McGrath v. Rhode Island Retirement Board

88 F.3d 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16291, 1996 WL 369377
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 1996
Docket95-2301
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 88 F.3d 12 (McGrath v. Rhode Island Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath v. Rhode Island Retirement Board, 88 F.3d 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16291, 1996 WL 369377 (1st Cir. 1996).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

This appeal requires us to determine whether a legislated change to a substantive provision of a public employees’ retirement plan, as applied, transgresses the Contracts Clause of the United States Constitution. We find no constitutional infraction: plaintiff-appellant Thomas McGrath’s pension rights had not yet vested when the modification occurred, and the state had reserved the power to alter or revoke its promise of retirement benefits to municipal employees at the time it established the plan in which McGrath later became a participant. Consequently, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee Rhode Island Retirement Board (the Board).

I. THE STATUTORY SCHEME

The Rhode Island General Assembly established a state employees’ retirement plan in 1936. See 1936 R.I. Pub. Laws, ch. 2334 (codified at R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 36-8-1 to 36-10-39 (1990 Reenactment & Supp.1995)). In 1951, the General Assembly enabled Rhode Island’s cities and town to enroll their employees in a matching plan. See 1951 R.I. Pub. Laws, ch. 2784 (codified at R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 45-21-1 to 45-21-62 (1991 Reenactment & Supp.1995)). The legislature patterned the municipal employees’ plan (MEP) after the state employees’ plan (SEP), en-grafting the former onto the latter. Together, these plans comprise what is familiarly known as the state retirement system. The key provisions of both plans are ordained by statute and both are administered under the aegis of the Board.

The law authorizing the MEP affords each of Rhode Island’s thirty-nine municipalities the option of deciding whether or not to participate. See R.I. Gen. Laws § 45-21-4. If a city or town chooses to join, its eligible employees are required to become members of the plan and must contribute six percent of salary until they have reached the maximum amount of service credit attainable. See id. § 45-21-41. Municipalities may elect to defray some or all of their employees’ required contributions to the MEP. See id. § 45-21-41.1.

A qualified employee is entitled to a life annuity upon retirement in the amount of two percent of his or her final salary times the number of years of total creditable service (up to thirty-seven and one-half years). See id. § 45-21-17. A person is eligible to retire with such a pension once he or she attains age fifty-eight and has logged at least ten years of total creditable service. See id. § 45-21-16. Under this formulation — the only formulation that is germane to this case 1 — a municipal member’s right to a pension vests when he or she meets both the age and years-in-service minima.

The MEP gives members the opportunity to purchase up to four years of pension credits for temporally equivalent active duty military service. See id. § 45-21-53. A member also can purchase pension credits for any “prior service with the city or town of which the employee is now employed.” Id. § 45-21 — 9(b). Prior to 1991, these purchased credits benefitted a plan participant in two ways. First, they served to increase the life annuity payments that would be payable upon the participant’s retirement. Second, they served to accelerate the participant’s vesting date. For example, an individual who had served four years in the military *14 could purchase four years of creditable pension time at a relatively modest rate and then retire at age fifty-eight after only six years of municipal employment. What is more, the individual would receive an annuity upon retirement in the amount of two percent of his or her final salary times ten years (despite having worked for a mere six years).

From its very inception, the statute that paved the way for municipal employees to enter the state retirement system included a provision reserving the state’s power to amend the terms of the municipal members’ participation. We reproduce this escape clause in its entirety:

Reserved power to amend or repeal— Vested rights. — The right to amend, alter, or repeal this chapter at any time or from time to time is expressly reserved, and in that event the liability of the municipal employees’ retirement system of Rhode Island shall be limited!,] in the case of a member or a person claiming through the member!,] to the contributions made by the member, without interest, and in the case of a municipality, to contributions made by the municipality!,] without interest, subject to deductions prescribed in the case of withdrawal by a municipality as provided in § 45-21-6. All retirement allowances or other benefits granted by the retirement of members, and in force prior to a repeal or amendment, shall be vested in the beneficiaries thereof and shall be paid in full in accordance with the terms of this chapter, and the rights of the retirement board to compel the payment by any municipality of the sum or sums necessary to provide the retirement allowances granted to members formerly employed by the municipality shall not be affected by the repeal or amendment.

Id. § 45-21-47. Under this provision, the state reserves the authority to make changes to the pension plan, up to and including the termination of municipal participation and the elimination of the pension rights of all employees (except those who have already retired). Upon repeal, current employees would receive back nothing more than the contributions they had made over the course of their employment, without interest. See id.

For many years the state retirement system was plagued with problems. In 1991, with tales of suspected pension abuse rampant, the General Assembly restructured the system in several respects. Among other changes, the legislature revised the method for calculating the minimum years of service (ten) required before an employee of suitable age could retire with a pension. The new method focused on actual time in service without regard to purchased credits. It did so by designating contributing membership (i.e., the period of time during which an employee had been working for the public employer and making contemporaneous contributions to the system) as the virtually exclusive measure of creditable time for vesting purposes. The new law stated:

Except as specifically provided in § 36-10-9.1, §§ 36-10-12 through 36-10-15 and §§ 45-21-19 through 45-21-22 of the general laws, no member shall be eligible for pension benefits under this chapter unless the member shall have been a contributing member of the employees’ retirement system for at least ten (10) years. Provided, however, a person who has ten (10) years service credit shall be vested. Any person who becomes a member of the employees’ retirement system pursuant to § 45-21-4 shall be considered a contributing member for the purposes of title 45, chapter 21 and this chapter.

R.I. Gen. Laws §

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Bluebook (online)
88 F.3d 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16291, 1996 WL 369377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-rhode-island-retirement-board-ca1-1996.