Ayers v. Public School Employees Retirement System of Georgia , 294 Ga. 827 ( 2014 )


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  • 294 Ga. 827
    
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    S13G0655. AYERS v. PUBLIC SCHOOL EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT
    SYSTEM OF GEORGIA.
    NAHMIAS, Justice.
    The Public School Employees Retirement System of Georgia (PSERS)
    filed suit against Appellant Leroy Ayers to recover three months of benefit
    payments to his mother, Esther Ayers, that PSERS mistakenly made after Mrs.
    Ayers had died. Appellant answered and counterclaimed, and a jury ultimately
    returned a $5,000 verdict in favor of Appellant. PSERS appealed, and the Court
    of Appeals reversed, holding that the trial court erred in denying PSERS’s
    motion for a directed verdict. See Public School Employees Retirement System
    of Ga. v. Ayers, 
    319 Ga. App. 234
    (734 SE2d 461) (2012). We granted
    certiorari.
    As explained below, the statutes that establish Mrs. Ayers’s contract for
    retirement benefits do not authorize the payment of monthly retirement benefits
    beyond the life of Mrs. Ayers and her designated joint annuitant — Mrs.
    Ayers’s husband, Grover Ayers, who predeceased her. Accordingly, no benefits
    were payable to Appellant after Mrs. Ayers’s death. The Court of Appeals
    correctly concluded that the trial court erred in denying PSERS’s motion for a
    directed verdict, but did so primarily based on analysis of retirement forms Mrs.
    Ayers filled out and correspondence she exchanged with PSERS instead of
    analysis of the statutory scheme. We disagree with that rationale, but agree with
    the result, so we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment.1
    1.      Esther Ayers worked for the Rome City School System for almost
    30 years before retiring as a cafeteria manager in 1982 at age 66. In November
    1978, she signed a “Change of Beneficiaries” form prepared by PSERS on
    which she designated her husband, Grover Ayers, as her “First Beneficiary” and
    her two sons, Appellant and his brother, as her “Second Beneficiary.” In March
    1982, Mrs. Ayers requested information on her retirement benefit payment
    options, and PSERS sent her an explanation sheet summarizing the three options
    set forth in the governing statutes, OCGA §§ 47-4-101 and 47-4-102.
    Mrs. Ayers then submitted an “Application for Retirement” that said: “I
    1
    In our order granting certiorari, we directed the parties to address both the trial court’s
    denial of PSERS’s motion for a directed verdict and the trial court’s denial of PSERS’s motion for
    summary judgment. However, our holding that the trial court erred in denying PSERS’s motion for
    a directed verdict moots any issue related to PSERS’s summary judgment motion. See 
    Ayers, 319 Ga. App. at 238
    . It should be noted, however, that both parties agree that this case involves no
    factual disputes; because the case involves only legal questions of statutory interpretation – and even
    on Appellant’s argument, only legal questions of contract interpretation – it should not have been
    submitted to a jury for decision.
    2
    understand the provisions of applicable law pertaining to retirement allowances
    for which I may be eligible and with this knowledge I hereby elect and authorize
    the System to pay allowances under the plan I have indicated below.” Below
    that, the application listed the three plan options – the maximum monthly
    benefit, Option A, and Option B. Mrs. Ayers placed a checkmark next to Option
    A, which said: “After my death, a specified portion of my monthly benefit will
    be paid to my primary beneficiary, if living, for the remainder of his or her life.”
    (Emphasis in original.) The bottom half of the form had a section labeled
    “Designation of Beneficiary,” where Mrs. Ayers designated her husband as her
    “beneficiary” and listed Appellant and his brother together as her “second
    beneficiary.” (Emphasis in original.)
    On May 10, 1982, PSERS wrote Mrs. Ayers a letter stating that her
    retirement application had been received; that under the Option A benefit
    payment plan that she had chosen, her 29 years and four months of service
    entitled her to “$184.88 per month for your lifetime”; and that “[a]fter your
    death, your primary beneficiary, Grover Ayers, will receive 100% of your
    retirement allowance for his lifetime.” The letter did not mention Mrs. Ayers’s
    sons. In closing, the letter said, “If you have any questions, or if there are any
    3
    changes which you wish to make in your retirement, please notify us
    immediately.” A postscript informed Mrs. Ayers that “[t]he amount contributed
    by you into the plan prior to your retirement was $432.00.” Mrs. Ayers retired
    effective July 1, 1982, and began receiving monthly benefits payments, the
    amount of which gradually increased over the years.
    On March 31, 1999, Mrs. Ayers died. Her husband had predeceased her
    in 1991, as had Appellant’s brother in 1995. Unaware of Mrs. Ayers’s death,
    PSERS continued making electronic deposits to a bank account that she held
    jointly with Appellant in April, May, and June 1999. The deposits for these
    three months totaled $1,064.91, which Appellant withdrew and used for his
    mother’s burial and to settle her finances. On November 3, 1999, Appellant
    submitted an “Application for Beneficiary’s Allowance,” which PSERS denied.
    In a series of letters over the next several years, PSERS demanded that
    Appellant immediately return the $1,064.91, but he never did.
    On August 11, 2004, PSERS sued Appellant in Fulton County State Court
    to recover on an open account, for breach of contract, and for money had and
    received. The complaint sought damages plus pre- and post-judgment interest
    and costs. On September 16, 2004, Appellant answered and counterclaimed.
    4
    After PSERS moved for summary judgment on the counterclaims, Appellant
    dismissed all of them except counts for breach of contract and costs. The trial
    court denied PSERS’s summary judgment motion in January 2009, and the case
    proceeded to trial in August 2009.
    At the close of the evidence, PSERS moved for a directed verdict, which
    the trial court denied. The jury then returned a verdict for Appellant, awarding
    him $5,000 in damages on his breach of contract counterclaim, and the court
    entered judgment on that verdict.2 The Court of Appeals granted PSERS’s
    application for discretionary appeal, see OCGA § 5-6-35 (a) (6) (requiring an
    application to appeal a money judgment of $10,000 or less), and reversed. See
    
    Ayers, 319 Ga. App. at 243
    , n. 1, 238. The court reviewed the PSERS forms
    that Mrs. Ayers filled out and her correspondence with PSERS and concluded
    that these documents plainly indicated that Mrs. Ayers’s retirement benefits
    would end upon her and her husband’s death. The court therefore held that the
    2
    In closing argument, PSERS asked the jury to return a verdict in its favor for $1,064.91 in
    principal plus $656.74 in prejudgment interest, and Appellant asked the jury to award him $46,314
    for 124 months of missed benefit payments plus $12,587.32 in interest, for a total of $58,901.32.
    The jury initially returned a verdict finding for Appellant “in the amount of legal fees with no
    repayment of benefits,” but the trial court sent the jury back to deliberate with a new verdict form
    and an admonition that the verdict was not in proper form and that the jury had heard no evidence
    or testimony as to legal fees.
    5
    trial court erred in denying PSERS’s motion for a directed verdict. See 
    id. at 238.
    2.      Appellant contends that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that
    PSERS was entitled to a directed verdict. We disagree.
    (a)     It is well settled under Georgia law that a statute or ordinance
    establishing a retirement plan for a government employee becomes a part of her
    contract of employment as soon as: (1) she performs services while the statute
    or ordinance is in effect; and (2) she contributes at any time any amount toward
    the benefits she is to receive. See Withers v. Register, 
    246 Ga. 158
    , 159 (269
    SE2d 431) (1980); Bender v. Anglin, 
    207 Ga. 108
    , 112-113 (60 SE2d 756)
    (1950). Because the right to receive such benefits is contractual in nature, the
    Contract Clause of the Georgia Constitution precludes the application of
    subsequent laws if the effect is to reduce rather than increase the benefits
    payable. See Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. X (“No . . . laws impairing
    the obligation of contract . . . shall be passed.”); 
    Withers, 246 Ga. at 159
    .3
    3
    See also Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. III, Sec. X, Pars. I-II (expressly authorizing the
    expenditure of public funds not only “for the purpose of paying benefits and other costs of retirement
    and pension systems for public officers and employees and their beneficiaries,” but also “for the
    purpose of increasing benefits being paid pursuant to any retirement or pension system wholly or
    partially supported from public funds”).
    6
    Although the rights of Mrs. Ayers and those claiming through her, such
    as Appellant, are contractual in nature, this case does not involve an ordinary
    insurance contract. PSERS was created and is controlled by statute. See Public
    School Employees Retirement System Act (“PSERS Act”), Ga. L. 1969, p. 998,
    §§ 1-26 (codified as amended at OCGA §§ 47-4-1 to 47-4-121).4 As a result,
    the PSERS Act itself supplied the terms of the written contract between PSERS
    and Mrs. Ayers. See Alverson v. Employees’ Retirement System of Ga., 
    272 Ga. App. 389
    , 392 (613 SE2d 119) (2005) (“[T]he plaintiffs are parties to a
    written contract established by the Code provisions in effect when they
    performed services and contributed toward their retirement benefits.”). See also
    Strickland v. City of Albany, 
    270 Ga. 31
    , 31 (504 SE2d 666) (1998) (holding
    that the city’s pension plan “created by the governing ordinances form[ed] a
    contract between the City and its employees”).
    PSERS has no authority to vary the terms of the contract between public
    school employees and the State of Georgia that is expressed in the PSERS Act.
    See OCGA §§ 47-4-26 (“The [PSERS] board shall have authority to expend the
    4
    Our review of the evolution of the PSERS Act indicates, and Appellant does not dispute,
    that the provisions of the Act relied on in this opinion have not changed over time in a way that
    affects Appellant’s claims.
    7
    funds [provided for in this chapter] in accordance with this chapter.”), 47-4-102
    (a) (“The benefit shall be paid in accordance with the terms of such option
    elected [by the employee].”). See also 
    Strickland, 270 Ga. at 31-32
    (rejecting
    reliance on the city’s employee handbook to vary the terms of the pension plan
    created by ordinance, explaining that “[a] court cannot, under the guise of
    statutory construction, either revise or enlarge upon those clear provisions of the
    [p]lan”). As this Court explained long ago, the rule is that
    the payment of benefits on the death of a [public employee] depends
    upon the terms of the law providing the right for such benefits, and
    neither the [public employee], nor those claiming under [her], have
    any rights except those conferred by the statutes . . . governing the
    pension funds.
    Burks v. Bd. of Trustees of Firemen’s Pension Fund of Atlanta, 
    214 Ga. 251
    ,
    254 (104 SE2d 225) (1958). Accord Sams v. Elder, 
    145 Ga. App. 222
    , 223 (243
    SE2d 644) (1978). Thus, Appellant’s reliance on the retirement forms that Mrs.
    Ayers filled out and the correspondence she exchanged with PSERS in 1982 is
    misplaced, and the Court of Appeals’ analysis focused on those extra-statutory
    materials, even if correct — which it may well be — was unnecessary.
    (b)   We turn our attention, therefore, to the relevant terms of the PSERS
    Act. OCGA § 47-4-101 establishes the basic retirement benefit for members of
    8
    PSERS. Subsection (a) authorizes retirement after a minimum of ten years of
    creditable service. Subsection (c) says that a PSERS member who retires on her
    delayed retirement date (Mrs. Ayers retired at 66 instead of 65) “shall receive
    a monthly retirement benefit, payment of which shall commence on [her]
    delayed effective date of retirement and which shall be payable on the first day
    of each month thereafter during [her] lifetime.” The amount of the monthly
    retirement benefit is a dollar figure multiplied by the number of years of
    creditable service. See OCGA § 47-4-102 (c). An employee receives the
    maximum possible monthly benefit under OCGA § 47-4-101, but those
    payments end when the employee dies; there is no provision for ongoing
    payments to any other person.
    OCGA § 47-4-102 is titled “Optional retirement benefits.” Subsection (a)
    allows a PSERS member to elect, at any time prior to retirement, a “joint and
    survivor option” or a “period certain and life option,” instead of the higher
    monthly payments for the employee’s lifetime alone under OCGA § 47-4-101.
    Subsections (c) and (d) of OCGA § 47-4-102 explain these two options as
    follows:
    (c) Option A, the joint and survivor option, shall consist of a
    9
    decreased retirement benefit which shall be payable to the member
    for life and shall continue after his death to the surviving joint
    annuitant in the same amount or in such smaller amount as he may
    designate. The election of this option shall be null and void if either
    the member or his joint annuitant dies before his normal retirement
    date.
    (d) Option B, the period certain and life option, shall consist
    of a decreased retirement benefit commencing on the date of
    retirement and payable on the first day of each month during the
    lifetime of the member, provided that if the member dies prior to
    having received the elected number of guaranteed monthly
    retirement payments, such remaining guaranteed payments shall
    continue to his designated beneficiary.
    It is undisputed that Mrs. Ayers elected Option A. Option A authorizes
    PSERS to pay a “decreased [monthly] retirement benefit” structured as a “joint”
    annuity. If the designated “joint annuitant” dies before the employee retires, no
    one else takes his place. Instead, the employee’s election of Option A becomes
    “null and void,” thereby allowing the employee to receive her full retirement
    benefit under OCGA § 47-4-101. If both the employee and her chosen joint
    annuitant survive beyond the employee’s normal retirement date, Option A
    guarantees lifetime monthly payments to the employee and to “the surviving
    joint annuitant.” If the joint annuitant is not “surviving” — that is, if the joint
    annuitant does not survive after the retired employee’s death — no further
    10
    payments are due under Option A, which is the “joint and survivor option.”
    OCGA § 47-4-2 (12) defines “joint annuitant” in the singular, as “the
    person designated to receive benefits payable on the death of a member, as
    provided in Option A” (emphasis added), and Option A makes no provision for
    multiple and successive joint annuitants. Moreover, subsection (b) of OCGA
    § 47-4-102 specifies that “[t]he amount of any optional retirement benefit set
    forth in this Code section shall be the actuarial equivalent of the amount of
    benefit that would otherwise be payable to the member under Code Section
    47-4-101.” Appellant concedes in his brief that “[g]iven the nature of the
    payments under Option A, it would [be] actuarially impossible to properly price
    an insurance policy where the potential beneficiaries have drastically different
    life expectancies.” In sum, Option A authorizes retirement benefit payments for
    the life of the employee and the life of her designated, single, surviving joint
    annuitant. And Appellant does not claim, nor could he credibly do so on this
    record, that in electing Option A, Mrs. Ayers intended to name him rather than
    his father, her husband, as her joint annuitant.
    Option B, by contrast, authorizes PSERS to pay a “decreased [monthly]
    retirement benefit” for a specified number of months chosen by the employee
    11
    prior to her retirement, with that full number of payments guaranteed. If the
    retired employee dies prior to receiving all of the payments, Option B requires
    PSERS to make the remaining payments to the employee’s “designated
    beneficiary.” No special provision is made in Option B for the death of a
    designated beneficiary prior to the employee’s normal retirement date, because
    none is needed. First, the retired employee would still receive the same
    guaranteed number of monthly payments, which is the option that she elected.
    Second, the employee is allowed to name more than one beneficiary, with her
    estate as the residual beneficiary.      Thus, OCGA § 47-4-2 (3) defines
    “beneficiary” to allow plural benefit recipients – “the living person or persons
    who are entitled to receive any benefits upon the death of a member and who
    were designated by the member by written notice to the board” (emphasis
    added), and adds that “[i]f the person or persons so designated are not living at
    the time of the death of the member, the beneficiary shall be the estate of the
    member.” No actuarial problems are created, because the amount of the
    monthly payments is based on the number of payments selected, regardless of
    whether the employee or one or more beneficiaries receive them.
    Appellant parses the retirement forms Mrs. Ayers filled out and the
    12
    correspondence she exchanged with PSERS in an attempt to show that they were
    confusing; he asserts that the documents therefore created a contract for a hybrid
    retirement benefit option that combined the lifetime benefits to a person other
    than the retired employee element of Option A with the ability to name multiple
    beneficiaries element of Option B. As explained above, however, those extra-
    statutory documents could not, as a matter of law, vary the terms of the
    retirement contract between Mrs. Ayers and the State established by the PSERS
    Act, and PSERS was not legally authorized to give an employee the hybrid
    option that Appellant postulates. Indeed, even if PSERS or its officials had
    made errors in administering its retirement plan with respect to Mrs. Ayers, it
    would not be estopped from correcting any deviations from the statutory scheme
    upon discovery. See Tate v. Teachers Retirement System of Ga., 
    257 Ga. 365
    ,
    366 (359 SE2d 649) (1987) (“It is well settled that ‘Powers of all public officers
    are defined by law and all persons must take notice thereof. The public may not
    be estopped by the acts of any officer done in the exercise of an unconferred
    power.’” (citation omitted)).
    (c)   For these reasons, Appellant was not entitled to the three months of
    retirement benefit payments that PSERS mistakenly paid after Mrs. Ayers’s
    13
    death into the joint bank account that Appellant shared with his mother, or to the
    additional monthly payments for which he counterclaimed. Thus, the trial court
    erred in denying PSERS’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor on PSERS’s
    complaint and Appellant’s counterclaims; the Court of Appeals properly
    reversed ruling; and we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    Decided March 17, 2014.
    Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia – 
    319 Ga. App. 234
    .
    Hernan, Taylor & Lee, Jerome Lee, for appellant.
    Stokes, Lazarus & Carmichael, Thomas V. Keough, for appellee.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S13G0655

Citation Numbers: 294 Ga. 827, 756 S.E.2d 538

Judges: Nahmias

Filed Date: 3/17/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023