Sundersingh Bala v. Virginia Retirement System

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 29, 2018
Docket1508172
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sundersingh Bala v. Virginia Retirement System (Sundersingh Bala v. Virginia Retirement System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sundersingh Bala v. Virginia Retirement System, (Va. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Chafin, Decker and AtLee Argued at Richmond, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

SUNDERSINGH BALA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1508-17-2 JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR. MAY 29, 2018 VIRGINIA RETIREMENT SYSTEM

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Gregory L. Rupe, Judge

Scott G. Crowley (Crowley & Crowley, P.C., on brief), for appellant.

Brian J. Goodman, Legal Affairs & Compliance Coordinator, Virginia Retirement System (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General; John W. Daniel, II, Deputy Attorney General; Heather Hays Lockerman, Senior Assistant Attorney General/Section Chief, on brief), for appellee.

Appellant Sundersingh Bala appeals the decision of the Circuit Court of the City of

Richmond, arguing that it erred in affirming the finding of the Virginia Retirement System

(“VRS”) that Bala forfeited six years of credited service under the Workforce Transition Act

(“WTA”) when he resumed employment with the Commonwealth of Virginia. He asserts that

VRS “violated the law by failing to properly and adequately notify him that by returning to a

VRS-qualified position, he would be forfeiting his credited service.” For the following reasons,

we disagree and affirm the circuit court’s decision.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. I. BACKGROUND

In December 2009, Bala was involuntarily separated from his accounting position with

the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (“DCR”). Bala worked for DCR for

approximately twenty-five years. Instead of a transitional severance benefit, he elected to

receive six years of creditable service under the WTA1 toward his VRS-managed retirement

benefit. Upon retirement, he received a VRS “Retirement Certificate” stating that:

The total Workforce Transition Act (WTA) credit added to your age and/or service was 6 years. In the calculation of your benefit, 0 years 0 months were added to your age and 6 years 0 months were added to your service. If you return to work in any VRS covered position, you will forfeit your WTA credit. When you retire again, the WTA credit will not be used in the calculation of your VRS benefit. You must retire under the same option selected in your initial retirement.

(Emphasis added).

In February 2015, Bala began a new position with the Virginia Department of Health

(“VDH”). Prior to beginning this position, he twice contacted VRS. There is no record of the

first communication, which Bala stated took place in December 2014. According to Bala, VRS

did not mention the impact returning to work would have on his WTA credits or retirement

calculation. Most pertinent to his appeal, Bala contacted a VRS hotline the same day he started

the new position at VDH. His conversation with a VRS agent was recorded and transcribed.

The transcript reads:

VRS: Okay thank you. Alright, when you retired there was only Plan 1, Plan 2 had not gone into effect yet.

1 “The WTA provides that certain employees of the Commonwealth who are involuntarily separated from employment are eligible for transitional severance benefits.” Boynton v. Kilgore, 271 Va. 220, 224, 623 S.E.2d 922, 924 (2006); see also Code § 2.2-3203 (explaining the recurring and lump sum payments that comprise the transitional severance benefit). “In lieu of the transitional severance benefit provided in [Code] § 2.2-3203, any otherwise eligible employee . . . may elect to have the Commonwealth purchase on his behalf years to be credited to either his age or creditable service or a combination of age and creditable service . . . .” Code § 2.2-3204. Bala made such an election. -2- Bala: Oh.

VRS: So you retired as original, in the original plan that you started (. . .) when you became a member years ago.

Bala: Okay, if I go back to the job and take a permanent job with with the state should I go into plan B or plan 1 (. . .)

VRS: You’ll stay where you are you’ll continue in your plan 1, so you’ll just go back in with the same plan that you had and start off with the same amount of service that you had when you retired in 2010.

Bala: Okay another question, if I go back to the work, and, what I lose? Anything I lose?

VRS: Well you’re going to . . . your monthly benefit will stop.

Bala: Yeah, right. But anything else?

VRS: So you won’t get that. . . . no sir.

Bala: And then and then, I . . . still work for a year or two and then restart again, right.

VRS: Right. We’ll recalculate your monthly benefit with the additional years of service and . . .

Bala: Oh, you put more additional service in the account?

VRS: Right. The only stipulation with retiring a second time is that you have to, we have to calculate your benefit based on the same option that you originally chose when you retired in 2010.

Bala: (. . .) Is not same plus the extra service, no?

VRS: No, You won’t get the partial lump sum money again . . .

Bala: so

VRS: . . . what we will do is we will calculate it based on the basic with the lump sum option, so that’s how the formula will be calculated but you won’t get the lump sum of money again.

Bala: Uh Huh. Which means I won’t lose anything I’ll just gain a little bit more if I do one year extra or maybe two years more?

VRS: Right. -3- Bala: That’s what I . . . as long as I don’t lose at least I’ll restart where I whatever I was getting. Okay that’s good. Okay. Thank you.

(alterations in original). Finally, the agent directed Bala to a VRS webpage that explained, in

detail, the impact that resuming employment with a VRS-covered position would have on his

WTA service credit. Bala never visited that webpage.

Bala left his position with VDH in October 2015. When he received his new VRS

Retirement Certificate, it reflected that he had forfeited the six years of credited service under the

WTA, resulting in a reduced monthly benefit of approximately $600.2 He appealed to VRS,

which conducted a comprehensive review, ultimately concluding that Bala received ample notice

that returning to state employment would result in a loss of that credit. Although Bala

purportedly relied upon his conversation with the VRS hotline agent in believing he would not

lose any benefits, VRS noted that he did not mention at any point during that conversation that

his retirement benefit calculation included WTA credit. VRS also explained that it contacted

DCR and “confirmed that [Bala was] counseled regarding WTA and the impacts of return[ing] to

work in a VRS-covered position prior to your WTA retirement.” DCR also, on multiple

occasions following Bala’s retirement, provided written information on his WTA retirement

benefits and the impact of returning to work in a VRS-covered position. Finally, VRS noted that

Bala’s call to the VRS hotline on February 25, 2015 coincided with his first day of work at VDH,

and thus Bala “had already taken the steps to return to and commenced full time work when you

first contacted VRS about your situation.”

2 It is not entirely clear from the record how much Bala’s forfeiting the six years of WTA credit reduced his monthly benefit. The fact-finder below noted that Bala estimated that additional credit “would have added approximately six hundred dollars of monthly benefit,” but at other points, Bala claimed his benefit was reduced by $418.88. -4- Bala appealed this decision, and after an administrative informal fact-finding hearing

pursuant to the Virginia Administrative Process Act, the fact-finder concluded that Bala either

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Related

Boynton v. Kilgore
623 S.E.2d 922 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2006)
Doctors' Hospital of Williamsburg, LLC v. Stroube
665 S.E.2d 862 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2008)
Virginia Retirement System v. Ricky A. Blair
772 S.E.2d 26 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2015)
Alliance v. Com., Dept. of Environ. Quality
621 S.E.2d 78 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2005)
Bala v. Va. Dep't of Conservation
136 S. Ct. 563 (Supreme Court, 2015)

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