Tumwater Police Officers' Guild v. Employment Security Department

9 P.3d 225, 102 Wash. App. 317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 1, 2000
DocketNo. 24219-2-II
StatusPublished

This text of 9 P.3d 225 (Tumwater Police Officers' Guild v. Employment Security Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tumwater Police Officers' Guild v. Employment Security Department, 9 P.3d 225, 102 Wash. App. 317 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Armstrong, C.J.

— Some members of the Tumwater Police Officers’ Guild want to opt out of the social security system. In an action before the federal Social Security Administration, the Guild argued that the Tumwater Police Department was improperly enrolled in social security coverage in 1955. At that time, a federal statute allowed city employees, previously excluded, to be enrolled in social security if the employees were not already covered by a state retirement plan. In 1955, the Town of Tumwater was making retirement contributions into the State’s volunteer firemen’s retirement fund for two police officers. Ch. 41.24 RCW. In spite of these contributions and the fact that the officers had received benefits, the state OASI Administrator determined that the officers were ineligible to be included under the volunteer firemen’s pension fund.1 The federal administrative law judge held that any challenge to the OASI Administrator’s determination was a question of state law that must be appealed through the state courts.

The Guild then sought a declaratory judgment from the Thurston County Superior Court stating that Tumwater police employees were not properly included in the federal social security system in 1955 because they were enrolled in a state retirement program. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled in favor of the Employment Security Department, concluding that the Tumwater police [320]*320officers were not qualified to be members of the volunteer firemen’s pension system. The court refused to make any determination of the police officers’ eligibility for social security coverage in 1955, declaring it a question of federal law. The Guild appeals, challenging only the determination that the police officers were not properly enrolled in the volunteer firemen’s pension system. We affirm.

FACTS

In 1950, the federal Social Security Act was amended to allow states and their political subdivisions to enroll public employees in the old-age and survivors’ insurance coverage (OASI). Social Security Act Amendments of 1950, Pub. L. No. 734, § 218, 64 Stat. 477, 514-17 (current version at 42 U.S.C. § 418). But public employees already covered by a state or local government retirement system were excluded from participation. Section 218(2)(d), 64 Stat. at 515. To enroll public employees in the federal program, states were required to enter into agreements with the Social Security Administration. Section 218(a)(1), 64 Stat. at 514.

In 1951, the Washington Legislature extended OASI coverage to state and local employees based on the 1950 federal amendments. Laws of 1951, ch. 184, § 1 (amended 1955). The Legislature’s intent was “to provide such protection to employees of the state and its political subdivisions on as broad a basis as is permitted under the social security act.” Id. The Legislature also stated:

Nothing in this act shall be construed ... to allow or authorize the governor or the governing body of any political subdivision, either separately or acting together, ... to put under the federal social security act any persons now members or protected by any state or local pension or retirement plan or system.

Id. (emphasis added).

By ordinance, the Town of Tumwater provided for the enrollment of its employees in OASI and submitted an application and agreement to the Department on April 1, [321]*3211955. The agreement included the police department in the list of covered employees but expressly excluded the volunteer fire department from coverage. Apparently, the State amended its agreement with the Social Security Administration to include the Tumwater employees on May 2, 1955.2

In 1954, Congress again amended the Social Security Act to allow state and local employees already covered by a state or local retirement program to enroll in OASI. Social Security Amendments of 1954, Pub. L. No. 761, § 101(h), 68 Stat. 1052, 1055-59 (current version at 42 U.S.C. § 418 (d)). But the decision to enroll had to be determined by a referendum of the employees in the coverage group. Section 101(h)(3)(A)-(E), 68 Stat. at 1056. Washington did not adopt the 1954 amendments until June 22, 1955,3 after the Tumwater police had been enrolled in OASI.4

In 1955, the Town of Tumwater paid annual fees to the Volunteer Fire fighters’ Relief and Pension Fund on behalf of two Tumwater police officers, Willard Couch and Earl Shaw. Couch and Shaw were employed as full-time police officers in 1955. A volunteer with the Tumwater Fire Department from 1951 to 1994 attested that Couch and Shaw “were not members of the Tumwater Fire Department” between 1952 and 1956. After investigating the circumstances under which the two officers were included in the volunteer firemen’s pension, the current Mayor of Tumwater said:

While we find no records which definitively show that the City required that the positions which these employees served in be covered by the Washington State Volunteer Firefighters Pension and Relief Act, it is our opinion that in that time period the City used this as a mechanism to provide pension benefits for [322]*322its police officers. Our records do indicate that the City paid the pension contributions in [sic] behalf of these individuals. In all likelihood the City would not have paid pension contributions unless the requirement had attached to the position.

Because both police officers are deceased, no additional information regarding their duties and enrollment in the volunteer firemen’s pension system could be obtained.

ANALYSIS

I. Were the Tumwater police officers eligible for participation in the Volunteer Firemen’s Relief and Pension Fund?

In 1945, the State passed legislation allowing:

Any municipal corporation maintaining and operating a regularly organized fire department [to] make provision by appropriate legislation whereby any fireman may enroll under the pension provisions of [the Volunteer Firemen’s Relief and Pension Act] for the purpose of enabling any fireman, so electing, to avail himself of the retirement provisions of this act.

Laws of 1945, ch. 261, § 2(b) (current version at RCW 41.24.020(2)). The Act further provided: “Every municipal corporation shall make provisions for the collection and payment of the fees . . . and shall continue to make such provisions for all firemen who come under this act as long as they shall continue to be members of its fire department.” Section 2(c) (current version at RCW 41.24.020(3)).

The term “firemen” included “any fireman who is a member of any fire department of any municipality as herein defined.” Section 1(c) (current version at RCW 41.24.010).

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.3d 225, 102 Wash. App. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tumwater-police-officers-guild-v-employment-security-department-washctapp-2000.