Gzaskow v. Public Employees Ret. Bd. , 2017 NMCA 64 ( 2017 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 13:46:53 2017.10.04
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2017-NMCA-064
    Filing Date: June 5, 2017
    Docket No. A-1-CA-35161
    MICHAEL GZASKOW and
    FRANCOISE BECKER,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT BOARD and EACH MEMBER OF THE
    BOARD IN HIS OR HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
    Francis J. Mathew, District Judge
    VanAmberg, Rogers, Abeita & Gomez, LLP
    Ronald J. VanAmberg
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellants
    Robles, Rael & Anaya, PC
    Charles H. Rennick
    Albuquerque, NM
    New Mexico Public Employees Retirement Association
    Misty M. Braswell
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellees
    OPINION
    BOHNHOFF, Judge.
    {1}    In 2011, Plaintiff Michael Gzaskow retired from employment with the State of New
    1
    Mexico and began receiving retirement pension benefits pursuant to the Public Employees
    Retirement Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 10-11-1 to -142 (1987, as amended through
    2016). At the time of his retirement he was divorced, but he named Plaintiff Francoise
    Becker to receive retirement benefits in the event of his death; a few months after his
    retirement, Gzaskow married Becker. In late 2014, shortly before he took an extended
    overseas trip with Becker, Gzaskow executed and delivered to the Public Employees
    Retirement Association (PERA) a form that exercised a “one-time irrevocable option to
    deselect” Becker as his survivor beneficiary and designate his daughter, Sabrina Gzaskow
    (Daughter), as the survivor beneficiary. Following his return from the trip, Gzaskow advised
    PERA that the deselection of Becker and designation of Daughter was a mistake and
    requested that the action be voided. PERA declined to do so, taking the position that the
    action was not reversible. Gzaskow and Becker (collectively, Plaintiffs) then brought suit
    in district court (the Complaint) against the Public Employees Retirement Board (PERB),
    which is responsible for administering PERA, asserting a right to cancellation of the
    deselection of Becker as survivor beneficiary and seeking declaratory, injunctive, and
    equitable relief. PERB moved to dismiss the Complaint for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction, arguing that Plaintiffs had failed to exhaust the administrative remedy afforded
    under the Act. The district court granted PERB’s motion to dismiss and Plaintiffs now
    appeal. We affirm.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    A.     The Act
    {2}     Through the Act, the New Mexico Legislature has established a program whereby
    employees of the State of New Mexico and other public agencies may receive retirement
    pensions. Participating employees are “members” of PERA and earn the right to receive a
    pension by meeting various age and service credit requirements. See §§ 10-11-2(M), -3(A);
    State ex rel. Helman v. Gallegos, 1994-NMSC-023, ¶ 5, 
    117 N.M. 346
    , 
    871 P.2d 1352
    . The
    Act establishes PERB to administer the Act and manage the retirement pension program and
    PERA. Section 10-11-130.
    {3}    When a member who qualifies for a pension retires, he or she must elect one of four
    payment options or “Forms.” Section 10-11-116(A). The Forms of Payment are set forth in
    Section 10-11-117. Under Form of Payment A, the “[s]traight life pension,” the retiree
    receives a monthly payment and upon his or her death the payments cease. Section 10-11-
    117(A). Under Form of Payment B, “[l]ife payments with full continuation to one survivor
    beneficiary,” the retiree receives a reduced monthly payment, but upon his or her death a
    survivor beneficiary will receive the same payment until the survivor’s death. Section 10-11-
    117(B). Under Form of Payment C, “[l]ife payment[s] with one-half continuation to one
    survivor beneficiary,” the retiree receives a reduced monthly payment in an amount greater
    than that received under Form of Payment B, and upon his or her death a survivor
    beneficiary will receive one-half of that payment. Section 10-11-117(C). Under Form of
    Payment D, “[l]ife payments with temporary survivor benefits for children,” the retiree
    2
    receives a reduced monthly payment, and upon his or her death each “declared eligible
    child” of the retiree is paid a share of the retiree’s monthly payment until death or age
    twenty-five, whichever occurs first. Section 10-11-117(D). Form of Payment A is the default
    payment option if the retiree is not married at the time of retirement and does not elect
    another form of payment; Form of Payment C is the default payment option if the retiree is
    married at the time of retirement and does not elect another form of payment. Section 10-11-
    116(A)(1), (2). Under each of the Forms of Payment, the pension payments are calculated
    to have the same overall “actuarial present value” as Form of Payment A. Section 10-11-
    116(B).
    {4}    In addition to selecting a form of payment (other than Form of Payment A), when a
    member retires he or she will name the survivor beneficiary (or beneficiaries, in the case of
    more than one declared eligible child under Form of Payment D). Section 10-11-116(A). If
    the member is married, PERA must obtain the spouse’s written consent to the election of
    form of payment as well as the designation of survivor beneficiary; in the absence of such
    consent, the election and designation are not effective. 
    Id. {5} “An
    election of form of payment may not be changed after the date the first pension
    payment is made.” 
    Id. Further, after
    the date of the first pension payment, the survivor
    beneficiary (or beneficiaries) may not be changed except as provided in Section 10-11-
    116(C), (D), and (E). Subsection C provides that a retiree who is being paid under Form of
    Payment B or C with his or her spouse as the designated survivor beneficiary may, upon
    becoming divorced, elect to have future payments made under Form of Payment A.
    Alternatively, Subsection D provides that a retiree who is being paid under Form of Payment
    B or C may, upon the death of his or her designated survivor beneficiary, “exercise a one-
    time irrevocable option” to designate another individual as the survivor beneficiary.
    Subsection E provides that a retiree who is being paid under Form of Payment B or C with
    a living, designated, survivor beneficiary other than his or her spouse or former spouse “may
    exercise a one-time irrevocable option to deselect the designated beneficiary” and either
    designate another survivor beneficiary or have future payments made under Form of
    Payment A. Section 10-1-116(E).
    {6}     While a PERA member is employed, his or her spouse ordinarily acquires a
    community property interest in the member’s pension benefit. See generally NMSA 1978,
    § 40-3-8(B) (1990) (defining community property); Ruggles v. Ruggles, 1993-NMSC-043,
    ¶¶ 14-32, 
    116 N.M. 52
    , 
    860 P.2d 182
    (discussing divorcing spouses’ community property
    interest in employer-sponsored retirement plans); cf. Martinez v. Pub. Emps. Ret. Ass’n,
    2012-NMCA-096, ¶¶ 28-36, 
    286 P.3d 613
    (discussing parameters of widowed spouse’s
    statutory interest in PERA survivor benefits). The Act recognizes a spouse’s interests in
    PERA benefits in various ways. First, as mentioned above, Section 10-11-116(A)(2)
    provides that if a member who is married at the time of his or her retirement does not
    designate another form of payment, the default is Form of Payment C, life payment with one-
    half continuation to one survivor beneficiary, with the member’s spouse as the survivor
    beneficiary. Second, again as stated above, Section 10-11-116(A) provides that if the
    3
    member is married, the consent of member’s spouse is necessary to an election of the form
    of payment and designation of any survivor beneficiary other than the spouse. Third, Section
    10-11-136 provides that, at the time of divorce, the court handling the divorce may provide
    for a division of the marital community’s interest in the PERA pension and other benefits.
    {7}    Section 10-11-120 addresses denials of claims for benefits under the Act. Benefit
    claimants shall be notified in writing, with explanation, of a denial of a claim for benefits.
    Following receipt of the notice,
    [a] claimant may appeal the denial and request a hearing. The appeal shall be
    in writing filed with the association within ninety days of the denial. . . . The
    retirement board shall schedule a de novo hearing of the appeal before the
    retirement board or, at the discretion of the retirement board, a designated
    hearing officer or committee of the retirement board within sixty days of
    receipt of the appeal. A final decision on the matter being appealed shall be
    made by the retirement board.
    Section 10-11-120(A). Regulations promulgated by the PERB authorize representation by
    legal counsel, limited discovery including depositions as authorized by the hearing officer,
    issuance of subpoenas to compel the production of documents and attendance of witnesses,
    direct and cross examination of witnesses under oath, and transcription of the hearing by a
    court reporter. 2.80.1500.10(C)(2), (3), (5) NMAC. A dissatisfied claimant may appeal a
    final decision of PERB pursuant to the provisions of NMSA 1978, Section 39-3-1.1 (1999),
    which generally provides for record review of administrative agency decisions. Section 10-
    11-120(B). See, e.g., Johnson v. Pub. Emps. Ret. Bd., 1998-NMCA-174, ¶ 10, 
    126 N.M. 282
    ,
    
    968 P.2d 793
    . (“Appeals from decisions of the Board denying disability retirement benefits
    are reviewed on the record made before the Board.”).
    B.     Factual History
    {8}     The Complaint alleges the following: Gzaskow retired from employment as a
    physician with the State of New Mexico on January 1, 2011. At that time Gzaskow was
    divorced. On his PERA retirement application form he selected Form of Payment C and
    designated Becker as his survivor beneficiary. Plaintiffs were then married on April 15,
    2011. Prior to the marriage, Plaintiffs entered into a pre-nuptial agreement: they agreed that
    Becker would be the designated survivor beneficiary with respect to Gzaskow’s PERA
    benefits, but that she would distribute to Gzaskow’s children a portion of any such benefits
    that she received.
    {9}     From time to time thereafter, Plaintiffs took extended trips. Gzaskow claims that he
    spoke with PERA personnel and discussed with them how to address his retirement benefits
    in the event both he and Becker were to die while on these trips. Gzaskow claims that he was
    told that he could pay PERA a $100 fee and have his benefits provisionally recalculated on
    the assumption that, pursuant to Section 10-11-116(E)(1), he deselected Becker as survivor
    4
    beneficiary and designated Daughter as the new survivor beneficiary. Gzaskow also claims
    that he was told that if he and Becker both died while on a trip, Daughter would become the
    beneficiary if the recalculation had been done. Gzaskow had his benefits provisionally
    recalculated several times: each time PERA would prepare and provide to Gzaskow a form
    to accomplish the deselection and new designation. The form would show the recalculated
    pension and survivor benefit payments for Gzaskow and Daughter: because Daughter was
    younger than Becker, and in accordance with the requirement in Section 10-11-116(E)(1)(b)
    that the pension benefit’s overall actuarial present value remain the same, Gzaskow’s new
    pension payment would be a reduced amount. The form stated in bold font:
    This one-time change to a new beneficiary or change to Form of
    Payment A is Irrevocable.
    ....
    I have read and understand that this is a one-time removal and selection
    of a new beneficiary or selection of Form of Payment A. By choosing one
    of the options above, this will change my beneficiary or payment option
    until my death or the death of my beneficiary.
    When preparing for extended travel, Gzaskow would execute and give the form to Daughter,
    with the understanding that she would deliver it to PERA in the event he and Becker died
    during their travels.
    {10} In October 2014, Plaintiffs planned a trip to Vietnam. Gzaskow repeated the process
    of having PERA recalculate his retirement benefits if he deselected Becker and designated
    Daughter as the new survivor beneficiary. This time, however, Gzaskow not only signed the
    form on October 14, 2014, but also—he claims, mistakenly—delivered it to PERA.
    {11} On November 20, 2014, while Plaintiffs were in Vietnam, PERA sent Gzaskow a
    letter, acknowledging receipt of the deselection of Becker and new designation of Daughter
    as Gzaskow’s survivor beneficiary. The letter restated Gzaskow’s reduced pension payment
    that had been set forth on the form that he had signed and delivered to PERA. The monthly
    payment was approximately $1,700 less than his pre-October 14, 2014 pension benefit. Upon
    returning from the trip and reading the letter, Gzaskow notified PERA that there was a
    mistake, that he had not intended to make the deselection of Becker and the new designation
    of Daughter, and requested that the change be canceled. Gzaskow alleges that PERA
    personnel knew that Gzaskow was attempting to protect himself should he and Becker die
    in a common incident by repeatedly initiating the process of deselecting Becker, and that he
    did not intend to replace Becker as the survivor beneficiary if she was still alive. Gzaskow
    asserted that under his pre-nuptial agreement with Becker, Becker could not be removed as
    his survivor beneficiary, and as a result of his mistake he was in breach of that agreement.
    Gzaskow also provided PERA with an affidavit signed by Daughter renouncing the
    beneficiary designation. However, PERA declined to cancel the deselection of Becker and
    5
    designation of Daughter as the new survivor beneficiary. PERA took the position that,
    Gzaskow having delivered the executed form to PERA, the action was irrevocable, and that
    under the Act and the regulations PERB had promulgated to implement the Act, nothing
    could be done to reverse the deselection.
    C.     Procedural History
    {12} Following an exchange of correspondence between counsel for the parties, Plaintiffs
    filed the Complaint in the First Judicial District Court in Santa Fe, New Mexico on March
    30, 2015. The Complaint alleged the facts set forth above, and then articulated five counts
    that seek overlapping relief. Distilled to its essence, the Complaint asserts the following:
    (1)    Pursuant to Section 10-11-116(A), discussed above, Becker’s consent was a
    necessary predicate to any deselection of her as Gzaskow’s survivor beneficiary.
    Because she did not give her consent, the court should declare Gzaskow’s
    deselection was void and canceled, and that Gzaskow’s pre-October 14, 2014
    pension benefit should be restored.
    (2)    A PERB regulation, 2.80.1100.11 NMAC, identifies a number of documents (e.g.,
    a statement as to whether the previous beneficiary is still living, a copy of the new
    beneficiary’s birth certificate, and certain divorce proceeding documents) that must
    accompany the delivery of a deselection form. Because Gzaskow did not provide
    these documents to PERA on October 14, 2014, the court should declare the
    deselection void and canceled, and Gzaskow’s pre-October 14, 2014 pension benefit
    should be restored.
    (3)    Alternatively, because the deselection form was signed by mistake, Plaintiffs will
    suffer severe prejudice if the mistake is not remedied, and because PERA would not
    be prejudiced by returning to the pre-October 14, 2014 survivor designation, the
    court should exercise its equity jurisdiction and enjoin PERA to return Becker to her
    pre-October 14, 2014 status as Gzaskow’s survivor beneficiary and restore
    Gzaskow’s pre-October 14, 2014 retirement benefits.
    {13} PERB initially responded to the Complaint by moving to dismiss for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction based on Plaintiffs’ failure to exhaust their administrative remedies under
    Section 10-11-120. PERB subsequently filed an answer to the Complaint as well. In PERB’s
    memorandum of law in support of its motion to dismiss and its answer, PERB disputed a
    number of Plaintiffs’ factual allegations: whether Gzaskow had spoken with PERA
    personnel about provisionally signing a beneficiary deselection form to address the
    possibility that he and Becker both could die during their travels; whether the paperwork
    listed in 2.80.1100.11 NMAC was provided to PERA; fundamentally, whether Gzaskow’s
    October 14, 2014 execution and delivery of the deselection form was a mistake, i.e., whether
    he in fact intended to take that step; and whether PERA would be financially impacted by
    voiding and canceling of the deselection.
    {14}   Plaintiffs responded in opposition to the motion to dismiss, generally articulating two
    6
    arguments. First, Plaintiffs argued that PERB lacked authority to grant an equitable remedy
    to Gzaskow because it is a quasi-judicial administrative agency, and that the exhaustion of
    administrative remedies does not apply to claims over which an administrative agency lacks
    jurisdiction. Second, Plaintiffs argued that their claim was properly brought under the
    Declaratory Judgment Act, NMSA 1978, Sections 44-6-1 to -15 (1975). They cited, as
    authority for exempting such claims from the exhaustion requirement, Smith v. City of Santa
    Fe, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶ 26, 
    142 N.M. 786
    , 
    171 P.3d 300
    , and the Declaratory Judgment Act.
    {15} Plaintiffs also moved for summary judgment. In that motion, Plaintiffs advanced their
    substantive arguments that underlie the Complaint: Gzaskow’s declaration was invalid
    because Becker did not give her consent and the documentation specified in 2.80.1100.11
    NMAC did not accompany the deselection form. Alternatively, because the deselection form
    was signed by mistake, Plaintiffs will suffer severe prejudice if the mistake is not remedied,
    and because PERA would not be prejudiced by returning to the pre-October 14, 2014
    survivor designation, the court should exercise its equity jurisdiction and enjoin PERA to
    return Becker to her pre-October 14, 2014 status as Gzaskow’s survivor beneficiary and
    restore Gzaskow’s pre-October 14, 2014 pension benefit.
    {16}       PERB responded in opposition to Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion, again
    disputing Plaintiffs’ version of the facts as well as reiterating the same legal positions that
    it first signaled in its motion to dismiss. In particular, PERB argued that, because persons
    who become spouses after retirement have no community property interest in the pension
    benefit, Section 10-11-116(A)’s spousal consent requirement is intended to, and should be
    construed to, extend only to persons who are spouses prior to the member’s retirement. It
    pointed out that PERB’s regulations reflect this construction. See 2.80.1100.11(C) NMAC
    (explaining that spousal consent is required for post-retirement selection of new beneficiary
    only if retired member was married at the time of retirement and remains married to that
    person).1 PERB also argued that the question of whether it has the authority to grant
    equitable relief was moot, because Plaintiffs had not articulated a legal claim upon which
    their request for equitable relief is based. PERB asserted that the equitable relief Plaintiffs
    requested, that Gzaskow’s change of beneficiary be rescinded and his original benefit
    amount be reinstated, would be granted by PERB only upon a proper legal showing which,
    PERB went on to argue, Plaintiffs had not articulated.
    {17} The district court heard the motions together. It granted PERB’s motion to dismiss
    and denied, as moot, Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs timely filed their
    1
    This construction of the scope of Section 10-11-116(A)’s spousal consent
    requirement presumably is the answer to the question why PERB ever permitted Gzaskow
    to use Section 10-11-116(E) to deselect Becker in the first place, given that Becker had been
    his spouse since April 2011. But the question remains why Gzaskow thought he could
    engage in the deselection exercise, given his claimed literal understanding of the provision
    to apply broadly to any person who is a spouse at the time of the deselection.
    7
    notice of appeal.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.      The Doctrine of Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies and Smith v. City of
    Santa Fe’s Declaratory Judgment Exception
    {18} The New Mexico Constitution broadly grants district courts original jurisdiction to
    hear “all matters and causes not excepted in this constitution[.]” N.M. Const., art. VI, § 13.
    However, based on separation of powers considerations and due respect for the executive
    branch, our Supreme Court repeatedly has determined that district courts lack subject matter
    jurisdiction where the plaintiff has failed to exhaust available administrative remedies. See
    New Energy Econ., Inc. v. Shoobridge, 2010-NMSC-049, ¶ 10, 
    149 N.M. 42
    , 
    243 P.3d 746
    (stating that the doctrine of separation of powers is implicit to our Supreme Court’s
    reasoning in its cases “addressing the relationship between administrative proceedings and
    declaratory judgment actions”). “Under the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine,
    where relief is available from an administrative agency, the plaintiff is ordinarily required
    to pursue that avenue of redress before proceeding to the courts; and until that recourse is
    exhausted, suit is premature and must be dismissed.” Smith, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶ 26
    (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted); accord, State Racing Comm’n
    v. McManus, 1970-NMSC-134, ¶ 17, 
    82 N.M. 108
    , 
    476 P.2d 767
    (reversing district court
    issuance of writ of prohibition); Associated Petroleum Transp., Ltd. v. Shepard, 1949-
    NMSC-002, ¶ 12, 
    53 N.M. 52
    , 
    201 P.2d 772
    (“The plaintiffs are required to exhaust such
    remedies as are accorded them by the law before resorting to the courts.”).
    {19} In Smith, our Supreme Court noted several previously-recognized exceptions to the
    exhaustion of administrative remedies rule. The exhaustion doctrine (1) “does not apply in
    relation to a question which, even if properly determinable by an administrative tribunal,
    involves a question of law, rather than one of fact”; and (2) “exhaustion of remedies does not
    require the initiation of and participation in proceedings in respect to which an
    administrative tribunal clearly lacks jurisdiction, or which are vain and futile.” 2007-NMSC-
    055, ¶ 27 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The court also addressed,
    however, whether to recognize a new exception to the rule for actions brought pursuant to
    the Declaratory Judgment Act. The court noted that, the “Declaratory Judgment Act is a
    special proceeding that grants the district courts the ‘power to declare rights, status and other
    legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed’ ” and that it is “intended
    to be liberally construed and administered as a remedial measure.” Smith, 2007-NMSC-055,
    ¶ 13 (quoting Section 44-6-2). The court noted in particular that, pursuant to Section 44-6-4,
    the Declaratory Judgment Act specifically authorizes district courts to construe and
    determine the validity of statutes and local laws. Smith, 2007-NMSC-005, ¶ 14. On the basis
    of these considerations the court recognized a declaratory judgment exception to the
    exhaustion of administrative remedies rule for declaratory judgment actions: “[the
    p]laintiffs’ decision to use a declaratory judgment action as their method for challenging the
    [c]ity’s authority to regulate the permitting of domestic water wells appears to fall well
    8
    within the perimeters of what the Declaratory Judgment Act was intended to encompass.”
    Smith, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶ 15. See also Rainaldi v. Pub. Emps. Ret. Bd., 1993-NMSC-028,
    ¶¶ 3, 4, 
    115 N.M. 650
    , 
    857 P.2d 761
    (holding that the district court had jurisdiction under
    N.M. Const. art. VI, § 13, and §§ 44-6-4, -13, to hear suit for declaration of rights to
    retirement benefits).
    {20} Importantly, however, our Supreme Court then immediately qualified the declaratory
    judgment exception:
    That said, however, we must remain mindful of some important limitations
    on the use of declaratory judgment actions to review the propriety of
    administrative actions. In particular . . . , we caution against using a
    declaratory judgment action to challenge or review administrative actions if
    such an approach would foreclose any necessary fact-finding by the
    administrative entity, discourage reliance on any special expertise that may
    exist at the administrative level, disregard an exclusive statutory scheme for
    the review of administrative decisions, or circumvent procedural or
    substantive limitations that would otherwise limit review through means
    other than a declaratory judgment action.
    Accordingly, a declaratory judgment action challenging an administrative
    entity’s authority to act ordinarily should be limited to purely legal issues
    that do not require fact-finding by the administrative entity.
    Smith, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶¶ 15-16. See also New Energy Econ., 2010-NMSC-049, ¶ 12
    (“[W]hen the matter at issue (1) is purely legal, (2) requires no specialized agency fact-
    finding, and (3) there is no exclusive statutory remedy, it is a proper matter for a declaratory
    judgment action and does not require exhaustion of administrative remedies.”).
    B.      Plaintiffs Must Exhaust Their Administrative Remedy Under the Act
    {21} Plaintiffs argue that, because they seek declaratory relief, the exception recognized
    in Smith exempts them from exhausting the administrative remedy under Section 10-11-
    120(B). They argue as well that PERB has only quasi-judicial authority, which does not
    encompass equitable remedies, and therefore they are free to pursue that relief as well in
    district court. We are not persuaded.
    1.     Standard of Review
    {22} “Whether a court has jurisdiction to hear a particular matter is a question of law that
    we review de novo.” El Castillo Ret. Residences v. Martinez, 2015-NMCA-041, ¶ 13, 
    346 P.3d 1164
    . This proposition, however, begs the question how a district court is to resolve a
    challenge to its jurisdiction. The answer depends on whether or not the challenge is fact-
    based:
    9
    In reviewing a facial [i.e., non-fact-based] attack on the complaint, a district
    court must accept the allegations in the complaint as true. In contrast, in a
    factual attack, a party may go beyond allegations contained in the complaint
    and challenge the facts upon which subject matter jurisdiction depends.
    When reviewing a factual attack on subject matter jurisdiction, a district
    court may not presume the truthfulness of the complaint’s factual allegations.
    ....
    When the challenge is factual, a court has wide discretion to allow affidavits,
    other documents, and a limited evidentiary hearing to resolve disputed
    jurisdictional facts[.]
    South v. Lujan, 2014-NMCA-109, ¶¶ 8-9, 
    336 P.3d 1000
    (alterations, internal quotation
    marks, and citation omitted). See also Hamaatsa, Inc. v. Pueblo of San Felipe, 2013-NMCA-
    094, ¶ 9, 
    310 P.3d 631
    (stating that on purely facial challenge to jurisdiction, the court will
    accept as true all material allegations of the complaint), rev’d on other grounds by 2017-
    NMSC-007, 
    388 P.3d 977
    .
    {23} This standard of review necessarily must be modified in the context of a motion to
    dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based on failure to exhaust administrative
    remedies, because, as will be discussed below, one of the relevant factors that enters into the
    exhaustion analysis is whether there are disputed fact issues. As to that factor, Plaintiff’s
    challenge effectively remains purely facial: Plaintiff’s contention is simply that the pleadings
    and other papers in the record do not reveal a fact dispute. With the possible exception of
    futility (which has not been asserted in this proceeding), the other factors that enter into the
    jurisdictional analysis—whether the administrative agency itself lacks jurisdiction, whether
    agency expertise would assist the agency in resolving the dispute, the exclusivity of the
    statutory scheme for review of administrative decisions, or other procedural or substantive
    limitations on review—are all facial as well. See Smith, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶¶ 15, 26. Thus,
    our review, though de novo, is facial and limited to the record. We need not resolve any
    factual contentions.
    2.     Section 10-11-120 Provides an Exclusive Remedy for the Denial of Benefits
    Under the Act
    {24} Section 10-11-120 authorizes a benefit claimant to pursue an administrative appeal
    before PERB, followed by a judicial appeal before the district court, in the event his or her
    benefit claim is denied. As a threshold issue, Plaintiffs contend that their claims do not
    involve a denial of benefits, because the issue is whether Becker was effectively deselected
    as a survivor beneficiary and whether, even if effective, the deselection nevertheless should
    be reversed. We think Plaintiffs’ reading of Section 10-11-120 is too narrow; it grants appeal
    rights to all benefit claimants, not just members, so it encompasses Becker as well as
    Gzaskow. Further, PERA’s action not only has denied Becker her contingent interest in
    10
    receiving a survivor benefit, but, more immediately—as a consequence of the
    deselection—Gzaskow’s current monthly pension payment has been reduced by
    approximately $1,700. Both consequences constitute benefit denials, and therefore Section
    10-11-120 affords Plaintiffs a remedy.
    {25} The question under Smith, however, is whether Section10-11-120’s scheme for the
    review of administrative decisions is exclusive. Smith, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶¶ 15, 27. “The
    exclusivity of any statutory administrative remedy turns on legislative intent.” Barreras v.
    N.M. Corr. Dep’t., 2003-NMCA-027, ¶ 9, 
    133 N.M. 313
    , 
    62 P.3d 770
    . The absence of
    explicit language stating that the remedy is exclusive is not dispositive. 
    Id. ¶ 11.
    Rather, we
    will look to “the comprehensiveness of the administrative scheme, the availability of judicial
    review, and the completeness of the administrative remedies afforded.” 
    Id. The test
    ultimately is whether the administrative remedy is “plain, adequate, and complete.” Chavez
    v. City of Albuquerque, 1998-NMCA-004, ¶ 14, 
    124 N.M. 479
    , 
    952 P.2d 474
    .
    {26} Particularly when the procedural provisions of 2.80.1500.10 NMAC (the validity of
    which Plaintiffs do not question) are considered, Section 10-11-120’s administrative appeal
    scheme is comprehensive. It generally grants PERB authority to review and, if appropriate,
    rectify PERA benefit denials. As stated above, the statutory appeal is open to all persons who
    might claim a benefit and encompasses all agency actions that would operate to deny
    benefits. In the absence of any constraining language, we also understand that PERB would
    possess full authority to act to reverse, or otherwise remedy, agency actions to the extent
    permitted by the Act itself.
    {27} Section 10-11-120 also provides for judicial review pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section
    39-3-1.1 (1999). Compare State ex rel. Regents of E. N.M. Univ. v. Baca, 2008-NMSC-047,
    ¶¶ 13, 22, 
    144 N.M. 530
    , 
    189 P.3d 663
    (stating that the Procurement Code grants specific
    statutory rights to judicial review of bid protest decision), and Barreras, 2003-NMCA-027,
    ¶ 13 (stating that the “State Personnel Act makes express provision for judicial review of
    [State Personnel Board] decisions”), with Chavez, 1998-NMCA-004, ¶ 18 (noting that
    Municipal Code does not provide for judicial review of municipal personnel board
    decisions).
    {28} Finally, the administrative remedy under Section 10-11-120 is complete. As is
    discussed below, to the extent the Act would permit cancellation or other reversal of the
    deselection of Becker as Gzaskow’s survivor beneficiary, PERB would possess authority to
    take that action, and a court acting under its equitable jurisdiction could provide no further
    remedy. Thus, not only is the administrative remedy complete, any judicial remedy would
    be redundant and thus unnecessary.
    {29} For these reasons, therefore, we believe that Plaintiffs have a remedy under Section
    10-11-120 to challenge PERA’s refusal to reverse the deselection of Becker as Gzaskow’s
    survivor beneficiary, and that such remedy is exclusive.
    11
    3.     Fact Questions Are Present
    {30} In its order dismissing the Complaint, the district court found that, “Plaintiffs’ claims
    require factual determinations that should be made within the hearing process provided at
    the administrative level.” We agree that multiple disputed issues of material fact constitute
    an additional reason why Plaintiffs must exhaust their administrative remedies.
    {31} First, in the Complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that Gzaskow had discussed with PERA
    personnel the idea of preparing, dating, and signing—but not delivering to PERA and instead
    leaving with Daughter—before they left on an extended trip, a provisional or contingent
    deselection of Becker as his survivor beneficiary and designation of Daughter as the new
    survivor beneficiary. The suggestion is that PERA acquiesced in, if not encouraged, a tactic
    that could significantly enhance the aggregate monetary benefit paid to Gzaskow’s family
    over time in the event both he and Becker were to die on the trip: if that were to occur,
    Daughter could deliver the document, which had been executed prior to Gzaskow’s death,
    and claim survivor benefits that otherwise would never be paid due to Becker’s concurrent
    death. PERA disputed this claim of consultation, as well as Plaintiffs’ additional claim that
    PERA would not be prejudiced by cancellation of the deselection. Resolution of these issues
    may be material to construction of Section 10-11-116(E), see Helman, 1994-NMSC-023, ¶¶
    19-20 (explaining that a statute will not be interpreted literally if such construction is
    unreasonable), as well as any request for cancellation to the extent that it might call for the
    exercise of discretion.
    {32} Second, Plaintiffs alleged that Gzaskow had not delivered with his signed deselection
    form the other documentation specified in 2.80.1100.11 NMAC. PERA disputed this claim,
    arguing that those facts were yet to be established by Plaintiffs. Resolution of this dispute
    in favor of Plaintiffs was the basis for one of their claims of entitlement to cancellation of
    the deselection.
    {33} Third, and most fundamentally, the factual lynchpin of Plaintiffs’ claim of
    entitlement to cancel and void the deselection of Becker and designation of Daughter as
    survivor beneficiary was the notion that his execution and delivery of the document to PERA
    was a mistake, i.e., that at the time Gzaskow signed and delivered the document he did not
    intend to accomplish the deselection. PERA also disputed this contention.
    {34} PERB is no less well positioned to resolve these disputed factual issues than the
    district court. For this reason as well, Smith’s declaratory judgment exception for the
    exhaustion doctrine is not available to Plaintiffs.
    C.     Plaintiffs’ Remaining Arguments
    1.     PERB’s Equity Jurisdiction
    {35}   Citing AA Oilfield Service, Inc. v. New Mexico Corp. Comm’n, 1994-NMSC-085, ¶
    12
    18, 
    118 N.M. 273
    , 
    881 P.2d 18
    (recognizing that an agency possessed only quasi-judicial
    powers which did not encompass the authority to grant equitable remedy), and Leonard v.
    Payday Professional/Bio-Cal Co., 2008-NMCA-034, ¶ 12, 
    143 N.M. 637
    , 
    179 P.3d 1245
    (concluding that Worker’s Compensation Judge did not have authority to issue injunctions
    under the Worker’s Compensation Act), Plaintiffs argue that PERB has only “quasi-judicial”
    powers and lacks authority or jurisdiction to grant equitable relief. Because Smith recognizes
    claims over which the administrative agency lacks jurisdiction as exempt from the
    exhaustion requirement, 2007-NMSC-055, ¶ 27, Plaintiffs urge that the district court erred
    in dismissing their claim for injunctive relief against PERA.
    {36} We can assume for purposes of discussion that PERB lacks the power to grant an
    equitable remedy. However, Plaintiffs overlook a threshold consideration that moots the
    point.
    {37} The key question in this case is whether, under the language of Section 10-11-116(E),
    the Legislature has authorized reversal—whether articulated as cancellation, rescission or
    otherwise—of a deselection on grounds of mistake or, indeed, any grounds. If the answer is
    yes, then PERB can grant such a remedy pursuant to Section 10-11-120(A). In taking such
    action PERB could not be characterized as “enjoining” PERA to do anything: PERB
    exercises ultimate control and authority over PERA, i.e., PERA personnel effectively act on
    behalf of, and in the name of, PERB. Section 10-11-130. Therefore, if on appeal PERB were
    to reverse the 2015 denial of Plaintiffs’ request to cancel the deselection, PERB effectively
    would only be reconsidering its own institutional decision, the same as any other decision
    that it might make to reverse a previous PERA denial of benefits. In other words, if Section
    10-11-116(E) permits reversal of mistaken deselections, then Section 10-11-120 provides
    an adequate legal remedy that precludes Plaintiffs’ claim for injunctive relief by the district
    court. 2 Dydek v. Dydek, 2012-NMCA-088, ¶ 53, 
    288 P.3d 872
    (“[E]quity will not act if there
    2
    Because an agency would never enjoin itself as opposed to simply reverse its
    decision, it is illogical to argue the lack of equitable jurisdiction as a means of circumventing
    the requirement to exhaust administrative remedies: the agency can provide a sufficient
    administrative remedy whether or not it lacks authority to grant injunctive relief. An
    exception might exist, however, where the administrative agency is addressing one party’s
    relative rights and obligations as against another party. See, e.g., AA Oilfield Serv., Inc.,
    1994-NMSC-085 (common carrier opposed competing common carrier’s application for
    transfer of certificate of public convenience and necessity); Leonard, 2008-NMCA-034
    (addressing worker’s pursuit of worker compensation benefits against employer and insurer).
    Only in that situation, not present here, might the first party have reason to seek equitable
    relief.
    We also observe that most any challenge to an administrative agency’s decision may
    be articulated in terms of a request for injunctive relief. If one can circumvent administrative
    remedies simply by seeking the court’s order enjoining the agency to reverse its decision,
    13
    is a complete and adequate remedy at law.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    {38} Alternatively, if under Section 10-11-116(E) the Legislature has not authorized
    reversal of a mistaken deselection, then the courts have no more authority—equitable or
    otherwise—to reverse the deselection than that which PERB statutorily possesses. That is,
    if Section 10-11-116(E) is construed to not permit reversal of a deselection, then as a matter
    of law there could be no equitable cause of action to accomplish the same result.
    {39} That a court may not exercise an equitable remedy to accomplish a goal that a statute
    has foreclosed is well recognized by courts throughout the United States. In Immigration &
    Naturalization Service v. Pangilinan, 
    486 U.S. 875
    , 882-83 (1988), the United States
    Supreme Court reversed the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision to use equitable
    authority to confer citizenship upon two Filipino citizens who had served in the United
    States armed forces during World War II in contravention of a federal statute explicitly
    setting a cutoff date by which the two individuals should have applied for citizenship, but
    did not. The Pangilinan court stated, “[I]t is well established that ‘courts of equity can no
    more disregard statutory and constitutional requirements and provisions than can courts of
    law.’ ” 
    Id. at 883
    (alteration omitted) (quoting Hedges v. Dixon Cty., 
    150 U.S. 182
    , 192
    (1893)). The Pangilinan court continued, “ ‘A [c]ourt of equity cannot . . . create a remedy
    in violation of law.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Rees
    v. City of Watertown, 86 U.S. (19 Wall.) 107, 122
    (1873)). Specifically, Pangilinan stated that the power to grant citizenship had not been
    conferred upon the federal courts as a generally applicable equitable power. 
    See 486 U.S. at 883-84
    . Instead, because a federal statute dictates how a person may be naturalized,
    “[n]either by application of the doctrine of estoppel, nor by invocation of equitable powers,
    nor by any other means does a court have the power to confer citizenship in violation of
    these [Congressional] limitations.” 
    Id. at 885.
    {40} Similarly, in Westerman v. United States, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals applied
    the equitable principle that equity follows the law, stating, “Well over a century has passed
    since American jurisprudence definitively established that ‘courts of equity can no more
    disregard statutory and constitutional requirements and provisions than can courts of law.’ ”
    
    718 F.3d 743
    , 752 (8th Cir. 2013) (alteration omitted) (quoting 
    Hedges, 150 U.S. at 192
    ).
    The Eighth Circuit decided that because the Internal Revenue Service’s rights to “maximize
    the treasury’s collection of unpaid liabilities by applying undesignated employment tax
    payments first toward non-trust fund taxes and then by recovering unpaid trust fund taxes
    from the person (Westerman) responsible for their underpayment” were “ ‘clearly defined
    and established by law, equity has no power to change or unsettle those rights[.]’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Magniac
    v. Thomson, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 281, 299 (1853)). See generally 2 John
    Norton Pomeroy, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence § 425, at 188-90 (5th ed. 1941)
    (“Equity follows the law, in the sense of obeying it, conforming to its general rules and
    the exception will swallow the rule. For that reason as well, we would not expect injunctive
    relief to be a frequent basis for not exhausting administrative remedies.
    14
    policy, whether contained in the common or the statute law. . . . Courts of equity may no
    more disregard statutory and constitutional requirements and provisions than can courts of
    law. They are bound by positive provisions of a statute[.] . . . Wherever the rights of the
    parties are clearly governed by rules of law, courts of equity will follow such legal rules.”).
    {41} New Mexico courts have embraced the same principle. In Nearburg v. Yates
    Petroleum Corp., 1997-NMCA-069, ¶¶ 3, 32, 
    123 N.M. 526
    , 
    943 P.2d 560
    , this Court
    declined to utilize “the court’s power of equity” to affirm the district court’s refusal to
    enforce non-consent penalty provisions of an operating agreement to drill oil and gas wells.
    Nearburg acknowledged that while it is within the discretion of the district court to decide
    whether equitable relief should be granted, “such discretion is not a mental discretion to be
    exercised as one pleases, but is a legal discretion to be exercised in conformity with the law.”
    
    Id. ¶ 32
    (alteration omitted) (quoting Cont’l Potash, Inc. v. Freeport-McMoran, Inc., 1993-
    NMSC-039, ¶ 26, 
    115 N.M. 690
    , 
    858 P.2d 66
    ). This Court also has observed, in declining
    to endorse the exercise of equitable powers to override express contractual deadlines for
    renewing a commercial lease, that “ ‘[e]quity jurisdiction has never given the judiciary a
    roving commission’ to do whatever it wishes in the name of fairness or public welfare.”
    United Props. Ltd. Co. v. Walgreen Props., Inc., 2003-NMCA-140, ¶ 19, 
    134 N.M. 725
    , 
    82 P.3d 535
    (quoting In re Adoption of Francisco A., 1993-NMCA-144, ¶ 88, 
    116 N.M. 708
    ,
    
    866 P.2d 1175
    ). Therefore, if under Section 10-11-116(E), the Legislature has not authorized
    reversal of a mistaken deselection, neither PERB (acting pursuant to its authority under
    Section 10-11-120) nor this Court (acting pursuant to either legal or equitable authority) may
    reverse the deselection.
    {42} We conclude that PERB has authority under Section 10-11-120 to address the
    statutory interpretation question in the first instance and determine whether a member’s
    mistaken deselection of a survivor beneficiary may be reversed. If Plaintiffs disagree with
    PERB’s decision, they will remain free to pursue an appeal to the district court under Section
    39-3-1.1. For the present, however, it is clear that Plaintiffs must exhaust their administrative
    remedy. We express no opinion on the substantive question.
    2.      Invalidation of the Deselection Ab Initio
    {43} In their pleadings Plaintiffs claim not only that the deselection of Becker and
    designation of Daughter as new survivor beneficiary should be reversed, but also that the
    deselection was void ab initio because: (1) Becker never gave her consent; and (2)
    documents required by 2.80.1100.11 NMAC did not accompany the deselection form. The
    two claims are analytically separate: even if under Section 10-11-116(E) a deselection, if
    mistaken but otherwise valid, may not be reversed, that would not necessarily preclude a
    determination that conditions precedent prevented the deselection from ever taking effect.
    Indeed, the second claim logically should be addressed first, because if the deselection was
    null and void, then there is no need to address whether it can be reversed.
    {44}    These, too, are questions that PERB may address during any Section 10-11-120
    15
    appeal, with the opportunity for review by the district court on appeal. That is, on these
    questions as well, Plaintiffs must exhaust their administrative remedy. We express no
    opinion on the issue, including the subsidiary questions whether Becker has any property
    interest in a survivor benefit, whether the spousal consent language in Section 10-11-116(A)
    applies only to pre-retirement spouses, and whether the failure to submit with the deselection
    form any of the documentation described in 2.80.1100.11 NMAC would operate to void the
    deselection.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {45} We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Complaint on grounds that they
    must exhaust the administrative remedy afforded them pursuant to Section 10-11-120.
    {46}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    HENRY M. BOHNHOFF, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    LINDA M. VANZI, Chief Judge
    ____________________________________
    JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    16