The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Local 2957 (the “Union”) and Terry White (collectively “plaintiffs”) sued the City of Benton (the “City”), Arkansas; its Aldermen Doug Strancener, Phillip Montalvo, Karla J. Haley, Willie Floyd, Ray Freemen, Leroy Allen, Ann Hall, Robin Berry, Claudine Ramsey and Charles Cuningham, in their official capacities as members of the City Council; and its mayor, Rick Holland (collectively “defendants”), to enjoin the City to continue paying retiree health insurance premiums. The district court 2 granted plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and, after a bench trial to determine the appropriate remedy, ordered the City to pay health insurance premiums for the specified Union-represented city employees upon retirement. Defendants appeal, and we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Beginning in 1976, the Union negotiated collective bargaining agreements (“CBA”) with the City on behalf of nonuniform Benton city employees. The parties entered into the CBA at issue in this action on June 14, 2002, and it expired on December 31, 2004. The CBA established rates of pay, hours of work, conditions of employment and provided for various types of insurance for employees upon retirement. In relevant part, Appendix B to the CBA provides that “[rjetirement coverage is 100% paid by the City of Benton.” (Appellant App. at 236.) Since 1989, the City has paid the premiums on the health insurance for its retired nonuniform employees.
At the recommendation of its personnel committee, the City Council passed a resolution on October 13, 2003, altering health insurance coverage for its retired employees. The resolution declared that effective January 1, 2004, the City would continue paying 100% of health insurance premiums for retired employees only for employees having more than 28 years of service, cease paying any portion of health insurance premiums for employees with less than ten years of service, and reduce payments to 3% of the premium for each year of service for all of the remaining employees. On March 22, 2004, the City Council again addressed the issue of retiree health insurance. Based on its belief that Arkansas Code § 24-12-129 required retirees to pay their own premiums, the City Council passed a resolution terminating any City payment of retiree health insurance premiums.
Two months later, on May 17, 2004, plaintiffs filed an action seeking to enjoin defendants from enforcing the March 22 resolution. Before answering, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on June 7, 2004. Plaintiffs moved for judgment on the pleadings on July 22, 2004. On August 2, 2005, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings in part and denied defendants’ motion to dismiss. The City then filed an answer to plaintiffs’ complaint on January 10, 2006.
*878 On January 27, 2006, the district court amended its order to certify the case for interlocutory appeal. We considered and denied defendants’ petition for permission to file an interlocutory appeal on February 17, 2006. On January 9, 2007, the district court held a one-day bench trial to address plaintiffs’ remedy. After trial, each side moved the court to amend its pleadings to conform to the evidence. Plaintiffs sought to include the City Council’s October 2003 resolution altering retirement health insurance premium coverage as an additional breach of the CBA. Defendants opposed that addition and in the alternative moved the court to add the defense of illegality to its answer. On January 31, 2007, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion and denied defendants’ motion. Two weeks later, on February 13, 2007, the district court issued an order affirming its prior ruling that the City Council’s October 2003 and March 2004 resolutions were unconstitutional impairments of the CBA. The court nullified the City Council resolutions and enjoined defendants from enforcing them against city employees with a vested right to the retiree health insurance premiums.
On appeal, defendants argue that the district court erroneously concluded that the October 2003 and March 2004 resolutions violated the United States Constitution. Defendants further argue that the district court abused its discretion by denying their motion to amend the pleadings and that the remedy ordered by the district court was clearly erroneous. We disagree.
II. DISCUSSION
The district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings before defendants answered but failed to treat the motion as one for summary judgment.
See Season-All Indus., Inc. v. Turkiye Sise Ve Cam Fabrikalari, A.S.,
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs.
Mayer v. Nextel W. Corp.,
A. Contractual Impairment
The Contract Clause of the United States Constitution provides that no state shall “pass any Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 10, cl. 1. A three-part test determines whether state action violates the Contract Clause. First, we ask whether “the state law has, in fact, operated as a substantial impairment on pre-existing contractual relationships.”
Equip. Mfrs. Inst. v. Janklow,
1. The Contractual Relationship
The district court found that the CBA was a valid agreement between the City and the Union. Defendants challenge this threshold determination. Specifically, they argue that the language of the agreement never required the City to pay retiree health insurance premiums, that the CBA’s health insurance provision was illegal under Arkansas law, that the City did not have the authority to enter into a multi-year agreement with the Union and that the payment of retiree health insurance premiums is a matter of city policy that cannot be contracted away.
The plain language of the CBA states that “[rjetirement coverage is 100% paid.” (Appellant App. at 236.) Defendants maintain that this provision does not obligate the City to pay retiree health benefits because “retirement coverage” was not defined in the CBA. Labor laws, however, “do not require all the details of particular practices to be worked out in advance.”
Consol. Rail Corp. v. Ry. Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
As to defendants’ contention that the CBA violates state law, the district court determined that the statutes in question-Arkansas Code §§ 24-12-129 and 24-12—130—did not prohibit the City from paying retiree health insurance premiums. Section 24-12-129 states:
When any municipal officer or municipal employee age fifty-five (55) or over who has completed twenty (20) years of service to the municipality and who is vested in the retirement system retires, the official or employee may continue to participate in the municipality’s health care plan, receiving the same medical benefits and paying the same premium as active employees as long as the retired official or employee pays both employer and employee contributions to the health care plan.
Defendants read § 24-12-129 in conjunction with § 24-12-180
3
and argue that these laws make it illegal for the City to pay retiree health insurance premiums. No Arkansas court has interpreted §§ 24-12-129 or 24-12-130, but the Arkansas attorney general issued a 2004 opinion concluding that the statutes bar municipalities from paying for retiree health insurance. As the district court noted, however, the attorney general’s opinion is not binding precedent,
Ark. Prof'l Bail Bondsman Licensing Bd. v. Oudin,
We find that §§ 24-12-129 and 24-12-130 do not prevent the City from contracting to pay retiree health insurance premiums. As the district court correctly determined, § 24-12-129 gives municipal employees the right to maintain insurance coverage. It does not, however, restrict a municipality’s ability to offer its employees more or varied coverage, as § 24-12-130 clarifies. By acknowledging that municipalities can offer benefits outside of the strictures of § 24-12-129, § 24-12-130 stresses that § 24-12-129 is meant to protect municipal employees-not to dictate the mandatory terms of a municipality’s retiree health insurance coverage. Therefore, the City could contract to pay retiree health insurance premiums without running afoul of § 24-12-129.
For the first time on appeal, defendants claim the Arkansas constitution prevented the City from entering into a multi-year agreement with the Union. Article 12, § 4 of the Arkansas state constitution provides that the fiscal affairs of cities shall be conducted on a “sound financial basis” and that a city council shall not “enter into any contract or make any allowance for any purpose whatsoever, or authorize the issuance of any contract or warrants, scrip or other evidences of indebtedness in excess of the revenue for such city or town for the current fiscal year.” The Arkansas Supreme Court addressed article 12, § 4 in
Goodwin v. State ex rel. Whittington,
We find
City of Little Rock v. White Co.
more instructive. In
White,
the city of Little Rock invoked article 12, § 4 in an attempt to avoid purchasing a truck that it had used for two years and purportedly agreed to purchase.
See
Finally, defendants argue that the CBA is void because it was against public policy for the City to contract away its right to manage the fiscal matters of the City. The Arkansas Supreme Court has held that a city has “the right in exercising its legislative and governmental functions to protect the health, safety and general welfare of its people ... and may not contract away any such right. [Therefore, a] municipality cannot bind itself by a perpetual contract, or by one which lasts an unreasonable length of time.”
Lamar Bath House Co. v. City of Hot Springs,
For these reasons, we find that there was a contractual relationship between the City and the plaintiffs that the City impaired through its 2003 and 2004 resolutions. Defendants do not challenge the district court’s determination that the impairment was substantial. However, they argue that the district court overlooked the significant and legitimate public purpose behind their actions. If such a purpose exists, we ask whether the city action appropriately addressed that purpose.
2. Significant and Legitimate Public Purpose
Private contracts are not subject to “unlimited modification under the police power.” U.S. Trust Co.
of N.Y. v. New
Jersey,
The district court also found that the City had not demonstrated a significant economic interest to justify its actions. Although economic concerns can give rise to the City’s legitimate use of the police power, such concerns must be related to “unprecedented emergencies,” such as mass foreclosures caused by the Great Depression.
Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus,
B. Motion to Amend the Pleadings
We review the trial court’s denial of a party’s motion to amend its pleadings for an abuse of discretion.
See Thomas v. Corwin,
The district court granted plaintiffs’ motion to amend their pleadings but denied defendants’ motion to do the same. Defendants argue that the district court erred by allowing plaintiffs to proceed with a new claim while denying defendants the right to a defense on the new claim. We disagree. The district court correctly determined that plaintiffs’ amendment does not create or affect the illegality defense because defendants could have raised that defense against plaintiffs’ original claims. Additionally, although the district court denied defendants’ motion to amend, it allowed them to make an offer of proof that included the illegality defense. (See Appellant App. at 199.) Therefore, defendants suffered no prejudice as a result of the district court’s decision, and we find that the district court did not abuse its discretion when it denied defendants’ motion to amend.
C. Remedy
We review a district court’s findings of fact regarding the remedy under a clearly erroneous standard, and there is a strong presumption that the findings are correct.
See Chakales v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue,
Retiree health benefits will survive the expiration of a CBA if they vest before the agreement expired.
See Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Int’l Ass’n of Machinists & Aerospace Workers,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court’s grant of judgment on the *884 pleadings in favor of plaintiffs, its denial of defendants’ motion to amend and the remedy for plaintiffs.
Notes
. The Honorable Rodney S. Webb, United States District Judge for the District of North Dakota, sitting by designation in the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Arkansas Code § 24-12-130 provides:
Nothing contained in § 24-12-129 should be interpreted to prevent a municipality from providing benefits contained in § 24— 12-129 to retirees who are less than age fifty-five (55) or who have completed fewer than twenty (20) years of municipal service. Further, any person who qualified and participated in a municipal health care plan under § 24-12-129 shall continue to be eligible to participate in the health care plan after August 1, 1997.
