218 Conn. 729 | Conn. | 1991
This administrative appeal, by way of reservation, concerns the continued eligibility of a retired state employee to receive his state pension after his appointment as a per diem Superior Court magistrate. The plaintiff, Ralph G. Murphy, filed a petition for a declaratory ruling with the defendant, the state employees retirement commission (commission), in
The record establishes that the plaintiff began to receive retirement benefits as a member of the state employees retirement system after his retirement as an assistant attorney general on March 1, 1986. He became a Superior Court magistrate
The plaintiff’s continued eligibility for retirement benefits turns on the statutory provisions governing the state employees retirement system. The determinative statutory language is contained in General Statutes § 5-164a (c), which provides that “[n]o member . . . reentering state service shall receive a retirement income during his reemployment . . . except (1) if his services as an employee are rendered for not more than ninety working days in any one calendar year . . . .”
The commission ruled that the plaintiff had reentered state service by accepting appointment as a magistrate. The administrative hearing focused primarily on the question of whether a magistrate was an “employee” for the purposes of § 5-164a (c). On this issue, which the commission considered a mixed question of fact and law, it rejected the plaintiff’s contention that he was an independent contractor and concluded instead that he was an employee. The commission noticed, but did
In the plaintiffs appeal to the Superior Court, the plaintiff challenged not only the administrative determination that his service as a magistrate made him an employee but also the underlying administrative assumption that his judicial employment was “state service” for which a salary is paid. Both of these contentions have been renewed in the appeal in this court. We agree with the plaintiffs second contention, that his appointment was not a “reentry” into state service as that term is statutorily defined in the State Employees Retirement Act; General Statutes §§ 5-152 through 5-192x; and therefore need not consider his first contention. Under the governing statutes, the plaintiff is entitled to continue to receive pension payments because he is not, at the present, in “state service” for the reason that he is not now receiving a “salary.”
Our determination of whether the plaintiff’s employment as a state magistrate constitutes “reentering state service” in § 5-164a (c) must be informed by the definitions for the State Employees Retirement Act that are set out in General Statutes § 5-154. Subsection (m) of § 5-154 defines the term “state service” as “service with the state, either appointive or elective, for which a salary is paid.” (Emphasis added.) Subsection (h) of § 5-154
The plain language of these definitional provisions supports the plaintiff’s continued eligibility to draw his retirement benefits regardless of his service as a magistrate for more than ninety days in any calendar year. The plaintiff’s per diem fees concededly are not paid from a “payroll submitted to the comptroller.” It is also the fact that the plaintiff has not “made retirement contributions on such fees.”
The commission maintains, however, that the plaintiff had the right to elect to make retirement contributions under § 5-164a (a)
To the reserved question: “Does the appointment of a retired state employee, receiving benefits from the State Employees Retirement System pursuant to Chap. 66 of the Conn. Gen. Stat., as a Superior Court Magistrate pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 51-193Í constitute reentering state service, as defined in Conn. Gen. Stat. § 5-154(m), so that the retired employee’s retirement income is suspended if the employee works 90 days in any one calendar year pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 5-164a (c)?”, our answer is “No.”
No costs will be taxed to either party.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
General Statutes § 5-162 provides in relevant part: “retirement date and retirement income, (a) The retirement income for which a member is eligible shall be determined from his retirement date, years of state service and base salary, in accordance with the schedule in subsection (c) or (d) below, whichever is appropriate.”
“[General Statutes] Sec. 5-164a. retirement credit of retired EMPLOYEES WHO ARE REEMPLOYED OR ELECTED TO SERVE IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, (a) Any person who has retired from the service of the state under any provision of this chapter and who is reemployed on a permanent basis may elect, upon completion of not less than six months of continuous service of reemployment or other state service, to make contributions to the retirement fund and resume membership in the retirement system. He may also elect to obtain credit for service for the period between the date of such reemployment or other state service and the date of such election, provided he shall contribute to the retirement fund for each month of such service a sum equal to the total contributions he would have paid if he had been a member of the retirement system during such period. Such payment shall be made within six months of the date on which his contributions to the retirement fund are resumed.
“(b) Any person who has retired from the service of the state under any provision of this chapter and who is elected to serve in the general assembly may elect, effective from the first day of his term of office, to make contributions to the retirement fund and resume membership in the retirement system.
“(c) No member reemployed under this section or under section 5-164 or elected to serve in the general assembly or otherwise reentering state service shall receive a retirement income during his reemployment or other state service except (1) if his services as an employee are rendered for not more than ninety working days in any one calendar year, provided that any member reemployed for a period of more than ninety working days in one calendar year shall reimburse the state retirement fund for retirement income payments received during such ninety working days; or (2) if his services are as a member of the general assembly or as a sessional employee of the general assembly during the regular legislative session, his retirement income payments shall not be suspended.
“(d) Upon the subsequent retirement of a member who has made an election under subsection (a), or upon the expiration of the term of office of
General Statutes § 4-183 provides in relevant part: “appeal to superior court, (a) A person who has exhausted all administrative remedies available within the agency and who is aggrieved by a final decision may appeal to the superior court as provided in this section.”
The question reserved by the trial court is: “Does the appointment of a retired state employee, receiving benefits from the State Employees Retirement System pursuant to Chap. 66 of the Conn. Gen. Stat., as a Superior Court Magistrate pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 51-1931 constitute reentering state service, as defined in Conn. Gen. Stat. § 5-154 (m), so that the retired employee’s retirement income is suspended if the employee works 90 days in any one calendar year pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 5-164a (c)?”
“[General Statutes] Sec. 51-1931. appointment of magistrates, submission OF NAMES OF PROBATE JUDGES FOR APPROVAL AS MAGISTRATES. The chief court administrator shall make such orders and rules as he deems necessary to provide for the appointment of magistrates to hear and decide cases pursuant to the provisions of sections 51-193t and 51-193u. Any commissioner of the superior court, admitted to practice in this state for at least five years, who is able and willing to hear such cases designated in accordance with sections 51-193t and 51-193u may be appointed as a magistrate. Any probate judge who is a commissioner of the superior court admit
“[General Statutes] Sec. 5-154. definitions. For the purposes of this chapter . . . (h) ‘Salary’ means (1) any payment, including longevity payments and payments for accrued vacation time under section 5-252, for state service made from a payroll submitted to the comptroller; and (2) the cash value of maintenance furnished by the state; and (3) fees received from the state in whole or in part in lieu of or in addition to item (1) above and established to the satisfaction of the retirement commission, to the extent that the employee has made retirement contributions on such fees; and (4) compensation paid by the United States to state employees who are
See footnote 2, supra, for the text of General Statutes § 5-164a (a). We need not, in this case, decide whether the plaintiffs service as a magistrate qualifies as reemployment “on a permanent basis,” which is a condition to eligibility “to make contributions and resume membership in the retirement system.”