Providence Teachers' Union v. Employees' Retirement System, 98-2672 (1999)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 24, 1999
DocketC.A. 98-2672
StatusPublished

This text of Providence Teachers' Union v. Employees' Retirement System, 98-2672 (1999) (Providence Teachers' Union v. Employees' Retirement System, 98-2672 (1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Providence Teachers' Union v. Employees' Retirement System, 98-2672 (1999), (R.I. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

DECISION
This declaratory judgment proceeding is before the Court for decision on the narrow issue of whether the retirement system may charge regular interest (at 5 percent) compounded annually to the date of payment for the purchase of service credits for time spent as a per diem substitute teacher if such purchase occurs more than 12 months following the teacher becoming a member of the retirement system. If interest, at the rate aforesaid (or at some other rate) may be charged, as between defendant Providence School Board and plaintiffs Larson and Quinn (and by inference other Providence teachers similarly situated), who should bear the cost of such interest?

Basically, the evidence before the Court demonstrates that in 1948 the General Assembly created a statewide retirement system for school teachers of Rhode Island's cities and towns (Title 16, Chapter 16 et seq. of the Rhode Island General Laws). The Teachers' Retirement System was patterned after and engrafted in and onto the Employees' Retirement System of the State of Rhode Island.

Teachers who have vested in the system are entitled to a life annuity in an amount equal to between 1.6 percent and 3 percent per year of service of teacher's average highest three consecutive years of compensation, multiplied by the number of years of total service. A teacher is eligible to retire and receive such pension upon: 1) attaining the age of 60 with at least 10 years of total service, or 2) regardless of age, having completed 28 years of total service.

The case at bar generally deals with certain Providence teachers who were per diem substitute teachers and who, during an applicable school year, worked not less than three quarters of the number of days that, by law, the public schools were required to be in session (180 days ÷ 3/4 = 135 days).

Section 16-16-1(11) provides that a teacher who works that number of days shall receive one year of credit in the retirement system. Further complicating the situation is the fact that per diem substitutes in Providence (those who work less than 135 days) are compensated at the rate, for example, of $55.00 per day for each day worked from which are deducted state and federal taxes. Upon completing 135 days, such teacher becomes a member of the union as well as a member of the retirement system and is compensated on a going-forward basis at the appropriate step annual salary level provided in the Collective Bargaining Agreement between defendant School Board and plaintiff Union. From and after the 135th day worked by such a per diem in any school year, the School Board is required to deduct employee's contribution to the retirement system and to make employer's contribution on all of teacher's earnings. Finally, at that time the teacher becomes entitled to a retroactive payment in an amount equal to the difference between the step one salary for the days that teacher was paid the per diem rate minus the amount actually paid teacher (i.e. 134 x $55.00 = $7,370.00).

The evidence indicates that, as to per diem teachers, appropriate reporting and payments to the retirement system are made with respect to the post 134th day salary and as to the retroactive payment, but that no payment report is made with respect to the $7,370 sum aforesaid.

The statutory scheme permits teachers, such as plaintiffs here, to purchase retirement system service credits for prior service by paying into the system the amount such teacher would have contributed to the system had they been a member, together with ". . . regular interest compounded annually to date of payment. . . ."1 "Regular interest" is a term defined by § 36-8-1(13) of the General Laws as ". . . two percent per annum, compounded annually or at such rate determined from theactual experience of the system as may be prescribed from time totime by the board."2 (emphasis added).

From time to time the board has increased the rate of interest, first in January 1966 to four percent, and then in July 1975 to the present five percent rate, in each case, pursuant to the compounding language found in §§ 16-16-5(c) and 36-8-1(13).

Plaintiffs here initially challenge the authority and procedure by which the retirement system, acting through its Retirement Board, set the rate of interest. Plaintiffs concede that regular interest as defined in 36-8-1(13) of the General Laws is "two percent per annum compounded annually or at such rate determined from the actual experience of the system as may be prescribed from time to time by the board." Plaintiffs, however, contend that at least since 1994 the board has been subject to the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act. (See 42-35-1.1 enacted in 1994, but see also Graveiro v. TheEmployees' Retirement System, 706 A.2d 1353 (R.I. 1998)). Further, plaintiffs point to the provisions of public law 87-330 for the proposition that all rules and regulations of the retirement system theretofore or thereafter established must be compiled, codified and published so that they might generally be available to the members of the system. Plaintiffs contend that there has been no such compilation, codification, and/or publication with respect either to the board's actions in 1966, setting a four percent compound rate, or in 1975, setting a five percent compound rate of interest as the regular rate to be applied pursuant to § 36-8-1(13) read in conjunction with § 16-16-5 (c). The Court notes that the last mentioned rate has stood for over 25 years, apparently without challenge. The Court further notes that the minutes of the board meetings are available to the members of the system.

In any event, there is no apparent case law authority in our state as to whether the act of setting an interest rate pursuant to statutory authority constitutes the creation of a rule or regulation. The statutory basis for the board's action in §36-8-1(13) does not, by its terms, require the adoption or promulgation of a rule or regulation — the General Assembly could have so provided — it did not. The General Assembly has, in certain instances, required the Retirement Board to act by rule, for example, as conceded by plaintiffs, § 16-16-5 (c) provides that by rule, the Retirement Board may provide for the time of payment and the manner of payment (see page 29 of plaintiffs memorandum in support of its verified complaint seeking declaratory judgment injunctive relief and mandamus).

This Court holds that pursuant to the statutory authority cited, and in the exercise of its routine administrative functioning, the board first, in 1966 and then again in 1975, set the interest rates to compound as aforesaid to be applied with respect to the purchase of prior years service credits.

This Court, predicated upon the foregoing analysis, holds that the Retirement Board is vested with the authority from time to time to set a regular rate of interest and, pursuant to that authority, most recently in 1975, set such rate as five percent compounded annually. In lieu of such Retirement Board action the statutory default rate of 2 percent compounded annually would, of course, pertain.

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Related

Charles Clauson v. Robert D. Smith
823 F.2d 660 (First Circuit, 1987)
East Providence Credit Union v. Geremia
239 A.2d 725 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1968)
Craveiro v. Employees' Retirement System
706 A.2d 1353 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
Providence Teachers' Union v. Employees' Retirement System, 98-2672 (1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/providence-teachers-union-v-employees-retirement-system-98-2672-1999-risuperct-1999.