Opinion No. 76-303 (1976) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedNovember 5, 1976
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 76-303 (1976) Ag (Opinion No. 76-303 (1976) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 76-303 (1976) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT SYSTEM — OMISSION OF ELIGIBLE EMPLOYEE An eligible employee omitted from the Retirement System whether purposely or inadvertently may become a member by submitting all required contributions plus a rate of interest to be determined by the Board in order to make the Retirement Fund accurately sound. Where an employer might be legally prohibited from paying the employer's contribution from another fiscal year's monies and no current appropriation is made for that purpose by the Legislature, the employee may become a member by contributing all monies which he might have been required to contribute and receive a retirement benefit equivalent to the ratio of his contribution to that which would have been required for the regular retirement benefit. An employee already eligible for retirement may become a member of the System and receive a retirement benefit by following the same procedures as outlined above in making all contributions necessary plus interest to make the Retirement Fund accurately sound. The Attorney General is in receipt of your letter requesting an opinion on the following questions: "1. We respectfully request your opinion as to whether an eligible Employee, who was not enrolled as a member in the Retirement System when first eligible, whether omitted purposely or inadvertently by his Employer, and consequently no contributions have ever been remitted to the System in such Employee's behalf, may become a member at the time this fact is disclosed to the Retirement System by payment of all retroactive contributions due from the Employee's eligibility date? "2. If the answer is affirmative, may the Board of Trustees determine a reasonable amount of interest be paid on the retroactive contributions, since these monies would have been earning interest each month ? "3. If the Employer is legally prohibited from paying the Employer contributions from another fiscal year's monies, what action, if any, may be taken by the Board of Trustees? "4. If the Employee is already eligible for retirement (disability, early or normal) at the time this omission is revealed, is he eligible for membership by complying with said payback ?" With reference to your first and second questions, several statutes must be examined concerning the State Employees Retirement System. Title 74 O.S. 902 [74-902] (1971) (as amended by Section 1 Ch. 207, O.S.L. 1976) contains several definitions pertinent to your inquiry. 74 O.S. 902 [74-902](14) (as amended by Section 1, Ch. 207, O.S.L. 1976) provides in part as follows: "'Eligible employer,' the State of Oklahoma and any county, county hospital, city or town, and any public or private trust in which a city or town participates and is the primary beneficiary is to be an eligible employer for the purpose of this act only, whose employees are covered by Social Security and are not covered by or eligible for another retirement plan authorized under the laws of the State of Oklahoma which is in operation on the initial entry date. Provided affiliation by a county hospital shall be in the form of a resolution adopted by the Board of Control. . . ." 74 O.S. 902 [74-902](25) (as amended by Section 1, Ch. 207, O.S.L. 1976), states as follows: "'Participating employer,' an eligible employer who has agreed to make contributions to the System on behalf of its employees;" (Emphasis added) Thus it can be seen that an "eligible employer" who takes the appropriate steps to become a part of the Retirement System will become a "participating employer" by agreeing to make the contributions to the System on behalf of its employees. With reference to the State of Oklahoma and its agencies, 74 O.S. 910 [74-910](2) (1971) (as amended by Section 2, Ch. 207, O.S.L. 1976) provides as follows: "The State of Oklahoma, in its capacity as an eligible employer shall become a participating employer on the first entry date and thereafter on the entry date immediately following the creation of any state agency not now in existence." (Emphasis added) It is clear, therefore, that the State of Oklahoma and its agencies that existed at the time the Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System came into existence and all those agencies created thereafter, became eligible employers and participating employers as provided in this section. All state agencies therefore have agreed by statutory mandate to pay contributions on behalf of their eligible employees. As to other entities under 74 O.S. 902 [74-902](14) who are or may become eligible employers no formal agreement to contribute is required as stated in Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System v. Nelson, 421 P.2d 221, 226, where the Court stated in part as follows with reference to the Retirement Act: ". . . Nowhere in the Act do we find that a county, or any other employer, under the Act, must enter into an 'agreement to contribute' as a prerequisite to coming under the Act. By this we do not mean to imply that a county, after electing to come under the Act, does not have to take further administrative steps, within its own administrative organization, to make funds available as its contribution to the System . . . ." If any doubt remains as to the duty of an "eligible employer" who becomes a "participating employer" to pay the employer's contribution to the Retirement Fund, this doubt is removed by 74 O.S. 920 [74-920](4)(5) (1975). "(4) Each other participating employer shall appropriate and pay to the System a sum sufficient to satisfy the obligation under this section as certified by the Board. "(5) Each participating employer is hereby authorized to pay the employer's contribution from the same fund that the compensation for which said contribution is made is paid from or from any other funds available to it for such purpose." To determine for which employees, if not all, the contributions of the employer must be made, we must turn to other sections of the statutes. Title 74 O.S. 902 [74-902](15) (1971) (as amended by Section 1, Ch. 207, O.S.L. 1976) provides in part as follows: "'Employee,' any officer or employee of a participating employer, whose employment is not seasonal or temporary and whose employment requires at least one thousand (1,000) hours of work per year and whose salary or wages is at least Ninety Dollars ($90.00) per month or a salary established by statute to be more than Ninety Dollars ($90.00) per month, . . ." The above-quoted section defines with certain exceptions not quoted, those employees which will qualify to be a member of the Retirement System. Those employees coming within the definition have no options in regard to joining the System. Title 74 O.S. 911 [74-911](1) (1971) provides as follows: "Employee members. — (1) Any employee of a participating employer on the entry date of such employer shall be a member of the system on the entry date." This section is further strengthened by the language contained in 74 O.S. 925 [74-925] (1971) which provides as follows: "Membership as condition of employment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Opinion No. 76-303 (1976) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-76-303-1976-ag-oklaag-1976.