Robert J. Brunkhorst and Randall E. Lewis, Individually and as Representative of All Similarly Situated Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System Members v. Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, the State of Iowa, Investment Board of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, and All Advisors and Consultants of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 30, 2014
Docket13-0606
StatusPublished

This text of Robert J. Brunkhorst and Randall E. Lewis, Individually and as Representative of All Similarly Situated Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System Members v. Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, the State of Iowa, Investment Board of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, and All Advisors and Consultants of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System (Robert J. Brunkhorst and Randall E. Lewis, Individually and as Representative of All Similarly Situated Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System Members v. Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, the State of Iowa, Investment Board of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, and All Advisors and Consultants of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Robert J. Brunkhorst and Randall E. Lewis, Individually and as Representative of All Similarly Situated Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System Members v. Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, the State of Iowa, Investment Board of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, and All Advisors and Consultants of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, (iowactapp 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 13-0606 Filed April 30, 2014

ROBERT J. BRUNKHORST and RANDALL E. LEWIS, Individually and as Representative of all Similarly Situated IOWA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM MEMBERS, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

IOWA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM, THE STATE OF IOWA, INVESTMENT BOARD OF IOWA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM, and ALL ADVISORS AND CONSULTANTS OF IOWA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Christopher L.

McDonald, Judge.

The plaintiffs appeal from the district court ruling granting the defendants’

motion for summary judgment. AFFIRMED.

Alexander E. Wonio and David L. Brown of Hansen, McClintock & Riley,

Des Moines, for appellants.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Tyler M. Smith, Assistant

Attorney General, Department of Special Litigation, Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ. McDonald, J., takes

no part. 2

DOYLE, J.

Plaintiffs Robert Brunkhorst and Randall Lewis appeal from the district

court’s ruling granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The district

court ruled there was no triable issue of fact on the wanton or malicious conduct

claim as to any defendant, the plaintiffs lacked standing, the plaintiffs’ claims

were barred by the statute of limitations, and the plaintiffs’ claims were barred by

discretionary-function immunity. We choose to affirm on the standing ground.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The district court set forth the background facts from the summary

judgment record as follows:

[The Iowa Public Employees’ Retirement System (IPERS)] is an independent agency charged with administering the defined benefit retirement system established under Iowa Code chapter 97B. Iowa Code § 97B.1(1) [(1999)1]. IPERS is administered by its chief executive officer, who, at times material to this action, was [Gregory] Cusack. Id. § 97B.4. Moneys collected pursuant to chapter 97B, together with all interest, dividends, rents, securities or investment income, and assets, are held in the Iowa Public Employees’ Retirement Fund (“retirement fund”) separate and apart from all other public moneys of the state of Iowa. Id. § 97B.7(1). The treasurer of the state of Iowa is the custodian of the retirement fund. Id. § 97B.7(2). The investment board of [IPERS] (“board”) is the trustee of the retirement fund. Id. § 97B.8A. The board is charged with establishing policy and reviewing policy implementation in matters relating to the investment of the retirement fund. Id. The board is also charged with the duty of selecting the actuary to be employed by the system and adopting all other necessary factors for use in actuarial calculations required in administering IPERS. Id. §§ 97B.8, .59. Participants in the retirement system are called “members” of IPERS. Id. § 97B.1A(14). Active members of IPERS and their respective employers are required to make “contributions,” or payments, to IPERS to fund retirement benefits. See id. §§ 97B.1A(7), .11. In 1999, an employee member’s required

1 The citations to the Iowa Code in this opinion refer to the 1999 Code of Iowa unless otherwise noted. 3

contribution was 3.7% of the employee’s covered wages. Id. § 97B.11. An employer’s required contribution was 5.75% of an employee member’s covered wages. Id. . . . [U]nder this contribution formula, an employee member contributed 40% and an employer contributed 60% of the total contribution. [See, e.g., id. § 97B.72(2)(b); Iowa Admin. Code r. 581-21.24(6)(d) (1999) (setting forth cost of “service buy-in/buy-back” for legislative members).] .... A “member” of IPERS is [statutorily defined as] an employee or former employee who maintains his or her “accumulated contributions” in the retirement system. Iowa Code § 97B.1A(14). In 1999, upon termination of employment prior to retirement, a member could, among other things, request and receive a refund of his or her accumulated contributions. Id. § 97B.53(4). By definition, this amount did not include the accumulated employer contributions for the employee, which IPERS retained. See id. § 97B.1A(2) (defining “accumulated contributions” as individual contributions by the member”). A former employee is no longer a member of IPERS if he or she received a refund of his or her accumulated contributions. Id. § 97B.1A(14). Under certain circumstances, a member may purchase service credits by paying additional monies into IPERS and thereby increasing the number of service years applied toward retirement. See, e.g., id. § 97B.74. There are two types of service credits: buy- backs and buy-ins. [See Iowa Admin. Code r. 581-21.24.] Prior to July 1, 1999, a [former] vested or retired member who received a refund of his or her accumulated contributions could “buy-back” service credits by repaying the accumulated contributions received plus accumulated interest and interest dividends, from the date of receipt to the date of repayment. See Iowa Code § 97B.74 (1997). The repayment amount thus only included the employee’s accumulated contributions refunded. See id. (1997). A [former] member could also purchase service credit for service rendered to another public employer, which is referred to as a “buy-in.” [See id. § 97B.43 (1997); Iowa Admin. Code r. 581-21.24(2) (1997).] Unlike a buy-back, a buy-in required the [former] member to pay both the employee and employer contribution for each calendar quarter of service purchased. [See Iowa Code § 97B.43 (1997) (requiring the individual to redeposit any withdrawn “contributions”); see also id. § 97B.41(7) (1997) (defining “contributions” as “payments to the fund required herein, by the employer and by the members, to provide the benefits of the system”); Iowa Admin. Code r. 581- 21.24(2)(b) (1997) (requiring the individual to make “employer and employee contributions to IPERS” for buy-in).] In 1998, a study conducted by IPERS’s actuarial service firm, Milliman and Robertson (“Milliman”), concluded that buy-backs 4

and buy-ins were being purchased disproportionately by older members who were able to determine more easily the net benefit of the purchase. This adverse selection or selection bias was resulting in an unfunded actuarial accrued liability because of the manner in which service purchases were being funded. In 1998, the general assembly amended chapter 97B in two respects material to this litigation. See 1998 Iowa Acts ch. 1183. The two amendments—and IPERS’s response to the same—are the crux of the parties’ dispute. .... The summary judgment record establishes that . . . [the legislature] made two amendments to chapter 97B relevant to this litigation. See id. First, one amendment required that, effective July 1, 1999, all members wishing to purchase service credit “make contributions in an amount equal to the actuarial cost of the service purchase.” Id. § 67 (codified at Iowa Code § 97B.74(2)(b)).

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Robert J. Brunkhorst and Randall E. Lewis, Individually and as Representative of All Similarly Situated Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System Members v. Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, the State of Iowa, Investment Board of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, and All Advisors and Consultants of Iowa Public Employees' Retirement System, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-j-brunkhorst-and-randall-e-lewis-individually-and-as-iowactapp-2014.