OPINION
Plaintiff Ellis appeals from the district court’s decision affirming an administrative denial of his application for disability retirement benefits. Ellis’s main contention is that the lower court erred in upholding the administrative ruling that the 1983 Utah Disability Act rather than the 1967 Utah State Retirement Act governed his claim for disability benefits. We affirm the district court's judgment.
Ellis was the head of the Provo City Attorney’s Office for over 20 years. According to Ellis’s attending physician, Ellis suffered numerous medical conditions stemming from the stressful nature of his employment. Consequently, on April 28, 1986, Ellis applied for disability retirement benefits. He was not totally disabled but, rather, sought less stressful legal employment.
The Utah State Retirement Board denied Ellis’s application for disability retirement benefits finding the Legislature replaced the disability plan under which Ellis sought benefits, see Utah Code Ann. §§ 49-10-1 to -61 (1981), with an optional plan in 1983, see Utah Code Ann. §§ 49-9a-l to -15 (1984), in which Provo elected not to participate and under which, in any event, Ellis would not have qualified because he was not totally disabled.
Ellis objected to the administrative denial of benefits and sought a formal hearing before the Board. In a hearing held in February 1987, the Board listened to Ellis and then requested Ellis to leave the room so the Board could consider his application. The Board denied Ellis’s application for benefits. In response, Ellis filed a complaint in district court seeking a review of the Board’s decision. He claimed that if the Board was correct in finding the Legislature repealed the retirement plan under which he sought benefits, then this repeal was unconstitutional. Ellis also challenged the procedure of the Retirement Board claiming the Board failed to comply with the Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act and the Open and Public Meetings Act.
The Board moved to dismiss Ellis’s complaint asserting it failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Ellis moved for summary judgment arguing that, as a matter of law, the 1983 enactment of the long-term disability act did not repeal the retirement plan under which he sought benefits. The court granted the Board’s motion to dismiss and denied Ellis’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal ensued.
I.
At the outset, we must determine whether the Legislature replaced the 1967 retirement program under which Ellis sought and qualified for disability benefits. Since this issue raises a question of special law,
see Utah Dep’t of Admin. Servs. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
*884 Our analysis of whether the Legislature replaced the earlier retirement program is best understood against the background of the relevant statutory history. Between July 1, 1967, and June 30, 1983, state retirement benefits were governed by the Utah State Retirement Act. Utah Code Ann. §§ 49-10-1 to -61 (1981). Section 49-10-28 of the Retirement Act provided that a state employee was entitled to disability benefits provided the employee had worked at least 10 years for the state and a medical examination determined that the employee was “physically or mentally incapable of performance of the usual duties of his employment and should be retired and the administrator so recommends to the board.”
On March 10, 1983, the Legislature enacted the Utah Public Employees’ Disability Act. 1983 Utah Laws ch. 223, § 1 (codified at Utah Code Ann. §§ 49-9a-l to -15 (1984)). The Legislature did not expressly repeal the Utah State Retirement Act when it enacted the Disability Act; however, the Legislature clearly provided that the Disability Act would cover all disabilities with a date of disability on or after the effective date of the Act, namely July 1,1983. 1983 Utah Laws ch. 223, § 2; Utah Code Ann. § 49-9a-8 (1984). Provisions of the Disability Act relevant to the instant case, with our emphasis added, provide:
section 49-9a~4: All employers participating in the Utah state retirement system may cover their employees under this act. Nothing in this act shall require any political subdivision or educational institution to be covered by this act.
section 49~9a-8: All covered disabilities with a date of disability on or after the effective date of this act shall be administered under this act. Disabilities commencing before the effective date of this act shall be administered under the provisions of Chapter 10, Title 40. In no event, may a disability be covered under both Chapter 10, Title 49 and this act.
Thus, in 1983 the Legislature, by clear, express language provided that two disability retirement systems would co-exist in Utah. The earlier 1967 Retirement Act would continue to cover disabilities commencing before the effective date of the 1983 Disability Act. However, all those whose disabilities commenced after the 1983 Disability Act became effective would be governed by the later Disability Act.
In order to receive disability benefits under the Disability Act, the employee must be totally disabled. “Totally disabled” is defined by the Disability Act to mean “complete inability to engage in any gainful occupation which is reasonable, considering the employee’s education, training and experience.” Utah Code Ann. § 49-9a-3(10) (1984). 1 The effective date of the Disability Act was July 1, 1983. 1983 Utah Laws ch. 223, § 2. After July 1, 1983, the Retirement Board refused to accept contributions for the Chapter 10, Title 49 fund.
On appeal, Ellis contends the Legislature did not impliedly repeal the Utah State Retirement Act when it subsequently enacted the Disability Act. We agree that the Legislature did not impliedly repeal the Retirement Act but, rather, by clear language, it expressly replaced the Retirement Act with the Disability Act for disability retirements commencing after the Disability Act’s effective date.
We acknowledge the authority governing implied repeals of legislation. As a general proposition, implied repeals are not favored and are found only if there is a manifest inconsistency or conflict between the earlier and later statutes.
State v. Sorensen,
[W]here a consistent body of laws cannot be maintained without the abrogation of *885 a previous law, a repeal by implication of previous legislation ... is readily found in the terms of the later enactment. It is the necessary effect of the later enactment construed in the light of the existing law that ultimately determines an implied repeal.... [W]here a conflict is readily seen by an application of the later enactment in accord with [the legislative] intent, it is clear that the later enactment is intended to supersede the existing law.
1A C. Sands,
Sutherland Statutory Construction
§ 23.09, at 332 (4th ed. 1985). This is so because when there is an irreconcilable conflict between the new provision and the prior statutes relating to the same subject matter, the new provision is deemed controlling as it is the later expression of the Legislature.
Murray City v. Hall,
The foregoing authority, however, is inapplicable as we are persuaded the Legislature clearly and expressly provided that the Utah State Retirement Act would continue to govern disabilities arising before July 1, 1983, the effective date of the Disability Act, but all those disability retirements occurring thereafter would be governed by the Disability Act. Therefore, there is no irreconcilable conflict between the Retirement Act and the Disability Act as the two acts are mutually exclusive. A disability is governed by one statutory act or the other, but not both. A consistent body of law is maintained and the Disability Act does not abrogate the Retirement Act.
The date of Ellis’s disability is April 26, 1986, i.e., after July 1, 1983, which is the effective date of the Disability Act. Consequently, the Disability Act governs Ellis’s disability retirement benefits. However, as previously mentioned, supra Note 1, Ellis is not “totally disabled” as required by the Disability Act. Therefore, Ellis is not entitled to disability benefits under the governing statutory scheme.
II.
Notwithstanding our holding that Ellis does not qualify for benefits under either retirement scheme, we must now determine whether the Legislature’s replacement of the Retirement Act with the Disability Act unconstitutionally deprived Ellis of vested contractual rights. Ellis contends that if the Disability Act governs his eligibility for disability retirement benefits, then he was unconstitutionally denied his vested contractual rights to an earned disability pension. Under Utah law, Ellis's argument is without merit.
There are two lines of authority addressing the rights of retired employees. One line of authority holds that a retirement plan is a gratuity in which the recipient has no vested rights and, consequently, is freely terminable at the employer’s option.
See, e.g., Keegan v. Board of Trustees,
The other line of authority adheres to the contractual view which reasons that once a public employee has fulfilled all the conditions precedent to receiving retirement benefits, the employee has certain vested rights which cannot be impaired by subsequent administrative or legislative enactments.
See, e.g., Yeazell v. Copins,
Utah adheres to the contractual line of authority. In
Driggs v. Utah State Teachers Retirement Bd.,
Since
Driggs,
our supreme court has consistently held that the employee has this vested contractual right only when he has satisfied all conditions precedent to receiving the benefit, i.e., he has attained retirement age, or has been medically disabled.
See Hansen v. Public Employees Retirement Sys. Bd. of Admin.,
Based upon the foregoing authority, we are persuaded Ellis was not deprived of vested contractual benefits because he failed to satisfy the conditions precedent to his disability retirement benefits, namely Ellis had not become disabled and retired before the Legislature enacted the Disability Act. Consequently, he was not entitled to benefits under the governing Disability Act.
III.
Ellis further contends the Retirement Board violated the Administrative Rulemaking Act 3 by failing to comply with rule making procedures when it determined the Retirement Act had been replaced by the Disability Act in deciding Ellis’s eligibility for disability benefits. Ellis contends that such a determination was, in effect, a policy determination subject to adequate advance notice to all affected parties, an opportunity to participate, and an opportunity to comment. 4
*887
Any agency subject to the Administrative Rulemaking Act promulgating a rule must follow the procedures specified.
See Williams v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
The critical question, therefore, is whether the Retirement Board’s decision to deny Ellis disability retirement benefits based upon its interpretation of the language of the Disability Act amounted to a rule within the meaning of the Administrative Rule-making Act. “We acknowledge that there is a variance of opinion on when an agency is engaged in rule making and must follow formal rule making procedures, and when an agency may legitimately proceed by way of adjudication.”
Williams,
In
Williams v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
Based upon the foregoing, we conclude the Retirement Board was not engaged in rule making and, therefore, did not have to adhere to rule making procedural requirements. Rather, the Board was merely applying the explicit statutory language of the Disability Act to the facts of Ellis's case. The explicit language of the Disability Act provides that that Act, not the Retirement Act, governs all disabilities with a date of disability after July 1,1983. Ellis’s *888 date of disability is April 26, 1986. This administrative process does not resemble the Legislature’s enactment of a statute. On the contrary, the administrative process examined here resembles a court’s decision applying explicit statutory language. The only policy decision which was generally applicable was made by the Legislature in its enactment of the Disability Act. The change in clear law in this instance was promulgated by the Legislature, not the Retirement Board. Therefore, the Retirement Board was not compelled to follow the rule making procedures of the Administrative Rulemaking Act.
IV.
The final issue we address is whether the Retirement Board violated the Open and Public Meetings Act, Utah Code Ann. §§ 52-4-1 to -9 (1981), when it requested Ellis to leave the room while it deliberated his appeal from the administrative denial of benefits.
The Open and Public Meetings Act requires that every “meeting” of a “public body” be open to the public. As used in this Act, “public body” means “any administrative, advisory, executive or legislative body of the state or its political subdivisions which consists of two or more persons that expends, disburses or is supported in whole or in part by tax revenue and which is vested with the authority to make decisions regarding the public's business.” Utah Code Ann. § 52-4-2(2) (1981).
We are persuaded that the Open and Public Meetings Act is not applicable to the Retirement Board. First, the Utah State Retirement Fund is administered as a common trust fund and not supported by tax revenue. Second, the Retirement Board is not vested with authority to make decisions regarding the public’s business. The Board administers funds for the benefit of the beneficiaries and not for the public at large.
Hansen v. Utah State Retirement Bd.,
Affirmed.
GREENWOOD and DAVIDSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. Ellis concedes he is not "totally disabled" as defined by the Disability Act and, therefore, does not qualify for disability benefits under this statutory scheme.
.We note, however, that
Driggs
was slightly modified in
Newcomb.
In
Newcomb,
the court held a statute which dissolved a statutory pension system invalid as to retired employees.
Newcomb,
. The Administrative Rulemaking Act, Utah Code Ann. §§ 63-46a-l to -15 (1986), was significantly revised and amended in 1987, after the commencement of this action. Accordingly, our analysis focuses on the administrative provisions in effect at the time of Ellis’s hearing before the Retirement Board.
. The Retirement Board contends that Ellis did not raise the applicability of the Administrative Rulemaking Act below and, therefore, is precluded from raising this issue for the first time *887 on appeal. We disagree. The record indicates that Ellis raised this issue not only in his amended complaint but also in his motion for summary judgment.
. The Retirement Board argues that it is exempt from the Administrative Rulemaking Act because it is a "political subdivision." Since the commencement of this action, the Utah State Retirement Act was amended and the Legislature decreed that the Board "shall voluntarily comply” with the provisions of the Administrative Rulemaking Act. Utah Code Ann. § 49-1-201(4) (1987). This new language implies that during the period of time at issue here the Board may indeed have been exempt from the Act’s coverage. But see Utah Attorney General Informal Opinion 86-16 (June 4, 1986), wherein Utah’s Attorney General concludes that the Retirement Board was required to comply with the requirements of the Administrative Rulemaking Act. Inasmuch as we conclude that the Board, in any event, complied with the Act, we need not decide whether it was required to do so.
. The court stated that its conclusion would not be any different had the court been called upon to interpret the definition of "rule" within the meaning of the subsequently enacted Administrative Rulemaking Act.
Williams,
