Mickey Fowler And Leisa Fowler v. Dept. Of Retirement Systems

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
Docket45128-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mickey Fowler And Leisa Fowler v. Dept. Of Retirement Systems (Mickey Fowler And Leisa Fowler v. Dept. Of Retirement Systems) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mickey Fowler And Leisa Fowler v. Dept. Of Retirement Systems, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II

2G# 4 DEC 30 AM 9 : Lei

STATE OF WASHINGTON BY IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WAS ' " UTON

DIVISION II

JEFFREY PROBST, and a class of similarly No. 45128 -0 -II situated individuals,

Plaintiffs,

MICKEY FOWLER and LEISA FOWLER, and a class of TRS 3 Plan members,

Appellants,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF RETIREMENT UNPUBLISHED OPINION SYSTEMS,

Respondent.

LEE, J. — Mickey Fowler and Leisa Fowler (the Fowlers) 1 appeal the superior court' s order

remanding the action to the Department of Retirement Services ( DRS) based on our mandate 2 issued in Probst v. Department of Retirement Services. The Fowlers argue: ( 1) the trial court

failed to comply with our mandate when it refused to calculate the interest the Fowlers were

entitled to based on the common law daily interest rule and instead remanded the action to the

DRS, ( 2) the DRS cannot retroactively apply a newly adopted rule, and ( 3) the DRS' s retroactive

1 Appellants are referred to as " the Fowlers "; some briefing refer to them as " the Teachers." 2 Probst v. Dep' t ofRet. Sys., 167 Wn. App. 180, 271 P. 3d 966 ( 2012). No 45128 -0 -II

application of a new rule that does not use the common law daily interest rule will result in an

unconstitutional taking. Additionally, the Fowlers seek costs and a common fund attorney fee

award at the conclusion of the litigation. Because the superior court properly interpreted our

mandate and properly remanded the action to the DRS pursuant to the Administrative Procedure

Act ( APA), we affirm the superior court' s order remanding the case to the DRS for further

rulemaking consistent with our mandate in Probst.

FACTS

This is the parties' second appeal to this court.3 This case arises from a dispute over how

the DRS calculates interest on the Public Employees Retirement Systems (PERS) and the Teachers

Retirement Systems ( TRS) accounts and on funds transferred between PERS /TRS Plan 2 and

PERS /TRS Plan 3. The DRS stated, "[ It] has set the rate of interest to be credited to PERS Plan 2

member accounts at 5. 5% per year, compounded quarterly." Administrative Record (AR) at 261.

The DRS credits interest on deposits to members' accounts on the fourth Saturday ofthe last month

in each quarter.

A. INITIAL ACTION AND FIRST APPEAL

Jeffiey Probst contacted the DRS after finding that his contributions for the last quarter

before transferring to Plan 3 had not earned interest. The DRS told him that it "uses the quarter' s

ending balance to calculate interest, and if an account has a zero balance at the end of the quarter, it earns no interest for that quarter." Probst, 167 Wn. App. at 183.

3 The parties do not dispute the substantive facts underlying this appeal; the substantive facts presented for context are taken from our opinion in the first appeal, the Probst opinion. Probst, 167 Wn. App. 180.

2 No. 45128 -0 -II

Probst unsuccessfully appealed the calculation methods before the DRS. Probst, 167 Wn.

App. at 184. In his administrative appeal, Probst requested that the DRS pay interest on deposited funds from the date of deposit into Plan 2 through the date that the DRS withdrew and transferred

the funds to the Plan 3 account. Probst then filed a class action suit in superior court challenging

the DRS' s calculation practice and sought judicial review of the DRS' s decision. The

administrative appeal was consolidated into the superior court action. The superior court then

approved a class settlement agreement, which excluded some class members based on the date that

they transferred from Plan 2 to Plan 3. The settlement agreement provided that excluded proposed

additional class members' claims may still be brought against the DRS.

The Fowlers, who were part of the proposed additional class, filed an amended complaint.

The superior court dismissed the claims; the Fowlers appealed to this court.

We reviewed the DRS order pursuant to the APA, and ultimately reversed and remanded

the case. Probst, 167 Wn. App. at 185, 194. We found that " although the DRS had authority to decide how to calculate interest," its method " was arbitrary and capricious because the agency did

not render a decision after due consideration." Probst, 167 Wn. App. at 183. Additionally, we

held that the " statutes do not require the DRS to pay daily interest" and that the legislature had

abrogated the common law daily interest rule. Probst, 167 Wn. App. at 191. We declined to

address the Fowlers' unconstitutional takings argument because we were able to decide the case

based on the APA. Probst, 167 Wn. App. at 183 n. 1. We remanded the case and later issued a

mandate for further proceedings in accordance with our opinion.

3 No. 45128 -0 -II

B. REMAND AND CURRENT APPEAL

On remand to the superior court, the Fowlers argued that our opinion required that

judgment be entered in their favor and required the DRS to pay daily interest. The superior court

disagreed and remanded the action to the DRS under the APA for proceedings consistent with our

opinion in Probst. The superior court signed the order remanding the action to the DRS on June

20, 2013.

On July 22, 2013, the Fowlers filed a motion to recall the mandate in Probst and to require

compliance under RAP 12. 9. In the Fowlers' motion to recall, they argued that the superior court

failed to comply with our mandate issued in Probst by remanding the action to the DRS for

rulemaking under the APA instead of determining the interest itself. The Fowlers also argued that

our opinion held the DRS' s failure to pay daily interest was arbitrary and capricious. The Fowlers

argued, alternatively, that if the superior court was correct, then their constitutional claims are

unresolved and they have the right to again appeal our decision in Probst. In August 2013, we

denied the Fowlers' motion.

Also on July 22, 2013, the Fowlers appealed the superior court' s order remanding the

action to the DRS. The Fowlers make the same arguments in their appeal as they made in their

motion to recall the mandate.

ANALYSIS

The Fowlers argue that the superior court did not comply with our mandate when it

remanded the action to the DRS instead of ordering the DRS to pay the Fowlers interest based on

the common law daily interest rule. Next, the Fowlers argue that if the DRS is allowed to make a

4 No. 45128 -0 -II

new rule determining the interest calculation method, it will improperly apply it retroactively. The

Fowlers further argue that an unconstitutional taking will likely result if the DRS is permitted to

calculate interest by. not using the common law daily interest method.

Whether the superior court properly implemented our mandate in Probst is the only issue

properly before us. The superior court did not abuse its discretion by remanding the action to the

DRS under the APA based on our opinion. As discussed below, the other issues are not properly

before us. Accordingly, we affirm the superior court' s order remanding the case to the DRS for

further rulemaking consistent with our opinion in Probst.

A. MOTION TO RECALL MANDATE AND EFFECT ON APPEAL

As an initial matter, the DRS argues that the Fowlers are precluded from appealing the

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