Williams v. Houston Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund

121 S.W.3d 415, 2003 WL 22113636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 2003
Docket01-99-01361-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 121 S.W.3d 415 (Williams v. Houston Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Houston Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund, 121 S.W.3d 415, 2003 WL 22113636 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

OPINION ON REHEARING

EVELYN V. KEYES, Justice.

Appellant, firefighter Elmer F. Williams II, appeals a take-nothing judgment rendered after the trial court denied Williams’s motions for partial summary judgment and granted (1) the summary judgment motions of the Houston Firemen’s Relief and Retirement Fund (the Fund) and the individual appellees, who were the Fund’s board members (collectively, “the trustees”), and (2) the summary judgment motions and dismissal motion of appellee the City of Houston (“the City”). We issued our original opinion in this appeal on December 27, 2001. Appellant moved for rehearing, as did the Fund and the trustees. We grant Williams’s motion for rehearing. We deny the Fund’s and trustees’ motion as moot. The Court’s prior opinion and judgment of December 27, 2001 are vacated, set aside, and annulled, and this opinion and judgment are issued in their stead. We modify the judgment and affirm as so modified.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Williams joined the Houston Fire Department (“HFD”) and the Fund in 1990, after six years and five months of service with two other cities’ fire departments, neither of which had statutory firefighters’ retirement funds like Houston’s. In 1995, Williams sought to purchase prior service credit (“PSC”) under the firemen’s retirement-fund statute (“the retirement statute”) for these six years and five months of service, to be applied toward his retirement with HFD. The PSC provision of the former retirement statute, section 30, provided:

A firefighter who transfers from the fire department of one city to that of a city covered by this Act and desires to participate in the fund of that city shall: ... [meet three requirements, including paying “into the fund of that city an amount equal to the total contribution he would have made had he been employed by that city instead of the city from which he transferred.”].2

The statute was silent as to whether the city from which the firefighter transferred had to have a fund. While Williams’s request was pending, the Fund adopted guidelines construing section 30: years worked outside Houston could be credited towards retirement only if the former city had a similar statutory firefighter’s fund. (The parties refer to this interpretation by the Fund and the trustees as “the guidelines,” and so do we.) Applying the guidelines, the Fund denied Williams’s PSC request in January 1997. The reason for that denial was that the cities in which Williams had worked before did not have firefighters’ retirement funds similar to Houston’s.

Subsequently, the Legislature repealed article 6243e.2 and replaced it with article 6243e.2(l). Article 6243e.2(l), the current retirement statute, restated and amended former article 6243e.2, the former retirement statute, and continued in effect each firefighter’s relief and retirement fund es[423]*423tablished under that article.3 The PSC provision of the current retirement statute, section 16(a), provides:

“A person who becomes a firefighter in a municipality to which this article applies may receive service credit for 'prior employment with the fully paid fire department of another municipality in this state with a similar fund benefitting only firefighters of that municipality to which the firefighter contributed if ... [the firefighter meets five requirements].”4

The Fund and the trustees interpreted the first sentence of former section 30(a) to mean what the italicized portion of current section 16(a) now expressly says.

Williams I

That same year, Williams sued the Fund in district court, alleging statutory and constitutional claims and challenges to the Fund’s guidelines and its PSC determination. On the Fund’s motion,5 the trial court dismissed all of Williams’s claims against the Fund, without prejudice, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction — except (1) his constitutional claims and (2) his challenge that the Fund’s ruling was barred by res judicata, claim preclusion, issue preclusion, waiver, estoppel, and collateral estoppel. Williams appealed the dismissal order. On interlocutory appeal, we affirmed, holding that the trial court had neither “appellate”6 nor original jurisdiction to consider the dismissed claims until 2003, the earliest possible date Williams might be “eligible for retirement.” Williams v. Houston Firemen’s Relief & Ret. Fund, No. 01-98-00681-CV, slip op. at 5-14, 1999 WL 82441 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] Feb. 11, 1999, no pet.) (op. on reh’g) (not designated for publication) (hereinafter “Williams I ”).

Williams II

Williams subsequently added the City and the four trustees, in their individual and official capacities, as defendants. He also added common law claims against all defendants. The Fund filed supplemental motions for traditional rule 166a(c) summary judgment; the trustees moved for 166a(c) summary judgment and incorporated the summary judgment grounds alleged by the Fund; the City moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction or, alternatively, for rule 166a(c) summary judgment; and Williams moved for rule 166a(c) partial summary judgment.7

[424]*424By the time all summary judgment and dismissal motions were considered, Williams was asserting the following claims and challenges:

Challenges to the Merits of the Guidelines and The Fund’s and the Trustees’ PSC Determination
1. The Fund and the trustees misconstrued section 30 of the former retirement statute;
2. No or insufficient evidence supported the Fund and the trustees’ PSC determination;
3. The Fund and the trustees’ PSC determination was not supported by substantial evidence; and
4. The Fund’s PSC determination was barred by res judicata, claim preclusion, issue preclusion, waiver, estop-pel, and collateral estoppel.
Constitutional Claims
1. The Fund’s guidelines and the trustees’ application of them exceeded their statutory authority;
2. The former retirement statute unconstitutionally delegated governmental authority to the Fund;
3. The Fund’s guidelines and the trustees’ PSC determination were an unlawful and unconstitutional retroactive application of the law that adversely affected Williams’s vested property right to PSC;
4. The Fund’s guidelines and the trustees’ application of them were an unconstitutional local or special law;
5. As applied, the guidelines denied Williams equal protection under the state constitution; and
6. The Fund’s and the trustees’ PSC determination violated substantive due process.
Common Law Claims 8
1. The trustees and the City fraudulently concealed from Williams or misled him about his right to purchase PSC, which acts were also breaches of their fiduciary and good-faith-and-fair-dealing duties;
2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

George Michael Welch v. Felix Lopez and Summerlyn Lopez
Tex. App. Ct., 4th Dist. (San Antonio), 2026
Lauren Flodquist v. Christon Griffin
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2024
Terry Holcomb, Sr. v. Waller County, Texas
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2018
Albert Morris v. Lisa Coffman
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012
Kent Allen Tramel v. Lori Ann Tramel
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012
Commission for Lawyer Discipline v. Jeffrey M. Stern
355 S.W.3d 129 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2011)
Glattly v. Air Starter Components, Inc.
332 S.W.3d 620 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2011)
in Re Estate of Nora G. Montemayor
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010
City of Athens v. MacAvoy
260 S.W.3d 676 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.3d 415, 2003 WL 22113636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-houston-firemens-relief-retirement-fund-texapp-2003.