Citation Numbers: 224 N.J. Super. 172, 539 A.2d 1266, 1988 N.J. Super. LEXIS 118
Judges: Long
Filed Date: 4/4/1988
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Prudential Insurance Company of America (Prudential) and the Board of Trustees (Board) of the Teachers Pension and Annuity Fund (TPAF) here challenge a determination by the trial judge that James McKenna, a TPAF member, died within the conversion period provided in his group insurance policies, thus entitling plaintiff, Elizabeth McKenna, his widow and Executrix, to the amount of insurance McKenna might have converted had he lived to the end of thé period. We affirm.
By way of background, a brief description of the relevant statutory scheme is in order. TPAF is the corporate entity which arranges for the payment of retirement and death benefits to those who qualify for membership in the fund. N.J.S.A. 18A:66-2(q). In addition to basic retirement allowances, the TPAF statute provides death benefits for its members. These benefits, which are the focus of this appeal, fall into two broad categories: basic noncontributory benefits and optional contributory benefits. Upon the death of a member “in service,” the beneficiaries of the member shall receive IV2 times the salary of the last year of creditable service. N.J.S.A. 18A:66-38(b). This is a basic noncontributory benefit. In addition to this, a member may purchase a further death benefit of two times the final salary to be paid upon his or her death in service. N.J.S.A.
In order to provide these benefits, the State Treasurer and the Board are authorized to purchase group life insurance policies. N.J.S.A. 18A:66-74. These policies must conform with statutory requirements including N.J.S.A. 18A:66-79, which prescribes that such policies: “shall include, with respect to any insurance terminating or reducing because the member has ceased to be in service or has retired, the conversion privilege available upon termination of employment as prescribed by the law relating to group life insurance.”
The law relating to group life insurance is set forth in N.J.S.A. 17B:27-1 et seq. and requires that the group policy contain
a provision that if the insurance, or any portion of it, on a person covered under the policy ceases because of termination of employment or of membership in the class or classes eligible for coverage under the policy, such person shall be entitled to have issued to him by the insurer, without evidence of insurability, an individual policy of life insurance provided application for the individual policy shall be made, and the first premium paid to the insurer, within 31 days after such termination ... [N.J.S.A. 17B:27-19.]
The payment of benefits upon death within the conversion period is covered by N.J.S.A. 17B:27-21, which requires that the policy must also contain
a provision that if a person insured under the group policy dies during the period within which he would have been entitled to have an individual policy issued to him in accordance with section 17B:27-19 ... and before such an individual policy shall have become effective, the amount of life insurance which he would have been entitled to have issued to him under such individual policy shall be payable as a claim under the group policy, whether or not application for the individual policy or the payment of the first premium therefor has been made. [N.J.S.A. 17B:27-21.]
James McKenna began working for the maintenance department of the Newark Board of Education on May 1, 1946, and was enrolled in the TPAF effective May 1, 1951. As a member of TPAF he was entitled to the previously outlined statutory benefits. During his years in service, McKenna was covered by the full contributory and noncontributory benefit of 3¥2 times final salary as provided in certain Prudential group insurance policies purchased by the State Treasurer and the Board. Both of the group policies issued by Prudential conform with the previously outlined requirements. They contain a provision which protects a member who dies within the conversion period but has not yet exercised the conversion privilege.
In 1979, McKenna, who was then 53 years old, began to explore the possibility of retirement because of his failing health and submitted a request for a retirement estimate. In late summer and fall of that year, McKenna filed initial and amended applications for disability retirement to be effective on September 1, 1981. In the accompanying disability evaluation he was found totally and permanently disabled because of advanced lung disease. While his disability application was being processed, McKenna submitted a separate application for early retirement to become effective on September 1, 1981.
At its meeting of December 10, 1981, the Board approved McKenna’s early retirement effective September 1, 1981. McKenna was informed of the Board’s action by letter postmarked December 28, 1981. The letter also informed him that he would have to wait at least 30 days from the date of Board
On March 17, 1982, plaintiff received a letter from TPAF explaining that, under the provisions of her husband’s early retirement, she would be receiving the balance of the unused reserve, totalling $113,187.99, as well as an insurance benefit of $7,724.20 representing Vieths of his final salary. The insurance benefit and the unused reserve were paid in May, 1982.
Thereafter, plaintiff requested that TPAF convert the full amount of her husband’s life insurance (3V2 times his salary) to an individual policy, posthumously. TPAF’s Board denied this request at its meeting of July 14, 1983. Plaintiff then filed an administrative appeal from this denial and simultaneously filed a six-count complaint in the Superior Court, Law Division against the Board, Prudential and the Newark Board of Education, in which she sought the difference between the full benefit of 3¥2 times salary and the amount actually received (Vie times salary).
The Board and Prudential argued before the trial judge that McKenna became retired on the date of the Board’s approval— December 10, 1981, and that the conversion period expired 81 days later, on January 10, 1982. They urged accordingly that because McKenna failed to exercise the privilege, the Board properly reduced the death benefit to 7/16 final salary. Plaintiff argued that the conversion period did not begin to run until McKenna was notified that the Board had approved his retirement on December 28, 1981; that he had until January 28, 1982 to exercise the privilege; that because he died on January 22, 1982, he died within the conversion period, and that plaintiff was entitled to the amount of insurance McKenna could have converted.
The trial judge agreed with plaintiff. As he noted, the policies state that the member’s insurance terminates when he ceases to be “in service.” Because N.J.S.A. 18A:66-79 uses the language “ceases to be in service or has retired,” the judge concluded that McKenna ceased to be in service when he retired and that the retirement was effective upon Board approval. He determined however that it would be unfair to start the conversion period before McKenna actually knew that he was retired and denominated the date of notice as the date of retirement for conversion purposes. In so doing, he rejected the Board’s argument to the contrary, and he relied on two New Jersey decisions which follow what is the majority rule on the general subject of insurance conversion clauses. Keane v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 22 N.J.Super. 296 (App.Div.1952); Wells v. Wilbur B. Driver Co.; 121 N.J.Super. 185 (Law Div.1972).
In essence, three possible “retirement” dates from which the conversion period can be calculated exist in this case: September 1, 1981, to which McKenna’s retirement was retroactive; December 10, 1981, the date on which the Board approved his retirement, and December 28, 1981, the date on which McKenna received notice that his retirement had been approved effective September 1, 1981. If September is considered McKenna’s retirement date for conversion purposes (a result which is not urged by either party) his right to convert would have expired on October 1, 1981, months before he ever knew of the Board’s approval. Under such an interpretation, McKenna’s right to convert would simply have been lost to him. This obviously cannot be countenanced. If the December 10, 1981, Board approval date is deemed to be the retirement date, McKenna essentially lost 18 of the 31 days which the statute mandates as necessary for the conversion decision to be made. We see no authority for this approach.
The only fair and sensible analysis of this issue is that of the trial judge: that for conversion purposes, the retirement date is the date upon which the enrollee is notified of Board approval.
Notwithstanding its primary claim as to the inapplicability of insurance law to this issue, the Board argues alternatively that N.J.S.A. 17B:27-24 governs. That statute provides:
If any individual insured under a group life insurance policy hereafter delivered in this State becomes entitled under the terms of such policy to have an individual policy of life insurance issued to him without evidence of insurability, subject to the making of application and payment of the first premium within the period specified in such policy, and if such individual is not given notice of the existence of such right at least 15 days prior to the expiration*181 date of such period, then the individual shall have an additional period within which to exercise such right; but nothing herein shall be construed to continue any insurance under the policy beyond the period provided in the policy. Such additional period shall expire 15 days next after the individual is given such notice, but in no event shall such additional period extend beyond 60 days next after the expiration date of the period provided in such policy. Written notice presented to the individual, or mailed by the policyholder to the last known address of the individual, or mailed by the insurer to the last known address of the individual as furnished by the policyholder, shall constitute notice for the purposes hereof, [emphasis added].
We disagree. In order for this statute to apply, we would have to conclude, as the Board apparently has, that notice of termination of employment and notice of the existence of the right to convert are synonymous. They are not. Notice of termination of employment is a fundamental right of the employee without which no benefit affected by such termination can be reduced or forfeited. This is an entirely different concept from notice of the specific options which are available upon termination. In other words, we differentiate between a case in which an employee was not notified of the termination of his or her employment and one in which the employee, although notified of termination, was not specifically advised of rights which could be exercised upon that event. It is in the latter case that we think N.J.S.A. 17B.-27-24 applies.
If we were to read N.J.S.A. 17B:27-24 as the Board suggests, the effect would be that in a case in which the Board failed completely to notify the enrollee of retirement, the enrollee’s right to convert would nevertheless expire 60 days after he was no longer in service. That cannot be the meaning of the statute. In our view, the statute applies in the situation where an employee has been notified of termination but not of the right to convert. In that instance, the statute essentially places the burden on the employee who knows he has been terminated, or his retirement approved, to ascertain, within a prescribed period, what his rights are.
Affirmed.
The State moved to dismiss the Superior Court action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The motion was denied, and the administrative appeal was transferred to the inactive list.
Count Six of the complaint, alleging a violation of the Consumer Fraud Act, was dismissed and the other counts bifurcated. Count One was decided based on stipulated facts without prejudice to plaintiffs right to a trial on the other issues should the judgment be adverse to her.
N.J.A.C. 17.3-6.3(a) and its statutory source, N.J.S.A. 18A:66-38, function to provide a waiting period to prevent deathbed applications seeking unfairly to maximize benefits based on the knowledge of impending death. The Legislature requires a member to survive for 30 days after retirement to insure that the member's choice of benefits is made based only upon statistical probabilities posited upon an unknown date of death. DeNike v. Board of Trustees, State Employment Ret. Sys. 62 N.J.Super. 280, 300 (App.Div.1960) aff'd 34 N.J. 430 (1961).