Pa School Boards Ass'n, Inc. v. Com., Public Sch. Employees'retirement Bd.

863 A.2d 432, 580 Pa. 610, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 3218
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 21, 2004
Docket124 MAP 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 863 A.2d 432 (Pa School Boards Ass'n, Inc. v. Com., Public Sch. Employees'retirement Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pa School Boards Ass'n, Inc. v. Com., Public Sch. Employees'retirement Bd., 863 A.2d 432, 580 Pa. 610, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 3218 (Pa. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Justice CASTILLE.

This appeal arises from a declaratory judgment action challenging appellee Public School Employees’ Retirement System’s (“PSERS”) interpretation of Section 8303(c) of the Public School Employees’ Retirement Code, 24 Pa.C.S. § 8101 et seq., as authorizing active members of the system to purchase credit toward retirement for previous school service rendered during a period when the employees were not yet members of *613 PSERS. The Commonwealth Court held that PSERS correctly interpreted the statute to permit the purchase of credit for prior part-time service that would not have entitled the employees to membership in PSERS at the time the service was rendered. For the reasons that follow, we agree with the Commonwealth Court, and accordingly, we affirm.

The parties stipulated to the relevant facts. PSERS is an independent administrative board of the Commonwealth that manages the pension retirement system for Pennsylvania’s public school employees. The Public School Employee’s Retirement Board (“Board”) is the governing body of PSERS. Prior to 1975, only full-time school employees were entitled to membership in PSERS. In 1975, our General Assembly adopted a new Public School Employees’ Retirement Code mandating PSERS membership status for certain part-time employees. Specifically, the 1975 Retirement Code required that, in addition to all full-time employees, all per diem employees working 80 or more days or hourly employees working 500 hours or more in a given fiscal year must be enrolled as active PSERS “members” for that year. See 24 Pa.C.S. § 8301(a). The 1975 Retirement Code also permitted PSERS members to purchase credit toward their retirement, which would increase their retirement benefits, for certain part-time service rendered prior to the enactment of the 1975 Retirement Code. See 24 Pa.C.S. § 8303(c). From 1975 through 1998, PSERS construed the Code as allowing its active members to purchase credit for prior part-time school service only for those years in which the members had worked 80 or more days or 500 or more hours—i.e., only for years in which they had qualified as “members” of the system. In 1992, consistently with this policy/interpretation, PSERS directed that school districts not report non-qualifying service, which PSERS defined as service involving fewer than 80 days or 500 hours in a given year.

On January 29, 1999, PSERS issued a Policy Statement which effectively reversed its practice of limiting purchase of credit for previous school service to years in which the employee had worked more than 80 days or 500 hours. PSERS *614 announced in its Policy Statement that active PSERS members could henceforth purchase credit for previous school service irrespective of whether that service met the 80 day/500 hour threshold in a given year. It is this change in policy, and the question of its legitimacy as a matter of statutory interpretation of the Code, which is the crux of this action.

On March 23, 1999, appellant Pennsylvania School Boards Association, Inc. (“PSBA”) 1 filed a petition for review in the Commonwealth Court’s original jurisdiction seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. PSBA claimed that the 1999 PSERS Policy Statement contravened both the clear meaning and intent of Section 8303(c) of the Retirement Code as well as the historical interpretation of the provision. PSBA sought to bar implementation of the policy, arguing that employee purchases of such previous part-time school service would financially burden its member school districts. The claim for injunctive relief was ultimately dropped, and a scheduled preliminary injunction hearing was canceled, based upon a stipulation between the parties, pursuant to which PSERS would process purchase requests for those members who needed the disputed time to qualify for “30 and out” early retirement incentives or for disability purposes. The parties further agreed that these applications would not be affected by any later court decision on the merits of the dispute. PSERS also agreed to accept but not process other applications to purchase the contested credit, subject to the resolution of this litigation. Thus, PSBA’s request for declaratory relief alone is at issue. The Pennsylvania State Education Association and the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers were permitted to intervene in the matter. 2

The Board filed preliminary objections to PSBA’s petition, seeking to eliminate PSERS as a party and to strike those portions of the petition claiming that the Board owed a *615 fiduciary duty to PSBA under the Retirement Code. On May 17, 2000, the Commonwealth Court, in a published opinion, denied the motion to strike PSERS as a party, but ruled that PSBA indeed lacked standing to assert that the Board owed PSBA a fiduciary duty. Pennsylvania School Boards Association, Inc. v. Public School Employees’ Retirement System, 751 A.2d 1237 (Pa.Cmwlth.2000) (PSBA v. PSERS I). Concluding that the Retirement Code expressly limits those standing in a fiduciary relationship with PSERS to “the members of the system,” and that PSBA is not a member of the system, the Commonwealth Court sustained the Board’s preliminary objection on the issue of fiduciary duty and struck the paragraphs of PSBA’s petition alleging a breach of fiduciary duty.

Following discovery and the parties’ stipulation of facts, PSERS filed a motion for summary judgment claiming that its new policy was legitimate and enforceable because Section 8303(c) of the Retirement Code permits PSERS members to purchase credit for any pre-membership service rendered as a school employee. PSERS argued that the Code broadly defines “previous school service” as any service by a school employee, whether full- or part-time, regardless of whether the school employee was a member of PSERS at the time the service was rendered, and regardless of any minimum of hours or days worked in a given service year. The Commonwealth Court, in a second published opinion, agreed with PSERS’s interpretation of Section 8303(c), basing its view upon a plain meaning reading of the statute. The panel noted, inter alia, that if the General Assembly had intended to limit the purchase of part-time service to service which, when rendered, would have qualified an employee for membership in PSERS (i.e., 80 days or 500 hours in a given year), the legislation easily could have included language making that intention clear: “It could have said ‘previous school service as a member’ in Section 8303(c), or it could have defined ‘previous school service’ as ‘school service rendered as a member’ in Section 8102. It did neither.” Pennsylvania School Boards Association, Inc. v. Public School Employees’ Retirement System, 804 A.2d 737, 743 (Pa.Cmwlth.2002) (PSBA v. PSERS *616 II).

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863 A.2d 432, 580 Pa. 610, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 3218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pa-school-boards-assn-inc-v-com-public-sch-employeesretirement-bd-pa-2004.