughn v. Pub. Emp.’s Ret. Sys., 182 So.3d 446, 448-49, 2015 WL 528336, at *1-2 (Miss.Ct.App.2015).

¶ 3. In the appeal to the Court of Appeals, the parties focused on the language of the current versions of Section 25-11-115(1) and Section 25-11-117.1. At oral argument before the Court of Appeals,-the issue was raised that the current language of these two sections did not go into effect until July 1, 2000, eight , and one-half months after Marjorie selected Option 4-B on her application for disability retirement and six months after she died. Thus, .the Court of Appeals ordered supplemental briefing on the following issues: .

(1) The relevance, if any, .of the pre-2000-amendment language of “Option 4-B” — language that was in effect when Kahn applied for benefits on October 11, 1999, and language that had not yet been amended when she died in January 2000. This language, found in Mississippi Code Annotated Section 25-11-115(1) (Rev.1999), stated: .
Option 4-B. A reduced retirement allowance shall be continued, .throughout the life of the retirant, but with the further guarantee of payment to the named beneficiary, beneficiaries, or to the -estate, for a specified number of years certain. If the retried member or the last designated beneficiary receiving annuity payments dies prior to receiving all guaranteed payments due, the actuarial equivalent of the remaining payments would be paid to the estate of the retired as intestate property.
(2) Thé relevance, if any,’ of the fact that, under 2Ó00 Miss. Laws, Ch. 628, § 23 (H.B.1281), Mississippi Code Annotated Section 25-11-117.1 did not come into effect until July 1, 2000-after Marjorie Kahn had died. '

The Court of Appeals ultimately affirmed the judgments. of the circuit court and PERS. It held that Marjorie’s intent that the remaining payments be paid into her estate were.Heather to die before all benefits were paid was clear. Vaughn, 182 So.3d at 448-49, 2015 WL 528336, at *2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Charles D. Easley v. Public Employees' Retirement System
222 So. 3d 1096 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 So. 3d 433, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 559, 2015 WL 7074578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kayla-vaughn-v-public-employees-retirement-system-of-mississippi-miss-2015.