TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, Plaintiffs-Respondents v. POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 2014
DocketSD32475
StatusPublished

This text of TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, Plaintiffs-Respondents v. POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI (TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, Plaintiffs-Respondents v. POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, Plaintiffs-Respondents v. POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL ) 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN ) TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, ) ) Plaintiffs-Respondents, ) ) vs. ) No. SD32475 ) POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION ) Filed: Feb. 5, 2014 PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES ) OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION ) PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY ) OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JASPER COUNTY

Honorable David B. Mouton, Circuit Judge

REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS

This case is an appeal from an amended judgment ("the judgment") entered by the

circuit court after its review of the decision of an administrative agency under the

Missouri Administrative Procedure Act ("MAPA"). See section 536.010 et. seq.1 The

issue in dispute is the appropriate calculation of retirement benefits due certain Joplin

firefighters who suffer a job-related or "duty" disability under Joplin's city ordinance

1 References to sections 536.090 and 536.150 are to RSMo 2000. All other statutory references are to RSMo Cum. Supp. 2012.

1 providing a retirement plan for police officers and firefighters.2 Defendants Police and

Firemen's Pension Plan of Joplin ("the Plan"), Trustees of Police and Firemen's Pension

Plan of City of Joplin ("the Board"), and the city of Joplin ("City") appeal the judgment

in favor of Plaintiffs Tom M. Robertson, IAFF Local 2618, Adam Grimes, Larin Trenary,

and Daniel Jobe on Count I of Plaintiffs' amended petition ("the petition").

The judgment reversed the Board's determination of Robertson's pension benefit,

declaring that the Plan provides that a duty disability pension benefit "is a 50% benefit[.]"

In accordance with that declaration, the judgment ordered that Robertson be paid

$10,978.43 for "past due duty disability benefits[,]" plus accrued interest, and "that Joplin

firefighters who become disabled in the line of duty shall receive a benefit equal to 50%

of their salary as calculated in accordance with the formula in the pension ordinances, but

not reduced based upon years of service less than 20[.]" The Board had awarded

Robertson a lower benefit amount -- 37.5% of his "average monthly compensation" -- by

reducing the benefit for years of service less than 20.

Defendants present four points of alleged error: (1) the circuit court erroneously

applied the law in that "the plain and ordinary meaning of the [P]lan's language cannot

reasonably be interpreted as granting an employee 50% of his average monthly

compensation without an adjustment based upon years of service"; (2) alternatively, the

circuit court "erroneously applied the law" in finding the Plan's language unambiguous

because it "can reasonably be interpreted as requiring a reduction in duty-disability

benefits for employees who have served fewer than twenty years"; (3) the circuit court

"misapplied the law . . . in the [P]lan and [MAPA]" by not "defer[ring] to the Board's

2 The case was decided on competing motions for summary judgment. The parties have agreed that Ordinance 2009-001 ("the Ordinance") codifies the current version of the retirement plan, and copies of the Ordinance were incorporated into the parties' respective factual averments.

2 reasonable interpretation of the ambiguous provision"; and (4) the circuit court erred in

denying Defendants' motion for summary judgment on Count III because substantial

evidence "does not support a finding that the Board has violated section 5.08 of [City's]

charter."

We agree that the Plan language at issue is unambiguous, but we must reverse the

judgment because that unambiguous language provides that a duty disability benefit is

equal to 50% of the employee's salary reduced 1/20th for each year of service less than

20.

Background

Robertson had been a City firefighter for 15 years and 11 months as of January

2011, when he was injured while on duty. He was thereafter declared disabled, and the

Board awarded him "$1,448.80 as a monthly duty-disability benefit award . . . which

represents 37.5% of his Average Monthly Compensation."3 In calculating the benefit, the

Board "appl[ied] a reduction of benefits clause, based upon Section 3.1 of the Plan." We

set forth and review the text of the applicable sections of the Plan in the analysis portion

of our opinion, infra.

The Board is composed of City's mayor, two citizens of City, two "actively

employed Covered Employees of the Police Department, . . . and . . . [two] actively

employed Covered Employees of the Fire Department[.]" The Ordinance provides that

the police officer and firefighter members are to be elected by a majority vote of their

respective departments. The Board "may, at any time, recommend that the Plan be

amended for any reason." Any amendment to the Plan must be "approv[ed] by the

3 In May 2011, the Board reconsidered the matter and entered the same award that it made in February 2011.

3 Participants[4] (by majority vote of those voting with respect to the amendment), and

final ratification by the City Council."

Count I of the petition sought a declaration that "Robertson is entitled to a 50%

benefit, which would result in a monthly payment to [him] of $1,931.74[,]" that

Robertson be awarded a judgment for unpaid benefits, and that the circuit court declare

"that firefighters who become disabled in the line of duty shall receive a benefit equal to

50% of their salary" which is "not reduced based upon years of service less than 20[.]"

Count II of the petition was stated in the alternative to Count I, and it sought a

determination of benefits based upon 15 years and 11 months of service as opposed to 15

years of service.

Count III of the petition sought a declaration that Defendants' interpretation of the

Plan was invalid as it violated City's charter, and it sought damages for City's "wrongful

actions[.]" Counts IV and V sought declarations that City had violated Robertson's

contractual rights under, respectively, article VI, section 13 of the Missouri Constitution

and Article I, Section 10 of the United States Constitution, and sought damages for said

violations. Count IV further averred that there was a 1993 vote on the Plan that "changed

the duty disability provisions from those previously existing and as described in all the

actuarial valuation reports to the position that has now been advocated by [City's

attorney] to the [Board]" and if such an interpretation is correct, then there would be "an

interference with [Robertson]'s constitutionally protected contractual rights to his proper

pension benefits." Count V incorporated this additional allegation and further contended

that City was acting as a state actor for purposes of Title 42 U.S.C. section 1983.

4 Under Ordinance section 1.21, a "PARTICIPANT" means "any Covered Employee who is or becomes eligible to participate in the Plan[.]"

4 Plaintiffs and Defendants each sought summary judgment on counts I and III, and

Robertson sought "summary judgment on liability only on [c]ounts IV and V[.]" After

the filing of statements of uncontroverted facts and responses thereto, the parties argued

their positions to the circuit court, and their counsel agreed that there were no disputed

facts.

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TOM M. ROBERTSON, IAFF LOCAL 2618, ADAM GRINES, LARIN TRENARY, and DANIEL JOBE, Plaintiffs-Respondents v. POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, TRUSTEES OF POLICE AND FIREMEN'S PENSION PLAN OF CITY OF JOPLIN, and CITY OF JOPLIN, MISSOURI, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tom-m-robertson-iaff-local-2618-adam-grines-larin-trenary-and-daniel-moctapp-2014.