Ridge v. Police & Firefighters Retirement & Relief Board

511 A.2d 418, 1986 D.C. App. LEXIS 362
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1986
Docket85-474
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 511 A.2d 418 (Ridge v. Police & Firefighters Retirement & Relief Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridge v. Police & Firefighters Retirement & Relief Board, 511 A.2d 418, 1986 D.C. App. LEXIS 362 (D.C. 1986).

Opinion

MACK, Associate Judge:

The Police and Firefighters Retirement and Relief Board (“the Board”) restored disability benefits to an annuitant who had been temporarily above the statutory income limits. We are asked to decide whether the Board should have backdated the annuity payments to the date of eligibility for reestablishment rather than making the reestablished annuity effective only from the later date on which the Board reached its decision. We agree with petitioner Thomas Ridge that the earlier date applies. We hold also that the Board may offset against the reestablished annuity any payments received by the annuitant during what was later recognized as a period of temporary ineligibility. Finally, we hold that the Board’s finding of a willful statutory violation was not supported by substantial evidence and, in addition, that the Board failed to give petitioner adequate notice of its threatened action. 1 We reverse.

I

On January 12, 1955, petitioner Thomas Ridge joined the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department. He subsequently suffered a disability incurred or aggravated in the course of duty and was retired from his rank as officer on April 1, 1967. After his retirement, petitioner entered into business as the sole proprietor of an Exxon service station. Petitioner used the income from this enterprise to supplement his disability annuity, set by statute at between 66% and 70% of his average pay for each year of his service. D.C.Code § 4-616(a) (1981).

A disabled annuitant’s “earning capacity” is deemed restored, and benefits therefore revoked, if his or her income from wages or self-employment for any calendar year equals at least 80% of the current rate of pay in the position held immediately *421 before retirement. Id. § 4-620(a)(2). 2 On November 19,1981, the Board ordered that petitioner’s disability annuity be revoked on the ground that his income for calendar year 1980 had risen above the statutory limit. 3 Petitioner’s annuity payments were stopped forty-five days later, as the statute requires, on January 4, 1982. Id. § 4-620(a)(1)(C).

Although petitioner’s income for calendar year 1980 was above the 80% limit, his 1981 earnings fell back below that level, making him eligible for reestablishment of his disability annuity. Id. § 4-620(a)(2). 4 On April 9, 1982, shortly after the close of the 1981 calendar year which brought him back within the eligibility limits, petitioner formally requested the Board to reinstate his annuity due to his changed circumstances. After a protracted transmission of documents from petitioner to the Board, a hearing on his reestablishment claim was finally held on September 15, 1988. The Board, having examined documentary evidence of petitioner’s earnings for 1981 and 1982, and having heard testimony from various individuals including petitioner’s Certified Public Accountant, concluded that he was in compliance with the statutory income requirements for those years. On October 4, 1983, the Board issued an order reinstating the annuity effective September 22, 1983, the date on which the Board reached its reestablishment decision one week after the hearing was held.

Petitioner sought review in this court of the Board’s determination that September 22,1983, was the effective date from which his annuity should be reestablished. He argued that the appropriate point for payments to commence was not the date on which the Board — after extended proceedings — arrived at its decision to reinstate the annuity, but rather the earlier date on which he had become eligible for reestablishment. Under this analysis, as we discuss below, he would be entitled not only to payments running from September 22, 1983, but also to payments retroactive to January 1, 1982.

Neither the challenged order of October 4, 1983, nor the decision upon which that order was based, indicated that the Board had ever considered the possibility of backdating the annuity from the date of its reestablishment decision to the date of eligibility. On January 4,1985, after requesting supplemental briefs on this and other issues, we remanded the case back to the Board to consider and determine the appropriate date for reestablishment of the annuity. Ridge v. Police & Firefighters Retirement & Relief Board, No. 83-1206 (D.C.January 4, 1985) (Ridge I). We suggested, in our unpublished order remanding Ridge I, that “the Board adopt regulations addressing this issue, in order that annuitants may be put on notice of the applicable rules and that future cases may be decided appropriately.” Id. at 2.

On April 10, 1985, on remand from Ridge I, the Board affirmed its prior ruling that payments would recommence from September 22, 1983. This is the final decision and order that we now review. The decision set forth the principle that the Board may “withhold reinstatement of an annuity until it is capable of making such a determination.” The Board also held that petitioner *422 had willfully failed to provide required information until September 22, 1983, the date on which the decision to reestablish was made, and that his willful delay justified the loss of benefits up to that time. D.C.Code § 4-620(c)(5) (1981). In so finding, the Board introduced a new issue into the case.

Before proceeding to address petitioner’s contentions, we note that this case presents a number of questions not expressly answered by the provisions of the governing Police and Firefighters Retirement and Disability Act, D.C.Code §§ 4-601 to 634 (1981) (“the Act” or “the retirement statute”). Specifically, the Act does not set forth the procedure to be followed by either the annuitant or the Board when reestablishing temporarily discontinued payments; it does not expressly indicate whether reestablishment operates retroactively to cover the lapse between the date of eligibility and the date upon which the Board arrives at its reestablishment decision; and the Act offers no express guidance as to whether the Board may offset against the reestablished annuity the payments which the annuitant received during the period before his or her ineligibility became apparent. Despite our prompting in Ridge I, it does not appear that the Board has adopted regulations which would clarify any of these issues.

II

“We may overturn the Board’s decision only if its findings are unsupported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole, or if it is grounded on a faulty legal premise.” Neer v. District of Columbia Police & Firemen’s Retirement & Relief Board, 415 A.2d 523, 526 (D.C.1980). Substantial evidence is “more than a mere scintilla.

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Bluebook (online)
511 A.2d 418, 1986 D.C. App. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridge-v-police-firefighters-retirement-relief-board-dc-1986.