Los Angeles County Fire Fighters, Local 1014 v. Board of Retirement

46 Cal. App. 3d 762, 120 Cal. Rptr. 478
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1975
DocketCiv. No. 44188
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 3d 762 (Los Angeles County Fire Fighters, Local 1014 v. Board of Retirement) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Los Angeles County Fire Fighters, Local 1014 v. Board of Retirement, 46 Cal. App. 3d 762, 120 Cal. Rptr. 478 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

I

KINGSLEY, J.

The present action involves the proper retirement allowances to be given to certain county employees based on service to [765]*765the federal government prior to their county employment. The trial court granted a writ of mandate accepting the employees’ version; the county retirement board has appealed; we affirm.

An understanding of the dispute requires a preliminary statement of certain terms and concepts:

(1) The statutes and ordinances governing retirement allowances for county employees relate to three classes of such employees: (a) “Safety Members”—i.e., employees engaged principally in active law enforcement or in active fire suppression1 and who are covered by some duly adopted county retirement system differentiating between such employees and other county employees; (b) employees principally engaged in active law enforcement or in active fire suppression but who are not covered by some adopted county retirement system making such differentiation; and (c) “general members”—i.e., employees not principally engaged in active law enforcement or in active fire suppression and who are covered by some duly adopted county retirement system making the differentiation above set forth.
(2) “Safety members,” as a class, make a larger contribution to the retirement system than “general members” and receive, on retirement, a larger pension than “general members.”

The present proceeding is brought by two individuals who entered county employ as “safety members” and who had, prior to their county employment been in federal military service2 of a character not involving [766]*766active law enforcement or active fire suppression, and an organization of county employees principally engaged in active fire suppression, which organization purports to represent other county employees in an employment situation the same as that of the two individuals. The employees (petitioners below) contend that their contributions to the retirement system, and the retirement allowances ultimately to be awarded to them, should be calculated at the rates applicable to “safety members” for the entire period of their public employment, regardless of the character of their public employment prior to entering public service. The board contends that their contributions, for the entire period of public employment should be calculated at the rates applicable to “safety members” but that their ultimate retirement allowances should be calculated at the rates applicable to “safety members” only for the period of their county employment as such, with the allowances for their prior public service being calculated at the rates applicable to “general members.”3 As we have said, the trial court adopted the petitioner’s position; for the reasons set forth below, we agree.4

County retirement systems are governed by a complex body of laws, running back many years and amended and re-amended many times during their existence. Section 31641.1 of the Government Code provides as follows: “A member who was in public service before becoming a member may elect by written notice filed with the board to make contributions pursuant to Section 31641.2 and to receive credit in the retirement system for all allowed public service time. Credit for part-time service shall be calculated as provided in Section 31641.5.”

Section 31641.2 provides:

“Any member of the retirement system who elects pursuant to Section [767]*76731641.1 to make contributions and receive credit as service for time for which he claims credit because of public service shall contribute to the retirement fund, prior to the effective date of his retirement, by lump sum payment or by installment payments over a period not to exceed five years, an amount equal to the sum of:
“(a)-Twice the contributions he would have made to the retirement fund if he had been a member during the same length of time as that for which he has elected to receive credit as service, computed by applying the rate of contribution first applicable to him upon commencement of his membership in this system to the , monthly compensation first earnable by him at the time as provided in Section 31641.3, multiplied by the number of months for which he has elected to receive credit for county service, including time, if any, prior to the establishment of the system, and which will constitute current service under this system.
“(b)..................
“(c).................”

The meaning of that section is clear. As applied to the persons herein involved—i.e., persons who had prior federal military service and who entered the county services as “safety members”—their contribution for the prior service must be calculated at the rates applicable to “safety members” on the date of their entering county service.

Although section 31641.2 does not, itself, tie the scale of contributions to the scale of retirement allowances, other portions of the statutory scheme make that nexus clear. Thus, a “retirement allowance” is defined in section 31473, as “the pension plus the annuity.” “Pension” is defined in section 31471 as “payments for life derived from contributions made from funds controlled by the board of supervisors, or from funds of a district.” “Annuity” is defined, in section 31457, as “payment for life derived from contributions made by a member.” Under sections 31639.1 through 31639.4, the rates of contribution by safety members are fixed so as to provide the statutory annuity for such members, using actuarial tables adopted by the board of supervisors under section 31453. The contributions by the county toward the pension is directly proportional to the members’ contributions toward the annuities. (§§ 31581 and 31582.) In the case of employees claiming credit, as here, for prior service, the county makes no contribution but that is made up by the [768]*768provision in section 31641.2 that the employee’s contribution shall be twice that of the contribution by him for periods of county service.

It follows that, if section 31641.2 stood alone in the context of the total statutory scheme, petitioners would be entitled to retirement allowances calculated for the period of the allowed prior service at the rates applicable to “safety members.”

The board argues that section 31641.2 does not stand alone. It points to the concluding paragraph of section 31641.4 as that section now reads. The section relied on provides as follows:

“A member shall receive credit for employment in public service only for such service as he is not entitled to receive a pension or retirement allowance from such public agency. The service for which he elects to contribute and the fact that no pension or retirement allowance will accrue to such member by virtue of his employment in such public agency must be certified to by an officer of the public agency where he rendered such public service or must be established to the satisfaction of the board.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. App. 3d 762, 120 Cal. Rptr. 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-county-fire-fighters-local-1014-v-board-of-retirement-calctapp-1975.