Robbins v. County Employees' & Officers' Annuity & Benefit Fund

2021 IL App (1st) 192142, 192 N.E.3d 663, 455 Ill. Dec. 834
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 2021
Docket1-19-2142
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 IL App (1st) 192142 (Robbins v. County Employees' & Officers' Annuity & Benefit Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robbins v. County Employees' & Officers' Annuity & Benefit Fund, 2021 IL App (1st) 192142, 192 N.E.3d 663, 455 Ill. Dec. 834 (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Digitally signed by Reporter of Decisions Reason: I attest to Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and integrity of this document Appellate Court Date: 2022.07.29 12:49:45 -05'00'

Robbins v. County Employees’ & Officers’ Annuity & Benefit Fund, 2021 IL App (1st) 192142

Appellate Court LESLIE ROBBINS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. THE COUNTY Caption EMPLOYEES’ AND OFFICERS’ ANNUITY AND BENEFIT FUND OF COOK COUNTY; THE RETIREMENT BOARD OF THE COUNTY EMPLOYEES’ AND OFFICERS’ ANNUITY AND BENEFIT FUND OF COOK COUNTY; LAWRENCE L. WILSON, in His Official Capacity as President of the Board of County Employees’ and Officers’ Annuity and Benefit Fund of Cook County; THE FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT EMPLOYEES’ ANNUITY AND BENEFIT FUND OF COOK COUNTY; THE RETIREMENT BOARD OF FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT EMPLOYEES’ ANNUITY AND BENEFIT FUND OF COOK COUNTY; and REGINA TUCZAK, in Her Official Capacity as Director of the Forest Preserve District Employees’ Annuity and Benefit Fund of Cook County, Defendants (The Retirement Board of Cook County Employees’ and Officers’ Annuity and Benefit Fund of Cook County, Defendant-Appellant).

District & No. First District, Third Division No. 1-19-2142

Filed June 30, 2021

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CH-16164; the Review Hon. Eve M. Reilly, Judge, presiding. Judgment Affirmed.

Counsel on Luke P. Hajzl, of Rolling Meadows, for appellant. Appeal Mary Patricia Burns, Vincent D. Pinelli, and Sarah A. Boeckman, of Burke Burns & Pinelli, Ltd., of Chicago, for appellees.

Panel JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Howse and Justice McBride concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Cook County employee pensions are governed by article 9 of the Pension Code (40 ILCS 5/art. IX (West 2014)). Article 9, like the rest of the Pension Code, is full of contingencies and qualifications and exceptions and exceptions to exceptions and different rules for different years, using old-fashioned language and murky terms and undefined phrases, often providing for multiple different scenarios (each with exceptions and qualifications to those exceptions) in lengthy single sentences far longer than this one. And often within a series of unnumbered paragraphs, frustrating any attempt to coherently cite them. We know who wrote it—the General Assembly—but we do not know for whom it was written. Not lawyers, and certainly not laypeople. To say that these statutes need a plain-language rewrite is the height of understatement. Laws serve little purpose when the only people who can understand them are technicians and bureaucrats—or judges, only after returning to the appellate lawyers repeatedly for additional guidance and clarification, as we did here. (And we thank counsel for each party for their exceptional work.) ¶2 This case is, in part, about the monthly annuities a Cook County employee receives upon retirement. (The Pension Code does not call them “pensions”—it calls them “annuities.”) ¶3 But more specifically, this case is about the automatic annual adjustments to which Cook County pensioners are entitled—usually known as cost-of-living adjustments, or COLAs, a term the parties use, and thus so will we. (The Pension Code does not.) ¶4 Generally speaking, retired county employees drawing annuities will become eligible for a COLA bump to their annuity at some point after turning 60. Precisely when that first COLA is added to an annuity depends on the class of employee. ¶5 One subset of county employees—those who retire before age 60 and who are drawing their annuity before age 60—receive their first COLA earlier in the process than others. Plaintiff Leslie Robbins says she belongs to that subset of employees and was thus entitled to the “earlier” COLA. The County Employees and Officers’ Annuity and Benefit Fund of Cook County (Fund) disagreed. After an administrative hearing, the defendant retirement board (Board) of the Fund agreed with the Fund. The circuit court, on administrative review, likewise

-2- sided with the Board. We do as well. We affirm the judgment below.

¶6 BACKGROUND ¶7 Robbins worked for the Office of the Cook County Public Guardian for 26 years. In April 2014, Robbins submitted an “Application for Retirement Annuity (Pension)” to the Fund. The application listed her projected retirement date as May 16, 2014. That retirement date was four days before Robbins’s sixtieth birthday. The timing was intentional. According to Robbins, sometime in 2011, she spoke to an unnamed representative of the Fund, who advised Robbins that, if she retired just before she turned 60, she would receive her first COLA the following January (meaning January 1, 2015). If Robbins waited to retire until after she turned 60, the representative advised, Robbins would be ineligible for a COLA until January 1, 2016. ¶8 The Fund acknowledged receipt of plaintiff’s application for annuity benefits on April 25, 2014, roughly a month before her pegged retirement date. And then Robbins retired, as promised, on May 16, 2014 (the Friday before her sixtieth birthday the following Monday). ¶9 By law, the first annuity check is supposed to arrive the first of the following month—June 1, 2014, in this case. See 40 ILCS 5/9-119 (West 2012). But apparently it is common for a brief lag in processing, and the annuitant is later reimbursed retroactively for the delay. That happened here, as well. On July 10, 2014, the Fund wrote Robbins that it had approved her annuity application, told her the monthly amount, and advised her that her benefits would begin retroactively to the first of June. ¶ 10 The Fund also advised her that her first COLA would be in January 2016. Robbins had expected her first COLA in January 2015, so she sought an administrative hearing before the Board. ¶ 11 The hearing officer initially ruled in favor of Robbins based on an inapplicable annuity formula—that is, one Robbins had not chosen. The Fund sought reconsideration of that ruling, citing the applicable statutory formula that Robbins had chosen and arguing that, using the right formula, the Fund’s interpretation of state law was correct, not Robbins’s. The hearing officer agreed with the Fund, reversed his ruling, and ruled in the Fund’s favor. The Board ultimately upheld the hearing officer’s (revised) recommended ruling. ¶ 12 Robbins sought administrative review. The circuit court agreed with the Board’s decision that Robbins was not entitled to a COLA until January 2016. This appeal followed.

¶ 13 ANALYSIS ¶ 14 I ¶ 15 Our review is de novo, as we are construing statutes, and the material facts are undisputed. Shields v. Judges’ Retirement System of Illinois, 204 Ill. 2d 488, 491-92 (2003); Fields v. Schaumburg Firefighters’ Pension Board, 383 Ill. App. 3d 209, 210 (2008). We ordinarily defer to the interpretation given by an administrative agency to the law it routinely administers. Shields, 204 Ill. 2d at 492. Yet we are also told that pension statutes should be construed liberally in favor of the pensioner. Id. at 494. If those sound like contradictory maxims, we read them as follows: we will place weight on the interpretation given to us by the Board, but we will ultimately make our own judgment, and if the statute is unclear, we will liberally construe it in favor of the pensioner.

-3- ¶ 16 The question here is not the calculation of plaintiff’s initial annuity but simply when she was supposed to receive her first COLA. But as we will see, before we can discuss how COLAs are calculated, it is important to understand first how the annuities, themselves, are calculated. ¶ 17 So we start with some basics of annuity calculations under article 9 of the Pension Code, which governs Cook County employees.

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Related

Shields v. JUDGES'RET. SYSTEM OF ILLINOIS
791 N.E.2d 516 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2003)
Fields v. Schaumburg Firefighters' Pension Board
889 N.E.2d 1167 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2008)
Vancura v. Katris
939 N.E.2d 328 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2010)
Arlene Atlas v. Mayer Hoffman McCann, P.C.
2019 IL App (1st) 180939 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 IL App (1st) 192142, 192 N.E.3d 663, 455 Ill. Dec. 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-county-employees-officers-annuity-benefit-fund-illappct-2021.