1 Conn. App. 454 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
The facts of this appeal1 are not in dispute. The plaintiff began employment with the University of Connecticut School of Law in September, 1967. Prior to that date, he had been employed full time with the departments of education of two other states. The plaintiff sought and was denied retirement credit under the State Employees Retirement Act; General Statutes
On appeal, the issues raised by the plaintiff are: (1) whether the court erred in admitting into evidence two documents relevant to the issue of the plaintiff's actual notice of the time limitations of General Statutes
The plaintiff claims error in the trial court's finding that an inquiry about the purchase of retirement credits for his out-of-state teaching was made in March, 1968, and in its finding that the plaintiff had received timely notice of his ability to purchase the credits in June, 1968. The findings were based, in part, upon the introduction into evidence of a memorandum of March, 1968, from the office manager and registrar at the law school to the university personnel assistant. The memorandum stated that the plaintiff was interested in receiving information concerning "buying-in retirement" and that he had taught at other schools and believed he could buy retirement benefits for the years *457
spent teaching elsewhere. It concluded by asking the personnel director to send such information to the plaintiff. The author of the memorandum testified that someone had asked her to write it, that she did not know Who had asked, that it was her job to write such memoranda involving retirement benefits, that normally such a memorandum would be written upon an inquiry by the dean or by a member of the faculty of the law school, and that she had personally typed the particular memorandum. Another witness responsible for maintaining personnel records testified that the original document was kept in her office in the plaintiff's personnel file folder. The defendant claimed it to be admissible under General Statutes
The trial court is given discretion under General Statutes
The entrant in the present case testified that a faculty member or the dean must have requested that she obtain the information, and also testified to the other prerequisites of General Statutes
The lack of personal knowledge of the entrant as to the particular source of the information affects the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility. Note, "Revised Business Entry Statutes: Theory and Practice," 48 Colum. L. Rev. 920, 926 (1948). Furthermore, General Statutes
At the very least, the writing indicates that the author of the memorandum believed that the plaintiff sought information about his "buying-in retirement" credits, even if the writing did not conclusively prove that it was the plaintiff who initiated the memorandum. See United States v. Burruss,
The plaintiff also claims error in the introduction into evidence of a University of Connecticut office memorandum dated June 3, 1968, and addressed to the plaintiff. It is from "personnel services" and its subject is the "purchase of prior teaching service under Public *460
Shuchman v. State Employees Retirement Commission Act 868." The author testified that he prepared it in the course of business and that it was the regular course of business as personnel assistant to make such writings and advise employees of the university as to "buy-ins" and retirement benefits. The plaintiff's claims of error are that the document was not prepared in the ordinary course of business and was not authenticated, apparently because it was not signed, was described as a "form letter" and the author could not remember if he mailed it. None of these claims for authentication is a requirement for introduction into evidence as a business entry. The memorandum met the criteria for introduction into evidence and the trial court did not err in such introduction.
The trial court had the benefit of observing the plaintiff and the witnesses and of listening to their testimony. In addition, it had as evidence all of the exhibits introduced by both parties, including fifteen exhibits which were not the subject of any objection. The court had facts from which it could conclude that the plaintiff had actual notice of the provision of General Statutes
Many cases are illustrative of the principle that statutes which differentiate among categories of persons are constitutionally valid so long as such classifications for differing treatment are relevant to the achievement of a legitimate state purpose and do not involve a fundamental right or an inherently suspect classification such as race, sex, or alienage. New York Transit Authority v. Beazer,
Teachers are not a suspect classification and statutes making distinctions among them for purposes of retirement benefits do not deny equal protection of the law as long as the disparate treatment does not lead to *462
the conclusion that the legislature acted irrationally. Morton v. State Teachers Retirement Board,
The statutory differentiation of General Statutes
The purpose of allowing purchase of retirement credits for in-state service without any time limitation is to reward continued service in the state; the purpose of providing for the purchase of retirement credit for out-of-state service is to attract qualified teachers to begin in-state service. An early determination as to the number of those persons who wish to purchase retirement credit for out-of-state teaching service is desirable. The legislature determined by its passage of General Statutes
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.