THOMAS EDISON CHARTER SCHOOL v. Retirement Board

2008 UT App 221, 189 P.3d 79, 605 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 5, 2008
DocketCase No. 20061159-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2008 UT App 221 (THOMAS EDISON CHARTER SCHOOL v. Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
THOMAS EDISON CHARTER SCHOOL v. Retirement Board, 2008 UT App 221, 189 P.3d 79, 605 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 211 (Utah Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

THORNE, Associate Presiding Judge:

T1 Petitioner Thomas Edison Charter School (TECS) seeks review of the Utah State Retirement Board's (the Retirement Board) 1 order denying TECS's request for board action essentially seeking to be retroactively excluded from the Utah Retirement System (the URS) and for a refund of funds previously paid. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

12 TECS is a state-sponsored charter school that receives public funds and is engaged in educational activities. In 2002, before receiving its charter and opening the school, the TECS Governing Board held a meeting where it considered offering retirement benefits. At a subsequent meeting, it voted to set up a 401K retirement plan for its employees. The Utah State Office of Education (the USOE), TECS's statutory sponsor at that time, advised the TECS Governing Board that charter schools choosing to offer retirement benefits to their employees were legally required to participate in the URS. In the summer of 2008, the TECS Governing Board met with the URS field services representative who told them that TECS was legally required to join the URS if it offered any retirement benefits to its employees.

13 On September 9, 2008, based on direction from the URS and the USOH, the TECS Governing Board voted to join the URS, reasoning that TECS "cannot opt out of the URS." On November 5, 20083, TECS voluntarily filed an Employer Application for the Public Employees' Noncontributory Retirement System with an effective date of August 1, 2002. TECS included a letter of intention with its application asking for retroactive benefits for its employees back to the beginning of the 2002-2008 school year. On December 11, 2003, the Retirement Board approved TECS for membership in the URS.

T4 In its 2004 general session, the Utah Legislature enacted House Bill 108, which was signed into law on March 23, 2004, effectively amending Utah Code sections 49-13-202 and 58A-1a-512 to make charter school participation in the URS voluntary instead of mandatory. In September 2004, the TECS Governing Board voted to opt out of the URS pursuant to the new amendments. In December 2004, TECS submitted its Declaration of Participation or Intent for a Charter School informing the URS that it had decided to opt out of the URS, specifically stating that it had made "an irrevocable election of nonparticipation as an employer for retirement programs with [the URS] under Title 49," effective July 1, 2004. TECS also submitted a letter to the executive director of the URS requesting to be retroactively excluded from the URS and for a refund of retirement contributions previously paid. On December 14, 2004, the executive director denied TECS's requests for retroactivity. Thereafter, TECS submitted a Request for Board Action to the Retirement Board seeking administrative relief pertaining to its request for retroactive exclusion from the URS. 2

T5 On October 8, 2006, the Retirement Board's Adjudicative Hearing Officer (the hearing officer) held a hearing on TECS's request for board action. TECS argued that Utah Code section 49-18-202's requirement of mandatory participation in the URS conflicted with section 58A-1a-512's direction that charter schools have exclusive authority to determine retirement benefits for its employees, and therefore section 58A-1a-512 prevails in the conflict because it is the more specific and most recent provision. TECS also argued that the legislative changes in House Bill 108 resulted in clarifying amend *82 ments that (1) resolve the conflict between the two statutes and (2) demonstrate that the legislature originally intended that charter school participation in the URS was to be voluntary.

16 The hearing officer considered TECS's statutory interpretation argument and interpreted the statutes concluding that Utah Code section 49-13-202 did not conflict with section 58A-1a-512. The hearing officer considered House Bill 108's effect upon sections 49-13-202 and 58A-1a-512, and concluded that House Bill 108 was not merely a clarifying amendment but an amendment meant to change the existing law, which required mandatory charter school participation, into voluntary participation in the URS. As a result, the hearing officer determined that TECS was required to participate in the URS when it joined effective August 1, 2002, until it opted out effective June 30, 2004. Accordingly, the hearing officer denied TECS's request for board action and ordered it to pay the URS delinquent contributions, including interest and penalties for failure to pay timely contributions for the time period from August 2002 to June 2004.

T7 On December 14, 2006, the Retirement Board adopted the hearing officer's Findings of Fact, Conclusion of Law, and Order of Denial. TECS filed this petition for review in this court.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

18 TECS challenges the Retirement Board's authority to interpret the Utah Charter Schools Act (the Charter Schools Act), 3 see Utah Code Ann. §§ 58A-1a-501 to -518 (2006 & Supp.2007), and asserts that the Retirement Board erred in its interpretation of various statutes under the Charter Schools Act and the Utah State Retirement and Insurance Benefit Act (the Retirement Act), see Utah Code Ann. §§ 49-11-101 to - 1001 (2007). TECS also asserts that the Retirement Board erred when it concluded that House Bill 108 did not merely clarify existing law but actually changed the law making charter school participation in the URS voluntary instead of mandatory. "Absent a grant of discretion, we review the [Retirement] Board's application or interpretation of a statute as a question of law under the correction-of-error standard." Sindt v. Retirement Bd., 2007 UT 16, 15, 157 P.3d 797. 4

ANALYSIS

T9 TECS asserts that, when it decided to offer retirement benefits to its employees in 2008, Utah law did not actually require charter schools to participate in the URS. TECS presents two arguments in support of this assertion. First, TECS argues that, although the version of Utah Code section 49-13-202 in effect in 2008 appears to have required charter school participation in the URS, see Utah Code Ann. § 49-18-202 (Supp.2003) (amended 2004), TECS's participation was not required because section 53A-la-512 provided charter schools with the exclusive authority to make decisions regarding employee benefits including retirement plans, see Utah Code Ann. § 58A-1a-512 (2000) (amended 2004). TECS maintains that an apparent irreconcilable conflict between the two statutes exists and the Retirement Board erred in its statutory interpretation of these statutes. Second, TECS argues that the 2004 amendments to sections 49-13-202 and 58A-1a-512 provide further support for the proposition that charter school partic *83

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Bluebook (online)
2008 UT App 221, 189 P.3d 79, 605 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 2008 Utah App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-edison-charter-school-v-retirement-board-utahctapp-2008.