State v. Board of Trustees, Teachers' Retirement

29 So. 2d 489, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 648
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 2874.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 489 (State v. Board of Trustees, Teachers' Retirement) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Board of Trustees, Teachers' Retirement, 29 So. 2d 489, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 648 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

This is a mandamus proceeding brought in the name of the State of Louisiana, on the relation of Edward E. Richardson, against the Board of Trustees, Teachers' Retirement System of Louisiana and Patterson C. Rogers, Secretary-Treasurer of the Board, acting in his capacity as executive officer of the Teachers' Retirement System.

The relator, Richardson, was not eligible for retirement under the Teachers' Retirement System as provided for by Act 83 of 1936. However in 1940 the Legislature passed another act in which it made available, proceeds for those teachers who were not eligible for benefits under the System, or for those who, although eligible, would receive so little upon retirement that they would hardly be able to provide for themselves the necessities of life. That was Act 216 of 1940. It specifically provided for disability payments to any teacher "who is now, on account of physical or mental disability, totally and permanently incapacitated for teaching service and who became so while in active service in the public schools of Louisiana." The allowance for any such disability benefits was to be computed in the same manner as for those teachers who were eligible for retirement under the System with the exception, that the "minimum annual allowance shall not be less than one-third of the average salary received for the last five years of service." The act of 1940 provided further that during the month of July for the next two years, beginning July, 1940, the State Treasurer had to pay to the Teachers' Retirement System from the avails of the State Public School fund, the sum of $30,000, or as much thereof as would be needed for the purposes set forth in the act. The Board of Trustees of the Retirement System had to determine annually the amount required to pay the cost of the benefits provided for in the act and certify such amount to the State Auditor.

Act 216 of 1940 was presented to the Legislature as House Bill No. 320 and, as shown from the record in this suit, the Secretary-Treasurer of the System, in administering the law, kept different bank accounts for the different funds under control of the Board and the funds provided for by that act were kept in an account which he designated as "House Bill No. 320 Fund."

In 1942, the Legislature again passed an act, being Act No. 108 of that year, in order to "dedicate or allocate" out of the State Public School Fund, the sum of $20,000 annually or so much thereof as might be necessary, beginning with the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1942, to be paid by the State Treasurer in the same manner as were the funds to be so paid by him under the terms of Act 216 of 1940.

The relator in this case became a disability annuitant on October 26, 1941, effective November 1, 1941. During the last five years of his service, his annual salary was the sum of $2936, one-third of which amount is the sum of $978.67. He was qualified as a disability annuitant but through inadvertence or error on the part of those administering the Teachers' Retirement System was paid at the rate of $600 per year throughout the period from November, 1941 through July, 1944, that being the Maximum amount allowed for any person approved for assistance under the old age provision of Act 216 of 1940 as well as Act 108 of 1942. By the provisions of Act 228 of 1944 that maximum allowance was raised to the sum of $700 and accordingly, under the same inadvertence or error, as to his status, he received $700 for the period running from August 1, 1944 to May 31, 1946.

He has instituted the present proceeding in order to have his status correctly recognized by the Board of Trustees and to compel them to pay him the difference in the amount he was justly entitled to receive and the amount actually paid him and also to compel them to pay him at the proper rate each year from now on.

In his petition he sets out that there was, for each year during which he should have received the full amount to which he was *Page 491 entitled, a surplus of receipts over expenditures in the account designated as "House Bill No. 320 Fund" to take care of those teachers who were included within the provisions of the Acts of 1940 and 1942. That the funds in that account had been designated and allocated for the purpose of taking care of those teachers and that notwithstanding the transfer of the surplus remaining at the end of each year in the fund to some other account, it still remains under the control and management of the Board of Trustees of the System and as there is more than a sufficient amount to pay him the difference to which he is entitled, that is the sum of $1551.90, as of the date on which he filed this proceeding, the Board should be made to pay him that amount.

The defendants appeared in answer to the alternative writs of mandamus which had been issued against them and whilst generally admitting the facts set out by the relator in his petition, aver that the relator waited until July 9, 1944 before presenting a final demand for the claim he now makes. They admit nevertheless that he had visited the office of the Board on several occasions prior to that date and also that his counsel of record had made a written demand before filing suit. The defendants then at length set out the method by which the funds provided under the whole system were administered, contending that it has been administered in the interest of all teachers eligible to participate in any of the funds and that all of the funds have been used in accordance with the provisions of the different acts to liquidate the service credits provided for in each, or have been returned to the State Treasurer to be credited to the State's General Fund and there remains now in their custody an amount sufficient only to pay and discharge the obligations imposed upon the Board by the terms of the said acts for the current month or until the close of the present fiscal year and the current biennium.

After trial in the lower court there was judgment in favor of relator decreeing that the alternative writs of mandamus be made peremptory and that the defendants be ordered to pay the relator the sum of $1501.90, and in addition thereto to issue monthly checks to him at the rate of $978.67 per annum, beginning June 1, 1946 until terminated by law. The discrepancy of $50 between the amount demanded and the amount in the decree of the judgment is accounted for by a remittitur tendered on behalf of the relator during the trial of the proceeding.

From the judgment rendered the defendants have taken this appeal.

It now appears that all the issues in the case have been cleared except on the right of the relator to proceed by way of mandamus and, if he has the right to so proceed, that by reason of the disbursements made over the period of years from the fund out of which his claim of $1501.90 should have been paid, and, in effect, the depletion of that fund, it is impossible to comply with the decree of mandamus. In other words the appeal, as stated in briefs that have been submitted, is only from that part of the judgment ordering the defendants to pay the claim of $1501.90 That of course, carries an admission that the relator's contention with regard to the amount to which he is entitled annually is correct.

One of the points raised against the proceeding by mandamus is that the relator had some other remedy at law which he should have pursued and that he should not have been permitted to resort to mandamus. It is stated that he should have proceeded to obtain relief to which he is entitled for the amount past due by having obtained permission to sue the State and have the Legislature make the necessary appropriation with which to pay his claim.

[1, 2] The State however is not indebted to relator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 489, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-board-of-trustees-teachers-retirement-lactapp-1947.