The appellants, all former officers of the Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) who retired from the MPD to become officers with the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (Park Board), appeal the district court’s 1 grant of summary judgment in favor of the Park Board. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Michael Ganley and four other former MPD police officers sued the Park Board, alleging that the Park Board violated their equal protection and due process rights under the United States and Minnesota Constitutions by denying them higher initial placement on the salary schedule and more vacation time when they started their employment as police officers with the Park Board. Each appellant was hired by the MPD before June 15, 1980, which mеans he was subject to the Minneapolis Police Relief Association (MPRA) pension program. Other former MPD officers referenced in this lawsuit also started with the Park Board on the same day as the appellants. These other MPD officers were hired by the MPD after June 15, 1980, requiring their participation in the Public Employee Retirement Association (PERA) pension plan.
The Police Officers’ Federation of Minneapolis (Federation) represents the officers of the Park Board and the MPD but in separate collective bargaining units. The Park Board and the MPD have con
Transfers between the [MPD] and the [Park Board] are not permitted. However, sworn personnel employed by the [MPD] may be eligible to be considered as a lateral entry candidate for the classification of Patrol Officer in accordance with the terms set forth herein. Notwithstanding any provisions of Section 7.7(a), to the contrary, if a Minneapolis Police Officеr is hired as a Park Police patrol officer, time served in the [MPD] shall be included as Department seniority for the purpose of determining the employee’s vacation accrual and placement on the salary schedule.
Under this provision MPD officers who become Park Board officers lose their rank and seniority but are given credit for thеir years of service for determining vacation accrual and placement on the salary schedule.
In 2003, the Park Board posted positions for officers. The MPD officers referenced in this lawsuit applied and were hired. The appellants retired from the MPD and cashed out their vacation leave, sick leave, and compensatоry time banks before being hired by the Park Board. In contrast, the other MPD officers started with the Park Board without first retiring from the MPD. Accordingly, they transferred without any break in service and were given credit, pursuant to section 7.7(b) of the collective bargaining agreement, for their prior years of service to the MPD for the purpose of placement on the Park Board’s salary and vacation leave accrual schedules. The appellants did not receive the benefit of section 7.7(b)’s provisions because the Park Board determined that by retiring they had separated from their MPD employment and their time banks had been liquidated. The difference between these two groups is that the appellants were subject to the MPRA pension plan and the others were subject to the PERA pension plan, and the former group retired before moving to the Park Board and the latter group did not.
The appellants claim that they were “forced” to retire, noting that the separation form they were given already had the “retirement with severance” option pre-checked. The Park Board claims the appellants elected to retire.
Minnesota Statute § 423B.12, which is part of the statutory provisions addressing Minneapolis police pensions, states “[a] person who has ceased to be an active member of the association or has knowingly failed or refused to retire, is entitled only for thе refund in an amount equal to $100 per year of service credit, payable in a lump sum.” The appellants assert that it was the MPRA’s position that this law dictated that a person who ceases employment with the MPD while eligible to retire, and does not retire, will forfeit their pension rights and be entitled only to a small lump sum reimbursement. Thus, the appellants claim Minnеsota law also effectively required them to retire when leaving employment with the MPD before beginning employment with the Park Board.
The Federation refused to file a grievance on the appellants’ behalf when asked to do so because it determined they were not MPD officers within the meaning of section 7.7(b) at the time the Park Board established their vacation and salary placement. This lawsuit ensued.
The district court held that even though all of the officers were on active duty when the park positions were advertised and each resigned from his MPD position and began the new park position on the same day, the appellants retired and were receiving full retirement benefits and were
As to the appellants’ substantive due process claim, the court likewise held that the Park Boаrd’s application of section 7.7(b) of the collective bargaining agreement withstands rational basis scrutiny. It also appears that the district court disposed of the appellants’ juxtaposed procedural due process claim by ruling that they have no property right in their vacation accrual and salary schedules, and thus no proсess was due. Because they had retired, the court refused to find that the appellants had remaining pension benefits upon which they could establish a property interest.
II. DISCUSSION
This court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the record most favorably to the non-moving party.
Tipler v. Douglas County,
A. Equal Protection
“In general, the Equal Protection Clause requires that state actors treat similarly situated people alike.”
Bogren v. Minnesota,
The governmentally established “classification” challenged by the appellants is that of retiree, which they claim was a status forced upon them by the MPD. They are not challenging a statutory or legislative classification per se, although the effеct of the purportedly forced retirement led to an alleged unequal application of contract and statutory provisions by the Park Board. The district court used the appellants’ retired status as a means of demonstrating that the two groups were, in fact, distinct, determining that the ap
According to the appellants, “[t]his is a situation in which defendant has created, by its own action, two groups of citizens, and chosen [sic] to use the distinction that it itself created as a basis for paying one grоup less than the other.” However, what the appellants fail to address is that they were never similarly situated in all respects with the officers to which they compare themselves: the appellants were all members of the MPRA and the other officers were all members of PERA. According to the appellants, the City of Minneapolis, acting through the MPD, dеtermined that their retirement was required under the MPRA in order for them to best preserve their well-earned pension benefits. Appellant Ganley affied to that fact as well, stating that it was his understanding, after serving on the MPRA Board, that he was obligated under section 423B to collect his pension at the time he ceased being a MPD officer. Thus, as we see it, the aрpellants became “retirees” because of their participation in the MPRA and the MPD’s supposed determination that they must retire, rather than through any distinction created by the Park Board. So, while the appellants argue that their participation in the MPRA pension plan with its different options and obligations than under the PERA pension arrangement mаkes “no difference” with respect to their claim, we hold that it makes an outcome determinative difference.
This difference also rationally explains the Park Board’s treatment of these two otherwise similarly situated groups of officers. Regardless of whether the appellants characterize it as a “forced” retirement by the MPD, therе was a rational basis for the Park Board’s determination that the appellants were not subject to the benefit of section 7.7(b) of the collective bargaining agreement.
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The appellants were not “sworn personnel employed by the [MPD]” at the time the Park Board reviewed their employment status and placed them on the salary and vaсation schedules. And, even if the Park Board mistakenly applied the statute or contract provision, “an erroneous or mistaken performance of the statutory duty, although a violation of the statute, is not without more a denial of the equal protection of the laws.”
Snowden v. Hughes,
B. Due Process
“The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits governments from depriving ‘any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.’ ”
Creason v. City of Washington,
Under the rubric of substantive due process, the Due Process Clause “protects individual liberty against ‘certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.’ ”
Collins v. City of Darker Heights,
The appellants do not articulate which fundamental right — that is, one “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacrificed,” — is at stake in this case.
Moran v. Clarke,
It appears that the appellants’ true due prоcess claim, if any, lies in procedural due process — they did not receive information about the effects of their retirement from the MPD, nor did they receive a hearing on whether section 423B.12 required them to retire so that they could determine what was in their best interest. The resulting claimed deprivation is that they “receive less salary than other employees, while receiving their pension payments, reducing the value of those pension benefits received.”
The procedural component of the Due Process Clause protects property interests created not by the Constitution but by “ ‘rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law.’ ”
Neal v. Fields,
Turning to the defendant in the instant action, the Park Board’s decision to determine the appellants’ vacation accrual and placement on the salary schedule (the appellants’ sole claim in this action)
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without reference to the appellants’ tenure at the MPD was reasonable given the appellants’ retired status. The appellants do not articulate what process, if any, was denied them at the time the Park Board made its detеrmination.
Parrish v. Mallinger,
III. CONCLUSION
Because the appellants are not similarly situated to those with whom they compare themselves, the Park Board’s аctions were reasonable, and the Park Board did not deny the appellants any process, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Michael J. Davis, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. Our analysis also encompasses the stricter rational basis standard under the Equal Protection Clause of the Minnesota Constitution.
See State v. Russell,
. The inquiries under the United States Constitution and the Minnesota Constitution for purposes of due process are identical and both are encompassed by this analysis.
McCollum v. State,
. Throughout their brief, the appellants often claim the "defendant” did certain acts when, in fact, they mean the City of Minneapolis, the MPD specifically, or the Park Board — the only defendant here. Clearly however, the appеllants acknowledge the important difference by setting forth that "[t]he City, through its MPD, created the status of plaintiffs as retirees, and then the City, through defendant, used that status as a basis to pay those employees less than other employees.”
. “Plaintiffs herein have not been given credit by the defendant for service with the Police Department for purposes of vacation accrual and pay, notwithstanding the language [contained in Section 7.7(b) of the collective bargaining agreement].” J.A. at 21 (Compl. at ¶ 5).
