230 Minn. 353 | Minn. | 1950
Action for a judgment declaratory of plaintiffs’ status as members of defendant Faribault Fire Department Belief Association and their rights as such to pensions and benefits. Defendants appeal from the order overruling their demurrer to the amended complaint.
Many questions have been raised. Only one need be decided, and that is whether a statute (L. 1947, c. 43) providing for the organization and government of certain existing fire department relief associations, for the purposes for which they may disburse their funds, including pensions and benefits, and for continuance therein of members who were such as of the effective date of the statute and of payment to them of any pensions or other benefits which had been allowed or which were being paid by any such association under or in accordance with any prior act or acts when the statute became effective, continues in force the memberships of such members and the payment to them of any such pensions and benefits.
There are 26 plaintiffs, all of whom were members of the association as of the effective date of the statute. Some had been members for as long as 54 years and others for only 5 years, but most
The association is in all things governed by L. 1947, c. 43, as amended by L. 1949, c. 154. So far as here material, the statute (§ 2) provides that the association shall be organized, operated, and maintained by firemen as therein defined; that (§3) a “fireman” is “one who is regularly entered on the payroll of one of said fire departments serving on active duty, with a designated fire company therein, or having charge of one or more of said companies and engaged in the hazards of fire fighting,” and certain other enumerated fire department employes; that (§ 3) “All persons who are members of such relief association at the time of the passage of this act but whose status is not embraced within the definition of a fireman herein contained, shall be entitled to have the right to continue as members of their respective associations and be entitled to any pensions or other benefits which have been allowed or which are being paid by such relief associations under or in accordance with any prior act or acts at the time this act becomes effective. Payment of such pensions and benefits shall be continued by the respective associations”; that (§ 16) the funds of the association shall be disbursed for the following purposes: “(a) For the relief of sick, injured and disabled members of the relief association, their widows and orphans, (b) For the payment of disability and service pensions to members of such relief associations, and salaries for its officers and premiums on their official bonds”; that (§ 17) .the association “shall in its by-laws define the sickness and disability entitling its members to relief, and specify the amount thereof, and also specify the amounts to be paid to its disability and service
Defendant relief association was incorporated in 1895 under G. S. 1878, c. 34, title 3, and acts amendatory thereof. The purpose of the association is declared in the articles of incorporation to be “to create, secure and establish a fund * * * for the relief of its members injured or disabled while in the discharge of their duty, whether by accident or sickness from exposure, and for the payment of a certain sum, to be established by the By-Laws of the Corporation, to the widows and orphans of any members whose death may occur from any of the said causes while a member of the Association.”
The association adopted by unanimous vote at least two constitutions and two sets of bylaws, one in 1928 and the other in 1941. So far as here material, the constitutions provide that the object of the association “shall be to provide means for the relief of the distressed, injured, sick or disabled members thereof; and in case of the death of a member, to pay the legal representatives, or widow and children of such deceased member, whose death may occur while a member of said Association, such sum as may be prescribed by the By-Laws”; that only an active fireman under 50 years of age and a member, in good and regular standing of, and actively serving as a fireman in the fire department of the city of Faribault may become a member of the association; that all members retired from active service in the department shall pay all dues and assessments the same as other members of the association; and that all members of the relief association shall be ready at all times to respond to the call of the chief of the fire department.
The bylaws, so far as here material, provide that any member who resigns or leaves the fire department, except in certain cases, may retain his membership in the association upon payment of
The association, pursuant to its constitution and bylaws, has paid sickness, disability, and death benefits to retired members of the fire department who retained their membership in the association. For example, between 1937 and 1916 benefits were paid upon the deaths of 17 retired members. Authorization for all such benefits was claimed under statutes
The arguments of counsel have exhaustively analyzed and discussed the applicable statutes and the opinions of the attorney gen
As in the case of other statutes, L. 1947, c. 43, is to be construed in the light of its subject matter, history, and purposes. Considered as a whole, the statute evinces an intention not only to provide new organization and government of fire department relief associations to which it is applicable, to define the purposes for which their funds may be disbursed, and to repeal by implication all laws in force at its effective date so far as they were inconsistent therewith, but also to preserve as of such date the rights of members in fact of such associations to both membership and to pensions and benefits. The part of § 3 quoted above is weighted with tokens of meaning that such existing rights are to be preserved. It is apparent therefrom that the legislature was familiar, as it should be presumed it was, with the affairs and practice of defendant association, and that it intended not only to legalize what had occurred, but also to authorize the same in the future so far as its members in fact at the effective date of the statute were concerned. The provision therein (§ 3), to the effect that all persons who were members of a relief association at the effective date of the statute, but whose status was not that of firemen as defined in the statute, should continue to have rights as members and be entitled to pensions or other benefits which were being paid under or in accordance with any prior act or acts, betokens a legislative intention to preserve the memberships of members in fact, regardless of whether
Affirmed.
7 M. S. A. 69.04, 69.06, and their statutory predecessors referred to in the footnotes.
Report Attorney General, 1944, No. 184; Opinions Attorney General, No. 688-M, June 4, 1943, April 30, 1943, and March 12, 1937; Report Attorney General, 1936, No. 30; Opinion Attorney General, No. 688-M, May 11, 1931, and prior opinions therein referred to. See, Opinion Attorney General, No. 198-B-6-d, May 20, 1948, reiterating the views expressed in prior opinions.