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Fallin v. Mayor Etc. of Baltimore

Court of Appeals of Maryland
Jun 28, 1949
67 A.2d 256 (Md. 1949)

Opinion

[No. 11, October Term, 1949 (Adv.)]

Decided June 28, 1949.

Municipal Corporations — Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City — Provisions Therein Relating to Computation of Employees' Contribution and to Adoption of Mortality and Service Tables and Certification of Rates of Contribution by Board of Trustees — Provisions Place No Obligation On City to Amplify Fund Created by Employees' Contribution — Holding of Chancellor that City Not Obligated to Pay Annuity Equal to Pension Unless Actuarial Equivalent of Accumulated Contributions Equals Pensions Correct — Where No Obligation to Pay More Than Actuarial Equivalent of Accumulated Contributions, No Enforceable Contract — One Misconstruing Effect of Provision Cannot Rely Upon That as Representation of Board of Trustees — Administrative Law — Board of Trustees Constitutes Administrative Board — Cannot Extend Benefits of System to Person Ineligible Thereto — Cannot Appropriate Money Or Obligate City Beyond Express Obligations Imposed — Declaratory Judgments — Finding That Board May Change Rates of Deduction from Members' Pay After Once Established — Eliminated — Question Not in Controversy.

That section of the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City providing that the employees' contribution to the Annuity Savings Fund "shall be computed to provide * * * an annuity equal to the pension to which he shall be entitled * * *" at the age of sixty, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, sec. 8(1)(a), was not intended to impose an obligation upon the City to amplify the Fund created by the contributions deducted from compensation and such additional deposits by an employee as are permitted by sec. 8(1)(d), so that the annuity shall equal the pension, for it is a far different thing to provide that the employees' contributions shall be computed to provide an annuity equal to the pension from providing that the annuity shall equal the pension. pp. 469-470

The obligation of the Board of Trustees under the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, secs. 5(14) and 5(15), to "adopt for the retirement system such mortality, service and other tables as shall be deemed necessary" and to "certify the rates of contributions" are designed to maintain the actuarial soundness of the system, not to impose a duty to increase the contributory fund from other sources; these provisions do not place an obligation upon the City to pay a member, upon retirement, an annuity equal to his pension, even though the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of his retirement is not equal to his pension. p. 470

The Board of Trustees established by the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, § 5, consisting of the City Comptroller, ex officio, two members elected by the members of the system, and two qualified citizens appointed by the Mayor with the consent of the City Council, is an administrative board, and has no authority to appropriate money or obligate the City beyond the express obligations imposed upon it by sec. 10. p. 470

Assuming that the Retirement Plan established by the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, imposed contractual obligations upon the City, if there is no such obligation as the appellants assert, i.e., that the City is obligated to pay a member, upon retirement, an annuity equal to his pension, even though the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of his retirement is not equal to his pension, there is no enforceable contract. p. 470

One who misconstrues the effect of a provision of the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art 30, cannot rely upon that as a representation of the Board of Trustees of the System; the Board has no authority to extend the benefits of a subsection of the ordinance to persons ineligible thereto. pp. 470-471

The holding of the Chancellor that the City was not obligated under the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, to pay to a retiring employee, by way of annuity, more than the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of his retirement was correct. p. 471

Where appellants did not challenge the power of the Board of Trustees under the ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City, Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, to change, from time to time, the rates of deduction from the pay of members after they have been once established, suggesting that the question is not in actual controversy because of the conceded fact that no such changes are in contemplation, the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, Code (1939), Art. 31A, § 6, modified the declaratory decree of the Chancellor by eliminating therefrom the paragraph finding that the Board has that power. p. 471

J.E.B.

Decided June 28, 1949.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Baltimore City (SMITH, C.J.).

Suit by Herbert Fallin and Allan L. Dell against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, J. Neil McCardell, Comptroller of the City of Baltimore, and the Board of Trustees of the Employees' Retirement System of the City of Baltimore, praying for a declaratory decree determining the rights of plaintiffs, and all others similarly situated, under Baltimore City Ordinance No. 553 (1925-1926), Baltimore City Code (1927), Art. 30, § 5, establishing the Employees' Retirement System of the City of Baltimore. From a decree holding that the City is not obligated to pay a member of the System an annuity equal to his pension unless the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of retirement equals his pension, that the Board of Trustees of the System may change from time to time the rates of deductions from the pay of all members of said system after they have been once established, and that the Board of Trustees may permit a member to increase his contributions so that he will receive an annuity equal to his pension, plaintiffs appeal.

Decree modified and, as modified, affirmed.

The cause was argued before MARBURY, C.J., DELAPLAINE, COLLINS, GRASON, HENDERSON and MARKELL, JJ.

R.E. Lee Marshall, with whom was Frank L. Fuller, III on the brief, for the appellants.

Allen A. Davis, Assistant City Solicitor of Baltimore, with whom were Thomas N. Biddison, City Solicitor, and Thomas M. Jacobs, Assistant City Solicitor, on the brief, for the appellees.


This appeal is from a declaratory decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, construing the Ordinance creating the Employees' Retirement System of Baltimore City as not obligating the city to pay a member, upon retirement, an annuity equal to his pension unless the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of his retirement is equal to his pension.

The Retirement System was established by Ordinance 553 of 1926, (Article 30, Pensions, Baltimore City Code, 1927 Edition). The complainants became members in 1926 and 1927, respectively. They will shortly reach the voluntary retirement age of 60. As stated by the Chancellor, "the present difficulty arises from the fact that the severe decline in the purchasing power of the dollar has made it necessary for the city to increase sharply the pay of its employees, in many categories, and as to such employees, from whose former salaries regular deductions were made, but in a smaller sum, the total of such contributions will not now produce an annuity equal to the pension. The pension is fixed in amount 1/140 of average final compensation multiplied by the number of years of service. Sharply increased final compensation will necessarily require increased pension. The burden of such increases will naturally fall on the city. That responsibility cannot be escaped. But complainants insist that the city is likewise responsible for the payment of increased annuities as well to equal the pension."

Section 1(12) of the Ordinance defines "Accumulated contributions" to mean "the sum of all the amounts deducted from the compensation of a member and credited to his individual account in the Annuity Savings Fund together with regular interest thereon as provided in Sections 7 and 8 of this Article". Section 1(14) defines "annuity" to mean "payments for life derived from the `accumulated contributions' of a member". Section 1(15) defines "pension" to mean "payments for life derived from money provided by the City of Baltimore." Section 1(17) defines "retirement allowance" to mean "the sum of the `annuity' and the `pension'". "Annuity Reserve" is defined by Section 1(18) to mean "the present value of all payments to be made on account of any annuity or benefit in lieu of any annuity computed upon the basis of such mortality tables as shall be adopted by the Board of Trustees and regular interest".

Section 8 (1)(a) provides that "the Annuity Savings Fund shall be a fund in which shall be accumulated contributions from the compensation of members to provide for their annuities". Section 8(2) provides that "the Annuity Reserve Fund shall be the fund from which shall be paid all annuities." There is no suggestion in any of these definitions that the city should be required to contribute to annuities.

The appellants contend, however, that the following language of section 8(1)(a) is controlling: "Upon the basis of such tables as the Board of Trustees shall adopt and regular interest, the actuary of the retirement system shall determine for each member the proportion of compensation which, when deducted from each payment of his prospective earnable annual compensation prior to his attainment of age sixty and accumulated at regular interest until attainment of such age shall be computed to provide at that time an annuity equal to the pension to which he will be entitled at that age on account of his service as a member. Such proportion of compensation shall be computed to remain constant". But as the Chancellor said: "It is a far different thing to provide that the employee's contributions shall be computed to provide an annuity equal to the pension, from providing that the annuity shall equal the pension. No such provision will be found in the law. An annuity equal to the pension is not an annuity `granted under the provisions of this Article', which is made one of the `obligations of the City of Baltimore' by Ordinance 553" (section 10). Moreover, section 8(1)(d) provides that "upon the retirement of a member his accumulated contributions shall be transferred from the Annuity Savings Fund to the Annuity Reserve Fund". Section 8(2) provides that "the Annuity Reserve Fund shall be the fund from which shall be paid all annuities and all benefits in lieu of annuities, payable as provided in this Article." We find nothing to indicate an intention to impose an obligation upon the City to amplify the Fund created by the contributions deducted from compensation and such additional deposits by a member as are permitted by Section 8(1)(d).

The appellants point to the provisions of section 5, subsections (14) and (15), dealing with the duties of the Actuary in recommending to the Board of Trustees, and reviewing at stated intervals, tables and rates based on "mortality, service and compensation experience". But here again, the obligation of the Board of Trustees to "adopt for the retirement system such mortality, service and other tables as shall be deemed necessary" and to "certify the rates of contributions" seem designed to maintain the actuarial soundness of the system, not to impose a duty to increase the contributory fund from other sources. It is conceded that the present inequality between annuities and pensions is a temporary condition and does not affect the actuarial soundness of the system beyond the obvious fact that increased wages have made any 1926 "compensation experience" obsolete. The Board consists of the City Comptroller, ex officio, two members elected by the members of the system, and two qualified citizens appointed by the Mayor with the consent of the City Council. It is an administrative board, and has no authority to appropriate money or obligate the City beyond the express obligations imposed upon it by Section 10.

The case presents only a narrow question of construction. Assuming, without deciding, that the Retirement Plan established by the Ordinance imposed contractual obligations upon the City, if there is no such obligation as the appellants assert, there is no enforceable contract. Cf. Hecht v. Crook, 184 Md. 271, 40 A.2d 673, and Heaps v. Cobb, 185 Md. 372, 45 A.2d 73. As we said in the former case 184 Md. page 283, 40 A.2d page 678: "Whether he is entitled to the special benefits of the section, under which he claims, is the sole question here, and if he misconstrued the effect of the provision, he cannot now rely upon that as a representation by the Board. Nor had the Board any authority to extend the benefits of the subsection to persons ineligible thereto."

We think the Chancellor was correct in holding that the City is not obligated to pay to a retiring employee, by way of annuity, more than the actuarial equivalent of his accumulated contributions at the time of his retirement. The appellants appear to have abandoned their contention that the Board lacks the power to permit employees to increase their contributions to the Annuity Savings Fund, under section 8(1)(d). Nor do they now challenge the power of the Board to change, from time to time, the rates of deduction from the pay of members after they have been once established, although they suggest that the question is not in actual controversy at this time, because of the conceded fact that no such changes are in contemplation. In view of the concession, we think it inappropriate to decide the latter question at this time. Code, Article 31A, § 6; Staley v. Safe Deposit and Trust Company, 189 Md. 447, 456-7, 56 A.2d 144, 149. In the exercise of our discretion, we shall therefore modify the decree by eliminating the second paragraph, and, as modified, affirm it.

Decree affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Fallin v. Mayor Etc. of Baltimore

Court of Appeals of Maryland
Jun 28, 1949
67 A.2d 256 (Md. 1949)
Case details for

Fallin v. Mayor Etc. of Baltimore

Case Details

Full title:FALLIN ET AL. v . MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE ET AL

Court:Court of Appeals of Maryland

Date published: Jun 28, 1949

Citations

67 A.2d 256 (Md. 1949)
67 A.2d 256

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