Perry v. Retirement Board

63 Pa. D. & C.2d 529, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 351
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedDecember 20, 1973
Docketno. 3251
StatusPublished

This text of 63 Pa. D. & C.2d 529 (Perry v. Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Retirement Board, 63 Pa. D. & C.2d 529, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 351 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

MORGAN, J.,

This is an equity action by eight employes of the City of Harrisburg and the union to which they belong to enjoin the retirement board from requiring plaintiff-employes to make retroactive payments into the city’s nonuniformed pension fund and to enjoin the mayor from discharging them for refusal to do so.

The matter is before us on the mayor’s exceptions to the chancellor’s adjudication that plaintiffs, Rogers, Mills, Musa, Witmer, Smith and Clark, are “per diem laborers” who, under the applicable statute and ordinance, have the option but cannot be compelled to contribute to the pension fund. The retirement board did not file exceptions.

On April 19, 1969, the Harrisburg City Council passed an ordinance, signed by the mayor, creating a new retirement system for the city. Inter alia, this ordinance provided that all officers and employes of the city would be required to contribute from their salaries a certain percentage into this retirement fund. The contributions were to be deducted from their wages. Under section I., 173.14, it was provided that:

“No person holding a position in the City as a laborer, at a per diem wage, shall be compelled to join this Retirement System and to pay or contribute toward the Fund herein provided for, but he shall have the option of electing to do so, and shall only, upon electing to contribute to the Fund, become entitled to the pension benefits provided by this Ordinance. Such election must be made within ninety (90) days of the date of employment for new employees and within ninety (90) days of the date of the final passage of this Ordinance for present employees. He shall contribute to the Fund at the same rate .as other members thereof. Once a laborer, at a per diem wage, elects to join the [531]*531Fund and is accepted by the Board, he cannot withdraw as a member at a later date.”

This particular provision of the ordinance was in keeping with the Third Class City Code, the enabling legislation dealing with pensions, which provided in the Act of June 23,1931, P. L. 932', art. XLIII, sec. 4345, as amended, 53 PS §39345:

“Any person holding a position in any such city as a laborer, at a per diem wage, shall not be compelled to pay or contribute toward the pension fund herein provided for, but shall have the option or choice of so doing and, in that event only, of becoming entitled to the pension provided by this act.”

Each of the plaintiff-employes in this case was hired as a per diem employe and was advised at the time of employment that since he was a laborer and per diem, it was optional as to whether or not he elected to join the retirement system. Based upon this representation, each elected not to join the pension plan and thereafter made no contributions. Nor were they asked to do so from the date of their employment until by memorandum dated June 22, 1973, they were informed of the amount of the retroactive contribution and required to make payment by July 15, 1973, or suffer dismissal.

Plaintiffs in this case are required, under the pension board’s ruling, to make the following lump-sum retroactive payments:

Robert A. Rogers.................... $1,531.30

James H. Mills ..................... 516.48

Joseph J. Musa .................... 553.20

Junior O. Witmer................... 449.00

George L. Smith ................... 818.65

Samuel Clark ..................... 1.159.81

Defendant agrees that if plaintiff-employes are “laborers at a per diem wage” they cannot be com[532]*532pelled to pay or contribute into the pension fund under the terms and provisions of section I., 173.14 of the ordinance. It is also conceded by defendant that plaintiffs are “per diem” employes, so that the only issue is whether the six named employes are “laborers.”

In making his adjudication, the chancellor simply applied to the testimony of plaintiffs (the city offered none) the definition of “laborer” given by the city solicitor in this matter to the city controller on March 8, 1973, which reads as follows:

“1. Laborers being paid on an hourly basis. In that category I include only those who are performing tasks which would be of such a nature as to categorize such employees as laborers’ as that term is generally used and has been defined for legal purposes. As defined in McQuillan on Municipal Corporations, a ‘laborer’ is ordinarily to be interpreted ‘. . . not in its broad and general sense, but in its common and usual acceptation as a term to specify those whose services are manual and menial — those not responsible for independent actions but who do a day’s work or stated job under the direction of a boss or superior.’ ”

The most cursory review of the testimony establishes that plaintiff-employes come within the foregoing definition which may explain why it is no longer asserted; at least not in the argument on exceptions. The city now, in substance, advances the familiar Webster definition that a “laborer” is “one who does physical labor; one who works at a toilsome occupation; esp., a person who does work that requires strength rather than skill, as distinguished from artisans and from the professional classes.” It contends that plaintiff-employes are not “laborers” within this definition because they are either “mechanics” [533]*533who, according to the city are at the level of artisans, or because although they may do physical labor it does not involve real physical exertion.

Regardless of how loosely the local garageman may use the term, we think that “mechanic” still means a skilled workman and it is obvious from the testimony that these employes, while they may from time to time work with the master mechanic in making repairs, have no such skill. Their own supervisor, the City’s Chief of the Bureau of Sewage, testified on their behalf that Rogers, Smith, Musa and Witmer initiated no work; that what they did was primarily manual; to keep the place cleaned. Nor do we think that the degree of exertion involved in the physical effort will serve to make these employes any less “laborers.” If, as the city seems to imply, the term ever included only the sweaty push, pull or lift of straining muscles, we hold that it no longer does.

In any given case, the question of whether or not an employe is a laborer must be determined with reference to its own particular facts and circumstances and in this case they are as follows:

Robert A. Rogers: Mr. Rogers was hired by the city in April of 1963 to cut grass and rake leaves for the Parks Department. He has a ninth grade education, and at the time of hiring was told that he did not have to join the pension plan. In 1967, he transferred to his current position at the sewage treatment plant. His job entails helping to repair pumps, digging ditches, cleaning up, planting flowers and cutting grass at times, as well as repairing chains and “anything that would break down I helped to repair.” He has had no technical training of any kind. He does no actual mechanical work without help of other maintenance people. His work is done under supervision. The simple type of mechanical work that he does does [534]*534not require any special skill and all his work is manual work. According to Rogers, the first time he knew he was supposed to be a mechanic was at the time of the hearing. He earns approximately $6,000 per year and is paid on an hourly basis at the rate of $3.21 per hour.

James H.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Pa. D. & C.2d 529, 1973 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-retirement-board-pactcompldauphi-1973.