Under the equal protection clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions, Miss Sanders, a school teacher, *299 challenges the decision of her employer, the Fulton County School System, compelling her to retire at age 65.
The trial court upheld the local retirement law as against these challenges but then ordered the school system to offer teaching contracts to Miss Sanders until she attains age 70 or until her employment is terminated for cause. The court’s order further provides that Miss Sanders shall make no more contributions to, and shall acquire no additional rights under, the retirement fund after attaining age 65, and that her retirement rights shall be computed as of the date she attained age 65 but not paid until she ceases active employment with the school system. In Case No. 33967, the school system appeals from the portions of the order requiring the school system to offer employment to Miss Sanders until she attains age 70 or is removed for cause. In Case No. 33970, Miss Sanders cross appeals from the portion of the order that rejected her equal protection challenges. She contends that she is entitled to continue making contributions to the pension fund until, and to have her pension computed at the time of, her retirement, and is entitled to the benefit of any new rights afforded to others under the system until the date of her retirement.
Able counsel for the litigants and for the parties amicus curiae have furnished this court with briefs comprehensively treating the many issues which arise in instances where a person’s employment is terminated simply and solely because of the attainment of a Specified age, rather than for cause or for medical reasons. These briefs have been of considerable assistance to the court in analyzing the issues.
The relevant facts and contentions are these: Miss Sanders filed this action upon being informed that pursuant to the laws governing the Fulton County local retirement system, and for no other reason, her employer was insisting that she retire at the end of the school year during which she attained age 65. See Ga. L. 1957, pp. 2574, 2576. Her case is narrowly based upon the ground that, as a Fulton County teacher, she was required to join the local retirement system, which mandates retirement at age 65, whereas teachers employed in school systems covered by the Teachers’ Retirement System of Georgia *300 are not forced into retirement by law until they attain at least age 70. See Code Ann. § 32-2905 (1) (b).
Miss Sanders does not challenge the right of various governmental entities to establish separate and independent retirement systems providing for differing retirement benefits. In her words, "Only that provision of the Fulton County Pension Law which restricts the 'inalienable right’ of Fulton County Teachers to work is challenged herein.” She insists that although "the state may have a legitimate interest in establishing distinct pension plans for teachers in distinct counties ... no similar rationale exists for treating state teachers indistinctly with regard to the required age of their retirement.” Her equal protection argument is best summarized by her assertion that "Georgia teachers are entitled to be treated as one class by the State legislature with respect to their retirement age.”
Although a number of recent cases, such as Gault v. Garrison, 569 F2d 993 (7th Cir. 1977) and Palmer v. Ticcione, 576 F2d 459 (2d Cir. 1978), have involved challenges to statutes providing for mandatory retirement at a certain age, Miss Sanders insists that "the only known case which presents the identical constitutional issue as that involved in this action” is Bradley v. Vance, 436 FSupp. 134 (D. C. 1977), juris, noted in
This court has concluded that the retirement age classification at issue in the present case is "rationally related” to the furtherance of a legitimate state interest. Massachusetts Bd. of Retirement v. Murgia,
The General Assembly has chosen to establish for the purpose of providing pension benefits a classification of Fulton County School System employees which includes school bus drivers and cafeteria personnel as well as teachers. See Ga. L. 1957, p. 2574. On the other hand, public school bus drivers and cafeteria personnel employed in school systems that do not operate local retirement funds are not members of the Teachers’ Retirement System of Georgia. Rather, they have their own separate retirement system. See Code Ann. §§ 32-2901 (5) and 32-3802 (5). The reason for these varying classifications of school system employees is purely historical. The General Assembly provided pension benefits to Fulton County school personnel before retirement rights were extended to school teachers in most school systems and long before such rights were extended generally throughout the state to school bus drivers and cafeteria personnel. See Ga. L. 1937, p. 892; Ga. L. 1939, p. 39; Code Ann. §§ 2-7002, 32-2901 et seq., and 32-3801 et seq.
Placing some school teachers in a classification with school bus drivers and cafeteria personnel does not amount to a per se denial of equal protection simply because other teachers throughout the state are classified separately from such non-teaching school system personnel. Nor has Miss Sanders carried her burden of
*302
proof and shown that these classifications are invalid.
McCullers v. Williamson,
Under the authority of recent cases such as Massachusetts Board of Retirement v. Murgia, supra, and McIlvaine v. Pennsylvania State Police,
Judgment reversed in Case No. 33967; affirmed in Case No. 33970.
