We transferred these cases from the Appeals Court to determine whether, under G. L. c. 32, § 4 (1) (p), retired
Statutory provisions and background. A detailed overview of the statutory provisions, administrative practice, and case law is in order.
Members are allowed, under certain conditions, to purchase credits for their employment in nonpublic schools under G. L. c. 32, § 4 (1) (p), inserted by St. 1973, c. 760, which governs purchases of creditable service for work performed after 1973.
General Laws c. 32, § 4 (1) (p), states, in pertinent part:
“Any member of a contributory retirement system who is engaged in a teaching position and holds a certificate issued by the department of education . . . and who was previously engaged in teaching pupils in any non-public school in the commonwealth, if the tuition of all such pupils taught was financed in part or in full by the commonwealth may . . . establish such service as creditable service . . . with the maximum credit for service in such non-public schools not to exceed ten years; provided, that no credit shall be allowed and no payment shall be accepted for any service for which the member shall be entitled to receive a retirement allowance, annuity or pension from any other source” (emphasis added).
In enacting this provision, the Legislature overrode the veto of Governor Francis W. Sargent, who stated that he was concerned about the costs to taxpayers.
In October, 1974, the board voted to request an opinion from the Attorney General concerning the exact issue we are asked to decide: whether Social Security benefits qualified as “a retirement allowance, annuity or pension from any other source” under the statute. The Attorney General responded that the provision appeared to be an effort on the part of the Legislature to “fill a gap in the pension laws for public service rendered but not otherwise credited [and was] aimed at precluding any unjust double credit.” He stated that the provision was limited to service in nonpublic schools where tuition is financed in full or part by the Commonwealth. He stated that the terms “retirement allowance,” “pension,” and “annuity” are defined in G. L. c. 32, § 1, with reference to the State system, not the Federal system.
For almost thirty years, from 1975 until 2004, the board interpreted § 4 (1) (p) to permit eligible members to purchase credit without regard to their eligibility for Social Security benefits. CRAB also abided by this interpretation of the statute.
“Any member in service ... of the teachers’ retirement system . . . and who was previously engaged in teaching pupils or as an administrator in a nonpublic school prior to January [1, 1973,] may . . . pay into the annuity savings fund . . . with a maximum credit for service in nonpublic schools not to exceed ten years; provided that no credit shall be allowed and no payment shall be accepted for any service on account of which the member shall be entitled to receive a retirement allowance or other similar payment from the nonpublic school system, the federal government or any other source . . .” (emphasis added).
G. L. c. 32, § 3 (4A), as appearing in St. 1994, c. 60, § 63.
It appears that this bill was advocated by members who were former nuns who had previously taught in private religious schools, and who were excluded from participating in the Social Security system prior to 1973. The limiting language “no credit shall be allowed and no payment shall be accepted for any service on account of which the member shall be entitled to receive a retirement allowance or other similar payment from the nonpublic school system, the federal government or any other source” was suggested by Governor William F. Weld, who was concerned that, without such language, the provisions could be interpreted to include not only the target group of teachers (i.e., those not covered by Social Security before 1973), but also any member whose nonpublic school did not have a pension program before 1973.
3. In 1999 and 2000, the Appeals Court interpreted certain
4. In 2004, a member whose material circumstances mirror those of these plaintiffs requested that she be allowed to purchase credit. The board denied her request and apparently argued before DALA that Social Security benefits fell under the exclusion in § 4 (1) (p), because of Flaherty and Dube. The administrative magistrate agreed, concluding that the two provisions had to be construed as a harmonious whole. Duprey-Gutierrez vs. Teachers’ Retirement Bd., CRAB Docket No. CR-04-0195 (June 4, 2004).
CRAB brought the Sigman decision to the attention of the judge below. Although his subsequent written memorandum and order did not refer to it, the judge did reject the reasoning of the 1975 Attorney General’s opinion on which CRAB relied. Instead, the judge stated that, under Dube, §§ 3 (4A) and 4 (1) (p) needed to be construed in harmony and, therefore, “an exclusion of Social Security beneficiaries from the benefits bestowed by § 3 (4A) would necessitate a similar bar under § 4 (1) (p).” He further stated that because the plain language of the statutes states that a retirement allowance, pension, or annuity from “any other source” is excluded from creditable service, and because “Social Security beneficiaries are, inherently, retirement beneficiaries,” the plaintiffs were “barred from purchasing creditable service.”
Discussion. The plaintiffs and CRAB argue that the Flaherty and Dube cases do not require the result the board and the judge reached. We agree.
In Flaherty, the court’s conclusion that the two provisions should be read together was in the context of identical and
Because the board’s reliance on Flaherty and Dube was error, the issue is whether, as the board now argues, its almost thirty-year interpretation of § 4 (1) (p) was erroneous.
“Where an agency determination involves a question of law, it is subject to de novo judicial review.” Flemings v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 431 Mass. 374, 375 (2000). The duty of statutory interpretation is for the courts, but where an agency’s determination is reasonable, a court does not substitute its own judgment. Id., quoting Dowling v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, 425 Mass. 523, 525 (1997). In the particular circumstances of these cases, although we give no deference to CRAB, we are mindful that if the language of a statute is ambiguous, “contemporary administrative construction, especially if long continued, is of significance.” Wellington v. Commissioner of Corps. & Taxation, 359 Mass. 448, 452 (1971), quoting Assessors of Holyoke v. State Tax Comm’n, 355 Mass. 223, 243-244 (1969). “An administrative interpretation developed during, or shortly before, the litigation in question is entitled to less weight than that of a long-standing . . . interpretation.” Mullally v. Waste Mgt. of Mass., Inc., 452 Mass. 526, 533 n.13 (2008), quoting 1A N.J. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 31.6, at 730 (6th ed. rev. 2002).
The board argues that the “plain language” of the two provisions shows that they are identical in scope; that the use of the word “any” in the phrase “any other source” necessarily means
First, we do not agree with the board that the language in § 4 (1) (p) is unambiguous. If it were as clear as the board now claims, the board would not have had the need to ask the Attorney General for clarification as to whether its terms incorporated Social Security benefits.
Second, although the word “any” could mean that the Legislature intended a broad interpretation of the phrase “any other source,” in this context, such an intent is not clear. In § 4 (1) (p), members are barred from purchasing credit if they are “entitled to receive a retirement allowance, annuity or pension from any other source.” In § 3 (4A), members are barred from purchasing credit if such members are “entitled to receive a retirement allowance or other similar payment from the nonpublic school system, the federal government or any other source.” Relying on what the judge referred to as a common understanding of Social Security, the board argues that the difference in language is not significant because Social Security is a “retirement allowance . . . from any other source” under § 4 (1) (p). This argument has superficial appeal, but does not explain why, if the “any other source” language so clearly incorporated Social Security benefits, the Legislature would have added different words, including a specific reference to the “federal government,” when it enacted § 3 (4A). Moreover, the terms “retirement allowance,” “annuity,” and “pension” are defined in G. L. c. 32, §§ 1-28, and do not reference Federal statutes. See note 7, supra. In addition, even assuming that the board is correct that the common understanding is that Social Security is a retirement benefit, this does not answer the two important questions here: whether it was commonly understood to be so in 1973,
Moreover, G. L. c. 32, § 3 (4), inserted by St. 1945, c. 658, § 1, a provision enacted before § 4 (1) ip), which is referenced in the Attorney General’s opinion, allows a member who taught in out-of-State schools to purchase credit unless the member is “entitled to receive a retirement allowance from any other state.” At oral argument, counsel for the board stated that, under the language of § 3 (4), such a member could purchase credit even if they could receive Social Security benefits. Viewing § 4 (1) (p) in light of this provision, and taking into consideration that satisfying the law requiring public schools to educate students with special needs often comes through the placement of the students in private institutions, we conclude that it does not seem likely that the Legislature would have permitted members who taught out-of-State to purchase credit without regard to whether they
Our conclusion that the Legislature intended to impose different limits on the purchase of credit under § 3 (4A) and § 4 (1) (p) also explains the reasons the Legislature chose not to amend § 4 (1) (p) when it enacted § 3 (4A). Suliveres v. Commonwealth, 449 Mass. 112, 116-117 (2007) (courts are to assume that legislators are aware of existing law, and “scholarship and attitudes” pertaining to subject of statute). Therefore, although we do not disagree with the statement in Flaherty, supra at 134, that the two provisions should be read in harmony, see Board of Educ. v. Assessor of Worcester, 368 Mass. 511, 513-514 (1975), we conclude that interpreting the provisions to impose different limits on members does not compel the conclusion that the interpretation is not harmonious.
For these reasons, we conclude that Social Security benefits
Conclusion. The judgments of the Superior Court affirming GRAB’S denial of the plaintiffs’ requests to purchase service credit are reversed and the cases are remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
The record indicates that the initial denial letters did not specify the earning of Social Security benefits as the ground for denying the plaintiffs the right to purchase credit. None of the plaintiffs was a classroom teacher, and the letters stated that his or her service was not within the meaning of the statute. The only issue before this court is whether Social Security benefits fall under the exclusion of G. L. c. 32, § 4 (1) (p). A joint motion to stay all other proceedings in the consolidated cases was allowed by the Superior Court judge.
A special assistant Attorney General was appointed to represent the board in this appeal.
General Laws c. 32, § 3 (4A), inserted by St. 1992, c. 333, which we discuss infra, governs the purchase of credit by certain nonpublic school teachers for work performed before 1973.
In a letter, the executive secretary of the State Board of Retirement urged the Governor not to support the bill, arguing that the term “nonpublic schools” had “far reaching effects” and would burden “states, cities, towns, and county systems.” He also stated that Social Security payments were a possible loophole because they were “possibly” insurance, and not a retirement benefit.
“Retirement allowance” is defined as “the sum of the amount of the annuity and the amount of the pension provided for in [§§ 1-28] inclusive.” G. L. c. 32, § 1. “Annuity” is defined as “payments dependent upon the continuance of life of any member and derived from his accumulated regular deductions [and additional deductions] or from both.” Id. “Pension” is defined as “payments dependent upon the continuance of life of any member or beneficiary and derived from contributions made by the appropriate governmental unit.” Id.
In 1992, a memorandum to Governor Weld from his legal counsel pointed out that the bill that would become § 3 (4A) was advanced by former nuns, estimated to number between one hundred to 200 members, ineligible for Social Security benefits.
There is nothing in the record indicating whether, in the years between the Appeals Court’s decisions and this 2004 decision, the board was faced with any requests to purchase credit in the circumstances presented here and, if so, whether it continued to allow the purchase of credit without regard to a teacher’s eligibility for Social Security benefits.
The plaintiffs, citing G. L. c. 30A, §§ 2-3, argue that the board did not follow any rule making or “Board process” when it changed its interpretation of § 4 (1) (p), nor did it ask the opinion of the Attorney General or notify its members. The board counters that it did not change its policy but responded to case law. Citing Commissioner of Revenue v. BayBank Middlesex, 421 Mass. 736, 741 (1996), the board further argues that, even if it did change policy, it is free to change policy if it has reasonable grounds for doing so. We need not resolve this issue because of our conclusion that the original interpretation of the statute was not erroneous.
In 1975, the Attorney General did not view it as a retirement allowance, stating, “[T]he Social Security System sounds in the tenor of ‘Old Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance Benefits’ (see 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 401 et seq.), yet no reference is made in [St. 1973,] c. 760 to ‘insurance benefits’ or directly
The board argues that the Attorney General’s statement that to exclude those who were eligible to receive Social Security benefits would make the law a nullity “rests on an assumption that never came to pass.” We do not see how the board is able to conclude that it never came to pass given that, for almost thirty years, the broader interpretation was applied.
In addition, the board argues that there were bills introduced in the Legislature,
The board also contends that the fact that the Legislature chose not to rewrite the relevant provision in § 4 (1) (p) when it amended the statute in 2009 “is at least some indication that it does not feel an urgent need for change in response to [the board’s] interpretation of nonpublic school service purchase rights.” Given the support for our analysis of the two provisions, we are not persuaded by this argument.
