The CITY OF ALLENTOWN, Appellant, v. LOCAL 302, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS, et al., Appellees.
No. 92 E.D. Appeal Docket 1986
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Argued Oct. 22, 1985. Decided July 23, 1986.
512 A.2d 1175 | 511 Pa. 275
Ronald Lucas, Harrisburg, for amicus Pa. League of Cities.
Nicholas J. Marcucci, Harrisburg, for amicus Municipal Retirement Systems.
Stephen C. Richman, Philadelphia, for appellees.
OPINION
ZAPPALA, Justice.
The Commonwealth Court has determined that under the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law,
In 1969 the City of Allentown passed Ordinance No. 11576 establishing the Paid Firemen’s Pension Fund. Subsequent collective bargaining agreements between the City and Local 302 of the International Association of Firefighters, including the agreement in effect between January 1, 1976 and December 31, 1977, made reference to this Pension Fund. In 1976, with the passage of Ordinance No. 12185, the City closed membership in the Pension Fund and elected to join the Retirement System established by the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law, Act of February 1, 1974, P.L. 34, No. 15,
This action was commenced on July 27, 1977 with the filing of a Petition for Review in the Commonwealth Court. The Appellees Roxberry, Sell, and Klechner, three firemen hired after the effective date of Ordinance No. 12185, and Local 302, their union, sought an order declaring the Ordinance invalid, construing the collective bargaining agree
The Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law provides in part:
§ 881.303. Existing local retirement systems and compulsory membership.
Where a municipality elects to join the system established by this act, and is then maintaining a retirement or pension system or systems covering its employes in whole or in part, those employes so covered, and employes thereafter eligible to join such pension system, shall not become members of the retirement system established by this act, unless at the time the municipality elects to join the system, the members of each such existing retirement or pension system shall, by the affirmative vote of seventy-five per cent of all the members of each pension
system, elect to be covered by the retirement system established by this act. At any time thereafter, within a period of three years after the municipality has elected to join the system, but not thereafter, the members of an existing retirement or pension system may, in like manner, elect to join the system established by this act.... No liability, on account of retirement allowances or pensions being paid from any retirement or pension fund of the municipality, shall attach against the fund, except as provided in the agreement, making a transfer of an existing system in accordance with this section. The liability to continue payment of pensions not so transferred shall attach against the municipality, which shall annually make appropriations from its tax revenues sufficient to pay the same. In cases where workers covered by an existing retirement or pension system elect to join the system created by this act, the election to join shall be deemed to have been made at the time the municipality elected to join the system, and the liabilities of the municipality shall be fixed accordingly.
If a municipality elects to cover its municipal firemen under the provisions of the system created by this Article III, then each municipal fireman shall be required to become a member of the system.
If a municipality elects to cover its municipal police under the provisions of the system created by this Article III, then each municipal policeman shall be required to become a member of the system.
.... Notwithstanding any other provision herein, the board may, in its discretion, entertain a request from a municipality to join the system established by this act for those employes who are excluded from local pension plan coverage by virtue of the collective bargaining process or otherwise. The request to join the system must be accompanied by an affirmative vote of no less than three-fourths of those employes not covered by the local pension plan. The benefits to be established may be in accordance with the provisions of this article or any other
relevant pension law covering that class of municipality. The other requirements of this section for joining the system shall be observed.
The foundation of the Commonwealth Court’s analysis is the third paragraph of this section. The court read this language to mean that under no circumstances could two retirement systems exist for municipal firemen; either all firemen would be required to be covered by the Retirement System or none of the firemen could be so covered. Finding that this section is “clear and can be interpreted in only one manner,” the court applied the rule of statutory construction which holds that “[w]hen the words of a statute are clear and free from all ambiguity, the letter of it is not to be disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit,”
The City argues that the Commonwealth Court erred by interpreting the third paragraph of Section 881.303 in a way which conflicts with other provisions of the statute when an interpretation avoiding conflict and giving effect to all provisions is available. See
Proceeding from these premises the City argues that the third paragraph of Section 881.303, if it is to be given meaning, as it must, should be read as imposing compulsory membership in the Retirement System on only those firefighters for whom the City elects to join the Retirement System. Because the Ordinance enrolls firefighters hired after its effective date, only those firefighters are required to become members of the Retirement System. Such firefighters are “excluded from local pension plan coverage” because of the Ordinance and are therefore candidates for enrollment in the Retirement System under the final paragraph of the Section. They are likewise not “eligible to join” the local pension system and therefore are not precluded from joining the Retirement System by the first paragraph. Compulsory membership co-extensive with the municipality’s election to enroll employees, not universal membership for all employees of the enrolled class, is said to be the proper interpretation of the third paragraph.
In support of this reading of the statute, the City offers the regulations of the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Board. In 1976 the Board adopted regulations to implement the Act, including the following general provision from Chapter 81:
§ 81.6. Election by municipalities to join retirement system.
Even though employes, who are present members of an existing local retirement system, choose not to join the System, a municipality may nevertheless enroll based
on the plan elected to cover employees of the municipality employed after the effective date of enrollment in the System. In such case, members of the existing local retirement plan may join the plan established under the law, within three years after enrollment in this System, but not thereafter, by a vote of 75% of the members of such existing local plan,
and, from Chapter 85 dealing with Municipal Firemen and Municipal Police, this regulation:
§ 85.3. Existing local retirement systems and compulsory membership.
(a) Except as it provides existing [sic] pension plans to join the System under this Part, the provisions of § 81.6 of this Title (relating to election by municipalities to join retirement system), § 81.12 of this Title (relating to existing local retirement systems), and 83.3 (relating to existing local retirement systems and compulsory and optional membership) shall be equally applicable to this section.
(b) In those cases where a municipality elects to cover its member police or firemen, as the case may be, each such employee shall be required to become a member of the System under Article III or Article IV of the law, (53, P.S. §§ 881.301-881.413 or §§ 881.401-881.413) as hereinafter provided in this Chapter.
16 Pa.Admin.Code §§ 81.6, 85.3 (emphasis added). The City notes that in addition to the deference which courts are bound to give to an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Public Welfare v. Forbes Health System, 492 Pa. 77, 422 A.2d 480 (1980), the General Assembly has given implicit approval to this construction of the statute by amending the Act subsequent to adoption of the regulations while leaving the administrative interpretation undisturbed. See Hospital Association of Pennsylvania v. MacLeod, 487 Pa. 516, 523, n. 10, 410 A.2d 731, 734, n. 10 (1980); See also,
The root of the present controversy is the language of the statute, a patchwork of provisions, some new and some old,
It is troublesome, however, that this construction requires that the first sentence of Section 303 be read as empowering the members of the existing pension fund to approve or disapprove the municipality’s election to join the Retirement System. Such a power was explicitly granted under the former law applicable to police1 but the language
It is regrettable when because of imprecise drafting of legislation the policy-making function entrusted to the General Assembly is wielded de facto by administrative agen-
As the foregoing discussion indicates, we do not agree with the Commonwealth Court that Section 303, when read in its entirety, is “clear and can be interpreted in only one manner.” The interpretation settled on by the Commonwealth Court, based on a strict reading of the third paragraph, requires that a “veto power” in favor of existing pension funds be implied in the first paragraph although it is not written in the statutory language. Alternatively the Appellant’s interpretation, based on a strict reading of the first paragraph (and supported by a later amendment contained in the final paragraph), requires that a limitation on the compulsory membership provision be implied, although it is not written in the statutory language. In view of the overall scheme of the Act, whereby a municipality’s “election” to join the Retirement System is established solely as a policy decision of the governing body or of the electorate,2 we find it preferable not to imply a limitation on this public power in favor of the private interests of existing pension funds. See
Resolution of the statutory question, however, does not dispose of the entire matter presented. The Act provides generally the procedures whereby a municipality may elect to join the Retirement System. Among the possibilities permitted by the statute, implicitly as originally written and explicitly following the 1980 amendment, is the enrollment of employees not covered by an existing pension plan. Nothing in the language of the Act speaks to the reason why employees might not be covered by an existing plan; it is merely provided that the Board may, in its discretion, permit the municipality to enroll such employees in the Retirement System. It is a separate question, entirely unrelated to the statute, whether or not the municipality has acted properly in creating the class of non-covered employees.3
Act 111, establishing collective bargaining by policemen or firemen, Act of June 24, 1968, P.L. 237, No. 111,
Having found that the City breached the collective bargaining agreement, we must remand this case to the court of common pleas for determination of an appropriate remedy. In doing so, we note that much of the specific relief requested by the Appellees in their Petition for Review would appear to be inappropriate. For example, the Appellees request that the court “[e]nter a judgment ... that all employees of the City of Allentown Fire Bureau including petitioners Roxberry, Sell and Kelchner are eligible to and shall participate in the Paid Firemen’s Pension Fund.” The terms of the Pension Fund, however, clearly provide that “it shall be optional with each paid fireman and employee as to whether or not he or she accept the provisions
The order of the Commonwealth Court is vacated and the record is remanded to the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County for further proceedings in conformity with this Opinion.
PAPADAKOS, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
LARSEN, J., filed a concurring opinion.
LARSEN, Justice, concurring.
I concur in the result based on the Commonwealth Court Opinion in this case authored by Judge Francis A. Barry. That opinion is attached to this concurring opinion as Appendix A.
APPENDIX A
LOCAL 302, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS et al., Appellants, v. THE CITY OF ALLENTOWN et al. and PENNSYLVANIA MUNICIPAL RETIREMENT BOARD et al., Appellees.
No. 1569 C.D. 1982.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
Submitted on Briefs June 6, 1984.
Decided Sept. 6, 1984.
Before WILLIAMS, BARRY and BLATT, JJ.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
BARRY, Judge.
Certain facts were established by stipulation of the parties in October of 1978. In 1969, the City, by ordinance, established the Paid Fireman’s Pension Fund (Pension Fund). In 1976, the City, again by ordinance, amended the ordinance establishing the Pension Fund and elected to join the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement System (Retirement System) which had been established by the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law, Act of February 1, 1974, P.L. 34,
The individual firefighters and their union then filed a petition for review in this Court, naming as respondents, in addition to the City, the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Board (Board) and certain members of the Board. The firefighters sought an order declaring invalid the 1976 ordinance requiring all firefighters hired after June 8, 1976, to join the Retirement System; they also sought an order directing the City to enroll all firefighters in the Pension Fund. Finally, the firefighters sought to enjoin the Board from accepting contributions from the City on behalf of the newest firefighters.
After the October, 1978 stipulation of all material facts had been filed, both sides filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Following oral arguments, this Court transferred the case to the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County, holding we had neither appellate jurisdiction as the Board had not entered any final order nor original jurisdic
Following the transfer to the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County, the parties again proceeded on the stipulation of facts and cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted the City’s motion for summary judgment and this appeal followed.
Appellant’s argue, inter alia, that the trial court erred in holding that the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law permits the existence of two separate retirement plans for the City firefighters. Section 303 of the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law, in pertinent part, provides:
Where a municipality elects to join the system established by this act, and is then maintaining a retirement or pension system or systems covering its employes in whole or in part, those employes so covered, and employes thereafter eligible to join such pension systems shall not become members of the retirement system established by this act, unless at the time the municipality elects to join the system, the members of each such existing retirement or pension system shall, by the affirmative vote of seventy-five per cent of all the members of each pension system, elect to be covered by the retirement system established by this act. At any time thereafter, within a period of three years after the municipality has elected to join the system, but not thereafter, the members of an existing retirement or pension system may, in like manner, elect to join the system established by this act....
....
If a municipality elects to cover its municipal firemen under the provisions of the system created by this Article III, then each municipal fireman shall be required to become a member of the system.
The City and the trial court, however, had a different view, reasoning that a reading of the entire Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law shows no legislative prohibition against two separate pension plans for a municipality’s firefighters. The City argues that allowing seventy-five per cent of the members of the Pension Fund to force the remaining twenty-five per cent to join the Retirement System would violate the rights of the minority; therefore, according to this argument, requiring such a vote would emasculate the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement Law and its benefits to the municipality including, inter alia, the ability to join a more actuarily sound pension system.1 These arguments, however, ignore one important clause of Section 303, which states, “[i]f a municipality elects to cover its municipal firemen under the provisions of the system created by this Article III, then each municipal fireman shall be required to become a member of the system.”
The Statutory Construction Act of 1972,
Accordingly, the trial court erred in granting the City’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
It is important to note that the benefits provided under Article II for nonuniformed employes may be less than those benefits you now provide for nonuniformed employes under your optional plan. The disparity in benefits, if they do exist, may require a careful policy review as to whether you can offer two different pension plans with dissimilar benefits for one category of employe, i.e., nonuniformed. The same problem would be present for benefits you now provide separately to police and firemen and those that would be available
under Article III or under Article IV for these categories of employes. (Emphasis added.)
