This suit involves the claims of the Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers (“the Brotherhood”) against the state of Rhode Island, its governor, and other officials (collectively, “Rhode Island”). Because the case was disposed of on a motion to dismiss, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), we accept for purposes of review the factual allegations (but not necessarily the characterizations) of the complaint,
Rogan v. Menino,
In 1976 the Rhode Island General Assembly enacted an incentive pay statute giving extra pay to correctional officers who acquired specified educational credits, provided that the officers remained employed by the Department of Corrections for designated periods (or paid back some of the extra pay if they left early). 1976 R.I. Pub. Laws. ch. 290, § 2 (codified at R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 42-56.1-1 to -10 (1976)). The extra pay was fixed as a specified percentage of the officer’s base salary, depending upon the number of educational credits obtained. R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56.1-2 (1976).
*45 Over the years after 1976 the state also entered into collective bargaining agreements with the correctional officers containing terms that mirrored the statute’s provisions on incentive pay. However, the latest collective bargaining agreement containing such incentive pay provisions expired on June 30, 1996. The union alleges that the state required union members to sign individual contracts confirming the state’s obligation to provide incentive pay under the terms of the statute; individual forms relating to incentive pay were signed, but whether they were contracts and if so what obligations they imposed and on whom remains to be discussed.
The Rhode Island legislature has several times enacted generous pay or pension statutes and later reconsidered them. 1 In 1996, the Rhode Island General Assembly amended the 1976 incentive pay statute, effective as of July 1, 1996, to provide that after that date incentive pay would no longer be a percentage of base salary but would be a specified flat sum, 1996 R.I. Pub. Laws. ch. 100, § 1 (codified at R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 42-56.1-2 (1997)). According to the union this generally results in lower incentive pay- — hardly a surprise since base salaries tend to rise over time.
On October 2, 2003, the Brotherhood brought suit, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1988 (2000), against Rhode Island, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to maintain the percentage formula and also seeking back payments. The claims were based on alleged violations of the contract clauses of the federal and Rhode Island constitutions, U.S. Const, art. I, § 10, cl. 1; R.I. Const, art. I, § 2; denial of substantive due process, U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1; R.I. Const, art. I, § 2; taking of property without just compensation (apparently under U.S. Const. Amend. V); breach of contract; promissory estoppel; and unjust enrichment/quantum meruit.
Thereafter, exercising supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims, 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a) (2000), the district court dismissed all of the claims on the merits, save that it dismissed the claims based on the alleged individual contracts for lack of standing.
R.I. Bhd. of Corr. Officers v. Rhode Island,
The contract clause of the federal constitution limits the ability of a state to abrogate rights created by pre-existing contracts, including contractual rights against the state created by legislation.
E.g., Parella v. Ret. Bd. of Rhode Island Employees’ Ret. Sys.,
The 1976 statute merely provides that the incentive pay specified will be afforded if the educational qualifications are met by the employee. It does not say that the provisions are a contractual commitment by the state or will never be changed, nor is there language authorizing the state to enter into contracts guaranteeing such benefits forever.
See Parella,
The Brotherhood’s main statutory-language argument to the contrary is that the 1976 provisions make references to writings in two instances: first, the eligibility provision requires that the employee “agree in writing to remain” in the Department of Corrections for a specified period, R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56.1-2 (1976); second, the payment provision directs an administrator to supply the “agreement form” containing the time constraints for completing educational programs, R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56.1-6 (1976). The provisions explain at least one of the forms relied on by the union as independent contracts.
Whatever the status and meaning of these two documents (an issue to which we will return), the two references to writings in the statute do not show that the statutory provisions for incentive pay were themselves unmistakably intended to create (or authorize creation of) private contractual rights against the state. The statute requires a document from the employee acknowledging the statutory commitment of the employee to remain or repay a portion of past incentive pay. The only obligations imposed on the state are to follow the statute — which has now been amended.
It would have been child’s play for the Rhode Island legislature to say explicitly in 1976 that educational credits once earned created private rights or that incentive pay could never be differently calculated for existing employees who had qualified for incentive pay. True, civil service jobs commonly create expectations that holders will likely enjoy no reductions in pay (but instead get periodic increases); but expectations alone are not contracts— contracts are written to protect expectations. Indeed, legislation constantly creates expectations that are disappointed by later modifications, repeal or lack of funding.
Of course, the employees in this ease assert not only expectations but reliance. In private ordering
(e.g.,
a corporate pension plan), courts commonly overlook the lack of an explicit promise where the employee performs in accordance with a promulgated plan and the employer then reduces the benefits.
Nat’l Educ. Ass’n-
*47
R.I. ex rel. Scigulinsky v. Ret. Bd. of R.I. Employees’ Ret. Sys.,
United States v. Winstar Corp.,
Thus,
Winstar
did not alter the traditional presumption that state legislation does not ordinarily create private contractual rights. Indeed,
since
the
Winstar
decision, this court has regularly followed that presumption.
E.g., R.I. Laborers’ Dist. Council v. Rhode Island,
As an alternative basis for its contract clause claim, the union relies on the collective bargaining agreements that mirrored the percentage pay terms of the 1976 statute. The last such agreement embodying those terms expired on June 30, 1996, one day before the statute converting incentive pay to flat stipends became effective. The union does not say that percentage based payments required before that date were not paid; its position is that under state labor law the last collective bargaining agreement previously in force is continued in force after June 30, 1996, until a new one is negotiated.
Assuming that state labor law maintains the status quo, the obligation would arise under state labor law and not by contractual obligation protected against impairment by the constitutional contract clause doctrine.
Providence Teachers Union v. Providence Sch. Bd.,
*48 Finally, as a basis for a contract clause claim, the Brotherhood points to the forms signed by individual employees. These forms, required by the 1976 statute as a condition of receiving incentive pay, appear in at least two versions: one is labeled “notice” and the other “acknowledgment” and both do no more than say that the employee receiving incentive pay understands that the payment requires that he or she continue to work for the Department of Corrections for a specified period or return part of the extra compensation. 6
The district court held that under Rhode Island law the Brotherhood had no authority to sue to enforce
individual
contracts made by its members.
R.I. Bhd. of Corr. Officers,
The district court’s main concern was that any determination as to amounts owed to individual employees as back pay since July 1996 would require individual calculations and the participation of those members in the lawsuit. Yet in this case the union sought for its members a declaration under the contract clause that percentage pay has to be provided in the future for members who had secured their educational credits. Surely such a declaration would benefit members even if they had to file separate lawsuits to determine individual back pay.
Int'l Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers v. Brock,
[T]hough the unique facts of each UAW member’s claim will have to be considered by the proper state authorities before any member will be able to receive the benefits allegedly due him, the UAW can litigate this case without the participation of those individual claimants and still ensure that “the remedy, if granted, will inure to the benefit of those members of the association actually injured.”
Id.
at 288,
It follows that federal standing rules permit the union to seek a declaration on behalf of its members as to whether the contract clause protects continuing rights to percentage pay under the alleged individual contracts. And embedded in *49 this federal claim is the question whether the forms do constitute contracts committing the state to continue to pay percentage-based compensation to those who earned their educational credits before the statute was amended. We thus turn to the contract question not reached by the district court.
Whether or not the forms constitute contracts — and neither is expressly a contract — they do not purport to create any obligations on the part of the state. Rather, the signing employee merely acknowledges that by accepting incentive pay, he or she “understands” that the educational program must be completed to qualify and that if the employee leaves in less than four years, a portion of the payment must be returned as provided in the 1976 statute. The time period for completing the educational requirements and the duration of required employment for each level of incentive compensation are specified in the two forms. Not a single phrase commits the state to do anything.
The purpose of the forms is patent. Although the employees’ obligations are spelled out in the statute, a prudent legislature might be concerned that employees receiving incentive pay who did not complete their educational program, or resigned early from employment, would balk at paying back anything. Were the state ever to sue to recapture benefits as provided by the statute, the signed forms would block the employee from denying that he or she understood from the outset the conditions imposed on the receipt of such pay.
Our discussion thus far also disposes of three more of the claims advanced in the complaint. Because the union has not established a violation of any contractual rights, there is no cognizable claim for taking of property without just compensation.
Parella,
The complaint’s two remaining claims invoke the doctrines of promissory estop-pel and quantum meruit/unjust enrichment, but the Brotherhood’s brief on appeal addresses these claims in only three sentences, effectively abandoning them.
Mass. Sch. of Law at Andover, Inc. v. Am. Bar Ass’n,
We have been brief in our treatment because the central contract clause claim has been turned back several times in past cases coming out of Rhode Island. Nor is the result remarkable: save in the area of pensions — and not always there — governments rarely guarantee that compensation will never be changed. If the Rhode Island legislature wants to promise never to reduce pay for existing workers, it will have to say so unmistakably — and accept openly the responsibility for its decision.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
See generally Parella v. Ret. Bd. of R.I. Employees’ Ret. Sys., 173
F.3d 46 (1st Cir.1999);
National Educ. Association-R.I. ex rel. Scigulinsky v. Ret. Bd. of R.I. Employees’ Ret. Sys.,
. This conclusion also disposes of the counterpart claim under the Rhode Island Constitution, because Rhode Island case law construes its contract clause consistently with the federal clause,
Retired Adjunct Professors,
. Although a litigant seeking to overcome the hurdle of the unmistakability doctrine may rely on "not only the words used [in the statute] but also apparent purpose, context, and any pertinent evidence of actual intent, including legislative history,”
R.I. Laborers' Dist. Council,
. Justice Souter’s opinion describes the history of the unmistakability doctrine as well-settled law.
Winstar Corp.,
. Although the union's complaint does not invoke any claims under state labor laws, the 1996 statute, expressly changing the basis for computing incentive pay, would arguably modify any state labor law doctrine that might otherwise independently perpetuate the old formula.
. Two versions of the documents exist, and are entitled, respectively, "Correctional Officer’s Education Incentive Pay Notification of Enrollment" and "Acknowledgment of the Provisions of Title 42 Chapter 56.1-1 through 56.1-10 of the General Laws of Rhode Island and in particular Chapter 42-56.1-2.”
