Parker v. Wakelin ( 1997 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    Nos. 96-2225
    96-2226
    96-2227
    96-2228

    RICHARD M. PARKER, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees, Cross-Appellants,

    v.

    DAVID S. WAKELIN, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellants, Cross-Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge,

    Boudin and Lynch, Circuit Judges.

    _____________________

    Cabanne Howard, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Andrew
    Ketterer, Attorney General, and Thomas D. Warren , State Solicitor,
    were on brief for appellants.
    Donald F. Fontaine, with whom Kaighn Smith, Jr. and Fontaine
    & Beal, P.A. were on brief for appellees.



    ____________________

    August 11, 1997
    ____________________




    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. The question presented by this

    appeal is whether certain legislative amendments to the Maine State

    Retirement System ("MSRS") violate the Contract Clause of the

    United States Constitution as applied to plaintiffs, a class

    comprised of current Maine public school teachers all of whom are

    members of the MSRS. Following a bench trial, the district court

    held that certain amendments violated the Contract Clause as

    applied to those public employees who had satisfied the service

    requirements under the MSRS and whose pension rights had thereby

    "vested." Finding no unmistakable intent on the part of the Maine

    legislature to create private contractual rights against the

    reduction of pension benefits prior to the point at which pension

    benefits may actually be received, we hold that the Maine

    amendments do not violate the Contract Clause with regard to any of

    the plaintiffs. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's

    holding that the amendments violate the Contract Clause as applied

    to "vested" members of the MSRS.

    BACKGROUND

    None of the relevant facts recited below are in dispute.

    I. The Maine State Retirement System (MSRS)

    The MSRS operates as a public pension trust pursuant to

    Maine's public employee retirement benefit statute. See 5 M.R.S.A.

    SS 17001-18663 (1989 & Supp. 1996). The MSRS was created in 1942

    to encourage "qualified persons to seek public employment and to

    continue in public employment in their productive years." 5

    M.R.S.A. S 17050 (1989). For all Maine state employees, including


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    the public school teachers comprising the plaintiff class in the

    instant case, membership in the MSRS is mandatory. 5 M.R.S.A.

    SS 17001(14), 17651 (1989). All MSRS members make mandatory

    contributions into a pension fund. The State of Maine also

    contributes annually to maintain the fund's actuarial soundness

    with regard to future benefit obligations. 5 M.R.S.A. SS 17701-A,

    17701-B, 17153(1-A)(B)(Supp. 1996). The MSRS can be classified as

    a "defined benefit system," in that the retirement benefits

    provided for teachers are defined upon employment and financed in

    part by their fixed contributions into the system.

    The teachers, as members of the system, qualify to

    receive retirement benefits upon (1) reaching the statutory

    retirement age, and (2) satisfying either of the following service

    requirements: (a) at least ten years of creditable service; or (b)

    at least one year of creditable service prior to reaching the

    statutory retirement age while in public service. 5 M.R.S.A.

    S 17851 (1989 & Supp. 1996). Alternatively, a member may be

    entitled to receive retirement benefits when he or she retires

    after performing at least 25 years of creditable service. Id. In

    the district court's decision, the term "vesting" was used to

    describe the satisfaction of the service requirements. See Parker

    v. Wakelin, 937 F. Supp. 46, 49 n.1 (D. Me. 1996). However, as the

    district court in fact noted, the term "vesting" does not figure in

    the statutory scheme itself, which simply indicates the age and

    service requirements that must be met. See 5 M.R.S.A. S 17851




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    (1989 & Supp. 1996). Members who terminate their public service

    prior to satisfying the pension eligibility requirements are

    entitled to a return of their contributions, with interest. 5

    M.R.S.A. S 17705(2).

    An eligible retiree earns a pension in the amount of two

    percent of his or her "average final compensation" multiplied by

    the number of years of total creditable public service (up to 25

    years). 5 M.R.S.A. S 17852 (1989). The legislative amendments at

    issue on this appeal affect, among other things, the process by

    which one computes an employee's "average final compensation" in

    such a manner as to reduce the expected pension benefits of many

    members.

    The State of Maine concedes that the sole purpose for

    enacting the changes in the terms and conditions of retirement

    benefits ("the 1993 Amendments") was to save money by lowering

    budget allocations by the state to the trust funds of the MSRS;

    their enactment coincided with other responses to a state fiscal

    crisis. The 1993 Amendments may be sorted into two groups: three

    changes apply to the pensions of all current teacher-members of the

    MSRS, while three others apply only to those who had not satisfied

    the service requirements under the MSRS as of the effective date of




    Other non-pension benefits under the retirement system, such as
    life insurance and disability retirement benefits, may be received
    without having satisfied any minimum service requirement.

    A slightly different method applies to those retirees whose
    eligibility is based on having completed 25 or more years of
    creditable service.

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    the amendments. None of the amendments affected retirees earning

    pensions as of the effective date. The amendments that affected

    all of the plaintiffs were: (1) an increase in the rate of required

    member contributions from 6.5 percent of their salary to 7.65

    percent; (2) a cap on the salary increase that may be included in

    the course of calculating the level of teachers' retirement

    benefits; and (3) a six-month delay in the first cost-of-living

    adjustment of retirement benefits. See P.L. 1993, ch. 410, pt. L,

    SS 28, 13, 31. The district court held that these three

    modifications were unconstitutional as applied to those plaintiffs

    who had satisfied the service requirements. The other 1993

    amendments, which only applied to those who had not served 10 years

    as of the effective date of the amendments, were: (1) an increase

    in the regular retirement age from 60 to 62; (2) an increase in the

    early retirement penalty from 2.25 percent to 6 percent of the

    teachers' retirement benefit for each year preceding age 62; and

    (3) the elimination of an inclusion of per diem payment of up to

    thirty days of unused sick or vacation pay in the course of

    calculating teachers' retirement benefits. See P.L. 1993, ch. 410,

    pt. L, SS 33, 35, 37, 12. It is not disputed that the 1993

    Amendments operate to the disadvantage of MSRS members without

    providing substantive offsetting benefits.




    These provisions are codified as amended at 5 M.R.S.A. SS 17001-
    B, 17701(13)(C), 17806(3).

    These provisions are codified as amended at 5 M.R.S.A. SS 17851
    (1-A) & (2-A), 17852(3-A), 17001(13)(B).

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    When the MSRS was first adopted in 1942, the legislature

    made no express statement as to its ability to amend or alter the

    pension benefit structure. In 1975, the Maine legislature enacted

    the following provision:

    No amendment to this chapter shall cause
    any reduction in the amount of benefits
    which would be due to the member based on
    creditable service, compensation, employee
    contributions and the provisions of this
    chapter on the date immediately preceding
    the effective date of such amendment.

    P.L. 1975, ch. 622, S 6, codified at 5 M.R.S.A. S 17801 (1989),

    under the title "Amendment not to cause reduction in benefit."

    II. The Proceedings Below

    Plaintiffs, the Maine Education Association and a class

    representing public school teachers throughout the State of Maine,

    challenged the constitutionality of the 1993 Amendments under the

    Contract Clause, the Due Process Clause, and the Takings Clause,

    seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to block implementation.

    The district court held that: (1) the 1993 Amendments violated the

    Contract Clause only as applied to MSRS members whose benefits had

    "vested" under the system; and (2) the 1993 Amendments did not



    The current version has a few minor changes in language:

    No amendment to this Part may cause any
    reduction in the amount of benefits that would
    be due to a member based on creditable
    service, earnable compensation, employee
    contributions, pick-up contributions and the
    provisions of this Part on the date
    immediately preceding the effective date of
    the amendment.

    5 M.R.S.A. S 17801 (1989).

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    violate any other provision of the constitution. By using the term

    "vested" the district court referred to those MSRS members who had

    satisfied the service requirements under the system -- a service

    requirement is a necessary (but not a sufficient) condition to

    being entitled to actually receive a pension. See Parker v.

    Wakelin, 937 F. Supp. at 49 n.1.

    On appeal, the state defendants ask that we hold that the

    1993 Amendments do not violate the Contract Clause as applied to

    any of the plaintiffs. In their cross-appeal, the plaintiffs argue

    that the 1993 Amendments violate the Contract Clause as applied to

    all teacher members of the MSRS prior to the effective date of the

    amendments, and that the 1993 Amendments also violate substantive

    due process.

    DISCUSSION

    The essential facts being undisputed, this appeal turns

    on questions of law over which we exercise de novo review. See

    Villafane-Neriz v. FDIC, 75 F.3d 727, 730 (1st Cir. 1996). This

    appeal raises a legal issue of considerable importance, one we

    specifically left unresolved in McGrath v. Rhode Island Retirement

    Board, 88 F.3d 12, 19 (1st Cir. 1996). When stated broadly, the

    issue is whether a legislative amendment to a state employee

    retirement pension plan that is detrimental to employees triggers

    further scrutiny under the Contract Clause as applied to state

    employees whose pension rights under the plan have "vested" prior

    to such amendment. In McGrath, we did not need to resolve this

    issue, because the plaintiff's pension rights had not vested prior


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    to the legislative amendment at issue, and because the legislature

    specifically reserved the power to amend or terminate the plan as

    to nonvested members. 88 F.3d at 19-20. We now conclude that a

    blanket answer to the issue of Contract Clause protection for

    vested employees is not possible, because, as we explain below, a

    detailed examination of the particular provisions of a state

    pension program will be required prior to determining the nature

    and scope of the unmistakable contractual rights, if any, that are

    created by a given state legislature.

    I. General Contract Clause Principles

    Although the wording of the Contract Clause appears

    uncompromising -- "No state shall . . . pass any . . . Law

    impairing the Obligation of Contracts . . . " -- the Supreme Court

    does not interpret it as an absolute bar on the impairment of

    either governmental or private contractual obligations. See United

    States Trust Co. v. New Jersey, 431 U.S. 1, 21 (1977) ("'[T]he

    prohibition is not an absolute one and is not to be read with

    literal exactness like a mathematical formula.'" (quoting Home

    Bldg. & Loan Ass'n v. Blaisdell, 290 U.S. 398, 428 (1934))).

    Rather, the Supreme Court has elaborated an analysis under which a

    court must first ascertain whether a change in state law has

    resulted in "'the substantial impairment of a contractual

    relationship.'" General Motors Corp. v. Romein, 503 U.S. 181, 186

    (1992) (quoting Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus, 438 U.S.




    U.S. Const. art. I, S 10, cl. 1.

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    234, 244 (1978)). Next, the reviewing court must determine whether

    the impairment is nevertheless justified as "reasonable and

    necessary to serve an important public purpose." United States

    Trust Co., 431 U.S. at 25-26. Where the contract allegedly

    impaired is one created, or entered into, by the state itself, less

    deference to a legislative determination of reasonableness and

    necessity is required, because "the State's self-interest is at

    stake." Id. at 25; see also McGrath, 88 F.3d at 16 (when the state

    itself is a party, it "must do more than mouth the vocabulary of

    the public weal in order to reach safe harbor.").

    The first step described above can be further broken down

    into "three components: whether there is a contractual

    relationship, whether a change in law impairs that contractual

    relationship, and whether the impairment is substantial." Romein,

    503 U.S. at 186. In the instant case, we need not reach the issue

    of impairment or substantiality, because the plaintiffs fail to

    demonstrate the existence of a contractual relationship protected

    by the Contract Clause. At the same time that less deference is

    given to state legislatures when it is the state that wishes to

    relieve itself of contractual obligations, a clear showing must be

    made that a state law has created a contractual obligation on the

    part of the state in the first place. See Hoffman v. Warwick, 909

    F.2d 608, 614 (1st Cir. 1990) ("The Contract Clause is applicable

    to contracts into which the state enters, but normally state

    statutory enactments do not of their own force create a contract

    with those whom the statute benefits.").


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    II. The Unmistakability Doctrine

    In order to deem a state legislative enactment a contract

    for the purposes of the Contract Clause, there must be a clear

    indication that the legislature intends to bind itself in a

    contractual manner. See National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Atchison,

    Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 470 U.S. 451, 465-66 (1985) ("[A]bsent

    some clear indication that the legislature intends to bind itself

    contractually, the presumption is that 'a law is not intended to

    create private contractual or vested rights but merely declares a

    policy to be pursued until the legislature shall ordain

    otherwise.'" (quoting Dodge v. Board of Educ., 302 U.S. 74, 79

    (1937))); United States Trust Co., 431 U.S. at 17 n.14 (a statute

    may be treated as a binding contract "when the language and the

    circumstances evince a legislative intent to create private rights

    of a contractual nature enforceable against the state.").

    This threshold requirement for the recognition of public

    contracts has been referred to as the "unmistakability doctrine."

    See McGrath, 88 F.3d at 19 (citing United States v. Winstar, 116

    S. Ct. 2432 (1996)). In United States v. Winstar, the Supreme

    Court traced the history of the unmistakability doctrine from

    Justice Marshall's opinion in Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch)

    87 (1810), and explained its purpose. Because legislatures should

    not bind future legislatures from employing their sovereign powers

    in the absence of the clearest of intent to create vested rights

    protected under the Contract Clause, courts developed canons of

    construction disfavoring implied governmental contractual


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    obligations. Thus, "'neither the right of taxation, nor any other

    power of sovereignty, will be held . . . to have been surrendered,

    unless such surrender has been expressed in terms too plain to be

    mistaken.'" Winstar, 116 S. Ct. at 2455 (quoting Jefferson Branch

    Bank v. Skelly, 68 U.S. (1 Black) 436, 446 (1862)). The

    requirement that "the government's obligation unmistakably appear

    thus served the dual purposes of limiting contractual incursions on

    a State's sovereign powers and of avoiding difficult constitutional

    questions about the extent of State authority to limit the

    subsequent exercise of legislative power." Winstar, 116 S. Ct. at

    2455.

    In its most recent Contract Clause case holding a state

    to its obligations under a public contract, the Supreme Court found

    ample evidence that a promise on the part of the state had been

    made in a contractual setting, in return for a specific bargained-

    for benefit, and found that the statutory scheme clearly employed

    the language of contract. See United States Trust Co. , 431 U.S. at

    17-18 (involving a legislative covenant between New York and New

    Jersey and future bondholders where the very "purpose of the

    covenant was to invoke the constitutional protection of the

    Contract Clause as security against repeal"). In the instant case,

    we must determine whether the MSRS also evinces a clear intent on

    the part of the Maine legislature to create contractual rights

    against the modification of pension benefits.

    III. Pension Plans as Contractual Obligations




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    The law governing the rights of members of public

    employee retirement plans varies greatly from state to state, and

    has not been the subject of federal regulation or harmonization.

    There is no modern Supreme Court case that provides guidance as to

    the rights public employees have to their pensions. Pennie v.

    Reis, 132 U.S. 464 (1889), stands for the proposition that public

    employee pension programs do not create vested rights against

    legislative modifications, and thus are gratuities that a state may

    freely revoke. See Pennie, 132 U.S. at 470-71 (holding

    California's adjustment of a pension benefit plan for police

    officers did not constitute deprivation of property without due

    process). Although this "gratuity" approach has been rejected by

    most state courts, Pennie has never been explicitly overruled. See

    generally 60A Am. Jur. 2d, Pensions and Retirement Funds, SS 1620-

    29 (discussing the shift away from the gratuity approach toward the

    contract approach). Pennie has, however, been ignored as a

    precedent, perhaps because its dicta regarding public pension

    benefits arose in the context of a Due Process claim.

    Although only two other circuits have addressed this

    question, state courts have generally viewed a public pension plan

    as creating implied-in-fact unilateral contracts. See McGrath, 88

    F.3d at 17 (collecting cases). The Ninth Circuit in State of

    Nevada Employees Ass'n v. Keating, 903 F.2d 1223 (9th Cir. 1990),

    agreed with the Nevada Supreme Court that the "'better reasoned

    view' recognizes that non-vested employees have contractual rights

    in pension plans 'subject to reasonable modification in order to


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    keep the system flexible to meet changing conditions, and to

    maintain the actuarial soundness of the system.'" 903 F.2d at 1227

    (quoting Public Employees' Retirement Board v. Washoe, 96 Nev. 718

    (1980)). Thus the Ninth Circuit in Keating concluded that a Nevada

    law penalizing the withdrawal of pension contributions and thereby

    altering the previous law that contained no such penalty, violated

    the Contract Clause because it did not represent a reasonable

    modification of the pension plan. The court in Keating noted,

    however, that the state did not dispute that Nevada's statutes

    providing pensions for public employees created contractual

    obligations. See Keating, 903 F.2d at 1225-26. The Fourth Circuit

    also ignored the gratuity approach in the course of holding that

    legislative amendments to a North Carolina public employee

    disability benefit plan did not violate the Contract Clause

    because, under relevant state law interpretations of the statute,

    rights to benefits under the plan did not vest until retirement.

    See Kestler v. Board of Trustees of North Carolina Local

    Governmental Employees' Retirement Sys. , 48 F.3d 800, 804 (4th Cir.

    1995) (no Contract Clause violation where plaintiff was not vested

    at the time of the effective date of the amendment).

    These cases reflect the modern trend among state supreme

    courts, which is to protect pension rights on the theory that a

    state's promise of pension benefits represents an offer that can be

    accepted through the employee's performance -- thus, a unilateral,

    implied-in-fact contract is created that is binding on the state.

    See generally Andrew Mackenzie, " Spiller v. State: Determining the


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    Nature of Public Employees' Rights to Their Pensions," 46 Me. L.

    Rev. 355, 357-59 (1994); Note, John J. Dwyer, "'Til Death Do Us

    Part: Pennsylvania's 'Contract' With Public Employees For Pension

    Benefits," 59 Temp. L.Q. 553 (1986). There is much disagreement on

    the details, however, under this unilateral contract approach. One

    widely held view is that at some point, public employees'

    contractual rights to pension benefits vest; after vesting, the

    state is contractually bound to honor its obligation to provide a

    pension without any further modifications or decreases in overall

    benefit levels. See, e.g., Petras v. State Bd. of Pension

    Trustees, 464 A.2d 894, 896 (Del. 1983) (rights vest upon

    completion of minimum service requirement); Baker v. Oklahoma

    Firefighters Pension & Ret. Sys., 718 P.2d 348, 353 (Okla. 1986)

    (same); Leonard v. City of Seattle , 503 P.2d 741, 746 (Wash. 1972)

    (en banc) (same); Sylvestre v. State, 214 N.W.2d 658, 666-67 (Minn.

    1973) (rights vest at start of employment); Yeazell v. Copins, 402

    P.2d 541 (Ariz. 1965) (en banc) (same as Sylvestre). Several

    states have provisions in their constitutions declaring that

    vesting occurs at the moment of public employment and barring any

    legislative modifications that retroactively reduce the accrued

    benefits of public employees. See, e.g., Alaska Const. art. XII,

    S 7; Haw. Const. art. XVI, S 2; Ill. Const. art. XIII, S 5; Mich.

    Const. art. IX, S 24; N.Y. Const. art. V, S 7. Several states

    follow a modified contract approach, which permits some unilateral

    legislative modifications of pension plans as long as the

    legislature offsets any new disadvantage with comparable new


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    advantages, as seen from the point of view of the public employee.

    See, e.g., Singer v. City of Topeka , 607 P.2d 467, 475 (Kan. 1980);

    Betts v. Board of Admin. of the Pub. Employees' Ret. Sys. , 582 P.2d

    614, 617 (Cal. 1978) (en banc); Opinion of the Justices , 303 N.E.2d

    320, 328 (Mass. 1973). At least two state supreme courts,

    including Maine's, have declined to use the language of "vesting"

    in the course of upholding modifications to pension benefits at any

    time during the employment relationship. See Spiller v. State, 627

    A.2d 513, 516 (Me. 1996); Pineman v. Oechslin, 488 A.2d 803 (Conn.

    1985). The Connecticut Supreme Court in fact rejected the contract

    model altogether and indicated that public employees have a

    property interest in pension benefits that may not be arbitrarily

    confiscated by the state, under the Due Process Clause. Pineman,

    488 A.2d at 809-810.

    Although we have recognized the diversity of contract

    theories adopted by state courts -- in particular the divergence of

    approaches with regard to when exactly binding rights to a certain

    level of retirement benefits "vest" -- we have never chosen to

    adopt a particular approach to public pension rights. See McGrath,

    88 F.3d at 16-18.

    In McGrath, we noted that, as a general matter, pensions

    are viewed as "a species of unilateral contracts," although there

    is considerable disagreement as to when rights in public pension

    plans vest, if at all. Id. at 17. But in the course of analyzing

    a Contract Clause challenge to certain amendments to the Rhode

    Island public employee retirement system, we eschewed participating


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    in abstract contract theory in favor of performing a close analysis

    of the statutory provision at issue. Such an approach is wise,

    because the unmistakability doctrine mandates that we determine

    whether the challenged legislative enactment evinces the clear

    intent of the state to be bound to particular contractual

    obligations. It may well be that the variety of approaches adopted

    by state supreme courts reflect, in part, differences in the

    structure of the various state pension programs, and of the

    intention of the different state legislatures that created them.

    There is a danger, however, in adopting a theory of pension rights

    and subsequently forcing a given program to fit under it. Any

    given theoretical approach will make assumptions regarding the

    intent of legislatures to be bound, as well as the time at which

    vesting should occur, which may be contradicted by particular

    statutory provisions such as, for example, an express reservation

    of the right to revoke pension benefits. When reviewing a

    particular enactment, therefore, we must suspend judgment and

    "proceed cautiously both in identifying a contract within the

    language of a regulatory statute and in defining the contours of

    any contractual obligation." Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. ,

    470 U.S. at 466. The district court's decision protects Maine

    public employees from benefit reduction once employees' rights are

    "vested." Unfortunately, the line it drew between teachers who had




    In McGrath, we specifically reserved judgment on the question of
    whether such express reservations are valid after the point at
    which pension rights are "vested." 88 F.3d at 19.

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    and had not completed a minimum service requirement, cannot be

    justified on the basis of the Maine statute, which nowhere speaks

    of "vesting" as understood by the district court.
















































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    IV. Contractual Rights Under the MSRS

    Turning to the MSRS, we ask whether the Maine Legislature

    has unmistakably evinced the intention to create binding

    contractual rights. See Hoffman, 909 F.2d at 614 (determining

    whether "language and circumstances" of Rhode Island benefits

    statute reveal "a legislative intent to create private contractual

    rights"). Specifically, in light of the plaintiffs' claims, we

    must ask whether Maine has bound itself not to modify or alter, at

    any time before the employee's retirement, the level of pension

    benefits an employee would expect to receive. The statutory

    language is the primary focus of the inquiry. Atchison, Topeka &

    Santa Fe Ry. Co., 470 U.S. at 466.

    Under the terms of the MSRS, public employees who have

    met certain service and age requirements are entitled to receive

    pensions. At the heart of this case is 5 M.R.S.A. S 17801, which

    reflects the state's intent to reserve the power to amend the

    amount of pension benefits, as well as, arguably, the state's

    intent to create private contractual rights. That is, the State's

    self-imposed limitations on its legislative power through section

    17801 may reasonably serve as an indication of its intent to

    guarantee pension benefits once they are "due," as well as an

    obvious reservation of amendment powers with regard to the amount

    of benefits that are not "due." The parties disagree as to the

    unmistakable intentions section 17801 represents.

    Section 17801 states that "no amendment . . . may cause

    any reduction in the amount of benefits which would be due a member


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    . . . on the date immediately preceding the effective date of the

    amendment." Much turns on the meaning of "due." The plaintiff

    public school teachers argue that benefits are "due" from the

    moment of employment, and that this section merely confirms the

    applicability of a strict implied-in-fact, unilateral contract

    approach. The State contends that section 17801 is a reservation

    of the power to alter benefits until the retirement benefits are

    literally due to be received. The third alternative, not the basic

    position of either party, is that benefits are "due" if a teacher

    has completed the statute's initial service requirements, although

    pension benefits are not yet currently payable.

    The Maine Supreme Judicial Court's Spiller decision,

    which deserves our "'respectful consideration and great weight,'"

    Romein, 503 U.S. at 187 (quoting Indiana ex rel. Anderson v. Brand,

    303 U.S. 95, 100 (1938)), clearly rejects the alternative pressed

    by the teachers. The court was "unpersuaded by the reasoning of

    those jurisdictions that have discerned in the statutory language

    the creation at the time of employment of binding contractual

    rights." Spiller, 627 A.2d at 516. It held that, as to the

    Spiller plaintiffs, none of whom had satisfied the statute's

    service requirements at the time of the statutory amendment

    challenged in Spiller, "[n]one of the benefits at issue here were

    due . . . on the effective date of [the] legislation." Id.

    The question remains, however, whether section 17801

    should be read to protect a teacher -- and possibly to create

    contract rights -- whenever a teacher satisfies the service


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    requirements even though the teacher is still in active service and

    no pension is currently payable. Section 17801 does not clearly

    compel such a reading, since "due" could easily be read to mean

    currently payable. And such a reading would also arguably conflict

    with some of the language in Spiller (although not its holding) and

    with the dissent's reading of the majority. See Spiller, 627 A.2d

    at 516 ("By implication, the [statutory] language reserves to

    future legislatures the power to modify prospective service

    retirement benefits for employees to whom benefits are not then

    due"); id. at 519 ("Although the Court does not reach the issue

    today, its interpretation of section 17801 also undermines the

    pension benefits of those employees who have met the eligibility

    conditions for pension benefits but [have not yet retired].")

    (Wathen, C.J., dissenting).

    Even if we treat the statute as unclear and conclude that

    Spiller leaves the issue open, we think that the principle of

    unmistakability would defeat the teachers' claim that the contract

    rights are created when service requirements are satisfied. We

    need not decide whether the statute ever gives rise to a

    contractual relationship; it is enough to say that it does not

    clearly do so before a teacher retires, and thus gains an immediate

    right to the payment of pension benefits. Because there is no

    attempt here to take away retirees' benefits, there can be no

    plausible contract clause claim in this case.

    The district court reasoned that "due" should be

    construed as referring to the point at which a member qualifies for


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    retirement benefits. But even if this is a possible reading, we do

    not think this language could be said to reflect the unmistakable

    intent of the Maine Legislature, particularly when the legislature

    could very well have indicated as much. In fact, the MSRS makes no

    reference to "vesting." As the district court points out, and as

    the plaintiffs have vigorously argued, there is some evidence

    indicating that certain legislators wanted to protect vested

    rights; and that the Maine Legislature, in enacting section 17801,

    responded to a report that recommended the protection of employees'

    accrued retirement benefits from retroactive reductions. But the

    language of section 17801 remains at best ambiguous, and we cannot

    find that the legislature as a whole unmistakably intended to

    create contract rights at the time that service requirements were

    satisfied -- especially where, as here, it would have been easy to

    make any such intention crystal clear.

    We do not decide today whether, in order to satisfy the

    unmistakability doctrine, a public pension statute must explicitly

    employ the language of contract. Nor need we decide whether

    Contract Clause principles would apply if Maine sought to reduce

    pension benefits already "due" to present retirees, a step that

    would in any case appear to require revision of the present section

    17801. To resolve this appeal, we need only conclude that there is

    no unmistakable intent by the Maine Legislature to create an

    enforceable private contract right against the modification of the

    plaintiffs' retirement benefits until they are actually receivable.




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    As we indicated in McGrath, public employment contracts

    operate in a "special employment environment" requiring recognition

    of "the states' flexibility vis-a-vis the retirement benefits that

    it offers public employees." 88 F.3d at 19. Whether the

    amendments here are wise or justified as a matter of political

    philosophy is not our concern. As Contract Clause challenges

    arise, we must look to the language of the pension statutes to

    determine, as a threshold matter, whether the unmistakability

    doctrine is satisfied. Here, as it relates to Maine's purported

    obligation not to alter the benefits of its public teacher

    employees, it is not. Thus, no violation of the Contract Clause

    may be found.

    With regard to the teacher-plaintiffs' due process claim

    on cross-appeal, we affirm the decision of the district court,

    finding no due process violation, for the reasons given in its

    opinion, extending that reasoning to all plaintiffs. See 937 F.

    Supp. at 58.

    CONCLUSION

    For the reasons stated in this opinion, the decision of

    the district court, to the extent that it found the Maine

    legislative amendments violative of the Contract Clause, is

    reversed in part, and to the extent that it found no constitutional

    violations, is affirmed in part.








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