Wayne County Employees Retirement Sys v. Charter County of Wayne

859 N.W.2d 678, 497 Mich. 36
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 2014
DocketDocket 147296
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 859 N.W.2d 678 (Wayne County Employees Retirement Sys v. Charter County of Wayne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne County Employees Retirement Sys v. Charter County of Wayne, 859 N.W.2d 678, 497 Mich. 36 (Mich. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Wayne County Employees Retirement System (“retirement system”) was established in 1944 “for the purpose of providing retirement income to eligible employees and survivor benefits.” Wayne County Charter § 6.111. Currently, the retirement system consists of five defined benefit plans, one defined contribution plan, and the Inflation Equity Fund (IEF). Each year, the county is required by Const 1963, art 9, § 24, to make an “annual required contribution” (ARC). An annual actuarial valuation determines the ARC amount. MCL 38.1140m.

The IEF was created in 1985 by county ordinance to provide a pool of money for discretionary payments to eligible retirement system participants and beneficiaries in addition to those payments required by the pension system, as a method to counteract the effect of inflation. Payments from the IEF are known as the “13th check.” The IEF is funded by investment profits earned on the assets held in the defined benefit plans and the IEF, to the extent those profits exceed a certain rate of return.

In 2010, Wayne County faced a substantial fiscal obligation in order to satisfy its actuarially determined ARC. In order to satisfy its ARC obligation, the county passed an ordinance amendment, Wayne County Code of Ordinances (WCCO), §§ 141-32 and 141-36, as amended by Wayne County Enrolled Ordinance No. 2010-514. As is relevant here, the amended ordinance limited the IEF to a maximum balance of $12 million, and directed that IEF funds exceeding that amount be transferred to the retirement system’s defined benefit plans. Because the IEF balance at the time was significantly greater than $12 *39 million, the ordinance resulted in a transfer of $32 million from the IEF into the defined benefit plans. The amended ordinance further permitted the county to use the $32 million transfer from the IEF to the defined benefit plans as an offset against its ARC obligation.

The retirement system challenged the 2010 ordinance amendment, claiming, inter alia, that the transfer and corresponding ARC offset violated Const 1963, art 9, § 24, and various provisions of the Public Employee Retirement Systems Investment Act (PERSIA), MCL 38.1132 et seq. The county moved for summary disposition, which the trial court granted, ruling that the IEF did not amount to an “accrued financial benefit” as considered in Const 1963, art 9, § 24, and that the amended ordinance’s transfer and offset did not violate PERSIA.

The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, holding that the transfer of funds from the IEF and offset against the county’s ARC obligation violated the requirement in MCL 38.1133(6) that the funds be for the “exclusive benefit” of the retirement system’s participants and their beneficiaries and that the county used the IEF funds in violation of the “prohibited transaction rule,” MCL SS-l^^Xc). 1 Wayne Co Employees Retirement Sys v Wayne Co, 301 Mich App 1; 836 NW2d 279 (2013).

*40 We affirm the Court of Appeals in part. Except as noted later in this opinion, we agree with the Court of Appeals that, in this case, the transfer of funds from the IEF to the retirement system’s defined benefit plans, coupled with the offset against the county’s ARC obligation, violated PERSIA for the reasons stated in the Court of Appeals opinion. Id. at 30-46 (finding a violation of the “exclusive benefit rule” in MCL 38.1133(6)), and id. at 46-48 (finding a violation of the “prohibited transaction rule” in MCL 38.1133(6)(c)). Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding that the $32 million that was offset against the county’s ARC violates PERSIA, and the county must satisfy its ARC obligations absent consideration of that $32 million. Id. at 52.

However, we also vacate two aspects of the Court of Appeals opinion. First, we vacate footnote 29 and corresponding portions of the Court of Appeals opinion in which the panel reasoned that, because the transfer of IEF funds, even without a corresponding offset to the county’s ARC, would violate PERSIA, the transferred funds must be returned to the IEF account and used “for the purpose intended.” See Wayne Co Retirement Sys, 301 Mich App at 51 n 29. Although the county raised the theory that the transfer of IEF funds without an offset is valid under PERSIA in Count II of its counterclaim, the trial court did not rule on this alter *41 native claim because it ruled that the county’s ordinance was “legal as written.” It was therefore unnecessary for the Court of Appeals to rule on this issue, and since this issue received only cursory treatment by the parties in the Court of Appeals, the preferable course would have been to remand for further proceedings on this claim. The Court of Appeals nonetheless addressed the matter, and although we invited farther development of it in this Court, the county failed to pursue it in its brief and at oral argument, instead taking the position that the presence of the corresponding offset had no bearing on the validity of the transfer under PERSIA. The county’s abandonment of the issue on appeal has rendered it unnecessary, and has left us ill equipped to address the merits of whether the amended ordinance’s transfer would be permissible under PERSIA without the corresponding offset. Accordingly, we express no opinion on the issue of whether the intrasystem transfer of retirement system assets without a corresponding offset to the plan sponsor’s ARC violates PERSIA, and leave that question open for another day. Nonetheless, because the county has abandoned this issue in the instant case, we leave in place the Court of Appeals’ determination that the transferred funds must be returned to the IEE See Mitcham v Detroit, 355 Mich 182, 203; 94 NW2d 388 (1959) (“The appellant himself must first adequately prime the pump; only then does the appellate well begin to flow.”); Horetski v American Sandblast Co, 340 Mich 323, 327; 65 NW2d 702 (1954).

Thus, while we vacate footnote 29 in its entirety, to the extent that the remedy fashioned by the Court of Appeals was based on its conclusion that the transfer even without an offset violates PERSIA, we leave its remedy intact for purposes of this case because, as stated above, the county abandoned its argument that the transfer without the offset does not viólate PERSIA. *42 Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding that “the $32 million that was offset against the county’s ARC [must] be[] returned, restored, or credited to the IEF, with the county being required to satisfy its ARC obligations absent consideration of that $32 million.” Wayne Co Retirement Sys, 301 Mich App at 52. Additionally, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that “the $12 million IEF limitation can operate prospectively” and that

[a] proper prospective application of the $12 million IEF limitation would entail limiting future funding of the IEF until it dropped below $12 million, which is exactly how WCCO, § 141-32(b)(l), operates and is presently structured, where it provides the formula for annual funding of the IEF, subject to the $12 million IEF balance limit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
859 N.W.2d 678, 497 Mich. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-county-employees-retirement-sys-v-charter-county-of-wayne-mich-2014.