Court Opinion

ID: 4362784
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-01-29 19:37:40.271306+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:49:31.362199
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Sherman v. Ohio Pub. Emps. Retirement Sys., 2019-Ohio-278.]

                             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

                                  TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Jeffrey P. Sherman,                                :

                Plaintiff-Appellant,               :                      No. 18AP-181
                                                                       (C.P.C. No. 17CV-6815)
v.                                                 :
                                                                  (REGULAR CALENDAR)
Ohio Public Employees Retirement                   :
System,
                                                   :
                Defendant-Appellee.
                                                   :

                                          D E C I S I O N

                                   Rendered on January 29, 2019

                On brief: Dworken & Bernstein Co., L.P.A., Patrick J.
                Perotti, Nicole T. Fiorelli, and Frank A. Bartela, for
                appellant.
                Argued: Nicole T. Fiorelli

                On brief: [Dave Yost], Attorney General, and Benesch,
                Friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff LLP, John F. Stock, and
                Mark D. Tucker, special counsel for appellee. Argued:
                Mark D. Tucker

                 APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

LUPER SCHUSTER, J.
        Plaintiff-appellant, Jeffery P. Sherman, appeals from a judgment entry of the
Franklin County Court of Common Pleas granting the motion to dismiss of defendant-
appellee, Ohio Public Employees Retirement System ("OPERS"), for failure to state a
claim. For the following reasons, we reverse.
I. Facts and Procedural History
        On July 28, 2017, Sherman filed a complaint alleging OPERS violated his right to
equal protection under the Ohio Constitution by reducing his health insurance subsidy
No. 18AP-181                                  2

while continuing to provide the full subsidy to other similarly situated OPERS retirees.
According to the complaint, Sherman retired from an OPERS-covered position with the
Ohio Department of Taxation on May 31, 2009. In May 2010, Sherman was reemployed
by the Regional Income Tax Agency ("RITA"), another OPERS-covered position, as a part-
time attorney.
       The complaint further alleges that in 2016, OPERS withheld $74.00 of Sherman's
health insurance premium monies each month, resulting in Sherman paying $106.54 per
month for health insurance instead of $32.54 per month. The reason these monies were
withheld was, according to the complaint, solely because Sherman was reemployed in an
OPERS-covered position. Sherman alleges that OPERS retirees who are reemployed in
non-OPERS-covered positions receive their maximum health insurance premium monies
whereas OPERS denied Sherman a significant portion of his monies solely because he
gained reemployment in an OPERS-covered position.
       In 2017, OPERS again withheld $74 of Sherman's health insurance premium
monies each month, resulting in Sherman paying $192 for health insurance each month
instead of $118 per month. Pursuant to the complaint, OPERS's stated reason for treating
reemployed retirees differently is "the administrative feasibility of identifying retirees who
are re-employed in non-[OPERS-]covered positions." (Compl. at 4.)
       In the complaint, Sherman sought class certification on behalf of all OPERS
retirees for whom OPERS withheld a portion of their health insurance premium monies
from January 1, 2016 to the present due to their reemployment in an OPERS-covered
position. Additionally, Sherman sought a declaratory judgment and equitable relief in the
form of restitution of the monies withheld.
       In response to the complaint, on September 21, 2017, OPERS filed a Civ.R.
12(B)(6) motion to dismiss. OPERS argued that it is the policy of the state of Ohio to
discourage "double-dipping," which OPERS defined as receiving taxpayer-supported
compensation while also receiving a public pension. (Mot. to Dismiss at 2.) OPERS
asserted that this policy serves to preserve state money and, therefore, was a sufficient
rational basis for the difference in treatment between Sherman and other reemployed
OPERS retirees who have gained reemployment in non-OPERS-covered positions.
No. 18AP-181                                  3

       The trial court, in a February 14, 2018 decision and entry, granted OPERS's motion
to dismiss. The trial court concluded that OPERS retirees who obtain reemployment with
a private employer are not similarly situated to OPERS retirees who obtain reemployment
with an OPERS participating employer. The trial court additionally found that even if the
groups were similarly situated, OPERS was nonetheless entitled to dismissal because
OPERS set forth a rational basis for the classification and Sherman did not maintain his
burden of negating every possible basis which might support the classification. Sherman
timely appeals.
II. Assignments of Error
       Sherman sets forth the following errors for our review:
               [1.] The trial court erred in holding that OPERS retirees re-
               employed in the private sector are not similarly situated to
               OPERS retirees re-employed in an OPERS-covered position.

               [2.] The trial court erred in holding that saving money by
               means of an arbitrary classification provides a rational
               basis for that classification.

(Emphasis sic.)
III. Standard of Review
       Under Civ.R. 12(B)(6), a defendant may move to dismiss a complaint for failure to
state a claim upon which relief can be granted. A Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss tests
the sufficiency of a complaint. O'Brien v. Univ. Community Tenants Union, Inc., 42 Ohio
St.2d 242, 245 (1975). In ruling on a motion to dismiss pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6), the
court must construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, presume all
factual allegations in the complaint are true, and make all reasonable inferences in favor
of the plaintiff. Mitchell v. Lawson Milk Co., 40 Ohio St. 3d 190, 192 (1988). The
dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim is proper when it appears, beyond
doubt, that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts entitling him to relief. Celeste v. Wiseco
Piston, 151 Ohio App. 3d 554, 2003-Ohio-703, ¶ 12 (11th Dist.).           When reviewing a
decision on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which
relief can be granted, this court's standard of review is de novo. Foreman v. Dept. of
Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. No. 14AP-15, 2014-Ohio-2793, ¶ 9.
No. 18AP-181                                  4

IV. First Assignment of Error – Similarly Situated
       In his first assignment of error, Sherman argues the trial court erred in concluding
that OPERS retirees reemployed in an OPERS-covered position are not similarly situated
to OPERS retirees reemployed in a non-OPERS-covered position.
       The Equal Protection Clause of the Ohio Constitution provides, in pertinent part,
"[a]ll political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their equal
protection and benefit."     Ohio Constitution, Article I, Section 2.      Generally, equal
protection requires that similarly situated persons be treated similarly under the law.
State v. Lawson, 10th Dist. No. 12AP-771, 2013-Ohio-2111, ¶ 18. "The comparison of only
similarly situated entities is integral to an equal protection analysis." GTE North, Inc. v.
Zaino, 96 Ohio St. 3d 9, 2002-Ohio-2984, ¶ 22. "But the Equal Protection Clause 'does
not require things which are different in fact * * * to be treated in law as though they were
the same.' " Id., quoting Tigner v. Texas, 310 U.S. 141, 147 (1940). Thus, to state an equal
protection claim, a party must claim that the government treated similarly situated
persons differently. State ex rel. Walgate v. Kasich, 10th Dist. No. 16AP-737, 2017-Ohio-
5528, ¶ 18.
       Sherman asserts that, in all relevant respects, OPERS retirees who are employed in
OPERS-covered positions are similarly situated to OPERS retirees who are employed in
the private sector. According to Sherman, both groups needed health insurance, were
OPERS retirees, and qualified for the OPERS health insurance premium subsidy. Both
groups are treated the same by the General Assembly and OPERS in that neither group is
denied a pension by virtue of their reemployed status. Additionally, Sherman argues that
no public policy exists to deter OPERS retirees from seeking reemployment in an OPERS-
covered position. To the contrary, Sherman notes that R.C. 145.38 expressly recognizes
than an OPERS retiree may return to employment in an OPERS-covered position.
       OPERS responds that the groups are not similarly situated because retirees such as
Sherman who are reemployed by an OPERS-covered employer are receiving a second
source of taxpayer-supported compensation and benefits. OPERS argues that the General
Assembly distinguishes between publicly and privately reemployed retirees so as to deter
"double-dipping" in public employment. According to OPERS, the $74 subsidy reduction
is designed to maintain the fiscal health and stability of the public pension fund.
No. 18AP-181                                5

      R.C. 145.38(B)(1) states, in pertinent part, that "[an OPERS] retirant or other
system retirant may be employed by a public employer." However, an OPERS retiree who
has received a retirement allowance for less than two months when he or she becomes
reemployed in an OPERS-covered position must forfeit the retirement allowance for any
month he or she is employed prior to the expiration of a two-month period.            R.C.
145.38(B)(4)(a).   This provision is not designed to discourage a return to public
employment; rather, the intention of the statute is to ensure that the public employee has
terminated service before receiving retirement benefits. State ex rel. O'Grady v. Griffing,
140 Ohio St. 3d 290, 2014-Ohio-3687, ¶ 14. "[A] public employee must terminate service
before receiving retirement benefits." Id. "A public employee need not leave public
employment permanently, but may terminate employment for purposes of OPERS
retirement and then be reemployed immediately, upon forfeiting two months of benefits."
Id., citing R.C. 145.38(B). During that period of forfeiture, an OPERS retiree is not
eligible to receive pre-Medicare healthcare coverage. Ohio Adm.Code 145-4-30.
       The state of Ohio does not have a general policy of discouraging OPERS retirees
from returning to public employment. Moreover, the General Assembly has not acted to
deny Sherman or others like him who resume public employment from receiving any
portion of their OPERS pensions while employed as a new OPERS-covered employee.
While OPERS points to a number of statutory provisions that apply to reemployed OPERS
retirees in support of its argument that these classifications are not similarly situated,
none appear designed to deter subsequent employment or receiving a second source of
taxpayer-supported compensation.
       R.C. 145.38(D)(1) provides that a reemployed OPERS retiree cannot become a
member of OPERS upon reemployment with an OPERS-covered employer. Instead, an
OPERS retiree employed with an OPERS employer contributes a portion of his
compensation to the public retirement system, and his employer contributes to the system
as well.   R.C. 145.38(B)(1).   The employee's contributions and an amount of the
employer's contributions determined by the OPERS board are placed into a money
purchase annuity account payable upon re-retirement. See R.C. 145.384. We do not find
that these statutory provision are designed to discourage further public employment or
"double-dipping," as OPERS argues.
No. 18AP-181                                  6

       Further, R.C. 145.38(B)(2) provides that a public employer that employs an OPERS
retiree must notify OPERS of the retiree's reemployment and is responsible for any
overpayment of benefits resulting from a delay or failure to notify OPERS promptly.
Again, while this statute contemplates reemployment of OPERS's retirees, it does not
operate to discourage further public employment.
       Additionally, R.C. 145.38(D)(2) requires an OPERS-covered employer to provide
primary health insurance coverage to a reemployed OPERS retiree if it offers health
insurance coverage to comparable employees. The OPERS retiree insurance coverage
must be secondary to the employer's primary coverage but the OPERS-covered employer
would be providing this benefit to the employee regardless of who filled this position.
Here, however, Sherman was a part-time employee of RITA and thus was not eligible for
health coverage from his new employer.
       " '[M]ost laws differentiate in some fashion between classes of persons. The Equal
Protection Clause does not forbid classifications.         It simply keeps governmental
decisionmakers from treating differently persons who are in all relevant respects alike.' "
(Emphasis added.) Harsco Corp. v. Tracy, 86 Ohio St. 3d 189, 192 (1999), quoting
Nordlinger v. Hahn, 505 U.S. 1, 10 (1992).          If a distinction between an apparent
classification is not a relevant distinction, a government actor will not be able to defeat an
equal protection claim on the grounds that the two groups are not similarly situated. MCI
Telecommunications Corp. v. Limbach, 68 Ohio St. 3d 195 (1994) (finding that the
distinction the tax commissioner was using to treat MCI Telecommunications differently
was not a relevant distinction, the two taxpayers were being treated differently, and thus
MCI Telecommunications was denied equal protection of the laws).
       In Ohio, there is no general policy of discouraging OPERS retirees from returning
to work in OPERS-covered positions. Unlike New York law, which OPERS references in
its brief, the Ohio General Assembly has not attempted to discourage OPERS retirees
from seeking government work by denying them pension benefits while they are
reemployed in the public sector. See Slavsky v. New York City Police Dept., 967 F. Supp.
117, 119-20 (S.D.N.Y.1997).
       Under Ohio's statutory framework, when an OPERS retiree becomes reemployed
in an OPERS-covered position, OPERS is only providing one stream of taxpayer-
No. 18AP-181                                  7

supported compensation: an OPERS pension. The OPERS pension is the identical stream
of taxpayer-supported compensation that is provided to reemployed OPERS retirees who
return to work in the private sector. Without a public policy or legislation prohibiting
"double-dipping," the payment of an OPERS pension and an OPERS salary to the same
person is not a relevant distinction for equal protection purposes. Regardless of who fills
the position, the employer must pay the salary and benefits. The employee's status as an
OPERS retiree does not impose any additional costs to the state. However, the result of
OPERS's policy of withholding a portion of the retiree's health insurance premium
subsidies is that certain OPERS retirees are being treated differently.
       Thus, we conclude Sherman and other OPERS retirees who gain reemployment in
an OPERS-covered position are similarly situated to those OPERS retirees who gain
reemployment in non-OPERS-covered positions for purposes of an equal protection
analysis. Accordingly, the trial court erred when it concluded that Sherman was not
similarly situated to other reemployed OPERS retirees.          We sustain Sherman's first
assignment of error.
V. Second Assignment of Error – Rational Basis Test
       In his second assignment of error, Sherman argues the trial court erred in
concluding OPERS set forth a rational basis for the classification and granting OPERS's
motion to dismiss on that basis.
       A governmental classification that does not involve a fundamental right or a
suspect class is accorded a strong presumption of validity. Heller v. Doe, 509 U.S. 312,
319 (1993). Such a classification cannot run afoul of the Equal Protection Clause if there
is a rational relationship between the disparity of treatment and some legitimate
governmental purpose. Id. at 320. Thus, a classification must be upheld against an equal
protection challenge if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide
a rational basis for the classification. Id.; Am. Assn. of Univ. Professors, Central State
Univ. Chapter v. Central State Univ., 87 Ohio St. 3d 55, 58 (1999). A rational relationship
exists under rational-basis review if the relationship of the classification to its goal is not
so attenuated as to render the distinction arbitrary or irrational. Id.
       A court may dispose of an equal protection claim on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to
dismiss if it can be shown that there is a reasonably conceivable state of facts that could
No. 18AP-181                                   8

provide a rational basis for the classification. Am. Assn. of Univ. Professors, Cent. State
Univ. Chapter at 58. See also Knapp v. Hanson, 183 F.3d 786, 789 (8th Cir.1999);
Barnesville Edn. Assn. OEA/NEA v. Barnesville Exempted Village School Dist. Bd. of
Edn., 7th Dist. No. 06 BE 32, 2007-Ohio-1109, ¶ 45.
       A classification does not fail rational basis review because it is not made with
mathematical nicety or because in practice it results in some inequality. Heller at 321;
State ex rel. Horvath v. State Teachers Retirement Bd., 83 Ohio St. 3d 67, 75 (1998).
Sherman asserts that because Ohio has no public policy against "double-dipping," it is not
rational for the state to seek to save money by means of an arbitrary classification that
penalizes some OPERS retirees but not others.
       Preserving state money can be a legitimate state purpose that serves as a rational
reason for creating a particular classification. Roseman v. Firemen & Policemen's Death
Benefit Fund, 66 Ohio St. 3d 443, 450 (1993).             However, under Ohio law, "when
preserving state money is accomplished by treating an individual in an arbitrary manner,
it is not a rational reason to classify." Adamsky v. Buckeye Local School Dist., 73 Ohio
St.3d 360, 362 (1995).
       Here, the trial court held that protecting the public fisc is a rational basis for the
challenged classification. It noted that Sherman, as the party attacking the rationality of
the classification, has the burden to negate every conceivable basis which might support
it. Walgate at ¶ 22. While the trial court is correct that Sherman would have the burden
of attacking the rationality of the basis for the classification once it is set forth, the trial
court's analysis ignores the threshold responsibility of the party supporting the rationality
of the classification to explain how the classification acts in furtherance in the stated
rational basis. OPERS has not identified how this policy is reasonably related to its stated
rational basis of protecting the public fisc. If we are unable to make a causal link between
the existence of a policy and the rational basis of that policy, we cannot say it appears
"beyond doubt" from the complaint that Sherman could prove no set of facts warranting
the requested relief. State ex rel. Turner v. Houk, 112 Ohio St. 3d 561, 2007-Ohio-814, ¶ 5.
       Here, OPERS asserts that the state's legitimate state interest in preserving state
money would be furthered by doing so in a manner that reduces administrative burdens
attributable to where OPERS retirees gain reemployment. OPERS does not explain how
No. 18AP-181                                  9

this policy reduces administrative burdens in a way that links the classification to the
stated goal of protecting the public fisc. We are mindful that "[t]he state does not bear the
burden of proving that some rational basis justifies the challenged legislation," and our
analysis here is not intended to shift the burden from the challenger of the legislation back
to the state. State v. Williams, 88 Ohio St. 3d 513, 531 (2000). While Sherman's burden
to negate every conceivable basis for the classification remains intact, it was erroneous for
the trial court to grant OPERS's motion to dismiss when OPERS did not provide enough
information in its motion to trigger Sherman's burden in the first instance. See State ex
rel. Doersam v. Indus. Comm., 45 Ohio St. 3d 115, 120 (1989) (noting apellant's failure to
explain how its stated objective would apply to its proposed classification).
       We also emphasize the crucial role a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss plays in an
equal protection challenge. OPERS's motion fails here, under this particular record, not
because these motions generally require more evidentiary support in the record, a notion
fundamentally at odds with the procedural tool of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion, but because
OPERS's motion was deficient. Moreover, this decision should not be construed to
compel the conclusion that OPERS's classification is arbitrary; instead, we hold simply
that OPERS did not provide enough information in its motion either for Sherman to
attempt to negate every conceivable basis or for the trial court to say that there exists a
rational basis for the classification sufficient to overcome an equal protection challenge.
Because OPERS failed to make a connection between its classification and its desire to
protect the public fisc, dismissal at this juncture was inappropriate.
       Having concluded that the trial court erred in granting OPERS's Civ.R. 12(B)(6)
motion to dismiss, we sustain Sherman's second assignment of error.
VI. Disposition
       Based on the foregoing reasons, the trial court erred in granting OPERS's motion
to dismiss.    Having sustained Sherman's two assignments of error, we reverse the
judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas and remand for further
proceedings consistent with this decision.
                                                     Judgment reversed; cause remanded.
                                 SADLER, J., concurs.
                           TYACK, J., concurs in judgment only.