Opinion No. 78-175 (1978) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedDecember 11, 1978
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 78-175 (1978) Ag (Opinion No. 78-175 (1978) 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. 78-175 (1978) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1978).

Opinion

CITIES AND TOWNS

The administration of the provisions of the Police Pension and Retirement System is not a matter of purely local concern but a subject of substantial interest to the State. Therefore, a municipal board of trustees may not retire a police officer on the basis of service who has served less that twenty years but attained a municipal mandatory retirement age of 65 in violation of 11 O.S. 50-114A [11-50-114A] (1977). The Attorney General has considered your request for an opinion wherein you ask the following question: "May the board of trustees of a Police Pension and Retirement System of a city or town of Oklahoma, as governed by the powers outlined in 11 O.S. 541 [11-541], authorize the payment of a pension on the basis of service, in accordance with 11 O.S. 541 [11-541](k), where the police officer has served less than twenty (20) years on a police department in Oklahoma, but has reached the age of 65, and where the ordinances of that city or town require mandatory retirement at age sixty-five. "We are further requesting that you review the question we pose in light of the revised 11 O.S. 541 [11-541] and 11 O.S. 543 [11-543], which become effective July 1, 1978." The Attorney General has been informed that this opinion request is based on the following circumstances: In municipalities across the State, ordinances have been enacted lowering the mandatory retirement age as specified in the Police Pension Retirement Act from age seventy, to age sixty-five pursuant to a supposed grant of authority found in Attorney General Opinion No. 70-115, dated May 11, 1970. The resulting situation has been that police officers meeting the mandatory retirement age requirement of their municipality but failing to meet the twenty year service requirement of the Act have been denied a service pension by the State Police Pension and Retirement Board pursuant to the exercise of their authority found at 11 O.S. 50-202 [11-50-202](3) (1977). 11 O.S. 50-202 [11-50-202](3) reads, in part, as follows: 'The Board shall . . . have authority to: "3. Review all pensions or retirements granted by any Board of Trustees of a Police Pension Retirement System . . . to determine if said decisions were in conformity with the law . . . and may affirm, disallow or modify any such . . . retirement. . . " It is in light of these facts, that this opinion is written. It should first be noted that Attorney General Opinion No. 70-115 held that the city of Seminole did have the authority to fix a mandatory retirement age at sixty-five (65) years of age for policeman. However, that opinion did not go far enough and contained a disclaimer stating: "We express no opinion upon the rights of the Seminole police officers and the Pension System should the city of Seminole lower its mandatory retirement age from seventy to sixty-five years." In light of the statutory grant of authority to the local Police Pension Retirement Board found at 11 O.S. 541 [11-541](r) (1971) as reenacted by the Municipal Code at 11 O.S. 50-121 [11-50-121] (1977), and case law in the area, we are of the opinion that Attorney General's Opinion No. 70-115 must be overruled to the extent that it conflicts with this opinion. 11 O.S. 50-121 [11-50-121] of the Police Pension Retirement Act from which municipalities draw their authority to enact ordinances to effectuate the retirement law reads as follows: "The governing body of any municipality which has established a Police Pension and Retirement System is hereby authorized and empowered to pass any and all ordinances specifically mentioned in this article, and such other ordinances as shall be necessary to accomplish the purposes provided in this article." Therefore, it is clear that this grant of authority must be construed in light of other provisions appearing in the Act as well as the general rules of law applicable here. In the case of In re Gribben, Okla., 47 P. 1074 (1897), the Court held that a municipality may not enact any and all ordinances, rather, such ordinances must be for the purpose and within the limitations of the legislative power delegated to them as well as being consistent with, and not repugnant to, the Constitution or the general laws of the United States and the State of Oklahoma. It is further principle that municipalities are creatures of the legislature, deriving their powers and functions therefrom. Town of Maysville v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 272 F.2d 806 (Okl. 1959). Since the supreme legislative power of government is vested in the sovereign, it is therefore basic that municipalities have no inherent power or authority. Rather, they possess and can exercise only those powers granted in express words, or necessarily or fairly implied, or incidental to the powers expressly granted to them by the Legislature. Shipp v. Southeastern Oklahoma Industries Authority, Okl.498 P.2d 1395 (1972). The law is well settled that a "home rule" municipality acting pursuant to a charter provision may exercise sovereign authority which supersedes conflicting state law in matters of purely municipal concern. City of Ponca City v. Edwards, Okl., 460 P.2d 418 (1969); Lee v. Norick, Okl. 447 P.2d 1015 (1968). However, evidenced by statutory provision and prior Attorney General Opinion, it is clear that the Police Pension and Retirement System is not considered a matter of purely local concern, but of substantial State interest. Title 36 O.S. 312.1 [36-312.1] (1971), provides statutory authority for the proposition that the State has a substantial interest in the municipal Police Pension Retirement System. That section reads as follows: "The Insurance Commissioner shall report and disburse all of the fees and taxes collected under 624 of this Title, and the same hereby appropriated as follows to wit: ". . . "(b) Sixty-one sixty-fourths percent (61/64%) of the four percent (4%) taxes collected on premiums by insurance companies other than fire insurance companies, on automobile liability and property damage and burglary and theft insurance in this state shall be allocated and disbursed annually to the Police Pension and Retirement System of each city or town of this state having such a system under the provisions of 11 O.S. 541-541x [11-541-541x], in the proportion that the total amount of salaries paid to police officers participating and entitled to participate under the system of each city or town bears to the total amount of salaries paid to police officers participating and entitled to participate in all such systems said disbursements to be deposited and expended by each system as and for the same purpose other funds thereof are deposited and expended; . . ." Further in an Opinion of the Attorney General No. 69-360, dated February 27, 1970, the issue of whether the Municipal Police Pension Retirement was a matter of purely municipal concern was decided. In that opinion the following language appears: "The eligibility of policemen to pensions and retirement is not a matter of purely municipal concern. The charter and ordinances of a city in regard thereto would not control over state general law for the reason that substantial funds for such pensions and retirement are levied and supplied by taxation at the state level." In light of the cited authority, and while municipal ordinances enacted pursuant to 11 O.S. 50-121 [11-50-121] can parallel or construe state law, it is abundantly clear that municipal ordinances cannot conflict with the laws of the State of Oklahoma, the United States, or the Constitution. 11 O.S.

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

Related

City of Ponca City v. Edwards
1969 OK 149 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1969)
Tannehill v. Special Indemnity Fund
1975 OK 104 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1975)
Lee v. Norick
1968 OK 173 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1968)
Shipp v. Southeastern Oklahoma Industries Authority
1972 OK 98 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1972)
Adams v. Fry
1951 OK 127 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1951)
In Re Gribben
1897 OK 22 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Opinion No. 78-175 (1978) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-78-175-1978-ag-oklaag-1978.