Stork v. State of California

62 Cal. App. 3d 465, 133 Cal. Rptr. 207, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1922
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 1976
DocketCiv. 15236
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 62 Cal. App. 3d 465 (Stork v. State of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stork v. State of California, 62 Cal. App. 3d 465, 133 Cal. Rptr. 207, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1922 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, J.

Plaintiff, a member of the Public Employees Retirement System, brought this declaratoiy relief action against the state to challenge the constitutionality of a 1972 statute which altered his retirement benefits. The trial court granted the state’s motion for summary judgment and plaintiff appeals.

No judgment as such was signed or entered. The last action of the trial court on file is an order granting the state’s motion for summary judgment. After the order was filed, plaintiff filed a purported appeal from the judgment. The order is not even a declaration of rights favoring the defendant and adverse to the plaintiff, but could be interpreted as an exercise of the court’s discretionary power to withhold declaratory relief. Nevertheless, we are reluctant to destroy the parties’ assumption that they have presented an effective appeal. The facts are uncontested and the issue is one of law. Where, from the record, the reviewing court is able to ascertain that the trial court intended a declaration of rights *468 adverse to the plaintiff, the absence of an express declaration is error but not a ground for reversal. (Anderson v. Stansbury, 38 Cal.2d 707, 717 [242 P.2d 305]; California Chiropractic Assn. v. Board of Administration, 40 Cal.App.3d 701, 704 [115 Cal.Rptr. 286].) Here, the parties’ summary judgment papers debated the constitutional question, and the court filed a notice of intended decision expressing the judge’s view that the statute was constitutional. Thus, we interpret the order granting the state’s motion for summary judgment as a final judgment declaring the validity of the 1972 modification of retirement benefits.

A change of retirement law which diminishes earned pension rights of public employees violates constitutional prohibitions against impairment of the obligations of contracts; the prohibition does not immunize employees against all changes; modifications may be made in the earned pension rights of active employees if they are reasonable and related to the theory of a sound pension system and if changes detrimental to the individual are offset by comparable new advantages. (Abbott v. City of Los Angeles (1958) 50 Cal.2d 438, 449 [326 P.2d 484]; City of Downey v. Board of Administration (1975) 47 Cal.App.3d 621, 632 [121 Cal.Rptr. 295].) The employee is entitled to no more and no less than preservation of the “reasonable expectations” generated by the pension system. (Lyon v. Flournoy (1969) 271 Cal.App.2d 774, 782, 787 [76 Cal.Rptr. 869].)

Plaintiff was born in February 1919. He became a member of what is now the Public Employees’ Retirement System in December 1948, six months after he commenced work for the state Department of Fish and Game. During the following years he worked continuously for the department. During those years the retirement law provided a service retirement formula for employees in the ordinary, nonhazardous state positions. These were called state miscellaneous members. The law also contained a number of separate retirement formulae for employees in the somewhat more hazardous “public safety” occupations, establishing separate categories for prison, patrol, warden, narcotics enforcement and law enforcement members. As a fish and game warden, plaintiff bore the classification of warden member.

In 1961, plaintiff availed himself of a statutory option by which he rejected combined coverage under the state system and the Social Security Act and elected to accept the service retirement formula established for state miscellaneous members. The latter formula is described in Government Code section 21251.13.

*469 In 1972 legislation was adopted abolishing the special retirement formulae for most public safety employees and gathering them into a single category of state safety member. (See Gov. Code, § 20014.) The new legislation became operative on April 1, 1973. Applied to plaintiff, this legislation abolished his status as a warden member and classified him as a state safety member. (Gov. Code, § 20017.9.) The service retirement formula applicable to state safety members is set out in Government Code section 21252.6. Shaped by the variant factors of length of service and age at retirement, the latter provides a different scale of retirement allowances than that accorded state miscellaneous members under section 21251.13.

On the assumption of a monthly salary of $1,420.94 immediately preceding plaintiff’s retirement, the following table depicts the monthly service retirement allowance (and its actuarial equivalent) available to him as a state safety member (under Gov. Code, § 21252.6) as compared with that available to him as a state miscellaneous member (under Gov. Code, §21251.13):

MISCELLANEOUS SAFETY
Age at Retirement Monthly Allowance Actuarial Equivalent Monthly Allowance Actuarial Equivalent
54 $ 440.82 $ 74,562.94 $614.89 $104,005.42
55 490.89 81,211.86 695.32 115,032.35
56 546.42 88,357.75 723.74 117,030.93
57 607.75 95,983.78 752.16 118.790.89
58 676.77 104.313.94 780.58 120.314.70
59 753.18 113.202.95 809.00 121.592.70
60 837.41 122,625.30 837.41 122,625.30
61 923.86 131,688.85 865.83 123,417.14
62 1015.87 140,810.76 894.25 123.952.89
63 1115.51 150.198.96 922.67 124,233.82
64 1149.87 150,227.07 951.09 124,257.06
65 1184.23 149,924.70 979.51 124,006.95

The parties do not quarrel over the public objectives of the 1972 statutory changes and their relationship to the retirement system’s soundness. It is helpful briefly to describe these general objectives. The 1972 legislation had been preceded by studies by the Board of *470 Administration of the Public Employees Retirement System, the state legislative analyst and the Assembly Committee on Retirement Systems.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Cal. App. 3d 465, 133 Cal. Rptr. 207, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stork-v-state-of-california-calctapp-1976.