McCall v. State

219 A.D.2d 136, 640 N.Y.S.2d 347
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 4, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 A.D.2d 136 (McCall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCall v. State, 219 A.D.2d 136, 640 N.Y.S.2d 347 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[138]*138OPINION OF THE COURT

Yesawich Jr., J.

Plaintiff Comptroller is the administrator of the State and Local Employees’ Retirement System and the State and Local Police and Fire Retirement System (hereinafter the retirement systems), as well as the sole trustee of the Common Retirement Fund (hereinafter CRF), which consists of "all of the assets and income” (Retirement and Social Security Law § 422 [1]) of those two systems (see, Retirement and Social Security Law § 13 [b]). Together with several retirees currently receiving benefits from the retirement systems, he commenced this suit challenging the constitutionality of portions of Laws of 1995 (ch 119).

In 1967, the Legislature enacted Retirement and Social Security Law §§ 78 and 378, which authorized the payment of supplemental retirement allowances to certain former public employees, the value of whose pension benefits had been diminished by inflation. Later amendments increased the amount of these supplemental allowances and expanded the group of retirees receiving them; the last adjustment — prior to the enactment of the legislation at issue here — was made in 1988.

The supplemental allowances were originally funded on a pay-as-you-go basis, with employers contributing annually only the amount necessary to pay the supplements for that year. In 1970, however, the Legislature authorized the Comptroller to require the advance funding of supplemental allowances (see, L 1970, ch 748), and over $70 million was thereafter collected for this purpose before the Comptroller decided to return to year-by-year funding. These funds, and their earnings — which, though collections ceased after only a few years, now total over $360 million — are referred to as the supplemental reserve fund (hereinafter SRF).

In 1990, the Legislature attempted to reduce employer contributions to the pension funds by mandating a new funding method for the CRF. When this legislation was struck down as unconstitutional (see, McDermott v Regan, 82 NY2d 354), the Comptroller established a plan for a phased-in restoration of the funds of the CRF to the level dictated by the original funding method. The plan required additional employer contributions of 1.5% of payroll, amounting to $230 million ($110 million from the State, $120 million from municipalities), in fiscal year 1995-1996. Rather than appropriate the moneys necessary to comply with the Comptroller’s plan, the Legislature ultimately passed, and the Governor signed into [139]*139law, the statute in dispute, which, inter alia, grants the State and municipal employers a credit, to be assessed against the assets of the SRF, equal to the amount of the additional contributions they would otherwise have had to make pursuant to the Comptroller’s restoration plan (see, L 1995, ch 119, § 13 [hereinafter section 13]). The same legislation also increases the supplemental retirement allowances paid to those retirees formerly receiving them and provides such allowances for the first time to those who retired between 1983 and 1989 (see, L 1995, ch 119, §§ 1-12).

In these consolidated actions, plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of the credit provision embodied in section 13 — which they contend violates the Impairment Clause of the NY Constitution (see, NY Const, art V, § 7) — and also that of another clause of the same legislation, which conditions the commencement date of the benefit increase on the existence, and outcome, of litigation challenging the credit mechanism (see, L 1995, ch 119, § 16 [hereinafter section 16]).

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Related

Kahoohanohano v. State
162 P.3d 696 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2007)
Guzdek v. McCall
193 Misc. 2d 759 (New York Supreme Court, 2002)
Knutson v. Bronner
721 So. 2d 678 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 A.D.2d 136, 640 N.Y.S.2d 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-state-nyappdiv-1996.