- The Wilson County school board is asking the state Supreme Court to review a $400,000 penalty linked to the state's law against pension spiking.
- A unanimous Court of Appeals ruling would force the school system to pay the money in connection with an assistant superintendent's retirement benefits.
- The school system argues that appellate judges ignored the "substantial" impairment of a contract between the school board and the affected administrator.
The Wilson County school board hopes North Carolina’s top court will take up its case challenging an application of the state pension-spiking law. An August court ruling could force Wilson schools to pay an additional $400,000 to help fund a former assistant superintendent’s retirement.
The Wilson school board filed formal paperwork Tuesday seeking a review from the state Supreme Court. Wilson school leaders seek reversal of a unanimous decision from the state Court of Appeals.
The General Assembly approved a law in 2014 attempting to address pension spiking for retiring government employees. The law allowed the state retirement system to charge an employer if a retiree’s benefits exceeded a newly established cap.
“Prior to the passage of this new law, and well prior to its effective date, Petitioner Wilson County Board of Education … had entered into an employment contract with its long-time employee, Dr. Susan Bullock, to promote her to an administrative position in the school system,” wrote the Wilson school board’s lawyers. “That contract was effective on 1 July 2013, and it was therefore on that date that the expectations and intentions of the Parties were fixed.”
“As a result of the new legislation, enacted and effective over a year following the employment contract, the Petitioner Board was invoiced a penalty in the amount of $401,763.96, allegedly owed to [the retirement system] under the new law,” the petition continued. “The penalty was imposed due to the employment contract’s allegedly resulting in prohibited ‘pension-spiking’ under the new law.”
Wilson schools challenged the invoice. Superior Court Judge William Wolfe issued a June 2022 favoring the school system. “The Superior Court found that, as applied, the Act here did constitute an unconstitutional impairment of contract; did violate Article IX, Section 7(a) of the North Carolina Constitution; and was impermissibly retroactive,” school lawyers wrote.
A unanimous state Court of Appeals panel reversed that decision. “The Court below found first that there was ‘no employment contract,’ ignoring the ample record evidence that there was, in fact, a valid contract, and ignoring the numerous North Carolina appellate cases holding that the existence of statutes can add implied terms to contracts,” according to the Wilson school board.
Wilson’s school board also contested the Appeals Court’s finding that there was no “substantial” impairment of the contract.
“In any event, $401,763.96, almost half a million dollars, is no doubt significant and is over three times this employee’s final yearly compensation as an employee,” school board lawyers wrote. “It is also substantial compared to the amount contemplated by the Board when it entered into the contract, a contract that was agreed upon well before the Pension-Spiking Statute existed.”
“Furthermore, the amount was totally unexpected, was imposed as a penalty well after the making of the contract, and could not have been foreseen when the Board developed its budget for that year,” the petition added. “No employer, private or public, should be faced with such an unforeseen penalty occurring well after an employment contract has been signed.”
Wilson would have to pay the penalty from its local funds, “funds specifically set aside by Article IX, Section 7 to be used ‘exclusively for maintaining free public schools,’” school board lawyers wrote. “The Court of Appeals totally neglects to point out that typically all public school personnel are paid from State funds, and this includes required monthly Retirement contributions.”
“There is no doubt that $401,763.96, owed from the local funds of Wilson County, not otherwise budgeted for, and constituting an unforeseen after-the-fact penalty, is ‘substantial,’” the petition argued. “There was a contract here, and the impairment is ‘substantial.’ The Court of Appeals failed to properly analyze the constitutional issues presented, and this Court should hear this appeal.”
Judge Allegra Collins wrote the Appeals Court’s unanimous decision in August. Collins and two colleagues defended the application of the pension-spiking law. “[T]he Act does not violate Article I, Section 10, of the United States Constitution; does not violate Article IX, Section 7(a), of the North Carolina Constitution; and is not retroactively applied to Petitioner,” Collins wrote.
Appellate judges rejected the school system’s argument that the pension-spiking law violated the US Constitution’s prohibition on state laws “impairing the Obligation of Contracts.”
“If the employee’s salary increase took effect after the Act was enacted on 30 July 2014 and resulted in the contribution-based benefit cap factor analysis concluding that an additional contribution was required, then the Act did not impair the employment contract,” Collins wrote. “Accordingly, Petitioner has failed to establish that the Act substantially impaired its employment contract with the employee. As such, we need not analyze whether the impairment was reasonable and necessary to serve an important public purpose.”
Appellate judges also rejected the notion that the Wilson County school board had an implied contract with the retirement system. “Petitioner cites no authority to support its proposition that such an implied contract existed, or that it has a vested right in keeping constant its amount of contribution to the TSERS pension fund,” Collins wrote.
TSERS is the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System.
“There is no set rate that an employer must contribute, but rather it fluctuates to remedy gaps in the pension fund,” Collins wrote. “Petitioner has therefore failed to show that the General Assembly manifested a clear intention to be contractually bound to keep constant the amount an employer is required to contribute to the pension fund. Accordingly, Petitioner has failed to show that a contractual obligation was present. As such, we need not analyze whether the Act impaired a contract or whether the impairment was reasonable and necessary to serve an important public purpose.”
Nor did the retirement system apply the law retroactively, according to the Appeals Court. “The plain language of the Act indicates that it applies to any retirement allowance for a member who retires on or after 1 January 2015. Because the employee in this case retired on 1 January 2018, three years after Act took effect, the statute was not retroactively applied to Petitioner,” Collins wrote.
There is no deadline for the state Supreme Court to decide how to address the Wilson school board’s appeal.