Opinion
Lаrry McIntyre appeals from the judgment denying his petition for a writ of mandate (Code Civ. Proc. § 1085) compelling respondent Santa Barbara County Employees’ Retirement System, Board of Retirement (Board) to follow certаin procedures in deciding his application for a service-connected disability retirement. He contends the Board’s procedures result in a breach of its fiduciary duties, violate due process, and violate the 1937 County Employees Retirement Law (CERL). (Gov. Code, § 31450 et seq.) 1 The trial court found each claim to be without merit as a matter of law. We affirm.
Facts
Appellant developed mycoplasmic pneumonia in 1989. The disease lеft him susceptible to blood clots and, as a result, he is required to take a blood-thinning medication called Coumadin. Appellant’s employer, the Summerland-Carpinteria Fire District, determined that he could no longer pеrform his job duties as a fire fighter because the medication increases the risk he will suffer a serious injury. Appellant last worked for the fire district in September 1997.
*733 In May 1998, he applied to the Board for a service-conneсted disability retirement. The Board obtained copies of appellant’s medical records and referred him to a doctor for examination. After reviewing a staff report, the Board appointed referee Catherine Harris to conduct a hearing on the application. The hearing never occurred because appellant filed this petition.
Appellant’s petition alleges that the procedures аdopted by the Board are biased against applicants and that the Board owes a fiduciary duty of loyalty to applicants which it breaches whenever it takes a position adverse to an applicаnt. Appellant does not claim that anyone involved in his application is actually biased against him. Rather, he alleges the bias is inherent in the Board’s bylaws and procedures because the doctors, lawyers and staff it retains are all biased against applicants. Appellant further contends the Board violates due process by unilaterally selecting hearing officers, and by participating as an adverse party in the hearings. 2 Finally, appellant alleges that the Board violates CERL by participating as an adverse party in hearings, determining whether a disability is service connected, and requiring the applicant both to provide medicаl records and submit to an examination by a Board-appointed doctor.
The trial court rejected each of these claims as a matter of law, concluding the Board had not breached its fiduciary duties or viоlated appellant’s due process rights. Appellant raises the same arguments here. We reject them for many of the reasons advanced by the trial court.
Standard of Review
Mandamus is available to correct an abuse of discretion by an administrative official.
(Common Cause v. Board of Supervisors
(1989)
Fiduciary Duty
Appellant correctly notes that the Board owes fiduciary duties of good faith and loyalty to the county employees who are members of the retirement system.
(Hittle v. Santa Barbara County Employees Retirement Assn.
(1985)
Board members “are entrusted by statute with the exclusive authority to determine the factual issues whether a member is permanently incapacitated for duty (Gov. Code, § 31725) and whether the disability is service connected (cf. Gov. Code, §§ 31725.7, 31725.8).”
(Masters
v.
San Bernardino County Employees Retirement Assn.
(1995)
For the same reasons, we reject appellant’s contention that to fulfill its fiduciary duty to remain neutral at the hearing, the Board must rely only upon the employer to opрose applications that lack merit. The Board, not the employer, has the constitutional and statutory duty to manage the retirement fund and to determine whether the fund is obligated to pay benefits to any *735 particular applicant. It is not required to rely upon third parties, even interested third parties, to make those determinations on its behalf.
Due Process
Appellant contends the Board violates his due process rights by unilaterally selecting а hearing officer to decide his application and by actively opposing the application. Appellant presents no evidence that any person involved with his application is actually biasеd against him. Instead, his argument assumes that that all hearing officers and staff members are biased against all applicants because they are paid by the Board, which is itself biased against all applicants. The claims are without merit.
First, the claims fail because they are unsupported by any evidence of actual bias and bias may not be presumed. “[D]ue process demands impartiality on the part of those who function in judicial or quаsi-judicial capacities. [Citation.] We must start, however, from the presumption that the hearing officers ... are unbiased. [Citations.] This presumption can be rebutted by a showing of conflict of interest or some other speсific reason for disqualification. [Citations.] But the burden of establishing a disqualifying interest rests on the party making the assertion.”
(Schweiker
v.
McClure
(1982)
We also reject the contention that the Board violates due process by unilaterally selecting hearing officers. “Due process does not require a perfectly impartial hearing officer for, indeed, there is no such thing. [Citation.] Rather . . . due process in these circumstances requires only a ‘reasonably impartial, noninvolved reviewer.’ ”
(Linney v. Turpen
(1996)
Nor is the Board prohibited from both investigating and adjudicating applications for retirement benefits. As the Supreme Court explained in
Withrow
v.
Larkin
(1975)
Statutory Violations
Appellant contends the Board violates CERL when it acts as an adverse party at the hearings, purports to dеtermine whether a disability is service connected, and requires applicants both to submit their own medical records for review and be examined by a Board-appointed doctor. We disagree.
Neither CERL nor article XVI, § 17 of our state Constitution prohibits staff members from participating in benefit hearings. To the contrary, both require the Board to administer the retirement fund for the benefit of its members and to manage the fund with care, prudencе and skill. The Board cannot fulfill these functions unless it investigates applications and pays benefits only to applicants who are eligible for them.
(City of Sacramento
v.
Public Employees Retirement System, supra,
Nor is the Board obligated to accept a stipulation between employer and employee that a disability is service connected. The Board is responsible for administering the retirement fund. The Board must, thеrefore, make its own determination ón the factual question of whether a disability is service connected. (§§ 31725.7, 31725.8;
Masters v. San Bernardino County Employees Retirement Assn., supra,
Finally, we reject appellant’s claim that the Bоard lacks authority to require an applicant both to submit medical records for review and submit to an examination by a Board-appointed doctor. There is no evidence appellant was required to do both; rather, he was required to provide a medical history so the Board could obtain a meaningful medical examination. This practice *737 is fully consistent with section 31723, which permits the Board to “require such proof, including а medical examination at the expense of the member, as it deems necessary or the board upon its own motion may order a medical examination to determine the existence of the disability.”
The judgment is affirmed. Costs to respondent.
Gilbert, P. J., and Perren, J., concurred.
A petition fоr a rehearing was denied August 14, 2001, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 17, 2001.
