RETIREMENT BOARD OF STONEHAM vs. CONTRIBUTORY RETIREMENT APPEAL BOARD & another.¹
Middlesex. SJC-12078
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
December 22, 2016
476 Mass. 130 (2016)
Present: GANTS, C.J., BOTSFORD, LENK, HINES, GAZIANO, LOWY, & BUDD, JJ.
Retirement Board of Stoneham v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board. Middlesex. October 5, 2016. - December 22, 2016.
A town‘s retirement board lacked discretion to terminate a part-time school department employee‘s membership in the town‘s retirement system when the employee ceased to satisfy the board‘s eligibility requirements after the board had granted her membership, where the jurisdiction granted to the board in
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on February 6, 2014.
The case was heard by Robert L. Ullmann, J., on motions for judgment on the pleadings.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Douglas S. Martland, Assistant Attorney General, for Contributory Retirement Appeal Board.
Thomas F. Gibson for Christine DeFelice.
Michael Sacco for the plaintiff.
LOWY, J. This case requires us to answer two questions: (1) whether a municipal retirement board possesses absolute discretion to terminate a part-time employee‘s membership in a retirement system to which that board hаs granted the employee membership; and (2) even if such a board does not have the power to terminate a part-time employee‘s membership, whether a “separation
Background. Christine DeFelice began working on a part-time bаsis for the Stoneham school department (department) in November, 2000. In April, 2001, she took on a second part-time job with the department to fill a temporary vacancy, increasing her weekly workload from nineteen and one-half hours per week to over thirty hours per week for the ensuing nine weeks. At the end of the nine-week period, DeFelice continued to work for the department on a part-time basis until at least June, 2009, only occasionally working mоre than nineteen and one-half hours per week.2
In 2009, DeFelice sought retroactive membership in the Stoneham retirement system as an employee of the department, based on the nine-week period in 2001 during which she worked over thirty hours per week. Under the membership eligibility criteria for part-time employees established by the Stoneham retirement board (board) that were in effect during 2001, Stoneham employees were eligible for membership in the retiremеnt system if they were scheduled to work more than thirty hours per week for a period of more than seven days.3 Initially, the board denied DeFelice‘s membership application, because her increase in hours was temporary. In August, 2010, the board reconsidered its position and granted DeFelice retroactive membership in the Stoneham retirement system for the nine-week period in the spring of 2001, but denied her membership for the subsequent time during which she remained a pаrt-time employee of the department. The board concluded that DeFelice was not eligible following the nine-week period because her weekly hours did not continue to satisfy the criteria.
DeFelice appealed from the board‘s determination, seeking mem-
Statutory scheme. Massachusetts law permits a municipality to establish a contributory retiremеnt system for the municipality‘s employees. See
General Laws c. 32, § 3 (2), sets forth various criteria that establish “eligibility” for membership in a retirement system. For example, individuals who are “employees,” and therefore “regularly employed,”5 are generally eligible for membership.
Satisfying the eligibility criteria for membership does not automatically confer membership upon an employee. See
Once an eligible employee is included in a city or town‘s retirement system, that employee becomes a “member” of the system.
Discussion. The first question before the court is whether the board‘s authority under
1. Interpretation of eligibility. The first question is whether the board possessed discretion to terminate DeFelice‘s membership when she ceased to satisfy the board‘s eligibility requirements,
CRAB argues that the board‘s jurisdiction over eligibility means only jurisdiction to set initial eligibility criteria. The board‘s authority, CRAB contends, does not include the ability to revoke the membership of employees once granted, because
The language of the statute is the starting point for all questions of statutory interpretation. Rotondi, 463 Mass. at 648, quoting Hoffman v. Howmedica, Inc., 373 Mass. 32, 37 (1977). Thе effect given to statutory language should be consistent with its plain language. See id., citing Sullivan v. Brookline, 435 Mass. 353, 360 (2001). Courts must look to the statutory scheme as a whole. See Commonwealth v. Raposo, 453 Mass. 739, 745 (2009).
We accept CRAB‘s interpretation, because (1) it is consistent with the statute‘s plain language, (2) it is consistent with use of “eligibility” as applied to full-time employees in the same subsection of
First, the plain language of the statute supports CRAB‘s interpretation. Section 3 (1) (a) (i) specifies the circumstances in which a member‘s status as a “member in service” may be terminated. The statute exрlicitly defines “member” as “any employee included in” the applicable retirement system.
Second, limiting the board‘s power tо the task of establishing only the initial eligibility criteria of non-full-time employees avoids interpreting the term “eligibility” inconsistently within
If eligibility means an individual‘s initial qualification, the provisions of
The board possesses full jurisdiction to determine when non-full-time employees become eligible for membership in the Stoneham retirement system. See
Lexington Educ. Ass‘n v. Lexington, 15 Mass. App. Ct. 749, 752 (1983), is an example of the limitations on a municipality‘s otherwise broad discretion in light of an explicit statutory requirement. In that case, the statute at issue required municipalities participating in an applicable health insurance program to “purchase certain group insurance ‘covering employees,‘” and defined “employee” to include any person working at least twenty hours per week for a municipality. Id. at 750-751, citing
The Manning decision, upon which the board relies for support,
CRAB also points out thаt permitting municipal retirement boards unilaterally to terminate a non-full-time employee‘s membership in a retirement system would subject such employees to a high degree of uncertainty. Indeed, if the board possessed the breadth of discretion it claims, non-full-time employees could lose their membership status whether they decreased their hours voluntarily or involuntarily, or whenever the board alters the criteria to exclude some non-full-time employees whо had previously been granted membership. We do not believe that the Legislature intended to subject non-full-time employees to this level of unpredictability. See
Municipal retirement systems may well place systemic strain on municipal budgets. The existing legislative framework provides a means for municipalities to address budget issues prospectively by controlling when and how non-full-time employees may, if at all, become members of the retirement systems. Broader public pоlicy decisions concerning municipal pensions rest with the Legislature.
2. Interpretation of separation from service. The board argues that, even if it does not have the authority to revoke a non-full-time employee‘s membership once granted, DeFelice was “removed” when she stopped working her second job at the end of
Section 3 (1) (a) (i) provides that a member‘s status as a “member in service” continues until the member‘s “prior separation from the service becomes effective by reason of,” among other things, “removal or discharge.” The operative event is the separation from service. Id. A “removal or discharge” in and of itself does not terminate an individuаl‘s member in service status. See id.
DeFelice remained in service even after she stopped working her second job after the 2000-2001 school year. “Service” is generally defined, with no distinction between full-time and non-full-time employees, as “service as an employee in any governmental unit for which regular compensation is paid.”
The board‘s reliance on Retirement Bd. of Attleboro v. School Comm. of Attleboro, 417 Mass. 24 (1994), is misplaced. That case involved another provision of
Conclusion. The board established a low threshold for membership in its retirement system and decided DeFelice satisfied that threshold when it granted her membership. DeFеlice continued working for the department after she received membership. Therefore, she became a “member in service” and her status as such “shall continue” until her death or a separation from service pursuant to one of the statutorily specified circumstances in
We conclude that CRAB reasonably interpreted
So ordered.
