Mattill v. Public Employees Retirement Board

112 N.W.2d 800, 261 Minn. 371, 1961 Minn. LEXIS 653
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 22, 1961
Docket38, 227
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 800 (Mattill v. Public Employees Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mattill v. Public Employees Retirement Board, 112 N.W.2d 800, 261 Minn. 371, 1961 Minn. LEXIS 653 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Knutson, Justice.

This action was commenced for a declaratory judgment to determine the .survival benefits of plaintiff as the surviving spouse of Peter M. Mattill under Minn. St. 1957, c. 353. Since the trial of the action and the perfection of the appeal to this court, plaintiff died, and the executrix of her estate has been substituted as plaintiff-respondent.

The case was tried by the court without a jury. The trial judge found in favor of plaintiff, and, after a denial of defendant’s motion for amended findings or a new trial, judgment was entered in her behalf, and this appeal is from the judgment so entered.

Dr. Peter M. Mattill was bom on October 26, 1887. On February 2, 1924, he was employed by Glen Lake Sanatorium, referred to hereinafter as the sanatorium. During June 1939 he became a member of the Public Employees Retirement Association, referred to hereinafter as PERA. He occupied the position of assistant superintendent and associate medical director of the sanatorium during most of this time.

It has been the practice of PERA to disseminate general information about the association, changes in the laws, its regulations, and other information by transmission of this information to department heads and other personnel who have charge of employees and are willing to give such information to them. Such information was frequently sent to William E. Meier, personnel director of the sanatorium. Inquiries by individual employees regarding the availability of retirement benefits and the terms thereof were frequently addressed to PERA through Meier. Dr. Mattill personally had contacted PERA several times, and at other times he had received information through Meier.

On December 5, 1957, the sanatorium commission voted to grant Dr. Mattill permission to relinquish his duties as assistant superintendent and associate medical director and take over the position of assistant medical director, effective December 26, 1957, in order to relieve him of some of the responsibility of the position he had formerly occupied and to lighten the work load which he carried.

*373 On December 6, 1957, Dr. Mattill paid into the PERA retirement fund the sum of $4,403.20 as a purchase of prior service in a position covered - by the PERA retirement system, so that he would be entitled to certain benefits to which he otherwise would not be entitled. This payment has been referred to in the record as a “buy-back” and will be so referred to here. In other words, the payment entitled Dr. Mat-till to retirement benefits retroactive to the date of his initial employment, which antedated the establishment of PERA. During October 1957 Dr. Mattill became 70 years of age. He had then been employed by the sanatorium for over 33 years and had been a member of PERA for 18 years.

On December 16, 1957, Dr. Mattill entered Northwestern Hospital suffering from cancer of the spine. He underwent surgery on December 19, 1957. On December 23 he had decided to elect a 10-year certain life annuity. During his hospitalization, either plaintiff or Mr. Meier brought him one of the forms of PERA which, when completed, would constitute an application for the 10-year certain life annuity, specifying retirement as of January 1, 1958. Dr. Mattill .signed the instrument on December 26, 1957, in the presence of a nurse and the attending physician, neither of whom signed as a witness at that time. The signed form was then given to Mr. Meier, apparently by plaintiff. The form then was completed by Meier and another employee of the sanatorium signing as witnesses and the sanatorium bookkeeper signing as a notary public. Neither of these witnesses nor the notary public saw Dr. Mattill sign the application. It thereafter was kept in the possession of either Mr. Meier or plaintiff. On January 10 or 11, 1958, Meier dictated to a machine a letter to PERA to accompany the application and proof of service and age of Dr. Mattill. The letter was typed, signed, and mailed on Monday, January 13, 1958, but in the meantime, on January 12, Dr. Mattill had died. The application was received by PERA on January 14.

On January 6, 1958, the superintendent of the sanatorium, by an interoffice communication, notified the payroll and personnel offices of the sanatorium that Dr. Mattill was retired as of December 31, 1957, and reemployed as of January 1, 1958—

*374 “=:= * solely for the purpose of guaranteeing Dr. Mattill certain retirement rights and benefits under the Public Employees Retirement Association Laws and regulations. It is a specific determination and is not to be construed as a precedent for future actions, which will be decided on their own merits. If there are any questions concerning it, please check with the undersigned.”

Dr. Mattill thereafter remained on the payroll of the sanatorium until the time of his death.

Plaintiff made her application for a survivor’s annuity based upon Dr. Mattill’s application, and her application was acted on by the Public Employees Retirement Board at a meeting on February 13, 1958. Prior thereto she had received a letter from the secretary of PERA addressed to Mr. Meier on January 21, 1958, stating that she would be entitled to the 10-year certain annuity payments of $408.60 per month because of Dr. Mattill’s application. At the February 13 meeting, the board rejected her request and granted her the státutory surviving spouse’s benefits available where no application for an optional annuity had been made by the employee. These payments would be in the amount of $150 monthly from age 62 until death or remarriage. The board also issued its check in the amount of $4,403.20 as reimbursement of the “buy-back” paid in by Dr. Mattill, which would not be used unless one of the optional annuities were granted.

The question for determination here is whether plaintiff was entitled to the 10-year certain annuity payments or to the surviving spouse benefits given to her by the board.

Under Minn. St. 1957, §§ 353.29, 353.30, 353.31, and 353.46, and the computations of the PERA, Dr. Mattill, upon retirement, was entitled to one of the following benefits:

(1) Based on account as paid from July 1, 1931, Dr. Mattill could have qualified for a full annuity of $250 per month effective January 1, 1958. In the event of his death, his wife, who was named his sole beneficiary, would have been entitled to a survivor’s benefit of $100 per month for life or until remarriage. 1

*375 (2) Based on account, including “buy-back” amounting to $4,403.20, Dr. Mattill could have qualified for a normal annuity of $489.98 per month for life beginning January 1, 1958. In case of his death, his wife, who was his beneficiary, would have been entitled to an amount equal to one month’s annuity, plus a lump sum of $250. 2

(3) Based on account, including “buy-back” amounting to $4,403.20, Dr. Mattill could have qualified for an annuity on the 10-year certain and life option in the amount of $408.60 per month, effective January 1, 1958.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 800, 261 Minn. 371, 1961 Minn. LEXIS 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattill-v-public-employees-retirement-board-minn-1961.