Marzec v. Public Employees' Retirement System

236 Cal. App. 4th 889, 187 Cal. Rptr. 3d 452
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 2015
DocketB246667, B246671
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 236 Cal. App. 4th 889 (Marzec v. Public Employees' Retirement System) 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
Marzec v. Public Employees' Retirement System, 236 Cal. App. 4th 889, 187 Cal. Rptr. 3d 452 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

EDMON, P. J.

These consolidated appeals concern the calculation of retirement benefits under the Public Employees’ Retirement Law (PERL), Government Code section 20000 et seq. 1 Plaintiffs are former police officers and firefighters employed by local public agencies that provide employee retirement benefits through California’s Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS). In order to enhance their service retirement benefits, plaintiffs purchased additional years of service credit through one of several optional programs offered by CalPERS. Subsequently, each plaintiff was disabled on the job and took an industrial disability retirement before reaching service retirement age. As a result, CalPERS pays each plaintiff a monthly disability retirement allowance of 50 percent of his or her final compensation. CalPERS does not, however, pay plaintiffs any additional allowance as a result of their purchase of additional years of service credit.

This appeal involves two putative class actions in which plaintiffs contend that their purchase of additional service credit entitled them to enhanced retirement benefits under the PERL. They alleged CalPERS’s failure to pay such enhanced benefits gave rise to a variety of causes of action, including breach of statutory duty, breach of contract, rescission, breach of fiduciary duty, and constitutional claims. 2 In the first action, the trial court sustained *896 CalPERS’s demurrer to all causes of action without leave to amend, concluding that plaintiffs had not properly pled an entitlement to the additional retirement benefits they claimed as a matter of statutory, constitutional, or contract law. As to the second action, the trial court granted judgment on the pleadings on the same bases. 3

We affirm in part. As we discuss, neither the PERL nor plaintiffs’ contracts entitle plaintiffs to the additional retirement benefits they seek, and thus the causes of action for breach of statutory duty and breach of contract fail as a matter of law. Plaintiffs’ causes of action for constitutional torts also fail because, as a matter of law, CalPERS’s interpretation of the applicable statutory provisions does not deny plaintiffs due process or equal protection of law and does not effect an unconstitutional impairment of contract.

We reverse, however, as to the causes of action for rescission and breach of fiduciary duty. Plaintiffs allege that CalPERS failed to disclose the potential loss of the value of purchased service credit if plaintiffs suffered a disability — a disclosure that CalPERS, as a fiduciary, is alleged to have been required to make. We conclude that plaintiffs’ pleading in this regard is sufficient to survive demurrer, and thus the demurrer should have been overruled as to these causes of action.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

I.

Background

A. CalPERS Retirement Benefits

CalPERS is a unit of the Government Operations Agency responsible for administering the retirement systems for the State of California and “contracting agencies” — local public agencies that have “elected to have all or part, of [their] employees become members of this system and that ha[ve] contracted with [CalPERS] for that purpose.” (See §§ 20001, 20002, 20004, 20022, 20028.) All of the plaintiffs in this action worked as police officers or firefighters for local public agencies that enrolled their employees in CalPERS. (§ 20420.)

The PERL authorizes retirement benefits to CalPERS members. As relevant here, the PERL provides safety members employed by local public agencies (“local safety members”) with two distinct kinds of retirement benefits:

*897 (1) Service retirement benefit. If a member retires at or after age 50, the member is eligible for a service pension to “equal 3 percent of his or her final compensation at retirement, multiplied by the number of years of patrol service or local safety service subject to this section with which he or she is credited at retirement.” (§ 21362.2, subd. (a).)

(2) Industrial disability retirement benefit: If a member retires before age 50 because of an industrial (job-related) disability, he or she “shall receive a disability retirement allowance of 50 percent of his or her final compensation.” (§ 21413.) 4 Alternatively, the disabled member may “waive[] the right to retire for disability and elect[] to withdraw contributions or to permit contributions to remain in the fund.” (§ 21153.)

B. Right to Purchase Additional Service Credit

At all relevant times, a CalPERS member who had served with the United States Armed Forces was permitted to receive credit for such service “in addition to his or her current and prior service credit” by “contributing] in a lump sum or by installment payments ... an amount equal to . . . the contributions he or she would have made to this system for the period for which current service credit is granted.” (§§ 21032, 21033; see §§ 21020, 21024.) Such purchased service credit is referred to as “military service credit” (MSC).

Between 2003 and 2012, CalPERS members with at least five years of credited state service were permitted “to make contributions . . . and receive not less than one year, nor more than five years, in one-year increments, of additional retirement service credit in the retirement system.” (§ 20909, subd. (a).) To receive such credit, members were required to contribute “an amount equal to the increase in employer liability, using the payrate and other factors affecting liability on the date of the request for costing of the service credit.” (§ 21052.) This purchased service credit is referred to as “additional retirement service credit” (ARSC) or “airtime.”

C. Plaintiffs ’ Purchases of Additional Service Credit and Subsequent Industrial Disability Retirements

Each of the plaintiffs purchased additional service credit and subsequently took industrial disability retirement before age 50, as follows:

*898 Plaintiff Robert Marzec worked as a police officer for the Stockton Police Department for approximately 17 years. In 2004, he elected to purchase four years of MSC based on his previous service with the United States Marines by making a lump sum payment of $23,709. In August 2010, after suffering a job-related injury, Marzec took an industrial disability retirement and began receiving industrial retirement benefits of 50 percent of his final compensation.

Plaintiff Rachel Healy worked as a police officer for the Stockton Police Department for approximately nine years. In 2005, she elected to purchase five years of ARSC by making a lump sum payment of $31,360, and rolling over an additional $46,000 from a deferred compensation account.

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Bluebook (online)
236 Cal. App. 4th 889, 187 Cal. Rptr. 3d 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marzec-v-public-employees-retirement-system-calctapp-2015.