Nelson v. BOARD OF DIRECTORS, ETC.

70 N.W.2d 555
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket48728
StatusPublished

This text of 70 N.W.2d 555 (Nelson v. BOARD OF DIRECTORS, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. BOARD OF DIRECTORS, ETC., 70 N.W.2d 555 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

70 N.W.2d 555 (1955)

Gustav E. NELSON and Gerald Penly, Appellants,
v.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT OF SIOUX CITY, Iowa, acting as the Board of Trustees of the Pension, Annuity and Retirement System of said District, Appellees.

No. 48728.

Supreme Court of Iowa.

June 7, 1955.

*556 Free & Free, Sioux City, for appellants.

Stewart & Hatfield, Sioux City, for appellees.

Brunk & Janss, Des Moines, amicus curiae.

OLIVER, Justice.

Petitioners Nelson and Penly, teachers in the Independent School District of Sioux City, brought this action in certiorari, as a class action under 58 I.C.A. Rule 42, Rules of Civil Procedure, against the Board of Directors of the Independent School District of Sioux City acting as the Board of Trustees of the pension, annuity and retirement system of the district, to review and set aside its acts for the termination and liquidation of such system.

Chapter 387, Acts 37th G.A., now, as amended, sections 294.8, 294.9 and 294.10, Code of Iowa 1954, I.C.A., authorized any independent school district in a certain class, to establish a pension and annuity retirement system for its teachers, the fund to be created from an annual tax not exceeding two-tenths mill, an assessment of the teachers not to exceed 1% of their annual salaries, and the interest on any permanent fund. The Board of Directors of the school district constituted the Board of Trustees, which formulated the plan and made rules and regulations for its operation.

Under this statute the pension and annuity retirement system of the Independent School District of Sioux City was adopted in 1927. It provided that all regular teachers employed on contract should be employed subject to, and all future contracts for employment, should contain as a part and condition thereof the rules governing this system. Any person who had been regularly employed as a public school teacher for thirty years, including fifteen years in this district, and had paid $200 into said fund, might retire at the age of 55 years upon a pension of $600 per year. Retirement was compulsory at 70. Provision was made also for retirement pay for disabled teachers.

The plan provided for two funds, current and permanent. Annuities and expenses were paid from the current fund created by the tax, the retention of 1% of the teachers' salaries and interest from the permanent fund. The surplus in the current fund for any year was to be placed in the permanent fund and invested in securities. If the current fund at any time was insufficient to pay the benefits allowed, each beneficiary was to be paid his proportionate annuity in full settlement of claims for that year. "No teacher shall have any vested interest in or to the funds created or any part thereof, * * *." No heirs, legatees or assignees were entitled to any portion of the fund. The Board reserved the right to modify the rules of the plan. Subsequently, amendments to the statute authorized the Board to increase the assessment upon teachers' salaries to such percentage as a majority of the teachers should agree to pay, and authorized tax levies to produce equal amounts. From 1941 the teachers contributed 1½ per cent. of their salaries and the tax supplied an equal amount.

As required by statute (see section 279.13, Code of Iowa 1954, I.C.A.) all contracts with teachers were in writing for one year. *557 Each annual contract provided that one (or 1 ½ per cent. of the teacher's salary be paid into the Teachers' Retirement Fund.

In 1950 the Congress of the United States amended the Social Security Law to permit the inclusion in the Federal Social Security System of public school teachers and other state employees. Title 42, section 418, U.S. C.A., provides in part:

"(a) (1) The Administration shall, at the request of any State, enter into an agreement with such State for the purpose of extending the insurance system established by this subchapter to services performed by individuals as employees of such State or any political subdivision thereof. * * *"

(d) Provides any group to be eligible for federal coverage must not be covered by any retirement system.

In 1953 the 55th G.A. enacted the Federal Social Security Enabling Act, now Chapter 97C, Code of Iowa 1954, I.C.A., to extend to employees of the state and their dependents and survivors the protection accorded to others by the Old Age and Survivor Insurance System embodied in the Social Security Act. The 55th General Assembly enacted also Chapter 121 entitled in part, "An Act to permit the liquidation of the pension and annuity retirement system of public school teachers * * *." The statutes thus amended or enacted are now sections 294.11, 294.12, 294.13 and 294.14, Code of Iowa 1954, I.C.A. The Board of Directors of any district is authorized to terminate such local system by resolution and to provide for its liquidation. In this process teachers are divided into two classes. Those who are drawing or entitled to draw retirement pay at the date of termination of the system are called surviving beneficiaries. They are to receive their full retirement benefits regularly from the retirement liquidation fund composed of all funds and accumulations of the system, with such additional amounts as may be necessary to be raised by taxes. There is no complaint from this class. The other class is composed of those teachers not eligible for retirement benefits. They are referred to as members of such system. Plaintiffs were such members for more than 20 and 14 years, respectively.

The statute provides: "Any amount in excess of the actuarial equivalent of the sum required to pay such benefit payments shall be apportioned to * * * members * * *." I.C.A. § 294.12. However, actuarial computations indicated the funds of the system would have been exhausted in fifteen or twenty years had it been continued. The trial court found the system was actually unsound because of insufficient contributions to the funds by the teachers and school district. Hence, it appears there was a shortage in these funds rather than a surplus to be apportioned to members. The statute provides also for the raising of funds by taxation to repay "members", in five equal annual installments, the amount, without interest, paid into the fund by such respective members.

The resolution of the board of directors here in question was adopted June 1, 1953. The preamble states it is possible for public school districts and their employees to become a part of the Federal Social Security System, that it has been recommended that they take action to make themselves eligible for that system and that this requires the termination of the present retirement system. It was resolved that the local system be terminated June 30, 1953; that all its funds be held in accordance with the laws of Iowa, for the surviving beneficiaries only; that the contributors to the local system, not entitled to benefits on that date, be repaid from tax levies the amount paid by each, in five equal annual installments, without interest, and that all necessary steps be taken to qualify the district and its employees for membership in the Federal Social Security System. Plaintiffs and other employees of the District were taken into the Social Security System, July 1, 1953.

Plaintiffs pleaded the Board of Directors was proceeding illegally to abolish the pension, retirement and annuity system; that *558

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