Title: KINZY v. STATE ex. rel. OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION AND RETIREMENT SYSTEM

State: oklahoma

Issuer: Oklahoma Supreme Court

Document:

KINZY v. STATE ex. rel. OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION AND RETIREMENT SYSTEM  KINZY v. STATE ex. rel. OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION AND RETIREMENT SYSTEM 2001 OK 24 20 P.3d 818 72 OBJ 824 Case Number: 92538 Decided: 03/13/2001 Mandate Issued: 04/04/2001 CLEVELAND KINZY, for himself and as a member of a class of Oklahoma firefighters, Plaintiff/Appellee v. STATE OF OKLAHOMA, ex rel., OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION AND RETIREMENT SYSTEM, Defendant/Appellant APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT, OKLAHOMA COUNTY HONORABLE CAROLYN R. RICKS, JUDGE ¶0 Appellee [pensioners] brought suit on April 26, 1995 seeking retroactive payment of retirement benefits (for the period May 26, 1983 to December 1, 1987) from the Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System [appellant]. Appellant asserts that appellee's claim is time-barred. The District Court ordered that benefits for the period in question be paid to the pensioners. Appellant appealed. THE TRIAL COURT'S JUDGMENT IS REVERSED AND THE CAUSE IS REMANDED WITH DIRECTION TO ENTER JUDGMENT DENYING RECOVERY ON THE TIME-BARRED CLAIMS. Marc Edwards of Phillips McFall McCaffrey McVay & Murrah, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma for appellant. Stephen G. Solomon and Gary Levine of Derryberry, Quigley, Parrish, Solomon & Blankenship, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma for appellee. LAVENDER, J. [20 P.3d 820] ¶1 Today's cause requires resolution of two issues: (1) identification of the limitation period which governs appellee's [Kinzy Class or firefighters] claim against Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System [System] and (2) determination of when the Kinzy Class' claim accrued so as to initiate the running of the applicable limitation period. The Court's earlier opinion in Baker v. Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System, 1986 OK 8, 718 P.2d 348 , holds that the terms of Title 11, Art. 49 Okla. Stat. create a contract between System and those firefighters whose rights in the pension system have vested. Hence, the limitation period governing the Kinzy Class' claim is the five-year period applicable to claims based upon written agreements. I FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2 On behalf of like-situated firefighters Kinzy brought suit to recover pension benefits payable under the provisions of 11 O.S.1981 § 49-136 for the period May 26, 1983 to December 1, 1987. In 1981 the Legislature [20 P.3d 821] created a centralized State pension system for municipal firefighters. ¶4 In light of the federal Baker judgment System recalculated (under the terms of § 49-136) the COLA-adjusted pension benefits due the Kinzy Class members. In its computation of the §49-136 benefit-adjustments System did not include any payment for the period May 26, 1983 to December 1, 1987. The firefighters were informed of this decision by document, titled "Pension Adjustment Based on Escalator Law Suit." System mailed notices to each Kinzy Class member during May 1988 and specifically advised them as follows: "The adjustment in your pension check shall be made retroactive to December 1, 1987." [Emphasis added.] ¶5 The issue of plaintiffs' entitlement to COLA benefits for the period May 26, 1983 to December 7, 1987 was not reached by the federal district court in its Baker judgment. The U.S. District Court in a manner consistent with the limitations on its jurisdiction impressed by U.S. Const. amend. XI accorded its judgment prospective application only. ¶6 At trial System, among other defenses, asserted that the Kinzy Class' claim was time-barred since the suit was brought more than five years after plaintiffs had received notice that System was not paying COLA-adjusted retirement benefits for periods earlier than December 1, 1987. The trial court ruled (a) that the Kinzy Class' claim was governed by the statute of limitations for suits premised upon breach of trust and (b) that the statute would not begin to run against the Kinzy Class' claim until System repudiated the trust. ¶7 Judgment was entered for the Kinzy Class. The trial court found that "escalator benefits" for the period in issue plus pre- and post-judgment interest were due and owing to the appellee. System appealed. II THE KINZY CLASS' CLAIM AGAINST SYSTEM IS CONTRACTUAL IN NATURE AND ACCRUED WHEN THE KINZY CLASS MEMBERS ACQUIRED NOTICE THEY WOULD NOT RECEIVE BENEFITS FOR PERIODS EARLIER THAN DECEMBER 1, 1987 ¶8 All litigants in their appellate paperwork acknowledge the contractual nature of their relationship. Firefighters claim that because of the fiduciary nature of the relationship between themselves and System the common-law rule of repudiation is invocable to toll the applicable statute of limitation. This rule qualifies accrual of a breach-of-trust action upon a trustee's repudiation of the trust. ¶9 Legally characterizing the relationship between System and firefighters as trust-like [because the Pension and Firefighter Pension Board (Board) holds legal title to, and retired firefighters are vested with, a beneficial interest in the pension funds] does nothing to undermine the contractual nature of the parties' legal relationship nor does it resolve the cause before the Court. Rather resolution of today's case lies in determining when the Kinzy Class' claim accrued, i.e., when the applicable statute of limitation was triggered. The trial court ruled that because of the existence of a trust-based relationship Board must first unequivocably repudiate the trust i.e., act in a manner amounting to a denial of the existence of the trust to initiate the applicable limitations period. This resolution would have been correct if the firefighters-pension trust were a private trust, but it is not. ¶10 The firefighters-pension is public in nature and its manager the Board is a wholly-owned state corporation whose authority is deraigned solely from statute. Since System is [statutorily-declared to be] an instrumentality of the State, it is without power to act in a manner contrary to what the law prescribes. [20 P.3d 823]¶11 The enactment of a statute of limitations is a legislative expression of policy "that prohibits litigants from raising claims after the expiration of a given period of time."12 Generally, the limitation period for a breach-of-contract claim accrues when the party asserting it first acquires the right to sue.13 Here, that would have been in May 1988. Kinzy Class members acknowledge they received notice that month System would only pay retroactive, COLA-adjusted benefits back to December 1, 1987. Kinzy also represents that he understood from a conversation with the System's executive director that System had paid the class all it was entitled to receive. Lastly, the Kinzy Class in its appellate paperwork excuses its members not seeking administrative remedies on the ground that such efforts would have been vain and useless. The predicate for making this representation requires the Kinzy Class to have understood (1) that a contractual breach had occurred and (2) that pursuit of an administrative remedy for the suffered breach would have been futile. A reasonable implication of the Kinzy Class' asserted defense is that its members knew System had not and would not pay retroactive benefits for periods earlier than December 1, 1987. A prudent plaintiff is required to pursue its claim with reasonable diligence.14 Those who refrain from pursuing inquiries plainly suggested by the facts will not be extended the benefit of a rule which would toll the applicable statutes of limitations.15 III SUMMARY ¶13 The Kinzy Class asserted a claim against System seeking COLA-adjusted retirement benefits under the provisions of 11 O.S.1981 § 49-136 for the period May 26, 1983 to December 1, 1987. The class' claim is contractual in nature and is governed by the five-year statute of limitations governing claims based upon breach of a written contract. The Kinzy Class acquired knowledge as early as May 1988 that System was not paying the adjusted retirement benefits for periods earlier than December 1, 1987. The record supports but a single inference that the Kinzy Class knew, or with reasonable inquiry would have known, of the facts which would have supported its breach-of-contract claim almost seven years before it filed suit. ¶14 The class seeks to avoid the limitations period's effect by asserting that System and itself are in a fiduciary relationship and, hence, the common-law rule requiring a trustee to repudiate the trust in order to trigger the governing limitation period is applicable. The trial court so ruled. Nonetheless, its conclusion is erroneous because its effect is to require Board [the firefighters [ 20 P.3d 824 ] pension-fund's manager] to perform an impossible act under Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence. Today's pronouncement reverses a trial court's ruling which in effect accorded indeterminate life to claims against the pension system. The law does not sanction requiring the Board, an instrumentality of the State, to perform a vain and useless act. Under the facts of this case the common-law rule of repudiation does not toll the limitation period governing the Kinzy Class' contractual claim against System. ¶15 For the above reasons, THE TRIAL COURT'S JUDGMENT IS REVERSED AND THE CAUSE IS REMANDED WITH DIRECTION TO ENTER JUDGMENT DENYING RECOVERY ON THE TIME-BARRED CLAIMS. ¶16 HARGRAVE, C.J., WATT, V.C.J., HODGES, LAVENDER, OPALA, SUMMERS, BOUDREAU and WINCHESTER, JJ., concur. ¶17 KAUGER, J., recused. FOOT