Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), the agency that administers JRS II,
ruled JRS II entitles Judge Warner only to the disability retirement allowance. The trial
court denied Judge Warner’s petition for writ of mandate, which sought to reverse the
agency’s ruling. We affirm.2
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Judge Warner served as a municipal and then superior court judge from July 1996
until his retirement in October 2010. In November 2010, he applied for a disability
retirement benefit under JRS II. CalPERS granted his application, and he was awarded a
monthly retirement allowance, paying him an amount equal to 65 percent of his
retirement-level salary.
In May 2011, Judge Warner applied to CalPERS to receive a distribution of his
monetary credits in the JRS II system, which totaled $572,407. CalPERS staff denied the
request. Judge Warner appealed that decision to the CalPERS Board of Administration
2 In the interest of giving credit where credit is due, it should be noted that our discussion below not only affirms the ruling of the trial court, but also adopts or adapts large portions of the excellent analysis of the trial court judge, the Honorable Brian M. Hoffstadt. In 2014 Judge Hoffstadt was appointed and confirmed as Associate Justice for the Second District, Division Two Court of Appeal.
2
(Board). After a hearing, the administrative law judge (ALJ) issued a proposed decision
recommending the staff decision be affirmed. The Board adopted the ALJ’s
recommendation.
In January 2013, Judge Warner filed a petition for writ of mandate in San
Bernardino County Superior Court challenging the Board’s decision. The Judicial
Council assigned the case to Los Angeles County Superior Court. On November 13,
2013, the court issued an order denying the petition.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
There are no disputed facts at issue. We review the trial court’s ruling interpreting
the relevant statutes and applying them to the undisputed facts de novo. (Saffie v.
If a judge leaves service but does not qualify for normal retirement, he or she is
eligible for an early retirement benefit. (§ 75521.) A judge who leaves service before
accruing five years of service may receive a refund of his or her eight percent monthly
contributions into the JRS II fund plus interest. (§§ 75521, subd. (a); 75502, subd. (f).)
If five or more years of service have been accrued, the judge may receive a distribution of
his or her “monetary credits”—as noted above, an amount equal to 18 percent of the
judge’s monthly salary for every month of service. (§§ 75521, subds. (a), (b), 75520.)
Importantly, given the issues in this case, section 75521 provides that the judge leaving
service and receiving an early retirement benefit is to receive the specified payment “and
no other amount.” (§ 75521, subds. (a), (b).)
A judge who becomes disabled as a result of an injury or disease “arising out of
and in the course of judicial service,” or a judge who becomes disabled for any reason
who has accrued five or more years of judicial service, may, “with his or her consent,”
apply for a disability retirement benefit. (§§ 75560.1, subd. (a), 75560.) The disability
retirement benefit is a monthly allowance—like the normal retirement benefit, essentially
an annuity—tied to a percentage of the judge’s final salary and capped at 65 percent.
(§ 75560.4.) Unlike the early retirement benefit, the disability retirement benefit comes
with certain restrictions on the judge’s postretirement employment that remain in effect
until the judge reaches the age he or she would have been eligible for normal retirement.
(§ 75580.)
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2. Under JRS II, a Judge Who Receives a Disability Retirement Benefit Is Not
Entitled to Also Receive an Early Retirement Benefit.
Judge Warner contends that a judge who becomes disabled may first apply for and
obtain a disability retirement benefit, and then still proceed to receive the retirement
benefit appropriate to his or her years of service (in his case, the early retirement benefit
of a lump sum payment of monetary credits pursuant to section 75521, subdivision (b).)
This contention is based in part on the circumstance that provisions regarding disability
benefits are codified in Article 4 of the JRS II law, while service retirement provisions,
including both normal and early retirement, are codified in Article 2. (§§ 75522, 75521,
75560.1.)
We cannot say Judge Warner’s interpretation is explicitly foreclosed by the
relevant statutory language, which ideally would have been drafted with greater
precision. Nevertheless, we conclude the interpretation that fits most comfortably with
the statutory scheme as whole, as well as its purpose, legislative history, and public
policy, is that a judge who becomes disabled is not entitled to receive both disability and
service retirement benefits under JSP II, but only one or the other.
First, the statute that provides the early retirement benefit expressly states that the
retiring judge is to receive the specified lump sum “and no other amount.” (§§ 75521,
subds. (a), (b).) Judge Warner’s position, whereby a retired judge might receive both an
6
early retirement benefit and a disability retirement allowance, is at least in some tension
with this language.3
Second, the structure of JRS II benefits generally suggests that retiring judges are
to receive either a monthly retirement allowance or a lump sum payment, but not both.
(See State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. v. Garamendi (2004) 32 Cal.4th 1029, 1043
[statutes are interpreted “‘“‘with reference to the entire scheme of law of which it is a part
so that the whole may be harmonized and retain effectiveness’”’”].) Judges qualified for
normal retirement must “elect” between retirement allowance and lump sum payment of
monetary credits. (§ 75522, subd. (c).) Judges who leave service before becoming
eligible for normal retirement may receive an early retirement benefit of a lump sum
payment, “and no other amount.” (§ 75521, subds. (a), (b).) Judges who qualify for
disability retirement may receive a monthly allowance, despite having not reached
normal retirement eligibility, but there is no explicit provision allowing such judges also
to receive a lump sum payment of contributions or monetary credits. (§ 75560.1.) The
absence of any contrary example—any situation where a judge is explicitly entitled to
collect two retirement benefits under JSP II—weighs in favor of CalPERS’s
interpretation.
3 We acknowledge Judge Warner’s argument that this language could, in isolation, be interpreted to impose restrictions only on any further service benefits under Article 2 of the JRS II law, but to place no restriction on award of a disability retirement allowance under Article 4. We do not, however, accept that argument, for the reasons discussed below.
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Third, the legislative history of JRS II provides no support for Judge Warner’s
interpretation, and indeed strongly weighs against it. (Day v. City of Fontana (2001) 25
Cal.4th 268, 272 [where plain meaning is insufficient to resolve a question of statutory
interpretation, “we may resort to extrinsic sources, including the ostensible objects to be
achieved and the legislative history”].) JRS II was enacted to “[p]rovide a new, lower
tier of benefits for judges” because the prior system was “[a]ctuarially unsound from its
inception.” (Conf. Com., Rep. on Sen. Bill No. 65 (1993-1994 Reg. Sess.) Aug. 25,
1994, p. 1.) An interpretation that allowed judges to receive two retirement benefits—not
only a monthly allowance, but also payment of a large portion of the sums contributed to
the retirement fund by the judge and the state during his or her service—would hardly
further the ostensible goal of creating a new, actuarially sound retirement system.4
Further, the legislative history includes repeated observations that payment of the lump
sum early retirement benefit “fully discharges the retirement system’s obligation to the
former judge.” (Id. at p. 5; see also Select Committee on Judicial Retirement, Final
Report, May 1993, p. 14; CalPERS memorandum to Members of the Board of
Administration dated Aug. 31, 1994, attached LGSD Bill Analysis, pp. 2-3.) A chart
4 To be sure, as a logical exercise, it is possible to imagine a system designed to subsidize judges who become disabled, providing not only a retirement allowance but also return of the disabled judges’ contributions or monetary credits, which nevertheless was actuarially sound. Such a system would simply require commensurately higher contributions from and/or lower benefits for those judges who do not become disabled, so that the fund remained solvent. If such a system for the benefit of disabled judges was intended by the Legislature, however, one would expect to find something in the legislative history explicitly discussing that decision, and justifying it both as a matter of policy and in terms of actuarial analysis. In the legislative history of JRS II, there is nothing of the sort.
8
prepared for the Senate committee considering the JRS II legislation, comparing the
benefits provided under JRS II with those of its predecessor system, indicates explicitly
that a judge receiving a disability retirement allowance under JRS II would not also
receive any lump sum payment of contributions or monetary credits (described as a
“defined contribution benefit”), stating “[d]efined contribution benefit not paid at
disability.” (California Judges’ Retirement System Benefit Illustrations and Cost Data
prepared for Sen. Bill 65 Conference Committee, Aug. 25, 1994.) At another point in the
legislative history, it is observed that “[i]f the judge retires on disability, he or she forfeits
all rights to the [defined contribution]-like account balance.” (Select Committee on
Judicial Retirement, Final Report, May 1993, Report Addendum, p. 3.) It is difficult, if
not impossible, to reconcile these aspects of the legislative history with Judge Warner’s
interpretation of JRS II.
Finally, Judge Warner’s interpretation falters on the principle that we must avoid
statutory interpretations that lead to unreasonable results. (Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream,
Inc. v. County of Alameda (1986) 178 Cal.App.3d 1174, 1181-1182.) Under his
interpretation, judges who are eligible for disability are entitled to two retirement
benefits, even though they have funded through their contributions only a portion of one.
(§§ 75502, subd. (f), 75601, 75602.) We find it unreasonable to single out a subset of
judges for such preferential treatment, at least in the absence of any unambiguous
indication in the statutory language or the legislative history that such a result was
intended.
9
In support of his interpretation, Judge Warner emphasizes that JRS II does not
specifically require judges to “elect” between an early retirement benefit and a disability
retirement benefit. But a judge who becomes disabled and leaves service does not
automatically receive a disability retirement benefit; he or she must “consent” to
disability retirement. (§ 75560.1, subd. (a).) In the context of JRS II as a whole and the
legislative history, discussed above, the judge’s “consent” to disability retirement is most
reasonably understood to serve as an election between the early retirement benefit and the
disability retirement benefit.
Judge Warner also points to JRS II’s treatment of judges convicted of certain
crimes, noting that such judges are entitled to a refund of their contributions to the
system, but otherwise “shall not receive any benefits from the system.” (§ 75526.) He
observes that such judges are eligible nevertheless to apply for and receive a disability
retirement benefit, albeit under a higher standard of proof. (§ 75562.) He concludes
from this circumstance that language in Article 2 of the JRS II law limiting further
payments, such as the “and no other amount” clause in section 75521 regarding the early
retirement benefit, applies only within Article 2, and does not preclude the judge from
also receiving a disability retirement benefit under Article 4.
We disagree that Judge Warner’s conclusion follows from his premises. At most,
it is appropriate to conclude that a conviction does not cut a judge off completely from
possible eligibility for a disability retirement benefit, not that a judge may collect both
disability retirement and early retirement benefits. Indeed, Judge Warren’s argument
accidently highlights the unreasonableness of his interpretation of JRS II. It is
10
implausible that the Legislature intended judges convicted of felonies to have the
opportunity to collect two retirement benefits, if they should happen to become
disabled—both a disability retirement allowance and a return of their monthly
contributions to the JRS II fund—while judges who retire normally, after careers
unmarred by any criminal conviction, may receive only a monthly retirement allowance
or a lump sum payment of their monetary credits.
Judge Warner further urges us to apply the rule that ambiguities in pension statutes
should be construed in favor of the pensioner, citing Ventura County Deputy Sheriffs’
Assn. v. Board of Retirement (1997) 16 Cal.4th 483, 490.) That rule only applies,
however, where the construction urged by the pensioner is “consistent with the clear
language and purpose of the statute.” (Ibid.) For the reasons discussed above, Judge
Warner’s interpretation of JRS II is not.
Additionally, Judge Warner invokes the maxim that the “‘law abhors forfeitures.’”
(See Wooster v. Department of Fish & Game (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 1020, 1027)
Indeed, as noted, the legislative history includes at least one use of the word “forfeit” in
describing a judge’s decision to take disability retirement and thereby relinquish his or
her entitlement to payment of his or her contributions or monetary credits. (Select
Committee on Judicial Retirement, Final Report, May 1993, Report Addendum, p. 3.)
And CalPERS described Judge Warner as “forfeiting” his right to receive a distribution
of monetary credits, upon applying for and receiving the disability retirement benefit, in
the letter sent to Judge Warner informing him that he is not entitled to both a disability
retirement allowance and payment of his accrued monetary credits. In both cases,
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however, the term is used in its general meaning, to give up or relinquish, not as the legal
term of art utilized in the cited maxim. In Kuhlemeier v. Lack (1942) 50 Cal.App.2d 802,
the court of appeal observed that “[i]n law the word ‘forfeit’ means ‘to lose and surrender
to an individual or the state something that belongs to one for misconduct or breach of
duty . . . .” and found no forfeiture, in the legal sense, despite parties’ use of the term in a
lease. (Id. at p. 808.) In that case, “the payment of money, or the relinquishment of the
right to demand the return of money, constitute[d] the consideration for the option to
terminate the lease.” (Ibid.) Here, too, Judge Warner relinquished the right to
distribution of his monetary credits, when he consented to receive a disability retirement
allowance. But it does not follow that there was ever a forfeiture of the sort the law
abhors. In fact, the money continues to inure to his benefit, as part of the JRS II fund
from which his disability retirement allowance is paid. (§ 75600.)
In short, we agree wholeheartedly with the trial court’s conclusion: “Judge
Warner has served the State with distinction as a bench officer, and his disability prior to
full retirement age deprived the People of San Bernardino County of an able judge. As
currently written, however, the JRS II statutes require that Judge Warner be awarded a
disability retirement annuity benefit and no other retirement benefit.”
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III. DISPOSITION
The trial court’s order denying Judge Warner’s petition for writ of mandate is
affirmed. CalPERS shall recover its costs on appeal.
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
HOLLENHORST Acting P. J. We concur:
MCKINSTER J.
MILLER J.
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AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. Under the Judges' Retirement System II Law (JRS II), a judge who elects to receive a disability retirement allowance is not entitled to also receive a separate distribution of accrued monetary credits. The statutory scheme provides for either a disability retirement allowance or a service-based retirement benefit, but not both.
Issues
Whether a judge under JRS II is entitled to receive both a disability retirement allowance and a distribution of accrued monetary credits.
Whether the statutory scheme of JRS II permits the simultaneous receipt of disability and service retirement benefits.
Disposition. Affirmed
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“we conclude the interpretation that fits most comfortably with the statutory scheme as whole, as well as its purpose, legislative history, and public policy, is that a judge who becomes disabled is not entitled to receive both disability and service retirement benefits under JSP II, but only one or the other.”
“As currently written, however, the JRS II statutes require that Judge Warner be awarded a disability retirement annuity benefit and no other retirement benefit.”