Cherry v. Mayor & City Cncl. of Balt. ( 2021 )


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  • Robert F. Cherry, Jr., et al. v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City, No. 36,
    September Term, 2020. Opinion by Biran, J.
    MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS – PENSIONS AND RETIREMENT BENEFITS –
    BREACH OF CONTRACT – Baltimore City maintains a Fire and Police Employees’
    Retirement System (the “Plan”) to provide pension benefits to uniformed officers in the
    City’s police and fire departments. The statute governing the Plan, Article 22 of the
    Baltimore City Code, provides that a contractual relationship exists between Plan members
    and the City, and that the benefits provided under the Plan “shall not thereafter be in any
    way diminished or impaired.” Balt. City Code, art. 22, § 42 (2009). The Court of Appeals
    held that the City did not breach its statutory contract with Plan members by allegedly
    “underfunding” retiree reserves.
    MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS – PENSIONS AND RETIREMENT BENEFITS –
    BREACH OF CONTRACT – VESTED BENEFITS – RESERVED POWER – In June
    2010, the City Council enacted Ordinance 10-306, which made several significant changes
    to the Plan’s terms and benefits. The Court of Appeals held that the City breached its
    contract with those Plan members who were retired as of June 30, 2010 (the “Retired Sub-
    class”), or eligible to retire but still working on June 30, 2010 (the “Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-class”). Ordinance 10-306 retrospectively divested benefits belonging to those Plan
    members by replacing a market-driven post-retirement cost-of-living adjustment feature
    (the “Variable Benefit”) with a tiered cost-of-living adjustment (“COLA”). However, the
    City did not breach its contract with Plan members who were working as of June 30, 2010,
    and not yet eligible to retire as of that date (the “Active Sub-class”). A governmental
    employer has the reserved power to make reasonable and necessary prospective changes
    to its pension plan. The Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s findings that, as to
    the Active Sub-class, whose benefits had not vested prior to the enactment of Ordinance
    10-306, the City made reasonable and necessary prospective changes to the Plan.
    MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS – PENSIONS AND RETIREMENT BENEFITS –
    BREACH OF CONTRACT – DAMAGES – The Court of Appeals held that the circuit
    court correctly calculated damages owed to the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-
    classes. The circuit court did not err in accepting the damages model provided by the City’s
    expert witness, and rejecting the competing model advanced by the Plan members’ expert
    witnesses. The City’s expert witness provided the circuit court with an accurate assessment
    of how the members of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes would have fared
    if, hypothetically, the City had retained the Variable Benefit for them but made the
    prospective changes to the Plan for other members that the City was permitted to make.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No.: 24-C-16-004670
    Argued: February 4, 2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 36
    September Term, 2020
    ROBERT F. CHERRY, JR., ET AL.
    v.
    MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL
    OF BALTIMORE CITY
    Barbera, C.J.
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty
    Booth
    Biran,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Biran, J.
    Filed: August 16, 2021
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2021-08-16 11:03-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Over the course of time, governing bodies of large cities face many challenges. One
    such challenge that some cities and other local governments may confront is how to change
    a public pension plan that is actuarially unsound. Often, the public employees who
    participate in these plans are represented by unions that register legitimate objections to
    proposed modifications. Taking such action in the face of opposition by public employees
    can be difficult politically. The challenge is magnified when the city is in dire financial
    straits. In such a situation, the city may have to choose between the lesser of two evils:
    change the plan without the consent, and to the consternation, of employees who have
    devoted their careers to public service; or keep the plan as is and put the city deeper into
    debt, perhaps even risking financial ruin. In 2010, Baltimore City faced this choice.
    Baltimore City maintains a Fire and Police Employees’ Retirement System (the
    “Plan”) to provide pension benefits to uniformed officers in the City’s police and fire
    departments. The statute governing the Plan provides that a contractual relationship exists
    between Plan members and the City, and that the benefits provided under the Plan “shall
    not thereafter be in any way diminished or impaired.” Balt. City Code, art. 22, § 42 (2009).
    In June 2010, facing a perfect storm of financial challenges, the City enacted Ordinance
    10-306 by which the City changed some of the key terms of the Plan to make it actuarially
    sound. Most notably, it replaced a variable post-retirement cost-of-living adjustment that
    was based entirely on the investment performance of Plan assets with a guaranteed, tiered
    cost-of-living adjustment that is not market-driven.
    On behalf of themselves and others similarly situated, several City police officers
    and firefighters filed a class action lawsuit against the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore
    in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. After the federal court
    directed the plaintiffs to refile their state law claims in state court, the plaintiffs commenced
    a class action lawsuit in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, alleging claims for
    declaratory relief and breach of contract. Eventually, the circuit court (the Honorable Julie
    R. Rubin) certified a class of plaintiffs (the Appellants/Cross-Appellees here) and three
    sub-classes: Plan members who retired from service before the enactment of Ordinance 10-
    306 (the “Retired Sub-class”); currently employed members who had reached eligibility to
    retire but who had not yet retired (the “Retirement-Eligible Sub-class”); and currently
    employed members who had not yet reached retirement eligibility (the “Active Sub-class”).
    After a bench trial, the circuit court ruled that the City breached its contract with the
    Retired    and   Retirement-Eligible      Sub-classes,    finding   that   Ordinance     10-306
    retrospectively divested the members of those sub-classes of benefits they had earned. The
    court awarded more than $30 million in damages to members of the Retired and
    Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. However, the circuit court found no breach of the City’s
    contract with the Active Sub-class, ruling that, as to the Active members, Ordinance 10-
    306 did not affect vested benefits, but rather made permissible prospective changes to the
    Plan.
    Finding no factual or legal errors in the circuit court’s rulings, we affirm its
    judgment in all respects.
    2
    I
    Background
    The City’s Fire and Police Employees’ Retirement System (The Plan)1
    Article II, Section 26 of the Baltimore City Charter authorizes the City to “establish
    and maintain a system of pensions and retirement benefits” for officers and employees of
    the Baltimore Police and Fire Departments. Balt., Md., Charter art. II, § 26. In 1962, the
    City established the current version of its pension plan for police officers and firefighters
    – the Plan – to be managed by a Board of Trustees (the “Board” or the “Trustees”). Balt.
    City Code, art. 22, §§ 29, 33(a) (2009). The Plan’s terms and benefits are set forth in Article
    22 of the Baltimore City Code (“Article 22”).2 Changes to the Plan may only be made by
    legislation passed by the City Council and signed into law by the Mayor.
    Section 42 of Article 22 provides that, upon becoming a member of the Plan, the
    member
    shall thereupon be deemed to have entered into a contract with the Mayor
    and City Council of Baltimore, the terms of which shall be the provisions of
    this Article 22, as they exist at the effective date of this ordinance, or at the
    time of becoming a member, whichever is later, and the benefits provided
    thereunder shall not thereafter be in any way diminished or impaired.
    1
    The facts set forth in this section of our opinion are largely drawn from the findings
    of fact contained in the circuit court’s Memorandum Opinion of May 13, 2019, and the
    parties’ Joint Statement of Stipulation of Fact and Other Matters, dated May 3, 2017.
    2
    Unless otherwise noted, we refer to Article 22 as set forth in the 2009 version of
    the Baltimore City Code.
    3
    The Plan covers all uniformed officers of the Baltimore Police and Fire
    Departments, as well as certain other public safety workers. Under the Plan, there are three
    categories of retirement benefits eligibility: Service Retirement, Non-Line-of-Duty
    Disability Retirement, and Line-of-Duty Disability Retirement. Participation in the Plan by
    covered workers is mandatory during their employment. Prior to July 1, 2003, Service
    Retirement eligibility required members to reach 50 years of age or accrue 20 years of
    service. For membership beginning on or after July 1, 2003, members were eligible for
    Service Retirement when they reached 50 years of age with 10 years of service as a
    contributing member, or accrued 20 years of creditable service with 10 years of service as
    a contributing member. In the years just prior to the passage of Ordinance 10-306, Active
    members contributed 6% of their regular annual compensation to the Plan.
    Section 36 of Article 22 lists four funds that are used to hold Plan assets and from
    which basic benefits are paid: (i) the Annuity Savings Fund (“ASF”); (ii) the Annuity
    Reserve Fund (“ARF”); (iii) the Pension Accumulation Fund (“PAF”); and (iv) the Pension
    Reserve Fund (“PRF”). Id. § 36(a)(1). The ASF, ARF, and PRF all are housed within the
    PAF.
    The ASF “consists of the assets for each member’s annuity portion of the member’s
    retirement benefit.” Id. § 36(b)(1). In other words, the ASF contains member contributions
    for Active members. Id. § 36(b)(2). Under § 36(b)(4), the Board of Trustees transfers a
    4
    member’s accumulated contributions3 from the ASF to the ARF upon the member’s
    retirement. The ARF serves as the fund from which shall be paid all annuities4 and all
    benefits in lieu of annuities, payable as provided in § 36. In short, the ARF contains retired
    members’ contributions.
    Section 36(d) defines the PAF, including how it is funded and maintained:
    The Pension Accumulation Fund shall be the fund in which shall be
    accumulated all reserves for the payment of all pensions and other benefits
    payable from contributions made by the City of Baltimore and from which
    shall be paid all pensions and other benefits on account of members with
    prior service credit and lump sum death benefits for all members payable
    from the said contributions.
    Id. § 36(d)(1).
    Under § 36(e), the PRF is “the fund from which the pension is paid to members not
    entitled to credit for prior service and benefits in lieu thereof.” When a member not entitled
    to credit for prior service5 retires, “an amount equal to that member’s pension reserve shall
    be transferred from the Pension Accumulation Fund to the Pension Reserve Fund.” Id.
    § 36(d)(7).
    3
    Section 30(10) defines “accumulated contribution” as “the sum of all the amount
    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 §§ 35 and 36[.]”
    4
    Section 30(12) defines “annuity” as “payments for life derived from the
    ‘accumulated contributions’ of a member.”
    5
    Section 30(7) defines “Prior Service” as “service rendered prior to January 1, 1926,
    for which credit is allowable[.]”
    5
    Section 36 requires that the City make annual contributions to the Plan. The City’s
    annual contribution to the Plan consists of two primary components: for the preceding
    fiscal year, (1) “a certain percentage of the earnable compensation of each member to be
    known as the ‘normal contribution,’” and (2) “an additional percentage of [the member’s]
    earnable compensation to be known as the ‘accrued liability contribution.’” Id. § 36(d)(2).
    Section 36(d)(5) describes the City’s annual contribution requirement with further
    reference to the two components:
    The required contribution by the City of Baltimore is the amount equal to the
    normal cost, plus the accrued liability contribution or less the amortization
    of the excess assets, as the case may be. However, the aggregate payment by
    the City must be sufficient, when combined with the amount in the fund, to
    provide the pensions and other benefits payable out of the [PAF] during the
    then-current year.
    Id. § 36(d)(5).
    Section 37 provides that “[t]he creation and maintenance of reserves in the [PAF],
    the maintenance of annuity reserves and pension reserves as provided for, and regular
    interest creditable to the various funds as provided in § 35(b) of this subtitle and the
    payment of all pensions, annuities, retirement allowances, refunds and other benefits
    granted under the provisions of this subtitle and all expenses in connection with the
    administration and operation of this Retirement System are hereby made obligations of the
    City of Baltimore.”
    Section 33(m) requires an actuary, designated by the Board of Trustees, to serve as
    “the technical adviser of the Board of Trustees on matters regarding the operation of the
    funds” of the Plan. Responsibilities of the actuary include: conducting an actuarial
    6
    investigation at least once every five years to assess and value the Plan’s assets and
    liabilities and “certify” Plan member and City contribution rates and relevant tables going
    forward, id. § 33(n)-(o); recommending the Board formally adopt actuarial tables and rates
    of contribution based on the survey, id. § 33(n); and performing “an annual valuation of
    the assets and liabilities of the funds of the system” based on the adopted tables. Id. § 33(p).
    Each year, the Plan actuary develops an Actuarial Valuation Report (“AVR”), which
    provides the actuary’s opinion and recommendation to the Board regarding the required
    annual contribution amount. Id. The AVR is based on, among other things, the interest rate
    set forth in § 30 of Article 22, and mortality and other statistical tables accepted by the
    Board. Prior to the enactment of Ordinance 10-306, Article 22 required that the Plan’s
    actuary use two earnings assumptions in making its recommendations to the Board: an
    assumed rate of return of 8.25% on assets held for the pre-retirement period, and a rate of
    6.8% on assets held for the post-retirement period.6 Following the Board’s approval of the
    assumptions and methods on which the AVR is based, as well as the Plan actuary’s
    recommendation and advice regarding the required contributions, the Board certifies the
    amount of the City’s annual Plan contribution, which is then incorporated into the City’s
    operating budget. Id. §§ 33(p), 36(f). The City is required to balance its budget.
    6
    Prior to the passage of Ordinance 10-306, those rates had been in place since Fiscal
    Year 1995.
    7
    The Variable Benefit Feature
    In 1983, a variable benefit feature (the “Variable Benefit”) was added to the Plan as
    § 36A of Article 22 to provide a post-retirement cost-of-living adjustment (“COLA”) for
    retirees and beneficiaries with more than two years of retirement. Before the Variable
    Benefit was instituted, the Plan had no provision for post-retirement benefit increases and
    members only received raises on an ad hoc basis after lobbying the City Council.
    Payment of the Variable Benefit was contingent on the annual investment
    performance of Plan assets. Any and all earnings of the PRF and ARF between 7.5% and
    10%, plus half the earnings in excess of 10%, were transferred from those funds to two
    different funds, the Paid-Up Benefit Fund and the Contingency Reserve Fund, which were
    established to hold Variable Benefit assets. The amount of earnings formed the basis to
    calculate the annual increase to the pension benefit to be paid for the expected life of each
    eligible member or beneficiary in accordance with the statutory rate.
    Variable Benefit payments were not guaranteed by the City. Rather, once the retiree
    assets reached the defined performance threshold to trigger the Variable Benefit, those
    benefits would be paid as long as the Paid-Up Benefit and Contingency Reserve Funds
    permitted. Id. § 36A(e)(ii). Section 36A(e)(ii) further provided that, “§§ 37 and 42 to the
    contrary notwithstanding, any benefit increase provided under this section is not and does
    not become an obligation of the City of Baltimore. In the event of any conflict between this
    section and either or both of § 37 or § 42, this section prevails.” Id.
    8
    Investment performance for purposes of calculating the Variable Benefit stood
    alone for each year. Therefore, performance below the 7.5% threshold was not carried
    forward and averaged with higher performing future years.
    The Impact of the Variable Benefit on the Plan and the City’s Finances
    Beginning in February 2002, the Plan’s actuary, Douglas Rowe, concerned about
    the negative impact of the Variable Benefit on the Plan’s assets, advised the City to
    consider alternatives to the Variable Benefit. The problem was that the Variable Benefit
    was drawing funds away from the assets required to pay basic retirement benefits, leading
    Mr. Rowe to be concerned that “[t]here wouldn’t be enough money to pay benefits over
    time.”7 In light of these concerns, beginning in 2003 and continuing through 2009, Mr.
    Rowe recommended reducing the post-retirement earnings assumption rate, which was
    then 6.8%, to 5%. Lowering that rate would require the City to increase its annual Plan
    contribution. Despite Mr. Rowe’s repeated recommendations over several years, the Board
    did not approve a reduction in the post-retirement earnings assumption rate until 2009. The
    earnings assumption rate on post-retirement assets stayed at 6.8% until the Variable Benefit
    was removed altogether with the enactment of Ordinance 10-306.
    7
    As discussed below, before this case came to state court, Appellants filed a class
    action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, asserting
    both federal constitutional claims and state law breach of contract claims. We are told that
    the presiding federal district court judge, the Honorable Marvin J. Garbis, referred to the
    Variable Benefit during a hearing in the case as “wacko,” “totally irrational,” and
    “extremely wacko.”
    9
    By 2005, the Plan had accumulated net losses amounting to $412.8 million, due in
    large part to the bursting of the dot.com/technology bubble in the early 2000s. Those losses
    were “smoothed”8 and then amortized over a period of 10 years beginning June 30, 2005.
    In Fiscal Year (FY) 2009, the City closed a $68.5 million deficit that resulted from
    the Great Recession in 2008 and 2009 by making significant cuts to other programs.
    However, as of June 20, 2009, the City still faced a $120 million projected deficit for
    FY20109 as a result of the Great Recession. As of June 30, 2009, the balance in the PAF
    showed a deficit of $514,413,177 based on a 6.8% post-retirement earnings assumption
    rate. At a 5% assumption rate, that deficit would have been $799,133,666, yet an amount
    greater than all of the earnings attributed to active and retiree Plan member assets
    nevertheless would have to have been transferred to the Paid-Up Benefit Fund for a
    FY2010 Variable Benefit increase.
    The City addressed the FY2010 crisis with additional cuts to core services, but
    unforeseen reductions in State aid and revenue shortfalls resulted in an additional, mid-
    year deficit of $60.2 million, which necessitated more cuts, including unpaid furloughs.
    The record snowfall in 2010 required still more cuts to City services and personnel, as well
    8
    “Smoothing” is not the same thing as amortization. Smoothing is a method of
    phasing in recognition of losses or gains for a given year for the purposes of actuarial value
    of Plan liabilities or assets to arrive at the City’s annual contribution obligation.
    Amortization is the gradual reduction of debt over a given period, which, in the context of
    the Plan, allows the City to gradually fund its unfunded pension liability.
    9
    The City operates on a July 1 fiscal year. For example, FY2010 began on July 1,
    2009, and ended on June 30, 2010.
    10
    as the use of $30 million of emergency reserves. As a result of these conditions, the City
    faced a $121 million budget deficit for FY2011. This was the City’s third consecutive year
    of declining revenues and multi-million-dollar budget deficits.
    As of June 2010, Plan assets totaled $1,295,823,326. The liabilities owed to retired
    Plan members as of that date exceeded Plan assets by more than $200 million. The FY2011
    recommended budget included a $101 million contribution for the Plan, but did not take
    into account the additional $64 million contribution that, in light of the stock market’s
    partial rebound, the City would be required to make if it retained the Variable Benefit and
    followed the Board’s recommendation to reduce the assumed investment-return rate. In an
    effort to secure the necessary funds to balance its budget, the City made still more cuts and
    raised $50 million in new taxes from its already depleted tax base.
    In the Spring of 2009, then-City Council President Stephanie Rawlings-Blake had
    sought advice from the Greater Baltimore Committee (the “GBC”) on how the Plan might
    be fixed. In response, the GBC formed a Fire and Police Pension Task Force, which
    produced a report and recommendations regarding modifications to the Plan to rectify what
    it observed was an “urgent” crisis. The GBC report confirmed that “[t]he City of Baltimore
    is facing a serious fiscal challenge. Current contributions to fund the [Plan] are inadequate
    to fully cover the existing and anticipated liabilities required under the pension system.”
    The report further explained that the combination of “negative investment performance of
    21.9%, the recognition of additional accumulated losses … used in previous years to
    provide benefit improvements to members and retirees, contribution reductions by the City,
    and costly post-retirement benefit increase provisions [(the Variable Benefit)], will drive
    11
    the employer contribution requirements to unsustainable new highs.” The GBC also noted
    the stark contrast between the Plan’s actuarial valuation, which indicated a funded ratio of
    84%, and its market value of 58.2%. The GBC report further averred that a failure to fix
    the Plan might impair the City’s ability to attract new fire and police employees, as well as
    new businesses, and might increase the cost of borrowing – a consequence that could result
    in higher taxes or further budgetary pressures on the City. The report also confirmed the
    existence of the City’s serious financial problems and the inadequacy of the current
    contributions to fully cover the existing and anticipated liabilities required under the
    system, as well as the threat to the City’s ability to provide basic public services and fulfill
    the commitment it made to retirees. The GBC recommended replacing the Variable Benefit
    with a COLA not to exceed three percent.
    The circuit court’s findings echo the GBC report’s conclusions. The court found
    that “[t]he Plan was unsustainable in its own right. The design of the Variable Benefit was
    fundamentally flawed from the start – posing a potential independent annual financial
    obligation unafflicted by past years’ market performance and the impact such performance
    might have on the City’s ability to fund the basic benefit in any given year. That design
    made the Variable Benefit particularly ill-suited to operating the Plan in a volatile market.”
    The circuit court also found that the Plan’s financial problems, including the unsustainable
    Variable Benefit, “threatened to dismantle the City’s already weakened capacity to provide
    basic, core services to City residents” and “its ability to keep pace with its basic benefit
    Plan obligation.”
    12
    Following the GBC report, when it appeared inevitable that legislative changes
    would be made, police and firefighter union representatives acknowledged that the City
    could not afford to repair the funding level of the Plan by reducing the post-retirement
    assumed rate of return to five percent. The unions proposed eliminating the Variable
    Benefit entirely in favor of a plan that included a fixed 2% COLA and increasing employee
    contribution requirements from 6% to 9%, spread over an equal number of years.
    Ultimately, the unions amended their proposal in June 2010 to include extending the
    20-year open, level dollar amortization period (then in place) to a 30-year open, level
    percent-of-pay amortization period; the unions proposed not only to extend the
    amortization period, but also to change the method in a way that would allow for smaller
    funding payments at the front end of the period, further exacerbating the City’s unfunded
    Plan liabilities. The City found the unions’ proposal unappealing because it did not repair
    the problem but rather delayed it for another day and another administration.
    In October 2009, the Board voted to adopt the Plan actuary’s recommendation to
    reduce the post-retirement earnings assumption rate from 6.8% to 5%. Then Mayor
    Rawlings-Blake believed that, absent legislative modification of the Plan by the close of
    FY2010, the “financial health of the City” would be “changed” because of the City’s
    inability to meet its increased contribution obligation brought about by a drop in the post-
    retirement assets earnings assumption rate per the Board’s recommendation. Mayor
    Rawlings-Blake believed that other legislative changes to the Plan were necessary to put
    the City on the path of pension plan sustainability.
    13
    Ordinance 10-306
    On June 7, 2010, Council Bill 10-0519 was introduced with proposed changes to
    the retirement benefits provided under the Plan. At the June 2010 hearing on Bill 10-0519
    before the Taxation, Finance and Economic Development Committee of the City Council,
    Appellant Robert F. Cherry, Jr. testified that the unions acknowledged well before that time
    that the Plan had systemic problems requiring change.10 Mr. Cherry noted that “[w]e did
    submit a proposal back in March 2009, so although we have been recently meeting to come
    up with an alternative, it was the Unions who first recognized that this Plan, or the problem
    with the Plan is a lot more systemic and going forward we recognize that we need to
    increase our contributions…. [E]liminating the Variable Benefit was something our
    retirees will be willing to do if, in turn, you’d give them a COLA that they can live with
    and their widows can live with.”
    The unions’ actuary, Thomas Lowman, presented the unions’ counterproposal at the
    June 2010 hearing.11 Mr. Lowman told the lawmakers: “We acknowledge the [P]lan is in
    trouble; we acknowledge that that trend line has to come down.” Mr. Lowman further
    acknowledged that the City was unable to fund the “true cost” of the Plan if the post-
    retirement investment assumption were dropped to five percent: “$165 million; that’s the
    true cost of the benefits if you don’t do anything. We know you can’t afford that.”
    10
    At the time that the legislation was being considered, Mr. Cherry was the
    President of Lodge 3, the City’s chapter of the Fraternal Order of the Police.
    11
    Eight years later, Mr. Lowman would testify as one of Appellants’ expert
    witnesses at trial.
    14
    On June 21, 2010, the City Council voted to adopt Bill 10-0519. Mayor Rawlings-
    Blake signed the bill into law as Ordinance 10-306 (hereinafter sometimes referred to as
    the “Ordinance” or “10-306”), effective June 30, 2010. Ordinance 10-306 modified the
    terms of the Plan in several important respects. First, it replaced the fully market-driven
    Variable Benefit with a “0-1-2” age-based COLA. Under that tiered COLA, a retiree
    member (or beneficiary) age 54 or younger on June 30 receives no increase; a 1% increase
    is paid to those aged 55 to 64 years as of June 30; and a 2% increase is paid to those aged
    65 and older as of June 30.12
    Second, under the Ordinance, for the first time, the City became a guarantor of all
    COLAs and past Variable Benefit increases.
    Third, it amended Article 22 to include a $16,000 minimum annual benefit for
    spousal beneficiaries of pre-July 1, 1996 retirees who completed 20 or more years of
    service. Prior to the enactment of Ordinance 10-306, the Plan included no benefit floor for
    retiree members or their beneficiaries.
    Fourth, it changed the Service Retirement eligibility requirements. Prior to the
    enactment of the Ordinance, Service Retirement eligibility depended on the date an
    employee became a Plan member. For those who became Plan members on or before June
    12
    After the City’s actuaries advised that the City could not afford a 2% COLA, as
    requested by the unions, Thomas Taneyhill (the Plan’s Executive Director) developed the
    0-1-2 COLA in an effort to ensure retirees who are least likely to have other income streams
    receive a raise when most needed in their stage of life. According to Mr. Taneyhill, “if
    you’re trying to get to a place that’s affordable that we can sustain that tries to get the best
    benefit for the most people, that’s why that was picked.”
    15
    30, 2003, Service Retirement was available upon the earlier of reaching age 50 or
    completing 20 years of service. For those who became Plan members on or after July 1,
    2003, Service Retirement was available upon the earlier of reaching age 50 with at least 10
    years of covered fire and police (“F&P”) service, or completing 20 years of service of
    which at least 10 years was covered F&P service.
    Following the effective date of Ordinance 10-306, Service Retirement eligibility
    was bifurcated into those who are grandfathered into pre-10-306 eligibility criteria and
    those who are not. Members who met pre-10-306 Service Retirement eligibility as of June
    30, 2010, as well as members with 15 or more years of covered F&P service as of June 30,
    2010, are grandfathered into pre-10-306 Service Retirement eligibility criteria. All other
    Active members are subject to 10-306 normal Service Retirement criteria, under which
    members become eligible for Service Retirement upon the earlier of completion of 25 years
    of continuous F&P service, or reaching age 55 with a minimum 15 years of continuous
    F&P service. In addition, Ordinance 10-306 created a new early retirement benefit that
    enables non-grandfathered members to retire at their pre-10-306 Service Retirement
    eligibility date, or any date thereafter (but before their post-10-306 Service Retirement
    eligibility date), subject to a statutory benefit reduction formula.
    Fifth, Ordinance 10-306 changed the amounts that members must contribute to the
    Plan. Prior to 10-306, Plan members were required to contribute 6% of their regular pay
    toward the Plan. Ordinance 10-306 modified this to a 7% contribution, with a gradual
    increase to 10% by 2013: a) as of July 1, 2010, 7% of regular pay; b) as of July 1, 2011,
    16
    8% of regular pay; c) as of July 1, 2012, 9% of regular pay; and d) as of July l, 2013, 10%
    of regular pay.
    Sixth, Ordinance 10-306 changed the investment earnings assumption. Prior to
    10-306, the Plan operated under a two-tiered “Regular interest” investment earnings
    assumption for valuation purposes (which figured into the annual City contribution): 8.25%
    on pre-retirement assets and 6.8% on post-retirement assets. Ordinance 10-306 modified
    the investment earnings assumption to a straight 8% on all assets.
    Seventh, the Ordinance modified the Plan’s deferred retirement option, known as
    “DROP 2.” The original Deferred Retirement Option Plan (“DROP”) was instituted in
    1996 to enable retirement-eligible members to continue in active service without
    sacrificing the pension benefits they would have received in retirement. This system
    enabled those eligible for retirement with 20 or more years of service to remain in active
    duty and collect both their regular salaries plus the sum of what would have been their
    retirement benefit. Upon retirement, DROP funds were available to members for full
    withdrawal or as add-ons to monthly benefit payments. DROP was originally adopted on
    a five-year trial basis under the assumption that it would cost the City a one-time payment
    of $6 million. Upon review after the initial five years, it was clear that DROP was costing
    the City several million dollars per year. The City renegotiated with Plan members and
    instituted DROP 2 in 2009. DROP 2 was available to Plan members with 20 or more years
    of service as of December 31, 2009, as well as to Plan members hired on or after January
    1, 2010 upon completion of 20 years of continuous F&P service.
    17
    Under 10-306, DROP 2 eligibility was bifurcated. Members with 15 or more years
    of covered F&P service as of June 30, 2010, are grandfathered into pre-10-306 DROP 2
    eligibility criteria upon completing 20 or more years of service. Members with fewer than
    15 years of covered F&P service as of June 30, 2010, are not grandfathered in and attain
    DROP 2 eligibility upon completion of 25 or more years of covered F&P service.
    Finally, Ordinance 10-306 modified the definition of Average Financial
    Compensation (“AFC”). AFC is used to determine the member’s retirement benefit
    amount. Prior to Ordinance 10-306, a member’s AFC was the average annual regular pay
    earnable by a member for the 18 consecutive months during which pay was highest.
    Following the effective date of Ordinance 10-306, a member’s AFC depended upon
    whether or not the member was grandfathered into the pre-10-306 AFC definition.
    Members with 15 or more years of covered F&P service as of June 30, 2010, are
    grandfathered into the pre-10-306 AFC definition. Members with fewer than 15 years of
    covered F&P service as of June 30, 2010, are not grandfathered in. Under 10-306, AFC is
    the average annual regular pay earnable by a member for the 36 consecutive months during
    which pay was highest.
    The Federal Lawsuit
    Appellants, along with unions that represent them (collectively, the “Federal
    Plaintiffs”), filed a class action lawsuit against the City and the Board in the United States
    District Court for the District of Maryland in June 2010. The Federal Plaintiffs asserted
    both federal and state law claims based on what they claimed was the City’s failure to fund
    the Plan and on the change in benefits and other modifications to the Plan effected by
    18
    Ordinance 10-306. Against the City, among other claims, they alleged a violation of the
    Takings Clause of the United States Constitution,13 contending that the City’s elimination
    of the Variable Benefit was a taking without just compensation. They also alleged that the
    City’s actions violated the Contract Clause of the Constitution,14 and brought a state law
    breach of contract claim against the City and the Board.
    After holding two hearings, the federal district court ruled that the substitution of
    the COLA for the Variable Benefit substantially impaired the contract rights of the groups
    we refer to here as the Retired and the Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. Cherry v. Mayor
    & City Council of Balt. City, No. CV MJG-10-1447, 
    2011 WL 11027560
    , at *7-8, *14 (D.
    Md. Sept. 6, 2011). The district court found no Contract Clause violation as to the group
    we refer to as the Active Sub-class. Id. at *8, *14. The district court invalidated the portion
    of the Ordinance eliminating the Variable Benefit and instituting the 0-1-2 COLA, finding
    an “unconstitutional impairment” of the rights of the Retired and the Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-classes. Cherry v. Mayor & City Council of Balt. City, No. CV MJG-10-1447, 
    2012 WL 4341446
    , at *13 (D. Md. Sept. 20, 2012). The district court dismissed the plaintiffs’
    13
    The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, in pertinent
    part: “No person shall be … deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of
    law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S.
    Const. amend. V. The Fourteenth Amendment incorporates the Takings Clause of the Fifth
    Amendment against the States. See Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 
    544 U.S. 528
    , 536
    (2005).
    14
    The Contract Clause is included in Article I, Section 10 of the United States
    Constitution. It provides: “No State shall … pass any … Law impairing the Obligation of
    Contracts[.]” U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 1.
    19
    Takings Clause claim as moot, and granted the parties’ agreed motion for a voluntary
    dismissal without prejudice of the state law claims.
    Both parties appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit,
    which affirmed in part and vacated in part the district court’s judgment. Cherry v. Mayor
    & City Council of Balt. City, 
    762 F.3d 366
     (4th Cir. 2014). The Fourth Circuit held that the
    Plan members’ rights under the Contract Clause were not impaired, because the members
    retained a state law remedy for breach of contract. Id. at 371-74. Thus, the court affirmed
    the district court’s judgment to the extent the lower court had held that the Federal Plaintiffs
    could not prevail under the Contract Clause, and vacated the judgment to the extent it had
    granted relief to the retired and retirement-eligible members with respect to the substitution
    of the COLA for the Variable Benefit.
    Given its holding concerning the Contract Clause claim, the Fourth Circuit vacated
    the district court’s order dismissing the Takings Clause claim as moot and remanded the
    case to the district court to decide that claim. Id. at 374. In a footnote, the Fourth Circuit
    stated: “The plaintiffs may attempt to refile in the district court their state law claims that
    were dismissed without prejudice, or they may initiate proceedings in state court alleging
    breach of contract under Maryland law. If the plaintiffs choose to pursue either of these
    two courses of action, the district court may wish to hold any proceedings regarding the
    Takings Clause claim in abeyance pending the resolution of related contractual issues.” Id.
    at 374 n.6.
    On remand, the district court found that the state law claims present novel and
    complex issues of state law, and that state law issues predominate; therefore, the court
    20
    declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims. Cherry v. Mayor
    & City Council of Balt. City, No. CV MJG-10-1447, 
    2016 WL 3955928
    , at *3 (D. Md. July
    22, 2016). On August 1, 2016, Judge Garbis stayed the remaining federal Takings claim
    and directed the parties to state court to resolve the state law claims. See 
    id.
    State Court Proceedings
    On August 16, 2016, Appellants filed a Class Action Complaint against the City in
    the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. On November 28, 2017, Appellants filed a First
    Amended Class Action Complaint. The putative class included all members and
    beneficiaries of the Plan as of June 30, 2010 (the date of enactment of Ordinance 10-306).
    The First Amended Complaint further alleged the existence of the three subclasses
    described above: (i) the Retired Sub-class, which includes all members and beneficiaries
    of the Plan who, as of June 30, 2010, were entitled to, and receiving, retirement benefits
    under the Plan; (ii) the Retirement-Eligible Sub-class, which includes all members of the
    Plan who, as of June 30, 2010, were eligible to retire but not entitled to receive benefits
    because they were continuing to work; and (iii) the Active Sub-class, which includes all
    members of the Plan who, as of June 30, 2010, were working and not yet eligible to retire.
    In Count One of the Amended Complaint, Appellants asserted a claim for a
    declaratory judgment, and specifically sought declarations on 14 points, including that
    “[t]he City, by adopting Ordinance 10-306, breached its contract with the members of the
    Plan.” In Counts Two, Three, and Four, the Retired Sub-class, the Retirement-Eligible Sub-
    class, and the Active Sub-class, respectively, claimed for breach of contract. All three sub-
    classes alleged that the City breached its contract with them, first, by underfunding the Plan
    21
    and, second, by enacting Ordinance 10-306. All three sub-classes demanded monetary
    damages in an amount to be determined at trial, equitable relief, specific performance,
    attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest.
    On January 2, 2018, the circuit court, on cross-motions for summary judgment,
    ruled that the City breached its contract with the Retired Sub-class and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-class members by removing the Variable Benefit feature of the Plan and replacing it
    with an age-tiered COLA, and that a trial was necessary to calculate the damages suffered
    by these Plan members. The circuit court based its ruling on its determination that members
    of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes, having satisfied all of the contractual
    conditions precedent to receipt of benefits under the Plan prior to the adoption of Ordinance
    10-306, held vested rights to Plan benefits that the City could not lawfully unilaterally
    diminish or impair.
    With respect to the Active Sub-class, the circuit court ruled that, under City of
    Frederick v. Quinn, 
    35 Md. App. 626
     (1977), the City had the power to unilaterally modify
    the terms of the Plan, including the benefits provided, so long as (i) such modifications
    were prospective and not retrospective and (ii) reasonable. The court further concluded
    that, as to the Active Sub-class, the modifications were prospective because members of
    the Active Sub-class had not yet fulfilled the conditions precedent to be eligible to receive
    benefits under the pre-10-306 structure. Therefore, the Active members did not have a
    vested right to receive the Variable Benefit when they reached retirement eligibility. The
    circuit court concluded that a trial would be necessary to determine whether Ordinance 10-
    306’s modifications, as to the Active Sub-class, were reasonable.
    22
    The circuit court conducted a bench trial to resolve the remaining issues beginning
    on October 29, 2018. Several expert witnesses testified for both sides. Closing arguments
    occurred on January 4, 2019. On May 13, 2019, the circuit court entered a Declaratory
    Judgment and Order, accompanied by a 144-page Memorandum Opinion explaining the
    bases for its rulings. With respect to the Active Sub-class, the court concluded that
    Ordinance 10-306 was reasonably intended to preserve the pension system by enhancing
    its actuarial soundness; therefore, the City did not breach its contract with the Active Sub-
    class by enacting the Ordinance.
    Additionally, the court concluded that the City did not breach its contract with any
    Plan members by underfunding the Plan. In reaching this conclusion, the court relied on
    the plain language of the Plan in which there was no intention or requirement for it to be
    fully funded.
    In terms of the proper remedy for the breach of the contract with the Retired and
    Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes, the court determined that returning to the Variable
    Benefit for those members would be unworkable and thus the court declined to award
    specific performance. Instead, the court stated that it would award damages in the amount
    that members of these sub-classes would have received, or been entitled to receive under
    the Variable Benefit system, from the date Ordinance 10-306 was passed through final
    judgment by the court. To calculate this figure, the court accepted the findings of the City’s
    expert witness, concluding that his assumptions were sound and reflected historical reality.
    The court rejected the assumptions proffered by Appellants’ expert witnesses, finding that
    they would result in an improper windfall for the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-
    23
    classes. The circuit court ultimately awarded more than $30 million in damages to specific
    members of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. However, under the damages
    model proposed by the City’s expert and accepted by the circuit court, many members of
    those sub-classes received no damages because they were found to have received no less
    compensation under the 0-1-2 COLA than they would have received under the Variable
    Benefit.
    Appellants noted an appeal of the circuit court’s judgment to the Court of Special
    Appeals. The City subsequently noted a cross-appeal. On September 8, 2020, before the
    parties had filed any briefs in the intermediate appellate court, Appellants filed a petition
    for certiorari in this Court. On November 10, 2020, we granted the petition. Cherry v.
    Mayor & City Council of Balt. City, 
    471 Md. 262
     (2020). We have condensed and
    rephrased the questions the parties have presented in their cross-appeals as follows:
    1. Did the circuit court properly conclude that the City did not breach its
    contract with the members of the Plan by “underfunding” the Plan?
    2. Did the City breach its contract with any of the sub-classes by adopting
    Ordinance 10-306?
    3. Did the circuit court err in its calculation of monetary damages owed to
    the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes?
    II
    Standard of Review
    Maryland Rule 8-131(c) governs appellate review of a circuit court’s findings and
    judgment after a bench trial:
    (c) Action Tried Without a Jury. When an action has been tried without a
    jury, the appellate court will review the case on both the law and the
    24
    evidence. It will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence
    unless clearly erroneous, and will give due regard to the opportunity of the
    trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.
    Under Maryland Rule 8-131(c), we “must consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party and decide not whether the trial judge’s conclusions of
    fact were correct, but only whether they were supported by a preponderance of the
    evidence.” City of Bowie v. MIE Properties, Inc., 
    398 Md. 657
    , 676 (2007) (citations
    omitted); Urban Site Venture II Ltd. P’ship v. Levering Assocs. Ltd. P’ship, 
    340 Md. 223
    ,
    230 (1995); see also Leavy v. Am. Fed. Sav. Bank, 
    136 Md. App. 181
    , 199-200 (2000) (an
    appellate court “may not reassess the credibility of [an] expert witness, or the weight of
    [their] testimony. That is quintessentially a job for the trial court sitting as a fact-finder in
    [the] bench trial. See Md. Rule 8-131(c). In deciding whether there is sufficient evidence
    to support the trial court’s factual finding, we assume the truth of all the evidence relied
    upon by the trial court, and of all favorable inferences fairly deducible from that
    evidence.”). “If there is any competent evidence to support the factual findings [of the trial
    court], those findings cannot be held to be clearly erroneous.” Della Ratta v. Dyas, 
    414 Md. 556
    , 565 (2010) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); Solomon v. Solomon,
    
    383 Md. 176
    , 202 (2004); see also Leavy, 136 Md. App. at 200 (“[I]f there is any
    competent, material evidence to support the factual findings below, the weight and value
    of such evidence must be left to the trier of facts, as it is not our function to determine the
    comparative weight of conflicting evidence.”) (alteration in original) (citation omitted).
    We review the circuit court’s legal conclusions without deference. See, e.g., Plank
    v. Cherneski, 
    469 Md. 548
    , 569 (2020).
    25
    III
    Discussion
    The Alleged Breach of Contract by “Underfunding”
    Appellants argue that the City breached the contract by “underfunding” certain parts
    of the Plan. In the circuit court, as summarized by the court, Appellants based their claim
    on the following allegations: (1) failure of the City to adopt the Plan actuary’s
    recommendations to reduce the 6.8% post-retirement asset earnings assumption rate
    (which enabled the City to avoid the resultant increase in required contributions during the
    relevant period); (2) use of the actuarial technique of “double smoothing” the losses
    sustained following the technology bubble burst in 2001-02 (which delayed recognition of
    those losses and, therefore, depressed the City’s required contributions during the period
    at issue in this case); and (3) failure to recognize losses resulting from the 2008-09 Great
    Recession by adopting Ordinance 10-306 instead of fully funding the ARF and PRF as
    required by §§ 36 and 37 of Article 22.
    The circuit court rejected these contentions, holding that the sections of the Plan
    upon which Appellants relied, “read individually or as a cohesive unit, … do not create an
    obligation on the part of the City to fully fund the Plan.” The circuit court further found
    that “[i]n addition to the absence of an affirmative obligation to maintain the Plan in a fully
    funded state, provisions of the Plan at sections 33, 36 and 37 are fundamentally at odds
    with such an obligation.” According to the circuit court:
    If the legislature had intended the meaning Plaintiffs attribute, the Plan would
    require that at all times the Plan be “fully funded,” to use [Appellants’]
    language, or the equivalent. Likewise, the legislature would not have
    26
    afforded the City entitlement to exercise discretion in consultation with
    industry professional advisors regarding, among other things, the proper
    methods of accounting for losses and gains.
    Thus, the circuit court concluded that Appellants’ argument lacked merit:
    The language of the Plan is plain and clear. It does not give rise to multiple
    meanings; nor is its meaning doubtful. Therefore, the court finds that the
    legislature did not intend to require that the City maintain the Plan in a “fully
    funded” state as Plaintiffs contend; and the Plan did not so require on the
    effective date of Ordinance 10-306 or at any time at issue in the Amended
    Complaint. Specifically, Plaintiffs (Class members) have failed to satisfy
    their burden to demonstrate that the City breached its contractual duties to
    any of the three Sub-Classes by l) failing to lower the post-retirement
    earnings assumption rate from 6.8%; 2) double smoothing the tech bubble
    losses; or 3) legislatively modifying the Plan following the Great Recession
    (and not “fully funding” the ARF and the PRF).
    Before this Court, Appellants argue that the circuit court misunderstood their
    position regarding fully funding the Plan. Appellants explain that they do not claim the
    entire Plan must be fully funded – only that the “retiree reserves” (the ARF and the PRF)
    upon which Variable Benefits are determined must be fully funded at the beginning of each
    fiscal year to ensure optimal circumstances for Variable Benefit distributions in a given
    fiscal year. Failure to fully fund retiree reserves, Appellants contend, “reduce[s] the assets
    upon which a [Variable Benefit] would be calculated and so reduce[s] [Variable Benefit]
    increases, breaching the City’s promise not to diminish or impair benefits.”
    The City counters that the circuit court properly rejected Appellants’ argument
    because there is nothing in the statutory language of the Plan that requires the City to “fully
    fund” retiree reserves, and, to the contrary, Article 22 permits the City not to fully fund
    retiree reserves. We agree with the City on this point.
    27
    To ascertain whether the City’s level of funding of the PRF15 breached the contract
    between the members of the Plan and the City, we must construe the relevant provisions
    of the Plan, as set forth in Article 22. As we have often stated, “[t]he cardinal rule of
    statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the actual intent of the [legislative
    body] in enacting the law under consideration.” Matter of Collins, 
    468 Md. 672
    , 689
    (2020). “A court’s primary goal in interpreting statutory language is to discern the
    legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by the statutory
    provision under scrutiny.” Lockshin v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274 (2010). If the statutory
    language “is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent purpose, our
    inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the statute as written, without
    resort to other rules of construction.” 
    Id. at 275
    . “However, we do not analyze statutory
    language in a vacuum.” Collins, 468 Md. at 689-90. “Rather, statutory language must be
    viewed within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the
    purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute.” Id. at 690 (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). We presume that the legislature “intends its
    enactments to work together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and, thus, we
    seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent with
    the statute’s object and scope.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also
    15
    Although retiree reserves include both the ARF and the PRF, the City’s
    contributions end up in the PRF after a member retires. The ARF holds the member’s
    contributions. Thus, we focus here on the PRF, as have the parties, when discussing
    Appellants’ underfunding claim.
    28
    Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. v. Fitzpatrick, 
    366 Md. 295
    , 302-03 (2001) (“[W]hen
    interpreting any statute, the statute as a whole must be construed, interpreting each
    provision of the statute in the context of the entire statutory scheme.”). Where statutory
    language is ambiguous and thus subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, or
    where the language is unambiguous when read in isolation, but ambiguous when
    considered in the context of a larger statutory scheme, “a court must resolve the ambiguity
    by searching for legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation
    or other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process. In resolving
    ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it relates to other laws, its
    general purpose, and the relative rationality and legal effect of various competing
    constructions.” Lockshin, 
    412 Md. at 276
     (citations omitted).
    We construe local ordinances and charters under the same canons of statutory
    construction as we apply to statutes. 120 W. Fayette St., LLLP v. Mayor & City Council of
    Balt. City, 
    413 Md. 309
    , 331 (2010). The plain language of the local ordinance is the
    primary source of legislative intent. O’Connor v. Baltimore Cty., 
    382 Md. 102
    , 113 (2004).
    In determining the legislative intent of a local ordinance, we assign the words of the
    ordinance “their ordinary and natural meaning and avoid adding or deleting words to
    impose a meaning inconsistent with the plain language” of the measure. 120 W. Fayette
    St., 
    413 Md. at 331
     (quoting O’Connor, 
    382 Md. at 113-14
    ). Moreover, “a court must read
    the language of the charter or ordinance in context and in relation to all of its provisions[.]”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Howard Research Dev. Corp. v. Concerned Citizens for the Columbia
    Concept, 
    297 Md. 357
    , 364 (1983)).
    29
    Initially, we observe that the circuit court, in fact, considered and rejected
    Appellants’ contention that the City breached the contract by not fully funding retiree
    reserves. In her Memorandum Opinion of May 13, 2019, Judge Rubin summed up her
    ruling against Appellants on this claim by stating (after explaining how the various
    pertinent parts of Article 22 work together): “Plaintiffs (Class members) have failed to
    satisfy their burden to demonstrate that the City breached its contractual duties to any of
    the three Sub-Classes by … not ‘fully funding’ the ARF and the PRF[.]”
    We agree with the circuit court’s analysis. Nothing in the plain language of Article
    22 requires the City to “fully fund” retiree reserves. And § 36(d), which governs the
    calculation of the City’s annual contribution to the Fund, demonstrates that the City
    Council did not intend to require the City to maintain funds in the PRF at any given time
    that were sufficient to pay all pension benefits to which Plan members would be entitled
    over time.
    As stated above, the City’s annual contribution to the Plan consists of a “normal
    contribution” and an “accrued liability contribution.” Art. 22, § 36(d)(2). Subsection
    36(d)(3) provides further detail regarding the first of these two components:
    On the basis of regular interest and of such mortality and other tables as shall
    be adopted by the Board of Trustees, the actuary engaged by the Board shall
    make a valuation to determine the required contribution by the City … to the
    Pension Accumulation Fund. The actuary shall determine a normal cost for
    each employee which is equal to the amount of annual contribution which is
    necessary to provide his benefit if such contributions had been made annually
    from his date of employment to his date of retirement. The total of amounts
    so determined shall be known as “normal cost contribution”.
    30
    Subsection 36(d)(4) then provides further requirements concerning the second of the two
    components, the “accrued liability contribution”:
    (i) For each employee, the Board of Trustees shall calculate an accrued
    liability equal to the accumulation of the annual normal cost contribution
    described in paragraph (3) of this subsection from date of employment to the
    valuation date on the basis of the actuarial assumptions adopted by the Board
    of Trustees.
    (ii) The accrued liability [thus] calculated … shall be added to the reserve for
    retirement benefits payable to retired members from the Pension
    Accumulation Fund to obtain the total accrued liability.
    (iii) The assets of the Pension Accumulation Fund shall be applied against
    the total accrued liability calculated for all participants to determine the
    amount of unfunded accrued liability.
    (iv) If the total accrued liability exceeds the assets in the Pension
    Accumulation Fund, an accrued liability contribution shall be determined as
    the amount that is sufficient to meet regular interest on the unfunded accrued
    liability and to amortize the principal of the unfunded accrued liability over
    the period determined by the Board of Trustees.
    (v) If the assets in the [PAF] exceed the total accrued liability, the excess
    assets shall be amortized over the period determined by the Board of Trustees
    to reduce the required contribution by the City of Baltimore.
    (Emphasis added).
    Subsection 36(d)(5) then reiterates that these two components constitute the City’s
    required contribution (“The required contribution by the City … is the amount equal to the
    normal cost, plus the accrued liability contribution or less the amortization of the excess
    assets, as the case may be.”), but crucially provides that “the aggregate payment by the
    City must be sufficient, when combined with the amount in the fund, to provide the
    pensions and other benefits payable out of the fund during the then-current year.”
    31
    Thus, subsections 36(d)(2) through (5) provide the framework for determining the
    amount of the City’s contribution to the Plan: (i) a normal cost component related to the
    value of benefits earned in the year for each working employee; and (ii) an unfunded
    actuarial liability component related to the amount by which the Plan is underfunded, the
    sum of which must be at least the amount needed to pay the pensions and other benefits
    due to members in the “then-current year.”
    As the City observes, subsection 36(d)(4)(iv) “directs that unfunded liability is
    addressed like a mortgage – the City makes regular payments of interest and principal over
    a specified term and at a specified interest rate.” On the other hand, if the assets in the PAF
    exceed the total accrued liability, subsection 36(d)(4)(v) requires the amortization of the
    excess assets to reduce the City’s contribution.
    Thus, § 36(d) contemplates the possibility of either underfunding or overfunding of
    the Plan. This convinces us that Appellants are incorrect in contending that Article 22
    prohibits underfunding of retiree reserves necessary to pay all benefits to which Plan
    members will be entitled over time. To the contrary, Article 22 requires funding in any
    given year that is sufficient to pay the pensions and other benefits due to members in the
    “then-current year.” Id. § 36(d)(5). It is undisputed that the City never breached its
    obligation to pay all pensions and benefits due to members in any given year.
    Appellants attempt to avoid the import of § 36(d)’s various provisions by arguing
    that § 36(d) only governs the PAF, not the PRF. According to Appellants, § 36(d)’s
    contemplation of potential underfunding only applies to the amounts necessary to make
    direct payments from the PAF to those Plan members who retired with “Prior Service”
    32
    credit – i.e., Plan members who retired from service prior to January 1, 1926. In support of
    this proposition, Appellants note that Plan members who retired from service after January
    1, 1926, receive payments from the PRF (and the ARF), not the PAF.
    Appellants’ argument distinguishing between the PAF and the PRF lacks merit.
    Appellants do not point to any language in Article 22 that requires the City to fund the PRF
    at a greater rate than the PAF. Notably, § 36(d)(7) describes the transfer of funds from the
    PAF to PRF – “on the retirement of a member” in “an amount equal to the member’s
    pension reserve.” The plain language of this subsection does not impose an obligation to
    maintain the PRF in a fully funded state at all times or require additional contributions to
    remedy investment losses immediately when they occur. Further, § 36(d)(5), not
    § 36(d)(7), operates to ensure compliance with the guaranty of § 37 by requiring the City’s
    contribution to be sufficient, accounting for the actuarial condition of the PAF, to remedy
    any deficiency in the funds to pay out pensions in the then-current year.
    In addition, the structure and content of § 36(d) as a whole does not support an
    interpretation that § 36(d)(5) only applies to benefits promised to public safety employees
    retired prior to January 1, 1926, especially given that the language contained in § 36(d) has
    remained in the Plan despite numerous amendments to Article 22 since 1962. It seems
    impossible that any currently living Plan members retired from service prior to January 1,
    1926. The idea that the City Council would retain detailed explanations in § 36(d)
    concerning the interplay of “normal contributions” and “accrued liability contributions”
    that would have no practical effect on any living Plan member – even after amending
    33
    Article 22 as late as 200316 – is far-fetched. It is much more likely that the City Council
    intended the provisions of §§ 36(d)(2) through (d)(5) to apply to all Plan members,
    regardless of when they retire from service. This conclusion is reinforced by § 36(d)(1),
    which defines the PAF as “the fund in which shall be accumulated all reserves for the
    payment of all pensions and other benefits payable from contributions made by the City[.]”
    (Emphasis added). The PRF is housed within the PAF. The fact that funds equal to a Plan
    member’s pension reserve are transferred from the PAF to the PRF when the member
    retires, see id. § 36(d)(7), does not demonstrate the City Council’s intent to apply a different
    set of funding rules for the PRF that the City Council has conspicuously not defined
    anywhere in Article 22.
    We agree with the circuit court that, had the City Council intended to require full
    funding of the Plan (or specific funds within the Plan) at all times, then the plain language
    of the relevant provisions governing funding would demonstrate such an intent. See, e.g.,
    In re Walker, No. 8, Sept. Term 2020, slip op. at 23 (Md. Mar. 30, 2021) (“If the General
    Assembly had intended for the MCLA to permit continuing liens, as an expedient
    mechanism for securing future condominium association costs and fees, it could have said
    so in the statute.”); Lillian C. Blentlinger, LLC v. Cleanwater Linganore, Inc., 
    456 Md. 272
    , 317 (2017) (“Presumably, had the General Assembly intended to include the
    requirement that a DRRA be supported by enhanced public benefits, the General Assembly
    16
    In 2003, the City Council modified § 36(d), making what appeared to be stylistic
    changes to subsection (d)(5). See Balt., Md., Ord. 03-576 (2003).
    34
    would have taken care to define the term ‘enhanced public benefit,’ or otherwise delineate
    what would constitute an enhanced public benefit. Absent any indication in the relevant
    statutory language or the legislative history that the General Assembly intended that a
    DRRA be supported by enhanced public benefits, we decline to construe the DRRA statute
    to reach such a strained result.”); Montgomery Cty. v. Phillips, 
    445 Md. 55
    , 76 (2015)
    (“Tellingly, the General Assembly could have, but did not, modify or otherwise raise the
    tax ceiling on the combined State agricultural land transfer tax and county agricultural land
    transfer tax that may be imposed.”).
    Finally, we reject Appellants’ attempt to discern legislative intent to “fully fund”
    the PRF by arguing that the failure to do so “is to reduce the assets upon which a [Variable
    Benefit] would be calculated and so reduce [Variable Benefit] increases, breaching the
    City’s promise not to diminish or impair benefits.” The City was not required under Article
    22 to contribute more than § 36(d) dictates in order to create a larger Variable Benefit in
    any given year. Indeed, under § 36(d)(4)(v), the City Council directs that, if assets in the
    PAF exceed the total accrued liability, the excess assets shall be amortized to reduce the
    required contribution by the City. In short, the City did not have an obligation to use excess
    assets to inflate the value of the PRF to maximize the amount of the Variable Benefit.
    For the above reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s ruling that the City did not
    breach its contract with the Plan members by underfunding the Plan.
    The Alleged Breach of Contract Through Enactment of Ordinance 10-306
    The circuit court ruled that, by enacting Ordinance 10-306, the City breached its
    contract with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes, but did not breach the
    35
    contract it had made with the members of the Active Sub-class. Appellants agree with the
    former ruling and disagree with the latter. Not surprisingly, the City agrees with the latter
    determination and disagrees with the former. As discussed below, we agree with the circuit
    court as to both conclusions.
    1. Maryland Caselaw Concerning a Government’s Power to Change a Pension Plan
    For almost 50 years, it has been settled that, under Maryland law, a “municipal
    corporation[] may make reasonable modifications of a pension plan at any time before the
    happening of the defined contingencies” in that plan. Saxton v. Bd. of Trs. of the Fire &
    Police Emps. Ret. Sys., 
    266 Md. 690
    , 694 (1972). This Court’s decision in Saxton is
    generally cited for that proposition. See, e.g., Baker v. Baltimore Cty., 
    487 F. Supp. 461
    ,
    468 (D. Md. 1980); Quesenberry v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Comm’n, 
    311 Md. 417
    ,
    423 (1988); Bd. of Fire Comm’rs v. Potter, 
    268 Md. 285
    , 295 (1973); Davis v. City of
    Annapolis, 
    98 Md. App. 707
    , 719 (1994).
    The issue in Saxton was whether the deceased firefighter’s widow (Mrs. Saxton)
    was entitled to a special death benefit upon the death of her husband (Lieutenant Saxton).
    Lieutenant Saxton worked for the Baltimore City Fire Department from 1940 through
    1969. In May 1968, he suffered incapacitating injuries in the line of duty. 
    266 Md. at 691
    .
    On May 7, 1969, he was involuntarily retired and was awarded a “special disability benefit”
    under the then-applicable provision of the Plan, Article 22, § 34(e) (1966). Id. On January
    1, 1970, Lieutenant Saxton died as a result of his injuries. Mrs. Saxton subsequently filed
    36
    an application with the Board of Trustees for a “special death benefit” under § 34(i). Id. at
    692. The Plan’s “special death benefit” provision in effect at the time stated:
    Upon the receipt of proper proofs of the death of a member in service arising
    out of and in the course of the actual performance of duty ... there shall be
    paid: (1) [to his designated beneficiary, and if none, to his estate, his
    accumulated contributions and a pension of 100% of his current
    compensation] (2) To his widow to continue during her widowhood …
    Id. (quoting Art. 22, § 34(i) (1966) (emphasis and alterations by the Court)). The Board
    denied Mrs. Saxton’s claim, and Mrs. Saxton then filed a mandamus action to require the
    Board to award the special death benefits to her. Id. at 691-92.
    On appeal to this Court, Mrs. Saxton noted that prior versions of what became
    § 34(i) (its “progenitors,” as the Court put it) did not “limit[] entitlement to death benefits
    in instances where death occurred in service, if it were occasioned by injuries sustained in
    the line of duty.” Id. at 693. Mrs. Saxton argued that “a pension law, being remedial
    legislation, should be liberally construed,” id. at 694, and therefore, notwithstanding the
    qualifying language in § 34(i), the Court should interpret § 34(i) in keeping with the City
    Council’s prior demonstrated intent not to withhold death benefits from spouses of
    decedents who retired from service but later died of injuries incurred in the line of duty.
    See id. at 693-94.
    This Court affirmed the denial of mandamus, reasoning that there was no ambiguity
    in the language of the special death benefit provision in the 1966 version of the Code. Id.
    37
    at 694.17 We stated that “the right to a pension depends upon the controlling statutory
    provisions and the claimant must satisfactorily perform and meet all conditions precedent.”
    Id. Mrs. Saxton was not entitled to the special death benefit because Lieutenant Saxton did
    not fulfill the condition precedent set forth in § 34(i) – i.e., he was not a member in service
    at the time of his death. Id. at 693-94. Pertinent to this case, the Saxton Court stated: “The
    ground rules here, to put it quite simply, were changed prior to the date when Lieut. Saxton
    sustained his injuries. In all states municipal corporations may make reasonable
    modifications of a pension plan at any time before the happening of the defined
    contingencies[.]” Id. at 694.
    Saxton stands for the proposition that a government employer may make reasonable
    modifications to its pension plan at any time before an event gives rise to an employee’s
    right to receive benefits (“the happening of the defined contingencies”). Id. Saxton also
    teaches that the employee must satisfy all conditions precedent set forth in the Plan (i.e.,
    the defined contingencies) to become entitled to receive the promised benefits. Id. In
    Saxton, the defined contingency in § 34(i) was “the death of a member in service arising
    out of and in the course of actual performance of duty.” Id. at 692. Thus, if Lieutenant
    Saxton had died of his injuries before being involuntarily retired, Mrs. Saxton would have
    been entitled to the special death benefit.
    17
    The Court did not state when § 34(i) – and its language restricting the special
    death benefit to designated beneficiaries and widows of “members in service” – was added
    to Article 22. Our research reveals that it was added in 1962. See Balt., Md., Ord. 62-1285
    (1962).
    38
    In Saxton, the Court did not consider whether the prospective modification of the
    benefit was reasonable. Thus, the Court offered no guidance about how to gauge
    reasonableness in the context of a prospective pension modification. Nor was the Court
    faced with a situation involving retrospective divestment of pension rights following the
    employee’s performance of all conditions precedent.18
    In City of Frederick v. Quinn, the Court of Specials Appeals considered both of
    those issues. In 1951, the City of Frederick adopted a noncontributory retirement and
    disability plan in Article XVI, Section 196 of its Charter. It repealed and replaced that plan
    with a contributory commercial insurance plan in 1961. 35 Md. App. at 628. Five police
    officers who had been covered under the old plan, and who declined enrollment in the new
    plan, sued the City of Frederick, seeking a declaratory judgment that they were entitled to
    benefits under the prior plan.19 Id.
    The prior plan provided:
    Any policeman, including the Chief of Police, who is in good standing and
    who has served on the force for a period of 20 consecutive years, including
    the years of service of any policeman now on the force, provided they are
    consecutive, and who has been retired from active service as provided in
    18
    The Court would have been presented with such a case if: (1) at the time of
    Lieutenant Saxton’s death the special death benefit provision in § 34(i) had not required
    that the employee have died while a “member in service” and the City therefore had begun
    making pension payments to Mrs. Saxton after her husband’s death; (2) a subsequent
    amendment added the “member-in-service” requirement to § 34(i); and (3) the City took
    the position that the amendment permitted it to stop making pension payments to Mrs.
    Saxton.
    19
    The plaintiffs in Quinn initially also sought damages under a breach of contract
    theory. However, for reasons not explained in the Court of Special Appeals opinion, the
    breach of contract claim was dismissed. Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 628 & n.1.
    39
    Section 196 shall be paid, for life, a sum of money equal to one-half of a
    prevailing salary, payable in semimonthly installments. Any policeman
    retired as provided in Section 196 who shall not have served on the force for
    a period of 20 years shall be paid, for life, a sum of money prorated in the
    proportion that the years he has served as a policeman bears to the whole
    period of 20 years.
    Id. Ruling in favor of the police officers, the lower court held that the officers, “by virtue
    of their service to the City of Frederick prior to the repeal of Article XVI, Section 196 of
    the City Charter, had vested pension rights as set forth therein which still remain in effect
    and cannot be modified, repealed or defeated by the City’s unilateral acts.” Id. at 627
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Court of Special Appeals vacated the lower court’s judgment. The court began
    its analysis by “[t]racing the evolution of theories in the decisional law of public employee
    statutory pension rights,” id. at 629, from which the court discerned two general approaches
    in this area: (1) a majority of states treated pension “rights” merely as “gratuities which a
    gracious and beneficent governmental employer may confer, withhold, modify or repeal as
    the whim of an omniscient sovereign dictates”; and (2) a minority of states had adopted “a
    basic concept of contractual rights that vest at time of employment,” but this latter group
    was “divided upon the extent to which the rights vest in the employee.” Id.
    The Quinn Court explained that the lower court had followed “the strict contract
    theory, holding that when the pension rights vested upon employment or adoption of the
    plan those rights were immune from prospective legislative impairment.” Id. The
    intermediate appellate court disagreed with this strict contract approach, opining that the
    lower court’s “holding goes too far,” but the court nevertheless agreed “that a pension is
    40
    more contractual than gratuitous.” Writing in 1977, the court stated: “Having barely
    concluded the 200th anniversary of our experiment in a democracy that wrenched itself
    from monarchical rule, it is absurd to speak of a pension as ‘a bounty springing from the
    appreciation and graciousness of the sovereign’. The medieval or even colonial concepts
    of a compassionate and generous sovereign rewarding his humble, devoted subjects is
    completely alien to our modern views of a democratic government’s obligations to its
    citizens.” Id. at 629-30 (citation omitted).
    “Only slightly less bemusing” to the court, however, was “the picture of a citizen
    whose contractual strength is so formidable” that a governmental employer “can neither
    terminate nor vary the terms of the employment contract which is the essence of the strict
    constructionists’ views…. Such rigid interpretation is the inevitable pitfall of seeking
    pigeonholes with labels as substitutes for logic and common sense.” Id. at 630.
    Having found both the “gratuity” approach and the “strict contract” approach
    wanting, the Court of Special Appeals adopted an intermediate position that turned on
    whether the employee’s right to a benefit had vested prior to the time of the pension plan
    modification. Key to the Court’s resolution of the dispute before it was the fact that the
    prior noncontributory plan provided that the officers would earn pension benefits on a
    prorated basis as they served the City. To illustrate its point, the court analogized to
    employee salaries:
    It is reasonable to assume, as the court below found factually, that [the
    police officers] were induced, at least in part, to their employment by the
    pension benefits held out at the time, just as they were induced by the salary
    then offered. The future benefits vested as they were proratedly earned, just
    as the employee’s rights to their salary vested as it was earned. Momentarily
    41
    assuming for argument that the City could terminate either or both of these
    benefits at its option, by doing so it would have no more right to withdraw
    retroactively the pro rata pension benefits that had accrued than it could
    demand repayment of the salary the employees had earned and had been paid.
    To that extent at least, especially in view of the proportionate prorating
    provision of Section 196, the pension rights vested absolutely. The provision
    acts as an express assurance to the employees that pension benefits they have
    earned by satisfactory service cannot be divested.
    Id.
    However, the court distinguished between pension rights that have vested and those
    that have not vested, reasoning that governmental employers may make reasonable changes
    to their pension plans that do not divest employees of pension benefits they have already
    earned:
    [T]he analogy of earned salary and vested pension does not withstand
    prospective comparison. The pension plan is not immutable and the
    government-employer need not keep its provisions precisely intact. As
    government grows in size and complexity and as more employees draw from
    the fund, changes must often be made to assure the soundness of the fund
    and permit its growth commensurate with its prospective needs. The
    contractual or vested rights of the employee in Maryland are subject to a
    reserved legislative power to make reasonable modifications in the plan, or
    indeed to modify benefits if there is a simultaneous offsetting new benefit or
    liberalized qualifying condition. Each case where a changed plan is
    substituted must be analyzed on its record to determine whether the change
    was reasonably intended to preserve the integrity of the pension system by
    enhancing its actuarial soundness, as a reasonable change promoting a
    paramount interest of the State without serious detriment to the employee. In
    short, the employee must have available substantially the program he
    bargained for and any diminution thereof must be balanced by other benefits
    or justified by countervailing equities for the public’s welfare.
    Id. at 630-31 (citing with approval City of Downey v. Bd. of Admin., Pub. Emps. Ret. Sys.,
    
    121 Cal. Rptr. 295
    , 303 (Ct. App. 1975)).
    42
    The court summed up its rule as follows: “If reasonable substitution is offered by
    an employer and it is declined by the employee, he is barred prospectively from further
    claims upon the rejected plan and is obviously not eligible to claim under the substitute
    plan. But the rights which have accrued under the terminated plan may not be
    retrospectively withdrawn from him.” Id. at 631. The court observed that its line of
    demarcation between retrospective and prospective pension modifications was in accord
    with this Court’s opinion in Saxton, based on Saxton’s references to the “ground rules”
    having changed before Lieutenant Saxton sustained his injuries, and to a municipal
    corporation’s authority to “make reasonable modifications of a pension plan any time
    before the happening of the defined contingencies.” See id. at 632-33 (quoting Saxton, 
    266 Md. at 694
    ).
    The intermediate appellate court remanded the case to the lower court to determine
    whether the new plan “was either necessary or reasonable when substituted.” Id. at 634.
    Since its issuance 44 years ago, Quinn has provided the most detailed explication of
    Maryland’s law regarding legislative modifications to public pension plans. Its holding
    may be summed up by two principles that build upon Saxton. First, a public pension plan
    “is more contractual than gratuitous.” Id. at 629, 633 (quoting Food Fair Stores v. Greeley,
    
    264 Md. 105
    , 113 (1972)). We have reiterated this principle. See Bd. of Trs. of Emps.’ Ret.
    Sys. v. Mayor & City Council of Balt. City, 
    317 Md. 72
    , 100 (1989) (“Under Maryland law,
    pension plans create contractual duties toward persons with vested rights under the
    plans.”). Thus, when an employee becomes a plan member, the employee has a vested right
    43
    to receive a pension through satisfactory service to the government-employer. Quinn, 35
    Md. App. at 630.
    Second, while an employee’s vested benefits may not be retrospectively eliminated,
    the employee’s vested right to a pension is not immune to prospective modifications and
    the government-employer “need not keep its [pension plan] provisions precisely intact.”
    Id. In other words, a government-employer is permitted to make reasonable prospective
    modifications to its pension plan, id. at 631, 633, subject to a determination as to whether
    the change was “either necessary or reasonable when substituted.” Id. at 634. The
    modification will be upheld as reasonable if it bears “some material relation to the theory
    of a pension system and its successful operation” and any disadvantages to employees that
    result from the modification are offset by comparable new advantages, benefits, or
    liberalized qualifying conditions. See id. at 631. It will be upheld as necessary if it was
    “intended to preserve the integrity of the pension system by enhancing its actuarial
    soundness, as a reasonable change promoting a paramount interest of the State without
    serious detriment to the employee.” Id. In other words, the substituted plan must be
    “substantially the program” the employee bargained for and, where a diminution in benefits
    is not balanced with a new advantage, the substitution must be “justified by countervailing
    equities for the public’s welfare.” Id.
    Guided by these principles, in Davis v. City of Annapolis, the Court of Special
    Appeals concluded that an Annapolis City police officer was entitled to pre-modification
    plan benefits where the employee’s rights had vested prior to the City’s plan modification.
    
    98 Md. App. 707
    . Davis involved a mandamus review following the Public Safety
    44
    Disability Retirement Board’s decision denying Officer Davis disability retirement
    benefits for a service-related injury that occurred in 1989 and a re-injury in 1990. 
    Id.
     The
    primary issue that the court resolved was whether the pre- or post-modification standard
    was applicable to determining his benefit eligibility.
    Prior to Officer Davis’s injuries and the modification at issue, the standard provided
    that an officer was entitled to the occupational disability retirement when that officer was
    “INCAPACITATED PERMANENTLY FROM ACTIVE SERVICE.” Id. at 711. In 1991,
    the City passed an ordinance to amend the standard. Id. Under the amended standard, an
    officer would be eligible if the officer was “WHOLLY AND PERMANENTLY
    PREVENTED FROM ENGAGING IN ANY OCCUPATION ... OR ... WHOLLY AND
    PERMANENTLY PREVENTED ... FROM PERFORMING ANY JOB IN THE FIRE OR
    POLICE DEPARTMENT....” Id. at 711-12. The Public Safety Disability Retirement Board
    applied the 1991 standard to Officer Davis’s case and denied disability benefits. After the
    Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County denied mandamus relief, Officer Davis appealed
    to the Court of Special Appeals.
    The intermediate appellate court explained that, if it were necessary to determine
    the validity of the change in standards, that inquiry would turn on “whether the 1991 change
    diminished the disability benefits under the prior law without conferring other comparable
    benefits to the class.” Id. at 717-18. However, it was not necessary to conduct that analysis,
    because the new standard applied “only prospectively as to disability rights that have not
    theretofore arisen,” id. at 718, and Officer Davis’s “contractual rights to disability benefits
    vested” under the pre-1991 pension contract because he was injured while the earlier
    45
    standard was still in effect. Therefore, the court remanded Officer Davis’s case for
    reconsideration under the pre-modification standard. Id. at 721.
    The cases we have summarized elucidate what up to now have been Maryland’s key
    principles concerning public pension plan contract law, and which consistently have been
    applied in federal courts tasked with deciding Contract Clause impairment claims involving
    Maryland public pension plans. See, e.g., Maryland State Teachers Ass’n, Inc. v. Hughes,
    
    594 F. Supp. 1353
     (D. Md. 1984) (applying Quinn); Baker, 
    487 F. Supp. at 467-70
    (examining and applying Saxton and Quinn); Cherry, 
    2011 WL 11027560
    , at *6 (citing
    Quinn and Davis). We now consider the application of these precedents to the contentions
    of the parties in this case.
    2. The City Breached Its Contract with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-
    Classes.
    The City contends that the circuit court erred in ruling that it breached its contract
    with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. According to the City, a correct
    reading of Saxton and Quinn, as well as federal Contract Clause cases, demonstrate that
    the City was allowed to make reasonable and necessary retrospective changes to the Plan.
    Alternatively, the City argues that Ordinance 10-306 only made prospective changes as to
    the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes.
    Appellants respond that the circuit court’s analysis regarding the Retired and
    Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes was correct. They argue that, while Saxton and Quinn
    allow for the possibility of prospective modifications to pension plans, those decisions
    make clear that retrospective divestment of earned benefits violates plan members’
    46
    contractual rights. According to Appellants, the Contract Clause jurisprudence upon which
    the City relies does not call into question the validity of the distinction between
    retrospective and prospective pension modifications. Appellants further contend that the
    switch from the Variable Benefit to the tiered COLA was retrospective, not prospective, as
    to the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes.
    We agree with Appellants that the circuit court correctly determined that the City
    breached its contract with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. The City’s
    argument to the contrary based on Saxton and Quinn misses the mark. The City focuses on
    the language in Saxton stating that municipal corporations “may make reasonable
    modifications to pension plans,” but the City does not grapple with the fact that, in the next
    breath, the Saxton Court qualified that statement by adding that such modifications may be
    made “at any time before the happening of the defined contingencies.” 
    266 Md. at 694
    .
    Saxton thus suggests that a modification may not be made with respect to rights that
    become vested as a result of “the defined contingency” having occurred; rather, a
    modification may only be made prospectively, i.e., in relation to benefits that have not yet
    vested.
    With respect to Quinn, the City focuses on the Court of Special Appeals’ statement
    that “[a]s government grows in size and complexity and as more employees draw from the
    fund, changes must often be made to assure the soundness of the fund and permit its growth
    commensurate with its prospective needs. The contractual or vested rights of the employee
    in Maryland are subject to a reserved legislative power to make reasonable modifications
    47
    in the plan, or indeed to modify benefits if there is a simultaneous offsetting new benefit
    or liberalized qualifying condition.” Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 630-31 (emphasis added).
    But this language must be read in the context of the opinion as a whole. As discussed
    above, Quinn made Saxton’s implicit retrospective/prospective distinction explicit. See
    Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 631 (“If reasonable substitution is offered by an employer and it is
    declined by the employee, he is barred prospectively from further claims upon the rejected
    plan…. But the rights which have accrued under the terminated plan may not be
    retrospectively withdrawn from him.”). Moreover, the reference to “vested rights”
    italicized above comes in a paragraph that explicitly addresses prospective modifications
    and concludes by stating that, after a modification, “the employee must have available
    substantially the program he bargained for and any diminution thereof must be balanced
    by other benefits or justified by countervailing equities for the public’s welfare.” Id. at 630-
    31. Further, the Quinn Court cited as support for this holding a California case, City of
    Downey v. Bd. of Admin., Pub. Emps. Ret. Sys., 
    121 Cal. Rptr. 295
     (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).
    The Downey Court explained that, upon becoming a plan member, an employee has a
    contractual or vested right to a pension, “but that right is not rigidly fixed by the specific
    terms of the legislation in effect during any particular period in which he serves. The
    statutory language is subject to the implied qualification that the governing body may make
    modifications and changes in the system. The employee does not have a right to any fixed
    or definite benefits, but only to a substantial or reasonable pension. There is no
    inconsistency therefore in holding that he has a vested right to a pension but the amount,
    terms and conditions of the benefits may be altered.” 
    Id. at 303
    .
    48
    Viewed in the context we have described, Quinn’s reference to “contractual or
    vested rights of the employee in Maryland [being] subject to a reserved legislative power
    to make reasonable modifications in the plan” does not refer to vested rights to specific
    benefits. Rather, it is properly understood to refer to the right, at the time employment
    begins, to have upon retirement either the pension plan that was in place when employment
    began or a “reasonable substitution” for that plan. Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 631.
    In a final effort to find support for its position in Quinn, the City asserts that the
    Quinn Court ordered a remand for the lower court to consider whether the retroactive
    divesting of the police officers’ prorated pension benefits through the substitution of plans
    was either reasonable or necessary. The City’s interpretation of the remand in Quinn is
    incorrect. The circuit court in this case cogently explained why a remand was necessary in
    Quinn, notwithstanding the Quinn Court’s holding that a retroactive divestment of pension
    rights is contrary to Maryland law:
    [T]he five Quinn plaintiffs were employed by the City of Frederick “at
    various times dating from September 12, 1942 until the present [April 13,
    1977] or the recent past.” Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 628. The original pension
    plan was effective “[a]fter 1951” and was “repealed on May 18, 1961 by
    resolution of the Board of Alderman of the City of Frederick. Thereafter, the
    officers on the police force were offered” a substitute plan. Id.
    These facts establish that the original plan at issue in Quinn was
    substituted smack in the middle of the span of years during which the five
    individual plaintiffs were employed by the City of Frederick, as they were
    employed “at various times” from 1942 until 1977 (or “the recent past”).
    Thus, for those Quinn plaintiffs who continued in active service following
    the adoption of the 1961 substitute plan, the substituted plan represented
    prospective change (as well as some measure of retrospective change given
    the pro rata system). With respect to the claims of these plaintiffs, therefore,
    the trial court was directed to make factual findings as to the necessity or
    49
    reasonableness of the substituted plan as a prospective change from its
    inception.
    We agree with the circuit court concerning the meaning of the remand in Quinn.
    The City’s argument concerning Contract Clause jurisprudence fares no better. The
    Contract Clause provides: “No State shall … pass any … [l]aw impairing the [o]bligation
    of [c]ontracts[.]” U.S. Const. art I, § 10, cl. 1. “A very important prerequisite to the
    applicability of the Contract Clause at all to an asserted impairment of a contract by state
    legislative action is that the challenged law operate with retrospective, not prospective
    effect.” Hughes, 
    594 F. Supp. at 1360
    . To determine whether such a retroactive enactment
    is an unconstitutional impairment of a contract, a court considers: “(1) whether there has
    been an impairment of a contract; (2) whether the state law has operated as a ‘substantial
    impairment of a contractual relationship’; and (3) if there has been a substantial
    impairment, whether the impairment is permissible because it is ‘reasonable and necessary
    to serve an important public purpose.’” Cherry, 762 F.3d at 371 (quoting Balt. Teachers
    Union v. Mayor & City Council of Balt., 
    6 F.3d 1012
    , 1015, 1018 (4th Cir. 1993)).
    The City contends that the federal caselaw applying a “reasonable and necessary”
    test to determine the constitutionality of a state law that retroactively affects contractual
    rights militates in favor of our interpreting Maryland common law similarly. Under this
    theory, the circuit court was wrong to consider whether Ordinance 10-306 was reasonable
    and necessary only with respect to the prospective changes affecting the Active Sub-class,
    but rather also should have undertaken that same analysis as to the Ordinance’s retroactive
    effects on the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes.
    50
    Although the City does not explicitly ask us to abrogate Quinn and import federal
    Contract Clause analysis in place of Quinn’s retrospective/prospective distinction, that is
    the import of the City’s argument. We decline the City’s implicit invitation. As the Fourth
    Circuit explained in the federal appellate incarnation of this case,
    [a] state or municipality does not “impair the obligation of contracts” merely
    by breaching one of its contracts or by otherwise modifying a contractual
    obligation. As we stated in Crosby v. City of Gastonia, “[i]t would be absurd
    to turn every breach of contract by a state or municipality into a violation of
    the federal Constitution.” 
    635 F.3d 634
    , 642 n.7 (4th Cir. 2011) (quoting
    Horwitz–Matthews, Inc. v. City of Chicago, 
    78 F.3d 1248
    , 1250 (7th Cir.
    1996)). Thus, our task is not to decide whether a breach of contract has
    occurred, but to determine whether the City has erected a legal barrier “that
    [has] prevented the [plaintiffs] from obtaining damages, or some equivalent
    remedy, for [any] breach.” Horwitz–Matthews, 
    78 F.3d at 1251
    .
    Cherry, 762 F.3d at 371. In short, a breach of contract claim is not equivalent to a Contract
    Clause claim. While all constitutional impairments of contracts are breaches of contract
    under Maryland law, not all breaches of contract rise to the level of an unconstitutional
    impairment.
    Finally, the City contends that Ordinance 10-306’s substitution of the tiered COLA
    for the Variable Benefit was a prospective change as to the Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-classes. As the City observes, future variable benefits “were entirely contingent on
    market performance.” Thus, according to the City, the Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Plan members did not have vested rights to any future Variable Benefits: “In this Court’s
    words in Saxton, the ‘defined contingencies’ – the declaration and calculation of a variable
    benefit in the future – had not yet happened.”
    51
    We disagree with the City’s characterization of “the declaration and calculation” of
    a future Variable Benefit as a “defined contingency” that had to occur before the Retired
    and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes would have a vested right with respect to receipt of
    such a Variable Benefit. What Saxton had in mind as a defined contingency was an act of
    the employee that triggered the requirement of the government-employer to provide the
    promised benefit(s). In Saxton, it was the death of a member in service from injuries
    sustained in the line of duty that entitled a surviving spouse to receive a special death
    benefit. In Quinn, it was the retirement of a police officer “in good standing” who had
    served on the force for a period of 20 consecutive years (or for a shorter period of time, in
    which case the officer would receive prorated benefits). In this case, a Plan member’s
    attainment of Service Retirement eligibility (reaching 50 years of age or accruing 20 years
    of service (with somewhat different rules for membership beginning on or after July 1,
    2003)) triggered their entitlement to any future Variable Benefits that were required to be
    paid based on investment performance.
    To conclude our analysis of this argument and the City’s claim of error in its
    entirety, we again turn to the circuit court’s ruling:
    The City argues that “Ordinance 10-306 did not retroactively withdraw any
    [Variable Benefit] raises” paid since the Variable Benefit was adopted in
    1983. “Rather, it adopted a different mechanism for providing future raises.”
    Therefore, “no ‘rights which have accrued under the terminated plan’ – i.e.,
    the variable benefit – were ‘retrospectively withdrawn’ from the retirees.”
    …. In the opinion of this court, the City has the wrong end of the stick.
    In addressing the pro rata pension benefits at issue there, the Quinn court
    determined that “future benefits vested as they were proratedly earned.”
    Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 630. The proportionate prorating provision of the old
    plan “act[ed] as an express assurance to the employees that pension benefits
    52
    they have earned by satisfactory service cannot be divested.” Id. Likewise,
    for Plan members who have satisfied all terms of service to earn, or to be
    entitled to earn, the Variable Benefit, prior to the effective date of Ordinance
    10-306, their rights in same vested absolutely. The notion that by virtue of
    the Variable Benefit’s market driven nature, Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-Class members, despite having satisfied all terms of service and defined
    contingencies, nevertheless float from one year to the next in some
    undefined, ethereal place, with the barest tether to entitlement – neither
    vested and yet not quite non-vested – is unpersuasive. Likewise, to reduce
    earned or accrued pension benefits to cash in hand or bust defies logic and
    flies in the face of controlling law.
    In sum, inasmuch as Retired Sub-Class members were entitled to, and
    receiving, Plan benefits as of the effective date of the Ordinance …, the court
    is not persuaded by the City’s argument that the Ordinance does not
    retroactively impair or diminish the rights or benefits of these Class members
    under the Plan. Further, as Retirement-Eligible Sub-Class members were
    eligible to retire as of the effective date of the Ordinance, but not entitled to
    receive Plan benefits solely because they remained working …, the court is
    not persuaded by the City’s argument that the Ordinance does not
    retroactively impair or diminish the rights or benefits of these Class members
    under the Plan. Instead, … the court finds that the City, by way of the
    Ordinance, breached its contract with Retired Sub-Class and Retirement-
    Eligible Sub-Class members by unlawfully withdrawing or removing
    previously earned and accrued benefit entitlements, specifically the Variable
    Benefit.
    We cannot say it any better. We affirm the circuit court’s determination that the City
    breached its contract with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes.
    3. The City Did Not Breach Its Contract with the Active Sub-Class.
    Appellants argue that the circuit court incorrectly determined that the City did not
    breach its contract with the Active Sub-class. Primarily, Appellants contend that the court
    erred in holding that the City had a reserved power to modify the contract to serve the
    public interest, notwithstanding the language in § 42 promising not to diminish or impair
    pension benefits. Thus, according to Appellants, the circuit court should not have
    53
    undertaken a “reasonable or necessary” analysis with respect to Ordinance 10-306’s effect
    on the Active Sub-class. To the extent such an analysis was appropriate, Appellants argue
    that the circuit court erred in concluding that Ordinance 10-306 gave the Active members
    substantially the program they had bargained for.
    The City responds that it was entitled to modify the Plan because, unlike the Retired
    and Retirement-Eligible members, the Active members had not yet satisfied the “defined
    contingencies” before the enactment of Ordinance 10-306. According to the City, the
    changes to the Plan as to the Active members were all prospective, and § 42 does not
    eviscerate the City’s reserved power to make such reasonable and necessary prospective
    changes to the Plan. A contrary interpretation, the City argues, would render Article 22
    void ab initio, as the City cannot bargain away its legislative powers. Finally, the City
    asserts that the circuit court thoroughly compared the old Plan to the Plan as it existed after
    enactment of Ordinance 10-306 and correctly concluded that the Active members received
    substantially the same program under the new Plan, but to the extent there was a
    diminution, it was more than justified by countervailing equities involving the welfare of
    the City.
    We agree with the City that there was no breach of contract as to the Active Sub-
    class. The City has the reserved legislative authority to make unilateral prospective
    modifications to the Plan, provided that the substitutions are reasonable and necessary.
    Section 42 does not and cannot bargain away this reserved power. Thus, the circuit court
    properly considered whether the prospective changes to the Plan were reasonable and
    necessary. We agree with the circuit court’s findings and conclusions regarding the
    54
    reasonableness and necessity of the changes to the Plan that the City Council made when
    it enacted Ordinance 10-306.
    a. The City Has the Reserved Legislative Power to Make Reasonable and
    Necessary Prospective Modifications to the Plan That Cannot Be
    Bargained Away.
    As discussed above, Saxton and Quinn demonstrate that, while a governmental
    employer may not retrospectively divest an employee of earned pension benefits, it has the
    reserved legislative authority to make reasonable and necessary prospective modifications
    to a Plan before the happening of the Plan’s “defined contingencies.” See Saxton, 
    266 Md. at 694
    ; Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 630-31. This reserved legislative power exists whether or
    not the operative statute expressly references it. See City of El Paso v. Simmons, 
    379 U.S. 497
    , 508 (1965) (“Not only are existing laws read into contracts in order to fix obligations
    as between the parties, but the reservation of essential attributes of sovereign power is also
    read into contracts as a postulate of the legal order.”); Baker, 
    487 F. Supp. at 468
     (“The
    power of the legislature under applicable state law to modify its own pension contracts is
    part of each pension plan which a legislature enacts, whether explicitly included or not.”);
    see also Hughes, 
    594 F. Supp. at 1362
     (where a contract concerns “the level of
    compensation to be paid State employees … for their services to the State,” it is “not one
    55
    as to which one legislature can bind subsequent legislatures for work and services to be
    performed by State employees … in the future”) (emphasis in original).20
    Appellants contend that § 42 of Article 22 changes the calculus. That provision
    states: “Upon becoming a [member of the Plan], … such member shall thereupon be
    deemed to have entered into a contract with the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, the
    terms of which shall be the provisions of this Article 22, as they exist at the effective date
    of this ordinance, or at the time of becoming a member, whichever is later, and the benefits
    provided thereunder shall not thereafter be in any way diminished or impaired.” (Emphasis
    added). Appellants effectively assert that, with respect to each member of the Plan, § 42
    provides immediate vesting of the benefits that exist in the Plan at the time the member
    enrolls by promising not to make prospective changes.
    20
    At least two Maryland counties expressly reserve legislative power to modify
    their pension plans. See Baltimore Cty. Code, § 5-1-259 (“The county shall from time to
    time amend this subtitle in such manner as may be found to be advisable to meet changed
    conditions or, as in the light of experience, may be considered necessary.”); Anne Arundel
    Cty. Code of Ord., § 5-1-103(a) (“It is intended that each plan be permanent, but the County
    reserves the right to amend or terminate each plan.”). However, as stated above, the absence
    of such an express reservation of legislative power does not mean the power ceases to exist.
    Another notable provision that is found in these other two plans that is missing from
    the City’s Plan are “vesting” clauses. In Baltimore County, an employee’s benefits vest
    after successful completion of 10 years of service. Baltimore Cty. Code, § 5-1-101(8)(ii).
    This is a pro rata vesting clause similar to the clause at issue in Quinn. In Anne Arundel
    County, the members accrue rights to the plan’s benefits and the County expressly provides
    that any amendment or termination “may not adversely affect accrued benefits as of the
    effective date of the amendment or termination.” See id. §§ 5-1-103(a), 5-1-101(36). If the
    Plan in this case had specifically provided that members accrue benefits on a pro rata basis,
    this case would resemble Quinn. That is, any change to an Active member’s benefits in
    such an instance would be partially retrospective and partially prospective.
    56
    We do not read § 42 as Appellants do. Section 42 explicitly states that a contractual
    relationship exists between the City and each plan member. It does not speak specifically
    to any particular benefit set forth in the Plan. The general statement in § 42 that the
    “benefits provided” under the Plan “shall not thereafter be in any way diminished or
    impaired,” in our view, essentially mirrors the rule that Saxton/Quinn states: once benefits
    have been provided to a member (i.e., once they have vested as a result of the employee
    having earned them per the terms of service), the City cannot thereafter retrospectively
    diminish or impair them.
    Thus, contrary to Appellants’ contention, § 42 is not analogous to the pro rata
    accrual provision at issue in Quinn. That pro rata provision created vested rights as the
    employees worked as police officers over the course of their careers. Each year, a greater
    percentage of their pension became vested, and any future change to the pension plan by
    the City of Frederick could not divest the officers of the accrued portion. Here, in contrast,
    the benefits set forth in the Plan do not vest until the members reach Service Retirement
    eligibility. Once they meet that condition precedent, as we have held above, the City may
    not retrospectively diminish or impair them. However, until the members reach Service
    Retirement eligibility, the City may make modifications to the Plan, provided they are
    reasonable and necessary.
    Accepting Appellants’ interpretation of § 42 would result in a contract that is void
    as against public policy. We generally are hesitant to invalidate voluntary bargains on
    public policy grounds, and thus we do so “only in those cases where the challenged
    agreement is patently offensive to the public good, that is, where ‘the common sense of the
    57
    entire community would ... pronounce it’ invalid.” Maryland–Nat’l Capital Park &
    Planning Comm’n v. Washington Nat’l Arena, 
    282 Md. 588
    , 606 (1978) (quoting Estate of
    Woods, Weeks & Co., 
    52 Md. 520
    , 536 (1879)). However, if we were to interpret § 42 as
    Appellants suggest, we indeed would be confronted with a contract that is patently
    offensive to the public good.
    As noted above, where a statutory contract concerns the level of compensation to
    be paid to public employees for their services to the governmental body, the enacting
    legislature cannot bind subsequent legislatures for work and services to be performed by
    the employees in the future. Hughes, 
    594 F. Supp. at 1362
    . Treating such a contract as
    “irrevocable” would render it void ab initio since it would have “surrender[ed] an essential
    attribute” of the government’s sovereignty – i.e., the police power, which the “legislature
    cannot bargain away.” 
    Id. at 1360
     (quoting United States Trust Co. v. New Jersey, 
    431 U.S. 1
    , 23 (1977)); see also Montgomery Cty. v. Bigelow, 
    196 Md. 413
    , 423 (1950) (“The
    legislature cannot by statute ‘preclude’ the repeal of any statute by a subsequent
    legislature.”). Appellants construe § 42 as rendering the terms of the Plan irrevocable as to
    current members whose benefits have not vested. That construction would render the Plan
    void ab initio for violating the reserved powers doctrine. See State v. Good Samaritan
    Hosp. of Md., Inc., 
    299 Md. 310
    , 319 (1984) (“It is well settled that the Contract Clause
    must be accommodated to the inherent police power of a sovereign state to protect the
    general welfare of its people.”). The public policy implicated by Appellants’ argument is
    the need for local governments to retain the ability to legislate for the public good – an
    essential element of their sovereignty. In sum, our interpretation of § 42 is reinforced by
    58
    the recognition that Appellants’ contrary interpretation would render the Plan void. Cf. City
    of San Antonio v. San Antonio Firefighters’ Ass’n, 
    533 S.W.3d 527
    , 532, 543-46 (Tex. Ct.
    App. 2017) (a contract that bargains away a city’s reserved legislative power is void as
    against public policy, but San Antonio’s collective bargaining agreement with the
    firefighter’s union, which expired after a maximum of 15 years, did not violate public
    policy by failing to be terminable at the will of the city).
    Harford County v. Town of Bel Air, 
    348 Md. 363
     (1998), relied upon by Appellants,
    is not to the contrary. Appellants cite Harford County for the proposition “that municipal
    contracts are not subject to modification based on the public interest.” In Harford County,
    we rejected the County’s governmental immunity defense to the Town of Bel Air’s claim.
    The County asserted, as its primary argument, that it was “entitled to abrogate its
    obligations under a contract entered into in performance of a governmental function if
    dictated by the public good.” 
    348 Md. at 370
     (internal quotation marks omitted). We
    restated this Court’s consistent position that “counties and municipalities have never been
    granted immunity in contract actions.” 
    Id. at 373
    . We distinguished two cases involving
    the constitutionality of legislative actions that repealed statutes, noting that
    [t]he holdings in both cases were that the subsequent repealing statutes did
    not violate the Contract Clause because the earlier statutes did not grant or
    authorize such vested contract rights that would be protected by the Contract
    Clause. The references to governmental purposes and “public good” in both
    opinions were integral parts of the holding that the subsequent repealing
    statutes were valid under the Contract Clause. Such references did not
    59
    constitute any recognition of local governmental immunity from suit in
    contract actions.
    
    Id. at 380
    . Therefore, we held that the County “has no governmental immunity in contract
    actions or in declaratory judgment actions relating to contractual rights and liabilities,” 
    id. at 373
    , even if the County abrogated its contractual obligations for “public good.” 
    Id. at 370
    .
    Harford County does not mention the reserved powers doctrine, let alone abrogate
    Saxton and Quinn. We agree with the City that “the type of contracts at issue (waste
    disposal) or discussed (construction) in Harford County are fundamentally different from
    pension plans that purport to tie a municipality’s hands for decades to come … and which
    threaten its ability to provide core services to its citizens. Given their ‘multifaceted’ nature,
    as they are based on ‘actuarial assumptions which may or may not turn out to be accurate,’
    pensions are simply different from other government contracts.”
    Having correctly determined that the City had the authority, notwithstanding § 42,
    to make reasonable prospective modifications to the Plan, the circuit court undertook an
    analysis of the reasonableness and necessity of those modifications. We now turn to that
    analysis.
    60
    b. The Circuit Court Correctly Concluded That Ordinance 10-306 Was
    Reasonable and Necessary.
    After conducting a lengthy trial, the circuit court found that Ordinance 10-306’s
    changes were reasonable and necessary and concluded that the City did not breach its
    contract with the Active members. We agree with the circuit court’s ruling.
    Tracking the points the Quinn Court opined were relevant in assessing the validity
    of a prospective change to a pension plan, the circuit court made numerous findings of fact
    in its Memorandum Opinion. Pertinent to the issue at hand, the court found:
    1.    At the time Ordinance 10-306 was passed, the City’s “dire financial and related
    circumstances extended to all City residents.”
    2.    “At the time the City adopted Ordinance 10-306, the Variable Benefit was
    unsustainable as a method of providing post-retirement benefit increases.”
    3.    “[C]ontinuation of the Plan unchanged would, in relatively short order,
    cannibalize the Plan’s basic benefit.”
    4.    Action to improve the actuarial soundness of the Plan was necessary at the time
    Ordinance 10-306 was enacted; “[t]he objectively verifiable and undisputed
    facts are that the City was in financial free fall; and – critically – even had the
    City not been in financial crisis, the Plan judged on its own merit was
    actuarially unsound and plainly unsustainable…. This was not theory subject
    to debate. This was reality. The Plan was unsound, unsustainable, and the City
    simply had to do something to turn it around.”
    61
    5.   “[W]hen it appeared inevitable that legislative changes would be made, the
    [police and firefighter] unions acknowledged that the City could not afford to
    repair the funding level of the Plan by reducing the post-retirement assumed
    rate of return to five percent. The unions proposed scrapping the Variable
    Benefit entirely in favor of a plan that included a fixed COLA and increasing
    employee contribution requirements by three percent (to nine percent) spread
    over an equal number of years.”
    6.   The testimony of the City’s expert witnesses was “credible, persuasive, and
    helpful, occasionally to the point of enlightening” concerning the “trajectory
    of the Plan (including the state of Plan assets) had it not been modified by law.”
    The testimony of the Appellants’ expert witnesses was not “comparatively
    credible or persuasive.”
    7.   “[T]he City was unable to absorb the nearly $62 million cost to the General
    and Motor Vehicle Fund budgets that would have resulted had the City
    modified the post-retirement assets earning investment rate from 6.8 to five
    percent as recommended[.]” And “additional tax revenue was effectively
    unavailable to resolve the problem, given the already tapped tax base of the
    City.”
    8.   PFM, the City’s outside consultant, “advised the City in 2010 that 10-306 as
    proposed (and later adopted) would enhance the Plan’s integrity and improve
    its [actuarial] soundness by enabling unfunded liabilities to be paid down.”
    62
    9.   Ordinance 10-306 was reasonably intended to preserve the integrity of the Plan
    by enhancing its actuarial soundness.
    10. The new 0-1-2 COLA, which replaced the Variable Benefit, “was properly
    intended to provide increases in income at stages of life when the City
    determined members were most likely not to have secondary employment or
    alternative sources of income[.]”
    11. Under the revised Plan, the City became a guarantor of the 0-1-2 COLA and
    all past Variable Benefit payments; the City previously did not guarantee
    Variable Benefit payments.
    12. “[U]nder the revised Plan, for the first time, the Plan provides a minimum
    annual benefit for qualifying spousal beneficiaries[.]”
    13. The new Plan “grandfathers certain Plan members into pre-Ordinance Service
    Retirement eligibility criteria” and “includes a new early retirement benefit
    enabling non-grandfathered Plan members to retire at pre-10-306 Service
    Retirement eligibility dates[.]”
    14. “[U]pdated levels of employee contribution increases are phased in over
    several years[.]”
    15. “[T]he revised Plan grandfathers into pre-10-306 DROP 2 eligibility those with
    qualifying years of service[.]”
    16. “[T]he revised Plan grandfathers into pre-10-306 AFC calculation those with
    qualifying years of service.”
    63
    17. Several “countervailing public equities” existed at the time the City Council
    modified the Plan, including:
    (a) The existence of “woefully anemic core services” following “shocking
    reduction in life-saving public essentials like fire-fighting and police units
    to important basic public health and welfare-related waste disposal
    services”; “these core service cuts, necessitated in large part by the nation’s
    financial circumstances that had overcome the City, placed the City’s
    residents in peril.”
    (b) “[E]nsuring the City has the capacity to continue to pay the basic Plan
    benefit is, itself, an important public equity… . The Plan, if left unmodified,
    was on track to run out of assets – not in theory, but with near certitude; not
    in some far off future, but in the relative near term.”
    18. The City’s expert witnesses were also “credible and persuasive on the subject
    of the impact of the comparative differences of the pre- and post-10-306 Plan
    on the Class (and Sub-Classes).” Appellants’ experts’ opinions “were neither
    credible nor persuasive on the question of whether the post-10-306 Plan
    provides Active Sub-Class members substantially the Plan they bargained for
    at the start of employment.”
    19. Plan members who met pre-10-306 Service Retirement eligibility as of June
    30, 2010, as well as members with 15 or more years of covered service as of
    June 30, 2010, are grandfathered into pre-10-306 Service Retirement eligibility
    criteria.
    64
    20. “[T]he increase in the minimum service requirement from 20 to 25 years for
    non-grandfathered employees will most likely impact a minority of employees
    in their retiring planning horizon, by one to at most five years; and, for these
    employees, the resulting pension at retirement with 25 years of service would
    be larger than they would have received retiring with 20 to 24 years of service
    under pre-10-306 provisions.”
    21. Regarding the impact of the AFC calculation, “employees retiring with 25 or
    more years of service who did not receive a pay increase in the final two years
    of employment would have received the same retirement benefit under the pre-
    10-306 Plan as they will receive under the revised Plan. For those affected by
    the change in AFC calculation, the paid benefit remains substantially the
    same.”
    22. The new COLA provides “predictability and reliability” and, therefore,
    “stability in a way the Variable Benefit cannot given its market dependency.”
    23. “[A]s far as hard dollars are concerned, the COLA measures up well to the
    Variable Benefit.” As the City’s expert explained (and the circuit court
    credited), “[t]he age-based COLAs are expected to deliver larger increases
    over an employee’s lifetime than under the variable benefit provisions prior to
    Ordinance 10-306. Accordingly, the lifetime income under 10-306 is expected
    to be reasonably equivalent (and certainly more predictable) than the benefits
    that would have been payable had Ordinance 10-306 not been adopted.”
    65
    24. The “actual effect the [tiered] COLA has had on retiree benefits (versus the
    Variable Benefit) since the Ordinance passed[] … further solidifies the court’s
    conclusion that the post-10-306 Plan provides Active Sub-Class members the
    substantial benefit of their bargain.”
    25. Ordinance 10-306 “made reasonable prospective modifications to the Plan’s
    terms, including Plan benefits affected by the Ordinance…. [T]he prospective
    modifications to Plan benefits were balanced by a combination of essential and
    overwhelming public welfare considerations, and new benefits or qualifying
    conditions. The Ordinance was ‘a reasonable change promoting a paramount
    interest of the State without serious detriment to the employee.’ Quinn, 35 Md.
    App. at 631.”
    Based on our review of the record, we perceive no clear error in the circuit court’s
    factual findings or any legal errors in the court’s analysis. We cannot say that the circuit
    court erred in accepting the opinions of the City’s experts and rejecting the opinions of
    Appellants’ experts concerning the state of the City’s finances at the time of the
    Ordinance’s enactment and the comparison of pre- and post-10-306 Plans. We also find it
    significant that, during the negotiations prior to 10-306’s enactment, the unions expressed
    their agreement that the Plan was in trouble and that the Variable Benefit should be
    eliminated and replaced with a COLA that was not market-driven. The unions also
    suggested increasing employee contributions. While the parties ultimately could not agree
    on the specific changes that should be made to the Plan, spawning more than a decade of
    66
    litigation, there is no dispute that the Plan urgently needed to be changed to ensure its
    actuarial soundness.
    In sum, we are satisfied that the circuit court correctly concluded that: (1) the
    Ordinance was reasonably intended to preserve the integrity of the Plan; (2) the changes to
    the Plan, as they affected the Active members, were reasonable changes promoting a
    paramount interest of the City without serious detriment to the employee; (3) post-10-306,
    the employees received substantially the Plan they bargained for; and (4) to the extent any
    benefits were lessened or other terms became more onerous, those changes were balanced
    by a combination of overwhelming public welfare considerations and new benefits or
    qualifying conditions.
    We emphasize the “and” in the preceding sentence to highlight an important
    clarification to Quinn. In Quinn, the Court of Special Appeals stated that “the employee
    must have available substantially the program he bargained for and any diminution thereof
    must be balanced by other benefits or justified by countervailing equities for the public’s
    welfare.” Quinn, 35 Md. App. at 631 (emphasis added). The disjunctive “or” in the Quinn
    Court’s formulation means that a governmental body’s dire financial situation, by itself,
    could balance a prospective “diminution” of Plan benefits. We believe fairness dictates that
    such a diminution be balanced both by other benefits and countervailing equities for the
    public’s welfare. As we have explained, the City does have the power to change the benefits
    under the Plan as to active employees. However, we recognize that, for some Active
    members, Ordinance 10-306 moved the goalposts very shortly before they were about to
    cross the goal line and achieve Service Retirement eligibility. Many of those employees
    67
    undoubtedly had given the best years of their careers to Baltimore City, serving the public
    daily in dangerous and stressful jobs. Although a governmental employer always retains
    its reserved power to make prospective changes to a public pension plan, it may make such
    changes only if any resulting diminutions in benefits are balanced by countervailing public
    equities and the addition of other benefits/terms, which provide the employees with
    substantially what they bargained for. Put another way and more simply, a prospective
    change to a pension plan must be both reasonable and necessary.21
    In this case, the circuit court correctly found that, with respect to Active members,
    the changes to the Plan were balanced by “a combination of essential and overwhelming
    public welfare considerations, and new benefits or qualifying conditions.” In other words,
    Ordinance 10-306’s changes were reasonable and necessary. Accordingly, we affirm the
    circuit court’s determination that the City did not breach its contract with the Active Sub-
    class.
    The Circuit Court Did Not Err in Calculating the Damages Awarded to the
    Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-Classes.
    As discussed above, by enacting Ordinance 10-306, the City breached its contract
    with the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes. As a remedy for the breach, the
    21
    This conjunctive formulation is consistent with Contract Clause jurisprudence,
    under which a court considers whether a substantial impairment to a contract is permissible
    because it is “reasonable and necessary to serve an important public purpose.” Cherry, 762
    F.3d at 371 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Although we have explained
    above that a Maryland breach of contract claim is not coextensive with a Contract Clause
    claim, the federal constitutional standard (“reasonable and necessary”) is appropriate to
    apply when considering whether a prospective change to a Maryland public pension plan
    is permissible or whether it breaches a statutory contract with plan members.
    68
    circuit court declined to order specific performance – i.e., reinstitution of the Variable
    Benefit for the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes22 – but rather calculated the
    monetary damages the City owes to the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes as a
    result of 10-306’s replacement of the Variable Benefit with the tiered COLA.
    Appellants contend that the circuit court erred in calculating the damages the City
    owes to these two Sub-classes by relying on incorrect assumptions made by the City’s
    expert witness, Adam Reese, and rejecting the testimony of Appellants’ experts, Thomas
    Lowman and Colin England. Perceiving no clear error in the circuit court’s factual findings,
    we affirm the court’s calculation of damages.
    As stated above, we review the factual findings of the circuit court for clear error
    and must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party and
    decide not whether the trial judge’s conclusions of fact were correct, but only whether they
    were supported by a preponderance of the evidence. See City of Bowie, 
    398 Md. at 676
    ;
    Urban Site Venture II Ltd. P’ship, 340 Md. at 229-30.
    The circuit court did not find Appellants’ expert witnesses, Messrs. Lowman and
    England, to be “credible or persuasive on the issue of what assumptions, bases and
    projections should be applied to calculate damages of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-Class members.” The court offered multiple reasons for this finding. “One of the
    primary reasons” was Appellants’ experts’ “reliance on a five percent post retirement assets
    earnings assumption rate as the basis for a significant portion of their determination of what
    22
    Appellants have not appealed this part of the circuit court’s ruling.
    69
    the prevailing Class members would have received had the Variable Benefit remained in
    place,” despite the fact that the City Council never voted to reduce the rate from 6.8% to
    5% prior to the enactment of Ordinance 10-306, which had “the effect of materially
    inflating damages without basis in fact.”
    In addition, as the circuit court explained, as to the over $400 million in losses due
    to the technology bubble burst, Appellants’ experts assumed “that the City recognized
    those losses between 2002 and enactment of the Ordinance, resulting in hundreds of
    millions of dollars in City Plan contributions. This did not happen and, even were the court
    to allow that double smoothing was chicanery, the notion that the City had even a fraction
    of that capacity is rather a whopper of a departure from reality.” The court concluded that
    “attributing those extra contributions to the retirees’ reserves (the PRF and the ARF) until
    they are fully funded, which wildly skews the amount of Variable Benefit in favor of
    Plaintiffs[,] does not reflect how Plan assets were actually accounted for among the pre-
    10-306 Plan funds; nor is it required by the Plan language.”
    Moreover, the circuit court found, Appellants’ experts ignored “the well-
    documented, deliberate Board practice of not tethering the Variable Benefit conversion rate
    to the post-retirement investment rate given the reality of the bond market (i.e., not yielding
    returns on par with the statutory 6.8% assumed investment rate) and the importance of
    avoiding volatile investments for retirees reserves” and instead used “a 6.8% conversion
    rate — which ha[d] the effect of enhancing Plaintiffs’ damages without suitable explanation
    of the presumed hike in rate.” The court also took issue with Appellants’ experts’
    assumptions that employee contributions from workers hired on or after July 1, 2010, and
    70
    associated employer contributions for those new hires, would be included in calculating
    Variable Benefit increases, despite new hires not being entitled to the pre-Ordinance 10-
    306 Plan terms and benefits. Lastly, the court determined the basis for Appellants’ volatility
    forecast and projections for future investment returns to be “outdated, outmoded, and
    unrealistically reliant on rarefied air of investment returns in ranges well above 40% in
    some years.”
    The court summarized Appellants’ experts’ damages analysis as building upon
    Appellants’ “breach by underfunding argument to calculate damages on a multi-faceted
    foundation of hundreds of millions of dollars in phantom City contributions (and capacity),
    an overly robust 6.8% conversion rate, post-10-306 new employee and employer
    contributions, and by booking these contributions singularly for the benefit of retirees until
    those funds are slated to be fully funded” and having return on investment projections that
    were “not well-based.” Therefore, the court concluded:
    In sum, in the opinion of the court, Plaintiffs’ damages theory is unsupported
    by historic fact and is unaccompanied by persuasive explanation why the
    court should go along with these assumptions. Plaintiffs’ theory is also
    unavailing as a matter of law, as it purports to place the prevailing Class
    members in a considerably better position than had the Plan not been
    modified. Contract law does not countenance a windfall for aggrieved
    parties, but rather mandates their position be righted.
    In contrast, the circuit court found the City’s expert, Mr. Reese, to be “credible,
    persuasive, and helpful to the court on the issue of the appropriate assumptions, bases and
    projections to utilize in determining what damages, if any, the Retired and Retirement-
    Eligible Sub-Class members are entitled, both pre- and post-final judgment.” According to
    the court, the City’s damages analysis “is based on terms of the pre-10-306 Plan and the
    71
    City’s documented, known, and Board-approved practices in place just prior to Plan
    modification” and its calculations “provide outcomes based on assets actually in the Plan
    when the modification was enacted and on a closed pre-10-306 Plan.” Therefore, the court
    concluded that “[t]he City’s proposed damages bases and assumptions ensure, to the degree
    possible, the members of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-Classes will receive the
    Variable Benefits they would have received had the Plan not been modified.”
    Having considered the testimony of the experts from both parties, the circuit court
    determined that calculations of damages would follow the City’s model:
    The court will, therefore, apply the City’s proposed assumptions, projections
    and overall method of calculating Variable Benefits the members of the
    Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-Classes would have received from the
    effective date of Ordinance 10-306 to the date of final judgment (including
    known FY 2010 through FY 2017 investment performance), and thereafter,
    reduced to present value. The pre-10-306 Plan will be treated as closed to
    new employees and new retirees following June 30, 2010, and calculated
    damages will implement Mr. Reese’s Variable Benefit averages based on his
    20 trials and shall be based on the amortization period and method in place
    in June 2010.
    Appellants argue that, by relying on Mr. Reese, the circuit court erred in its
    determination of how to calculate “Variable Benefit” increases if Ordinance 10-306 had
    not been passed, which dramatically reduced the damages award in this case. According to
    Appellants, the court erred by accepting Reese’s hypothetical two-plan model (Closed Plan
    and New Plan) to measure damages. Appellants also assert that the court erred by assuming
    that the Board of Trustees would not have acted to ensure that the retiree reserves in the
    PRF were fully funded.
    72
    In addition, Appellants challenge the court’s assessment of their experts’ analysis
    as neither credible nor persuasive. Appellants contend it was reasonable for Appellants’
    experts to assume that the City would have adopted the 5% post-retirement earnings
    assumption rate “based upon the Mayor’s testimony that the City would have had no choice
    but to adopt this rate and make an increased contribution to the Plan in the absence of a
    reduction of benefits.” Moreover, according to Appellants, it was reasonable for their
    experts to assume that the Board of Trustees would exercise its statutory authority and
    perform its fiduciary duty to adequately fund the retiree reserves. Finally, Appellants assert
    that their volatility forecast and projections were reasonable and consistent due to applying
    a weighted average to the 10,000 outcomes produced in the forecast.
    The City counters that Mr. Reese’s model was an accurate damages model based on
    a hypothetical “but for world” that assumed no breach and separated the Sub-classes into
    two categories – those in the “Closed Plan” (Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-class
    members) and those in the “New Plan” (Active Sub-class members and members who
    joined the Plan on or after July 1, 2010). According to the City, Mr. Reese’s model was
    based on Article 22 and actual past practice, which “showed conclusively that most retirees
    have fared and are expected to fare better under Ordinance 10-306’s guaranteed COLAs
    than under the previous variable benefit.”
    Appellants contend that the dispute over the analysis by the respective experts rests
    on questions of contract interpretation, and that we therefore should review without
    deference the circuit court’s “credibility” determinations as to the competing experts.
    73
    Assuming without deciding that de novo review applies to the circuit court’s choice of
    assumptions to apply in the damages calculation, the result is no different.
    As explained above, the pension benefits of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-classes fully vested prior to the enactment of Ordinance 10-306. Having vested, any
    change to the pension benefits cannot “be diminished or impaired” under § 42. In this sense,
    the Retired and Retirement Eligible Sub-Classes are “closed” from changes enacted by
    Ordinance 10-306. However, as the court found and we have affirmed, the City was
    permitted to apply the new COLA to the Active Sub-class (and, of course, to members who
    were hired after the enactment of the Ordinance). In this sense, the members of the Active
    Sub-class and new hires work in the “new” world of the COLA increase under Ordinance
    10-306.
    With this framework in mind, the circuit court’s acceptance of Mr. Reese’s two-
    Plan construct comes into better focus.23 Appellants believe that the Retired and
    Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes’ damages should be assessed under a hypothetical post-
    June 30, 2010 Plan in which there were no prospective changes made to the Plan as to the
    Active members and new hires. But the circuit court was correct not to measure damages
    in that way. The City had the power to make the prospective changes that it did. Moreover,
    23
    While the circuit court criticized Appellants’ experts’ damages model as
    unpersuasive and not credible, the circuit court did find that Appellants’ experts had “deep
    institutional knowledge of the Plan and changes made to the Plan over time,” and that all
    trial experts for the parties collectively were “well-qualified to render their respective
    opinions, their testimony was appropriate on the subject matters about which they testified,
    and each expert’s testimony had sufficient factual basis.” Thus, the court considered the
    testimony of Appellants’ experts, and rejected it.
    74
    as the circuit court found, if the City had not made those prospective changes, the Plan
    would have run out of funds to pay the basic benefit to Plan members in the near term. For
    these reasons, it was appropriate for the court to accept Mr. Reese’s assumptions, which
    accounted for different Plans for the “closed” group and the “new” group. The court
    correctly rejected Appellants’ experts’ pie-in-the-sky one-group Plan; such a hypothetical
    Plan would have self-destructed, leaving the Retired and Retirement-Eligible members
    with no pension at all.
    Similarly, the circuit court correctly declined to accept Appellants’ experts’ other
    assumptions, including extra contributions by the City to fully fund the PRF, and the
    recognition of the technology bubble losses more quickly than had actually occurred in the
    2000s. These assumptions did not accord with Article 22’s requirements and the historical
    administration of the Plan by the Board of Trustees and the City; had the circuit court
    accepted those assumptions, the Retired and Retirement-Eligible members improperly
    would have received a windfall. In contrast, Mr. Reese offered a reasonable damages
    calculation model based on the terms of the pre-10-306 Plan and the City’s documented,
    Board-approved practices in place just prior to the Plan modification by Ordinance 10-306.
    In sum, we conclude that Mr. Reese’s damages model provided the circuit court
    with an accurate assessment of how the members of the Retired and Retirement-Eligible
    Sub-classes would have fared if, hypothetically, the City had retained the Variable Benefit
    for them but made the prospective changes to the Plan for other members that we have held
    the City was permitted to make. This is the proper measure of damages, given that the
    75
    actual Plan at all times includes some members whose rights to benefits have vested and
    others whose rights to benefits have not yet vested.
    Mr. Reese’s analysis, based on assumptions that we have found are correct, provides
    “competent material evidence” to support the circuit court’s factual findings as to damages.
    Because there is competent material evidence to support the findings of the circuit court,
    no clear error exists here, and we therefore affirm the circuit court’s damages calculation
    for the Retired and Retirement-Eligible Sub-classes.
    IV
    Conclusion
    The record makes clear that the City took no pleasure in modifying the Plan with
    the enactment of Ordinance 10-306. The City was faced with a lose-lose proposition: either
    change the terms of the Plan and incur the wrath of its members, or allow the unsustainable
    Plan eventually to consume itself from within, harming the Plan members and all City
    residents. The City opted for the former approach. As to the Active Sub-class, Ordinance
    10-306’s changes made reasonable and necessary prospective changes. Thus, the City did
    not breach its contract with the Active Sub-class. However, the Ordinance retrospectively
    divested Retired and Retirement-Eligible members of the benefits they had earned by
    reaching Service Retirement eligibility. The City breached its contract with those Sub-
    classes and is liable for damages to the members as calculated and ordered by the circuit
    court.
    76
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court for
    Baltimore City.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE CITY AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE DIVIDED EQUALLY
    BETWEEN THE PARTIES.
    77
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 36-20

Judges: Biran

Filed Date: 8/16/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/31/2021

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