PUBLIC EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT ADMINISTRATION COMMISSION vs. EDWARD A. BETTENCOURT.
SJC-11910
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
April 6, 2016
474 Mass. 60 (2016)
Suffolk. October 6, 2015. - April 6, 2016. Present (Sitting at New Bedford): GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.
Public Employee Retirement Administration Commission. Retirement. Public Employment, Retirement benefits, Forfeiture of retirement benefits. Constitutional Law, Excessive fines clause.
This court concluded that the mandatory forfeiture by a public employee of retirement and health insurance benefits to which the employee would be entitled, upon conviction of a crime involving violation of laws applicable to the employee‘s office or position, as required by
This court concluded that the mandated total forfeiture of a public employee‘s retirement and health insurance benefits pursuant to
Having held that the mandated total forfeiture by a public employee of retirement and health insurance benefits upon conviction of a crime involving violation of laws applicable to the employee‘s office or position, as required by
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on December 19, 2012.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Paul T. Hynes (Michael R. Keefe also present) for the defendant.
Peter Sacks, State Solicitor (Judith A. Corrigan, Special Assistant Attorney General, also present) for the plaintiff.
Ian O. Russell & Patrick N. Bryant for Massachusetts Coalition of Police, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
BOTSFORD, J. The Commonwealth‘s law governing public employee retirement systems and pensions requires that a public employee forfeit the retirement and health insurance benefits (retirement allowance or pension) to which the employee would be entitled upon conviction of a crime “involving violation of the laws applicable to [the employee‘s] office or position.”
Background.3 Edward A. Bettencourt was first appointed as a police officer in the city of Peabody in October, 1980, and became a member of the Peabody retirement system on November 7, 1982.4 Bettencourt was promoted to the rank of sergeant around 1990, and promoted again to serve as a lieutenant in 2003. In the early morning hours of December 25, 2004, Bettencourt was on duty as a watch commander, and he knowingly accessed, through the Internet and without permission, the Massachusetts human resources division (HRD) computer system, and specifically the HRD Internet site containing individual applicant record infor-
On October 26, 2006, Bettencourt was indicted for unauthorized access to a computer system, in violation of
Bettencourt sought certiorari review of PERAC‘s decision in the Peabody Division of the District Court Department, arguing that his convictions did not trigger the forfeiture mandated by
On remand, the District Court judge concluded that forfeiture of a retirement allowance pursuant to
Discussion.
”Forfeiture of pension upon misconduct. - In no event shall any member [of a retirement system] after final conviction of a criminal offense involving violation of the lаws applicable to his office or position, be entitled to receive a retirement allowance under the provisions of [
G. L. c. 32, §§ 1 through 28 ], inclusive, nor shall any beneficiary be entitled to receive any benefits under such provisions on account of such member. The said member or his beneficiary shall receive, unless otherwise prohibited by law, a return of his accumulated total deductions; provided, however, that the
rate of regular interest for the purpose of calculating accumulated total deductions shall be zero.”
At this juncture, Bettencourt does not challenge the Appeals Court‘s conclusion that his convictions under
1. Is the forfeiture required by
To decide whether the forfeiture of Bettencourt‘s pension qualifies as a fine under the Supreme Court‘s definition, the first question to be answered is whether the forfeiture operates to “extract payments” from him -- that is, requires the transfer of
In response to this first question, Bettencourt contends that the mandatory forfeiture under
We do not share PERAC‘s view. Under the Commonwealth‘s contributory retirement system, the relationship between a member and the system is contractual. See
“‘[c]ontract’ (and related terms such as rights, benefits, protection) should be understood . . . in a special, somewhat relaxed sense. . . . It is not really feasible -- nor would it be desirable -- to fit so complex and dynamic a set of arrangements as a statutory retirement scheme into ordinary contract
law which posits as its model a joining of the wills of mutually assenting individuals to form a specific bargain. . . . When, therefore, the characterization ‘contract’ is used, it is best understood as meaning that the retirement scheme has generated material expectations on the part of employees and those expectations should in substance be respected. Such is the content of ‘contract.’
“. . .
“The contract so ‘envisaged [by
G. L. c. 32, § 25 (5) ,] is under the shelter of the impairment-of-contract clause, or, what amounts to much the same thing, the due process clause of the Federal Constitution and State constitutional provisions cognate to the latter. . . . [A] retirement plan establishing a сontractual relationship[,] . . . whether viewed strictly as contract or as property[,] may be constitutionally guarded against impairment” (emphasis supplied; footnote omitted).
Opinion of the Justices, 364 Mass. 847, 861, 863 (1973).13 See Madden v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 431 Mass. 697, 701 (2000) (under contractual relationship between State retirement system members and State, “[t]here can be no change to the system that deprives members of benefits as long as they have paid the required contributions“).
As Opinion of the Justices and Madden reflect, this court has long held the view that a public employee who is a member of a retirement system holds an interest in retirement benefits that originates in a “contract” and in substance amounts to a property right. See Garney v. Massachusetts Teachers’ Retirement Sys.,
In arguing that Bettencourt had no property interest in his retirement allowance, as stated previously, PERAC posits that an employee‘s interest is always contingent on not being convicted оf an offense “applicable to his office” under
We are not persuaded by the reasoning in these cases. If an employee has a protected contract right and, derivatively, a property interest in retirement benefits, the fact that the benefits may be subject to forfeiture on account of misconduct does not change the fundamental character of the contract right or property interest. Rather, it simply means that the employee will lose his or her right and interest as a result of the misconduct.16
PERAC also argues that no forfeiture occurred here because, through the operation of
To summarize, at the point that Bettencourt, as a Peabody police officer, became a contributing member of the Peabody retirement system with deductions taken from his salary in accordance with governing statutes and rules, he acquired a protected interest in the retirement allowance provided by the retirement system that amounted to a property interest. See Opinion of the Justices, 364 Mass. at 863.17 This is not to say that Bettencourt, or any public employee, may not lose his right to receive his retirement allowanсe as a result of committing a crime connected to his employment. Section 15 (4) expressly requires this result, and Bettencourt raises no challenge to the authority of the Legislature to enact such a statute. But the fact that
b. Punishment requirement. A forfeiture of property only qualifies as a fine under the Eighth Amendment if it constitutes punish-
In MacLean, 432 Mass. at 351, in the context of considering a retired public employee‘s argument that the forfeiture of his retirement allowance violated double jeopardy principles, we stated that “[a]lthough
In Bajakajian, the Court described the characteristics of the currency forfeiture at issue there that indicated it qualified as punishment: “The forfeiture is . . . imposed at the culmination of a criminal proceeding and requires conviction of an underlying felоny, and it cannot be imposed upon an innocent owner.” Id. at 328. Forfeiture pursuant to
2. Was the fine excessive? Bettencourt argues that the mandated forfeiture of his retirement benefits is excessive because the amount of the forfeiture is grossly disproportional to the gravity of his offenses. The District Court judge agreed.18
We review the District Court judge‘s determination of еxces-
The amount of the forfeiture is the first issue to consider. Bettencourt estimated the value of his pension benefits to be approximately $1,487,940 and the value of his health care benefits to be approximately $482,500, or approximately $1.9 million in total. In contrast, PERAC introduced an actuarial estimate stating that the value of Bettencourt‘s pension benefits, independent of the health benefits, was $659,000. Although PERAC disputes Bettencourt‘s calculation of health benefits, PERAC agrees that they confer some value. Accepting for purposes of discussion that PERAC‘s estimate is correct, Bettencourt would face forfeiture of $659,000 at a minimum, plus the value of health insurance benefits.20 Bettencourt accrued his interest in the forfeited benefits over more than twenty-five years of public service.
Turning to the gravity of the underlying offenses that triggered the forfeiture, we are called upon to gauge the degree of Bettencourt‘s culpability and, in that regard, to consider the nature and circumstances of his offenses, whether they were related to any other illegal activities, the aggregate maximum sentence that could have been imposed, and the harm resulting from them. See Maher, 452 Mass. at 523, citing Bajakajian, 524 U.S. at 337-339; MacLean, 432 Mass. at 346. We consider these factors in order.
First, with respect to the nature and circumstances of the
Second, Bettencourt‘s offenses were wholly unrelated to other illegal activities. Bettencourt had no prior criminal record, and there is nothing before us suggesting that he had engaged in any criminal or illegal misconduct besides this one episode of accessing the computer files without authority.
The third factor focuses on the maximum potential penalties for Bettencourt‘s offenses. See Bajakajian, 524 U.S. at 338-339. In this regard, “the maximum punishment authorized by the Legislature is the determinative factor.” Maher, 452 Mass. at 524 n.12. See MacLean, 432 Mass. at 348.22 The maximum punishment authorized by the Legislature for a single offense under
Harm caused by the offense is the fourth factor. PERAC contends that Bettencourt‘s offenses were a breach of the public trust that was “especially serious because it involve[d] a police officer, in command of a police department, breaking the law in the police station, by willfully impersonating fellow police officers while using their personal information to do so.” We recognize that Bettencourt‘s offenses certainly violated the privacy rights of his fellow officers, and -- as will always be the case when a public employee commits a crime by violating a law connected to his or her office or position -- that there was a breach of the public trust. However, no harm to the public fisc was accomplished or threatened here, compare Maher, supra at 524-525, there was no improper or illegal gain involved, compare MacLean, supra at 349-350, and, as the trial judge recognized, the offenses did not warrant concern about protection of the public. PERAC also argues that Bettencourt‘s offenses undermined the integrity of the civil service promotion process because the knowledge of the identities of his main competitors for promotion to captain and their examination scores provided an advantage to him. But, as the District Court judge stated, despite PERAC‘s attempts to speculate about how Bettencourt could have gained from knowledge of the scores, nothing in the record demonstrates that Bettencourt received any personal benefit,
Considering the factors discussed above, we conclude that the complete forfeiture of Bettencourt‘s retirement benefits in excess of $659,000, accrued over a lengthy career as a full-time municipal police officer, was not proportional to the gravity of the underlying offenses of which he was convicted. In sum, the forfeiture violates the excessive fines clause of the Eighth Amendment.
3. If the mandatory forfeiture of a public employee‘s retirement allowance qualifies as an excessive fine, what is the appropriate remedy?26 Although the United States Supreme Court in Bajakajian
We agree with PERAC that, as a general proposition, where a court determines that imposition of a statutorily mandated forfeiture would violate the Eighth Amendment‘s excessive fines clause, it is likely within the court‘s authority to determine a level or amount of forfeiture or fine that would be constitutionally permissible -- whether the statutory forfeiture is criminal (as in the Castello and Sarbello cases) or, as here, civil in nature. However, we decline to attempt such a determination in this case.
This is the first case in which this court has held (rather than assumed) that the forfeiture required by
These tyрes of determinations are ones that fit squarely within the legislative, not the judicial, domain, and we believe that the more prudent approach is to defer to the Legislature for its resolution of such issues in the first instance. See Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of N. New England, 546 U.S. 320, 329 (2006) (where Court determines statute is unconstitutional as applied, its “ability to devise a judicial remedy that does not entail quintessentially legislative work often depends on how clearly [it has] already articulated the background constitutional rules at issue and how easily [it] can articulate the remedy“).
Conclusion. There is no question that the mandatory forfeiture provisions of
The judgment of the Superior Court is vacated, and the case remanded to that court for entry of judgment affirming the judgment of the District Court.
So ordered.
Notes
Article 26 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights contains an excessive fines clause: “No magistrate or court of law, shall demand excessive bail or sureties, impose excessive fines, or inflict cruel or unusual punishments.” However, the parties have not raised a claim under art. 26 and therefore we consider solely the Eighth Amendment in this case.
“The provisions of [
“Where a city charter provides for pensions, it is well settled that the pension rights of the employees are an integral part of the contract of employment and that these rights are vested at the time the employment is accepted. An amendment to the charter which attempts to take away or diminish these vested rights is an unconstitutional impairment of contract. However, this does not preclude reasonable modifications of the pension plan prior to the employees’ retirement [to maintain the financial viability of the plan]. . . .”
