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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
January 2006 Term
_______________
No. 32849
________________
THE WEST VIRGINIA CONSOLIDATED PUBLIC RETIREMENT BOARD,
Defendant Below, Appellant
v.
WARREN CARTER AND GERALD TREMBUSH,
Plaintiffs Below, Appellees,
_______________________________________
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Wood County
Honorable George W. Hill, Judge
Civil Action No. 02-P-190
REVERSED
________________________________________
Submitted: March 28, 2006
Filed: June 14, 2006
|
Anne Werum Lambright
Consolidated Public Retirement Board
and
Susan B. Saxe
Bowles, Rice, McDavid, Graff & Love LLP
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellant
|
Harry M. Rubenstein
Jennifer S. Caradine
Kay, Casto & Chaney PLLC
Morgantown, West Virginia
Counsel for Appellees |
JUSTICE BENJAMIN delivered the Opinion of the Court.
SYLLABUS OF THE COURT
1. On appeal of an administrative order from a circuit court, this Court
is bound by the statutory standards contained in W. Va. Code § 29A-5-4(a) and reviews
questions of law presented
de novo; findings of fact by the administrative officer are
accorded deference unless the reviewing court believes the findings to be clearly wrong.
Syllabus Point 1,
Muscatell v. Cline, 196 W.Va. 588, 474 S.E.2d 518 (1996).
2. The term final average salary, as that phrase is used in W.Va. Code
§§ 5-10-2(15) and (16) (1997) plainly limits the calculation of retirement benefits to an
annual salary paid to a member of Public Employees Retirement System by a participating
public employer for personal services rendered by the member to the participating public
employer and does not permit the inclusion of payments for unused, accrued vacation days
in the calculation of retiree benefits.
3. Employees of the West Virginia Secondary Schools Athletic
Commission are eligible employees for purposes of applicability of the lump sum provisions
of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989) to the calculation of their retirement benefits under the Public
Employee Retirement System.
4. The term, annual leave, as used in W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989),
includes vacation time, and, therefore, the lump sum payment of unused, accrued vacation
time may not be considered in calculating a retiring employee's retirement benefits under the
Public Employee Retirement System.
Benjamin, Justice:
This case is before the Court upon the appeal of the appellant, The West
Virginia Consolidated Public Retirement Board (the Board), (See footnote 1) from the October 8, 2004,
order of the Circuit Court of Wood County, West Virginia, in Civil Action No. P-190.
Therein, the circuit court reversed the decision of the Board dated October 2, 2002, which
had found that Warren Carter, who retired on January 1, 2000, and Gerald Trembush, who
retired on August 1, 2001, as employees of the West Virginia Secondary School Activities
Commission (the WVSSAC) (See footnote 2) , were not legally entitled to have the payments made to them
by their employer for unused, accrued vacation days included in their final average salary
for purposes of calculating their retirement benefits as retiring members of the Public
Employees Retirement System (PERS). The effect of the circuit court's ruling in favor of
Carter and Trembush was to increase their respective retirement benefits.
The Board asks this Court to reverse the circuit court's order of October 8,
2004, because its findings are contrary to West Virginia law concerning the definition of
final average salary, and because West Virginia law does not permit lump sum payments
for unused, accrued vacation days in the calculation of retirement benefits. Carter and
Trembush disagree with the definition urged by the Board for the term, final average
salary, and further contend that the statutory provisions cited by the Board relating to lump
sum payments are not applicable to them. Trembush additionally argues that the Board
should be estopped from acting to his detriment in the calculation of his retirement benefits.
This Court has before it the Board's petition for appeal, all matters of record,
the briefs of the parties, and has heard oral argument of counsel. For the reasons stated
below, we reverse the circuit court's order of October 8, 2004.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Except for the claim by Trembush that he detrimentally relied upon certain
representations of the Board, the facts are not in material dispute. Carter was first employed
by the WVSSAC in July 1985. Trembush was first employed by the WVSSAC in May 1993.
Prior to their respective employments with the WVSSAC, both Carter and Trembush were
employed in the West Virginia public school system for a number of years and were members
of the teacher's retirement system. Upon becoming employed by the WVSSAC, both Carter
and Trembush transferred their respective retirement accounts from the teacher's retirement
system to PERS, and became members thereof.
The WVSSAC permitted its employees to carry over and accumulate certain
unused vacation days from one year to the next. At the time of their respective retirements,
Carter had 43 days and Trembush had 53.75 days of unused, accrued vacation time. On
December 23, 1999, some eight days before his retirement, Carter was paid a gross lump-sum
of $12,808.46, for his unused vacation time. Unlike Carter, Trembush elected to take his
unused vacation pay, totaling $14,471.10, in installments over the three months immediately
preceding his retirement (May, June and July, 2001). Trembush explained that he chose this
method because he wanted to avoid, if he could, the possible application of W. Va. Code §
5-5-3 (1989), which, for some retiring employees at the time of Trembush's (and Carter's)
retirement excluded lump sum payments for unused, accrued annual leave from the
computation of a retiree's final average salary[.]
(See footnote 3) Both Carter and Trembush requested that
their unused, accrued vacation time be considered in the calculation by the Board of their
respective retirement benefits.
Trembush further claims that his decision to retire at the time he did was based,
at least in part, on his belief that his retirement benefit calculation would include the value
of his unused, accrued vacation time. He asserts that a staff person at PERS made a
representation to him at the time he was considering transferring his retirement account from
the teachers' retirement system to PERS in 1993 that there would be no differences between
the two systems that would operate to his detriment when he retired. Trembush contends that
he should be entitled to have his unused, accrued vacation time valued into his retirement
benefit as if he had been in the teachers' retirement system at the time of his retirement.
After the Board refused to include the payment of unused vacation time in their
respective final average salaries for purposes of calculating their retirement benefits, both
Carter and Trembush requested and were granted an administrative appeal. A hearing was
held, after which the hearing officer, Jack W. DeBolt, issued a Recommended Decision,
dated August 1, 2002, wherein he recommended that the requests of both Carter and
Trembush be denied. The Recommended Decision also concluded that Trembush was not
entitled to be treated differently based on his claim of detrimental reliance or statutory
promise. The Board adopted the recommendations of the hearing officer and issued its
decision, dated October 2, 2002.
Carter and Trembush appealed the Board's decision to the Circuit Court of
Wood County (being the county wherein both Carter and Trembush resided). As noted
above, the circuit court, in an order issued on October 8, 2004, reversed the Board's decision
and ordered the Board to recalculate the retirement annuities of both Carter and Trembush
based upon the inclusion of compensation for unused vacation in Plaintiffs' [Carter's and
Trembush's] final average salary. Upon the Board's petition, this Court granted the Board's
appeal of the circuit court's October 8, 2004 ruling.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On appeal of an administrative order from a circuit court, this Court is bound
by the statutory standards contained in W. Va. Code § 29A-5-4(a) and reviews questions of
law presented de novo; findings of fact by the administrative officer are accorded deference
unless the reviewing court believes the findings to be clearly wrong. Syl. Pt. 1, Muscatell
v. Cline, 196 W.Va. 588, 474 S.E.2d 518 (1996).
III.
DISCUSSION
This appeal presents the issue of whether retiring members of the West
Virginia Public Employee Retirement System are entitled to have payments which are made
to them by their employer for unused, accrued vacation days included in their final average
salary for purposes of calculating their retirement benefits. Key to our consideration of this
issue is the statutory language which determines the manner in which retirement benefits are
calculated. We must first look to the relevant statutory definition of final average salary
(See footnote 4) as that term is used in W. Va. Code § 5-10-22(a) (1971),
(See footnote 5) and whether, by such definition,
the Legislature intended that unused, accrued vacation days be included in the benefits
calculation.
In addition to our consideration of the meaning of final average salary, we
must also consider whether W. Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989), relating to lump sum payments for
unused, accrued annual leave, is applicable herein; and, if so, whether this statutory section
excludes payments for unused, accrued vacation time from the term final average salary.
Key to our consideration of this issue is whether vacation time is subsumed within the term
annual leave for purposes of the express statutory prohibition against lump sum payments
for such accrued time being used in the calculation of retirement benefits in PERS. Even if
this express statutory prohibition applies to unused, accrued vacation time, we must also
consider the argument of Carter and Trembush that they are not eligible employees as that
term is used in W.Va.Code § 5-5-3 (1989), and, therefore, that this code section is simply not
applicable to them based upon their status as employees of WVSSAC.
Finally, we must consider the contention of Trembush that had he remained in
the teachers' retirement system, his unused, accrued vacation time could be used to enhance
the calculation of his retirement benefits. In this regard, Trembush asserts that certain
representations were made to him by a staff person of PERS at the time of his transfer from
the teachers' retirement system to PERS and that the Board should now be estopped from
calculating his retirement benefits any less than what he contends he would have received
as a member of the teachers' retirement system.
A.
W.Va. Code § 5-10-2 and the Meaning of Final Average Salary
Since the inception of PERS in 1961, final average salary has been one of
the two principal determinants in the calculation of retirement benefits for retiring members.
The other is credited service. Since March 2, 1970, the retirement benefit, termed a
straight life annuity, has been equal to two per cent of [a retiree's]
final average salary
multiplied by the number of years, and fraction of a year, of [a retiree's] credited service,
exclusive of limited credited service in force at the time of his or her retirement. W.Va.
Code § 5-10-22(a) (1971) (emphasis added).
Insofar as here relevant, the statutory definition of final average salary has
remained essentially the same since 1961:
(A) The average of the highest annual compensation
received by a member . . . during any period of three consecutive
years
(See footnote 6) of credited service contained within the member's ten
years of credited service immediately preceding the date his or
her employment with a participating public employer last
terminated[.]
W.Va. Code § 5-10-2(16) (1997).
(See footnote 7) The word, compensation, within the definition of final
average salary, has been defined since 1961, in substance and in relevant part, as the
remuneration paid a member by a participating public employer for personal services
rendered by the member to the participating public employer. W.Va. Code § 5-10-2(15)
(1997).
Focusing on the word, salary, the Board argues that salary is commonly
and ordinarily understood to mean a fixed amount of income regularly paid to an employee
for services rendered. The Board asserts that payments upon retirement for unused, accrued
vacation days are not regularly paid and should therefore not be considered in calculating
retirement benefits under PERS. Carter and Trembush, on the other hand, focus on the term,
personal services rendered within the definition of the term compensation, and argue that
the remuneration paid to an employee for working in lieu of taking vacation (the
remuneration apparently being the payments made for unused, accrued vacation days) is
clearly a benefit to the employer and is thus compensation for personal services rendered
within the statutory definition of compensation.
The parties' narrow focus on a specific phrase or word, however, overlooks the
words with which the terms salary and personal services rendered are associated in the
statutory language. We believe that a broader view of the statutory language is necessary to
understand the context in which each word or phrase should be considered and, thereby, to
determine the intent of the Legislature in establishing the PERS system.
We agree with the Board that the common and ordinarily understood meaning
of salary is a fixed amount of income regularly paid to an employee for services rendered.
Each word of a statute should be given some effect and a statute should be construed in
accordance with the import of its language. Syllabus Point 6, in part, State ex rel. Cohen
v. Manchin, 175 W.Va. 525, 336 S.E.2d 171 (1984). Applying this rule of statutory
construction, we conclude that the term final average salary plainly limits the calculation
of retirement benefits to an annual salary paid to a member of PERS by a participating public
employer for personal services rendered by the member to the participating public employer.
That annual salary must be for personal services rendered by the member to a participating
public employer and to no one else, and paid to the member by such employer and by no one
else. If payment for unused, accrued vacation days is in fact remuneration . . . for personal
services rendered, the payment is neither salary nor annual. A salary is a fixed
amount of income regularly paid to an employee for services rendered. The adjective,
annual, means that the salary is specified or calculable in terms of a regular annual or
yearly amount, which may be payable in equal monthly, semi-monthly, or other periodic
installments. (See footnote 8)
This Court's decision in Craig v. The City of Huntington, 179 W.Va. 668, 371
S.E.2d 596 (1988), concerning the calculation of retiree benefits in the Policemen's Pension
and Relief Fund, supports this conclusion. In Craig, we unanimously concluded that the
circuit court had not erred in concluding that under W.Va. Code 8-22-24(a) (1981), a lump
sum payment [made to Huntington Police Officer Billy Jack Craig] for accumulated sick
leave, vacation, or holiday pay is not includable in [Craig's] salary base for the purpose of
calculating pension benefits. 179 W.Va. at 672, 371 S.E.2d at 600. We pointed out therein
that the term 'monthly' assumes critical importance. Id. For that reason, we stated, the
terms salary and compensation were synonymous and meant . . . remuneration actually
received, but it is remuneration received on a monthly basis that is the statutory predicate. Id.
Our reasoning in Craig guides us in the case before us now. It may be similarly
said that the term annual in the instant case, like the term monthly in Craig, assumes
critical importance because W.Va. Code § 5-10-2(16) (1997) defines final average salary
as [t]he average of the highest annual compensation received by a member [during a
statutory-specified period]. Compensation, being synonymous with salary, is defined
in W.Va. Code § 5-10-2(15) (1997) as the remuneration paid a member; which is quite
similar to the definition of salary or compensation set forth in W.Va. Code § 8-22-16
(1981) as considered in Craig: remuneration actually received by a member.
Carter and Trembush undertake to distinguish the persuasiveness of Craig on
the basis that the statutory term involved in that case was monthly while in this case the
statutory term is annual. We do not believe that the two words serve such different
purposes within their respective statutory sections as would indicate a legislative intent that
payment for unused, accrued vacation days shall enter into the calculation of retirement
benefits when annual is used, but not when monthly is used.
Significantly, our decision in Craig observed that [o]ther courts that have
considered this issue have uniformly found a lump sum payment upon retirement for
accumulated benefits is not includable in the salary base for calculating pension benefits. Craig, 179 W. Va. at 672, 371 S.E.2d at 600. Craig cited Stover v. Retirement Bd. of St.
Clair Shores, 260 N.W.2d 112, 114 (Mich. Cl. App. 1977), as containing reasoning that is
typical of the reasoning employed by the other courts. It quoted the following from the Stover decision:
Annual compensation received does not include unused sick or
vacation payments because those payments are not made
regularly during a worker's tenure with the city. Those
payments are properly viewed as a retirement bonus received at
retirement and not as annual compensation received during a
certain number of years immediately preceding the member's
retirement. [Emphasis in original]
Id. The Michigan court was considering a statute that was in terms of annual
compensation and average final compensation; terms quite similar to those in the case
currently before us. (See footnote 9)
We conclude that the Legislature did not intend to make a distinction in
retirement benefits between a retiree who took a vacation and one who did not. (See footnote 10) By its plain
language, we find that the term final average salary, as that phrase is used in W.Va. Code
§§ 5-10-2(15) and (16) (2005) plainly limits the calculation of retirement benefits to an
annual salary paid to a member of PERS by a participating public employer for personal
services rendered by the member to the participating public employer and does not permit
the inclusion of payments for unused, accrued vacation days in the calculation of retiree
benefits.
B.
Applicability of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989) Concerning Lump Sum Payments
In 1989, the Legislature amended W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989), regarding lump
sum payments made to employees, to read:
Every eligible employee, as defined in section one of this article,
at the conclusion of such employee's active employment by
resignation, death, retirement or otherwise, may be paid in lump
sum amount, at their option, for their accrued and unused annual
leave at the employee's usual rate of pay at such time . . . ;
however, such lump sum payment may not be a part of final
salary computation[.]
(Emphasis added.) In amending the statute, the Legislature changed statutory wording
adopted in 1988 (and in effect from July 1, 1988, until April 8, 1989) which had read:
however, such lump sum payment
is to be a part of final average salary computation[.]
(Emphasis added.) In doing so, the Legislature made a clear decision that lump sum
payments for accrued and unused annual leave should not be included in the calculation of
retirement benefits.
(See footnote 11) Carter and Trembush contend, however, that this statutory section is
not applicable to them. First, they argue, as employees of the WVSSAC, they do not come
within the definition of eligible employee. Second, they argue that payment for unused,
accrued vacation time is different from payment for accrued and unused annual leave. We
disagree with both contentions and find W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989) applicable to the
computation of retirement benefits for both Carter and Trembush.
For purposes of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989), the term eligible employees is
defined as [a]ny regular full-time employee of the state or any spending unit of the state who
is eligible for membership in any state retirement system of the state of West Virginia or
other retirement plan authorized by the state[.] W.Va. Code § 5-5-1(1) (1986). The term
spending unit means any state office, department, agency, board, commission, institution,
bureau or other designated body authorized to hire employees. W.Va. Code § 5-5-1(3)
(1986). Carter and Trembush contend that the WVSSAC is not a spending unit because
it receives no money from the state, and, therefore, they are not eligible employees for
purposes of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989).
Receipt of money from the state is not a prerequisite to an entity being a
spending unit of the state. To be an employing spending unit for purposes of the statute
at issue, an entity need not receive money from the state. W.Va. Code § 5-5-1(3) (1986).
In contrast, spending unit for purposes of W.Va. Code § 5A-1-1 (1990) is defined as a
department, agency or institution of the state government for which an appropriation is
requested, or to which an appropriation is made by the Legislature. Consequently, the
contention of Carte and Trembush is not supported by the statutory language.
Carter and Trembush became eligible for membership in PERS only because
their employer, WVSSAC, was a participating public employer in that system. W.Va. Code
§ 5-10-17(a) (1997). WVSSAC could qualify as a participating public employer only if it
were the State of West Virginia, any board, commission, department, institution or spending
unit[.] W.Va. Code § 5-10-2(5) (1971). It is this qualification of WVSSAC as a
participating public employer that qualifies its employees to be eligible employees for
purposes of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989).
(See footnote 12) Since Carter and Trembush made contributions
to PERS believing that they were members of that system and came to rely upon it for their
retirement, it is too late in the day for them to now question whether the WVSSAC qualified
as a participating public employer.
Carter and Trembush also urge this Court to conclude that the lump sum
provisions of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989) are inapplicable to them because the term accrued
and unused annual leave, as used in the statute, does not include unused, accrued vacation
time.
(See footnote 13) They argue that annual leave means personal leave. While the circuit court
below may have aptly characterized personal leave as requiring some form of justification
for the leave to be taken, we note that the Legislature did not use the term personal leave
in W.Va. Code § 5-5-3 (1989). Rather, the Legislature used the term annual leave; a term
it has used in other statutory sections.
Based upon our review of the Legislature's use of the term annual leave in
other statutory provisions, we conclude that annual leave is not the same as personal
leave. For example, in W.Va. Code § 5-16-13(k) (2001), the Legislature declared that it
is not now nor has it ever been the Legislature's intent that elected public officials be
provided any sick leave,
annual leave or personal leave[.] (Emphasis added.) In the
Parental Leave Act, as codified at W.Va. Code § 21-5D-4(a)(1) (1989), the Legislature
provided that [a]n employee shall be entitled to a total of twelve weeks of unpaid family
leave, following the exhaustion of all his or her
annual and personal leave, during any
twelve-month period [for certain specified reasons]. (Emphasis added.) In both instances,
the Legislature made a distinction between annual leave and personal leave.
(See footnote 14)
It is fair to conclude that the Legislature has clearly provided that personal
leave is not annual leave. We hold that employees of the WVSSAC are eligible
employees for purposes of applicability of the lump sum provisions of W.Va. Code § 5-5-3
(1989) to the calculation of their retirement benefits under the Public Employee Retirement
System. We further hold that the term, annual leave, as used in W.Va. Code § 5-5-3
(1989), includes vacation time, and, therefore, the lump sum payment of unused, accrued
vacation time may not be considered in calculating a retiring employee's retirement benefits
under the Public Employee Retirement System.
C.
Trembush's Claim of Estoppel
Even if the statutory law is contrary to his contentions herein, appellee
Trembush claims that the Board should be estopped from applying any different formula to
his retirement calculations than if he were a member of the teachers' retirement system. He
claims that his decision to retire at the time he did was based, at least in part, on his belief
that he would be treated no differently as a member of PERS than if he were a member of
the teacher's retirement system. He bases his contention upon his claim that a staff person
of PERS represented to him at the time he was considering transferring his retirement
account from the teacher's retirement system to PERS in 1993 that there would be no
difference between the two systems that would operate to his detriment. The Hearing Officer
below made a finding that there was no evidence of detrimental reliance on the part of
Trembush, a finding which is to be accorded deference unless we believe that finding to be
clearly wrong. See Syl. Pt. 1, Muscatell v. Cline, 196 W.Va. 588, 474 S.E.2d 518 (1966).
Without making any judgment here as to whether Trembush's unused, accrued
vacation lump sum payment would or would not have been included in his retirement
calculation had he retired from the teacher's retirement system instead of PERS, the claimed
representation by a staff person at PERS, if made, was one of law rather than of fact and
could not have been predicated or relied upon in 1993 for the year 2001, the year Trembush
retired. See Ara v. Erie Ins. Co., 182 W.Va. 266, 270, 387 S.E.2d 320, 324 (1989) (The
doctrine of estoppel applies when a party is induced to act or to refrain from acting to her
detriment because of her reasonable reliance on another party's misrepresentation or
concealment of a material fact.) Moreover, we do not find that the Hearing Officer's
determination that there was no detrimental reliance on the part of Trembush to be clearly
wrong.
We, therefore, hold that appellees, Carter, who retired on January 11, 2000, and
Trembush, who retired on August 1, 2001, as employees of the WVSSAC, were not legally
entitled to have the payments made to them by their employer for unused, accrued vacation
days included in their final average salary for purposes of calculating their retirement
benefits as retiring members of PERS.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Circuit Court of Wood County's order of
October 8, 2004, in its Civil Action No. 02-P-190, is reversed.
The Consolidated Public Retirement Board was created by the Legislature in 1990
to administer all public retirement plans in this state: the Public Employees Retirement
System (the largest of the plans) (established in W. Va. Code § 5-10-1,
et seq.); the Teachers
Retirement System (established in W. Va. Code § 18-7A-1,
et seq.); the Teachers Defined
Contribution Retirement System (established by W. Va. Code § 18-7B-1,
et seq.); the West
Virginia State Police Death, Disability and Retirement Fund (established by W. Va. Code §
15-2-1,
et seq.); the West Virginia State Police Retirement System (established by W. Va.
Code § 15-2A-1,
et seq.); the Deputy Sheriff Death, Disability and Retirement Fund
(established by W. Va. Code § 7-14D-1,
et seq.); and the Judges' Retirement System
(established by W. Va. Code § 51-9-1,
et seq.). W. Va. Code § 5-10D-1(a) (2005). The
Board has all the powers, duties, responsibilities and liabilities of the [above-identified
Retirement Systems and Funds] and their appropriate governing boards. W. Va. Code § 5-
10D-1(d) (2005). The Legislature has made the Board a trustee for all public retirement
plans[.] W. Va. Code § 5-10D-1(g) (2005). The fiduciary duty of the Consolidated Public
Retirement Board . . . with respect to employee pension funds and assets entrusted to the
Board, includes the affirmative duty to monitor and evaluate the effect of legislative actions
that may affect such funds and assets, and to take all necessary actions including initiating
court proceedings if necessary to protect the fiscal and actuarial solvency of such funds and
assets. Syl. Pt. 2,
State ex rel. West Virginia Deputy Sheriff's Ass'n., Inc. v. Sims, 204
W.Va. 442, 513 S.E.2d 669 (1998).
Footnote: 2
The West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission was established by the
Legislature in 1967. W. Va. Code § 18-2-25 (1967). It is empowered to exercise the
control, supervision and regulation of interscholastic athletic events and band activities of
public secondary schools and private and parochial schools delegated to it by county boards
of education and private and parochial schools W. Va. Code § 18-2-25. The WVSSAC
receives no funding from the State and its employees are not employees of the State or on its
payroll. The WVSSAC is completely self-sustaining; its revenue is generated through dues
paid by participating county boards of education and private and parochial secondary schools,
event gate receipts, fees received for training provided to referees and officials, and corporate
sponsorships. W. Va. Code § 18-2-25 declares that all moneys paid to [the WVSSAC], as
well as moneys derived [by the WVSSAC] from any contest or other event sponsored by [it],
shall be quasi-public funds as the same are defined in [W. Va. Code § 18-5-1,
et seq.], and
such funds of the WVSSAC] shall be subject to an annual audit by the state tax
commissioner. On the basis of an Opinion of the Attorney General issued in 1980, the
WVSSAC became a participating public employer of PERS on the ground that it came
within the statutory definition of the state of West Virginia, any board, commission,
department, institution or spending unit[.] W. Va. Code § 5-10-2(5) (1997). The employees
of the WVSSAC thus became members of PERS, as provided in W. Va. Code § 5-10-17(a)
(1997), and as presently provided in the same code section. W. Va. Code § 5-10-2 was
amended, including the renumbering of subsections in 2005. Therefore, sections cited herein
are those in effect at the time of Carter's retirement.
Footnote: 3
In 2005, the Legislature modified this statutory provision to explicitly state lump
sum payment for unused, accrued leave
of any kind or character may not be a part of final
average salary computation[.] W. Va. Code § 5-5-3 (2005) (emphasis added).
Footnote: 4
The relevant components of the statutory definition of final average salary, namely
highest annual compensation and compensation, have remained virtually the same
throughout the years since the establishment of PERS in 1961. However, the numbering of
the specific subsections within W. Va. Code § 5-10-2,
et seq., in which these phrases appear
have changed over the years.
See supra, n.2
Footnote: 5
The Legislature amended W. Va. Code § 5-10-22(a) 2005 to include the following
language. Provided, that the final average salary used in this calculation does not include
any lump sum payment for unused, accrued leave or any kind of character. Herein, we are
asked to address the statute, as it existed, at the time of the events at issue and prior to the
2005 amendment. Therefore, we cite to the statute in existence at the time of Carter's
retirement.
Footnote: 6
Between 1961 and 1971, this period was five consecutive years.
Footnote: 7
The term, final average salary, or some variant thereof, with its own set of
definitions, is also a determinant of the retirement benefits of a retiring member of other
retirement systems: of a deputy sheriff under the Deputy Sheriff Retirement System Act
(W.Va. Code §§ 7-14D-11(a), 2(a) and 2(s) (2005)); of a municipal policeman or fireman
under the Policemen's Pension and Relief Fund and Fireman's Pension and Relief Fund
(W.Va. Code §§ 8-22-25(a) and 16 (2005)); of a state trooper under the West Virginia State
Police Retirement System (W.Va. Code §§ 15-2A-6 and 2(5) (2005)); and of a teacher as
defined under the State Teachers Retirement System (W.Va. Code § 18-7A-26(a) (2005)).
Footnote: 8
In
International Ass'n. Of Firefighters v. City of Kansas City, 942 P.2d 45 (Kan. Ct.
App. 1997), the court was of the view that the term salary as used in a Kansas retirement
statute does not include lump sum payments for unused sick leave, vacation time and
compensatory time in that salary means a periodic payment dependent upon time. 942
P.2d at 48. The court concluded that [b]y definition, a lump sum payment which occurs
once upon retirement cannot be a periodic payment.
Id.
Footnote: 9
Courts other than
Stover that have considered the issue before us have expressed
some illuminating opinions. In
Kosey v. City of Washington Police Pension Board, 459 A.2d
432 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1983), a case involving the legislative term, highest average annual
salary, it was clear to the court that its legislative body did not intend for certain retirees
to receive a large windfall simply because their [employer] chose to pay them a lump sum
for unused vacation time in lieu of requiring them to take their vacation time prior to their
official retirement date.
Id. at 434. To the court, such a procedure would permit an
unacceptable disparity in pension benefits between the one who took off for his vacation
during the retirement year and the one who saved his vacation time and pay until after the
retirement date fixed by him.
Id. The
Kosey court found thoughtful merit in the
following statement made in
Casale v. Pension Comm. of Newark, 78 N.J.Super. 38, 187
A.2d 372 (1963): To permit retroactive adjustments in salary to effect a pension increase
would create a situation fraught with possibilities of favored treatment, potentially
destructive of the orderly administration and financial soundness of a pension system[.]
Id.
Footnote: 10
In
City of Covington v. Board of Trustees, 903 S.W.2d 517 (Ky.1995), the primary
issue before the Kentucky Supreme Court was whether or not accrued terminal leave pay
(unused sick and vacation time) is to be included in the calculation of 'average salary' for
purposes of age and service pensions and 'last rate of salary' for disability benefit purposes.
Id. at 518. The Kentucky Supreme Court ruled that such pay was not to be so-included and
observed:
We have a real problem with designating the lump sum payment
upon retirement as salary . . . where one employee is healthy and
accumulates a considerable amount of sick leave, he or she
would receive a large pension whereas another employee who
unfortunately had to use most of his or her sick leave, would be
punished for the rest of his or her life by receiving a much
smaller pension. It is incongruous that where two employees
working side by side making the same rate of pay and one is sick
more than the other, for him or her to receive less pension for
the rest of his or her life (which would continue to the surviving
spouse and minor children upon death). We do not believe the
General Assembly intended such a result.
Id. at 522-523.
Footnote: 11
In 2005, the Legislature again amended W.Va. Code § 5-5-3, to make it read as it
does today:
Every eligible employee . . . may be paid in a lump sum amount,
at his or her option, for accrued and unused annual leave . . .
however, lump sum payments for unused, accrued leave of any
kind or character may not be a part of final average salary
computation[.]
Thus, in 2005, the Legislature underscored its 1989 prohibition and made it even more
emphatic that lump sum payments for unused, accrued annual leave
of any kind cannot be
used in the final average salary computation for retirement benefit purposes. In addition, in
2005, the Legislature added a proviso to W.Va. Code § 5-10-22(a) (the retirement annuity
or benefit section of PERS) to declare That the final average salary used in this calculation
[of straight life annuity] does not include any lump sum payment for unused, accrued leave
of any kind or character.
Footnote: 12
As the Hearing Officer aptly noted in his Recommended Decision to the Board, If
SSAC is a part of the State for purposes of its employees participating in the PERS, it must
inescapably be a part of the State for the purpose of § 5-5-1 and the application of § 5-5-3
to its employees.
Footnote: 13
The circuit court agreed with Carter and Trembush, concluding:
Annual leave may be taken for matters such as accident
sickness, family tragedy, and illness. Clearly, vacation is a
different benefit designed to address a different purpose, and
may be taken without justification or cause. [The Board's]
theory is this matter seems to rest entirely upon the proposition
that annual leave is the same as vacation. Annual leave
requires a reason for taking it, vacation is simply a gift and
requires no justification or reason whatsoever.
Footnote: 14
Other examples also underscore the difference between the more generic term,
annual leave, and the more specific term, personal leave. The West Virginia Division
of Personnel has promulgated a legislative rule, codified as W.Va. C.S.R. § 143-1-14.3,
which authorizes employees subject to the rule to accrue annual leave with pay and
benefits. The rates of accrual are set forth in a table in that subsection. The rule also allows
such employees to accrue sick leave with pay and benefits. W.Va. C.S.R. § 143-1-14.4. The
annual leave accorded employees by this legislative rule does not in the words of the circuit
court require[] a reason for taking it or require[] . . . justification or reason[.] Thus, what
the Division calls annual leave is in fact annual vacation according to the definition
which the circuit court would use. Two other statutory examples involving county
commissions also underscore the difference between personal leave and annual leave.
W.Va. Code § 7-5-21 (1983) authorizes county commissions to grant county employees
annual and sick leave benefits. The Legislature did not require that those taking such annual
leave have a reason for taking them. Also, W.Va. Code § 7-14-17a (1976) requires that each
county commission allow the sheriff's deputies in its employ vacation time accrued in the
[manner there specified]. A corollary statutory section, W.Va. Code § 7-14D-10 (1998),
authorizes deputy sheriffs to use accrued annual leave or sick leave days at the time of
retirement to acquire additional credited service in [the deputy sheriff's] retirement system.
If annual leave as used in the corollary section does not mean the vacation time
referenced in the first section, deputy sheriffs would have no days, other than sick days, to
accrue for purposes of additional credited service.