STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
CX-00-2097
Lawrence A. Jacobson, et al.,
Appellants,
vs.
Board of Trustees of the
Teachers Retirement Association,
an Agency of the State of Minnesota, et al.,
Respondents.
Filed May 29, 2001
Affirmed
Huspeni, Judge
Ramsey County District Court
File No. C6005980
Joseph T. O'Neill, Elizabeth I. Goodpaster, Michael D. O'Neill, O'Neill, Grills & O'Neill, P.L.L.P.,
W-1750 First National Bank Building, 332 Minnesota Street, St. Paul, MN 55101; and
Stewart C. Loper, Mary F. Seymour, Loper & Seymour, P.A., Suite 201, 24 East Fourth St., St.
Paul, MN 55101 (for appellants)
Mike Hatch, Attorney General, John S. Garry, Jon K. Murphy, Assistant Attorneys General, 445
Minnesota Street, Suite 1100, St. Paul, MN 55101 (for respondents)
Considered and decided by Willis, Presiding Judge, Amundson, Judge, and Huspeni, Judge.
S Y L L A B U S
1. When the gravamen of a complaint challenges legislative changes to a public pension plan and
amounts to a claim of unconstitutional impairment of contract, the statute of limitations accrues as of
the effective date of those legislative changes, not as of the date the public employees retire and
apply for benefits.
2. In an action alleging unconstitutional impairment of contract based on legislative changes to a
public pension plan, the doctrine of anticipatory repudiation is not available so as to allow the public
employee the option of bringing suit upon repudiation or waiting until the time of retirement, where
legislative changes to the employee's pension plan eliminated the particular pension fund and
transferred all past and future contributions into other funds.
3. In an action alleging that legislative changes to a public pension fund violated equal protection,
the statute of limitations begins to run as of the effective date of those changes, and the fact that the
discriminatory acts are not realized until retirement does not operate to extend the statute of
limitations to retirement.
O P I N I O N
HUSPENI, Judge
Appellants, members of the Teachers Retirement Association (TRA), challenge dismissal by the
district court under Minn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(e) of their action against respondents State of
Minnesota and the TRA Board of Trustees. The district court determined that the six-year statute
of limitations on appellants' claims of unconstitutional impairment of contract, denial of equal
protection, common law breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment had begun
to run as of the effective date of 1989 statutory amendments, which substantially changed or
modified appellants' pension plans, not on the dates when appellants retired and began to collect
their pensions. Because the district court correctly determined that the six-year statute of limitations
had run on all of appellants' claims, we affirm the rule 12 dismissal.
FACTS
Appellants are TRA members who taught during the 1968-69 school year and who have already
retired or will retire on January 1, 1998, or thereafter. When they first became employed as
teachers, only one pension fund was available, the improved money purchase (IMP) program.
In 1969, the legislature passed the Teachers Retirement Improvement Act of 1969, which made
several other pension funds available to TRA members. See 1969 Minn. Laws ch. 485, §§ 1-41.
TRA members were offered the opportunity to select from five programs, each of which required
increased contributions from the employing school districts and TRA members. Those programs
included (1) IMP, (2) a formula and three variable annuity; (3) a combined IMP and variable
annuity; (4) a combined formula and variable annuity; and (5) a total variable annuity.
TRA members were required to return a signed election form before July 1, 1972, indicating their
choice of program under which their benefits at retirement would be calculated. The Act specifically
provided that a member's acceptance of one of the programs, once made, cannot be revoked or
changed. 1969 Minn. Laws ch. 485, § 12, subd. 3. If a member did not return an election form,
he or she automatically remained in the existing IMP program. Each of the appellants here
completed and timely returned an election form sometime prior to July 1, 1972.
Subsequent statutory amendments to the Act altered and eventually eliminated the variable annuity
programs, as follows.
In 1973, statutory amendments changed the formula program from a career average salary
computation to a computation based on the average of a teacher's highest five consecutive salaries.
1973 Minn. Laws ch. 728, § 10, subd. 7. These 1973 amendments included a savings clause for
teachers who had chosen to remain in the IMP program, to allow them to choose, upon retirement,
benefits under the IMP or the formula program, whichever are larger. 1973 Minn. Laws ch. 728, §
27.
In 1974, statutory amendments transferred teachers in the three variable annuity programs into a
single program that was half variable annuity and half formula. The amendments further provided
that all other teachers rendering service after June 30, 1972, were covered by the formula program.
1974 Minn. Laws ch. 289, § 15.
In 1978, amendments provided that teachers in the variable annuity program would have their
future contributions invested in the formula program, instead of the variable annuity program, unless
they elected, by June 30, 1978, to continue in the variable annuity program. 1978 Minn. Laws ch.
781, § 7.
Finally, in 1989, amendments transferred past contributions and earnings of teachers in the variable
annuity program to the formula program and closed the variable annuity fund. 1989 Minn. Laws ch.
319, art. 9, §§ 1-6. These amendments, which eliminated the variable annuity program and its
funding, were effective June 30, 1989. Id.
Appellants brought this action against the state and the TRA board on July 10, 2000. Their
complaint alleges that they held certain irrevocable contract rights, as created by the 1969 Act, and
that respondents' subsequent legislative amendments to that Act amounted to impairment of
contract, denial of equal protection, common law breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and
unjust enrichment. In particular, appellants challenge respondents' conversion of their variable
annuity program, which was a primarily stock market-based defined contribution pension
program, to the formula program, which is an entirely defined benefit pension program based on
a teacher's salary and years of service. Appellants further challenge the addition of penalties for
early retirement, which were not part of their original irrevocable contracts. Appellants finally allege
that the 1973 amendments violated equal protection by creating disparate treatment between those
who made no choice during the election period and those who made an election, by giving those
who made no election a choice between two pension programs at retirement: the IMP program or
the formula program.
ISSUES
1. Did the district court err in determining that appellants' breach of contract claims are barred
because not brought within six years after those claims accrued?
2. Did the district court err in determining that appellants' equal protection claims are barred under
the six-year statute of limitations?
ANALYSIS
On review of this judgment dismissing appellants' claims under Minn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(e), we take
the facts alleged in appellants' amended complaint as true. Pederson v. American Lutheran
Church, 404 N.W.2d 887, 889 (Minn. App. 1987), review denied (Minn. June 30, 1987).
Because dismissals under rule 12.02(e) are generally disfavored, a reviewing court will not uphold
such a dismissal if it is possible on any evidence which might be produced, consistent with the
pleader's theory, to grant the relief demanded. Martens v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co., 616
N.W.2d 732, 739-40 (Minn. 2000) (quotation omitted). A motion to dismiss may be proper,
however, when it is clear and unequivocal from the face of the complaint that the statute of
limitations has run on all the claims asserted. Pederson, 404 N.W.2d at 889.
Issues involving the construction and application of statutes of limitations are questions of law,
which appellate courts must review de novo. Benigni v. County of St. Louis, 585 N.W.2d 51, 54
(Minn. 1998). Courts have no authority to extend or modify statutory limitations periods.
Johnson v. Winthrop Laboratories Div. of Sterling Drug, Inc., 291 Minn. 145, 151, 190
N.W.2d 77, 81 (1971) (citation omitted).
I.
Appellants' claims alleging breach of contract, promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, and
impairment of contract all rest on the same facts, and all are governed by a six-year statute of
limitations. Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(1), (2), (5) (2000) (actions on express or implied
contracts, on liabilities created by statute, or for any other injury to rights of another, not arising on
contract and not enumerated elsewhere, must be commenced within six years). The question we
must answer here is when did the six years begin to run?
The statute of limitations begins to run when the cause of action accrues. Minn. Stat. § 541.01
(2000).
A cause of action accrues when the holder of the right to bring the action can apply
to the court for relief, and is enabled to commence proceedings to enforce his
rights, and from this time the statute of limitations is running.
Everett v. O'Leary, 90 Minn. 154, 157, 95 N.W. 901, 902-03 (1903) (citations omitted).
A cause of action for breach of contract [generally] accrues at the time of the alleged breach.
Pederson, 404 N.W.2d at 889 (citation omitted). This is true even when actual damages resulting
from the breach do not occur until some time afterwards or when the aggrieved party was ignorant
of the facts constituting the breach. Bachertz v. Hayes-Lucas Lumber Co., 201 Minn. 171, 176,
275 N.W. 694, 697 (1937); Weston v. Jones, 160 Minn. 32, 36, 199 N.W. 431, 433 (1924).
Appellants argue, first, that their contract claims did not accrue until they retired and applied for
pension benefits, citing Butler v. Minneapolis Police Relief Ass'n, 283 Minn. 70, 166 N.W.2d
705 (1969). We disagree. Butler involved a claim to receive pension benefits under statutes
existing at the time the plaintiff became eligible for a pension and applied for benefits. Id. at 71-74,
166 N.W.2d at 706-08. Here, appellants do not seek to establish their rights to pension benefits
under existing statutes; rather, they challenge changes made by the legislature to their allegedly
irrevocable contract rights, which they claim were given them by the legislature in the 1969 Act.
In Minnesota, challenges to legislative changes to public pension plans have been characterized as
claims alleging unconstitutional impairment of contract. See, e.g., Duluth Firemen's Relief Ass'n v.
City of Duluth, 361 N.W.2d 381, 386 (Minn. 1985); Christensen v. Minneapolis Mun.
Employees Ret. Bd., 331 N.W.2d 740, 749-52 (Minn. 1983); Sylvestre v. State, 298 Minn.
142, 154-55, 214 N.W.2d 658, 666 (1973). In Christensen, 331 N.W.2d at 746-47, a retired
public employee sued after his pension was discontinued pursuant to subsequent legislative acts.
The supreme court expressly abandoned the gratuity approach that had been used in prior cases
and adopted a promissory estoppel approach in its analysis of the rights of the employee in that
particular case. Id. The court noted that even if a promise may be deemed enforceable against a
public employer, that promise is still subject to modification under the state's policing power. Id. at
749. The court further noted, however, that the state's policing power is itself constrained by the
constitutional prohibition against contract impairment, which requires that any impairments be
reasonable and necessary to meet a broad and pressing social or economic need. Id. at 749-50.
To prove a claim alleging unconstitutional impairment of contract, a party must establish the
existence of an underlying contract. Thus, in Christensen, 331 N.W.2d at 746-47, a promissory
estoppel approach was used; in Sylvestre, 298 Minn. at 156, 214 N.W.2d at 667, the underlying
contract between district court judges and the state was analyzed as a unilateral contract; and in
Duluth Firemen's Relief Ass'n, 361 N.W.2d at 386, the retirees failed to establish any type of a
contractual right in maintaining a specific benefit level. The statute of limitations was not at issue in
any of these cases, however, because suit was brought in each case soon after the enactment of the
challenged legislative changes.
When the issue before us is analyzed as one claiming unconstitutional impairment of appellant's
allegedly irrevocable contract rights, we note initially that appellants do not challenge the calculation
or payment of their pension benefits under the law as it exists at the time of their retirements.
Rather, the gravamen of their complaint involves a challenge to the constitutionality of actions taken
by the legislature between 1973 and 1989. We conclude, therefore, that any irrevocable contract
rights that appellants might have had would have been breached no later than enactment of the last
of the statutory amendments and that a cause of action accrued at the time of that breach. See
Pederson, 404 N.W.2d at 889. Thus, appellants' claims accrued on June 30, 1989.
Appellants argue further, however, and urge that the legislative amendments amounted to an
anticipatory repudiation on the part of respondents, thereby providing appellants with the option of
suing immediately upon breach or waiting until respondents' performance was due, and that the
statute of limitations did not begin to run until they made their election. As support for their
argument, they cite Levin v. C.O.M.B. Co., 441 N.W.2d 801 (Minn. 1989). In Levin, the
supreme court reversed the district courts' decisions accelerating accrual of all of an employee's
claims to the date of the employer's repudiation of a commission agreement, noting that it
has long been established * * * that the renunciation and repudiation of a contract
by one of the parties does not set the statute of limitation in motion against the other
party although it gives the latter an election to sue immediately.
Id. at 803-04 (citation omitted). The complaint filed by the employee in Levin, however, was
similar to an installment contract and alleged a series of breaches arising from repeated failures to
pay commissions, each of which occurred only at the close of a contract year. Id. at 803. The
supreme court characterized the complaint as asserting separate causes of action with different
accrual dates. Appellants' reliance on Levin is, we believe, misplaced.
As already discussed, appellants' complaint challenges a series of actions by the legislature,
between 1973 and 1989, which they allege unconstitutionally impaired their irrevocable contract
rights created by 1969 legislation. Again, as of 1989, this irrevocable contract was modified when
the variable annuity program was eliminated and appellants and their contributions were transferred
into the formula program. Respondents' allegedly unconstitutional act occurred when the variable
annuity programs that had been chosen by appellants were eliminated, and when funding for these
programs was eliminated. We cannot strain to categorize these legislative amendments as an
anticipatory repudiation of the contract by respondents. The issue is, instead, whether the
legislative amendments created an unconstitutional impairment of allegedly irrevocable contract
rights. That issue could have, and should have, been raised during the six years following the last
amendment.
Respondents note that, as a state agency created by the legislature, the TRA and its board may act
only according to its statutory authorization and in compliance with its statutory fiduciary duties. See
Stang v. Minnesota Teachers Ret. Ass'n Bd. of Trs., 566 N.W.2d 345, 348 (Minn. App. 1997).
Thus, as of June 30, 1989, it became legally certain that the TRA and its board would be required
to follow legislative mandates and eliminate the variable annuity program. See Johnson v. Kansas
Pub. Employees Ret. Sys., 935 P.2d 1049, 1053 (Kan. 1997) (claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
by public employees alleging unconstitutional interference with contract, accrued in 1974, when
legislation was enacted abolishing city's pension plan and consolidating it with county's plan and
when it became legally impossible for employees to continue under city's plan); see also Smith v.
City of Enid, 149 F.3d 1151, 1154 (10th Cir. 1998) (impairment of contract claim under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 accrued when public employee received notice of statutory amendment that would
require him to terminate his employment after participating in deferred option plan for five years, not
when city actually terminated his employment).
Appellants' claims, which challenge whether respondents could constitutionally modify an allegedly
irrevocable contract right to continue in the variable annuity fund, accrued at the latest as of June
30, 1989, the date on which that particular fund was eliminated and appellants' contributions were
transferred into another fund. As of that date, appellants could have brought an action challenging
respondents' actions. Thus, the statute of limitations ran six years after that date, or on June 30,
1995.
II.
Appellants' equal protection claim is based on the 1973 amendments, which included a savings
clause allowing TRA members who had chosen the IMP or who had not made an election and
were deemed to continue in the IMP program, a choice between receiving benefits upon retirement
based on the IMP or on the formula program. Appellants allege that this saving clause created
disparate treatment between these TRA members and appellants.
This claim is governed by the six-year residual statute of limitations, Minn. Stat. § 541.05, subd.
1(5) (2000). A cause of action accrues under this statute of limitations when a plaintiff suffers
some damage or when the claim is sufficiently ripe to overcome a motion to dismiss. Herrmann
v. McMenomy & Severson, 590 N.W.2d 641, 643 (Minn. 1999). The district court concluded
that appellants' equal protection claim was sufficiently ripe to withstand a motion to dismiss no later
than 1989, when the state eliminated the variable annuity program, but left untouched the 1973
savings clause, which preserved the IMP as an optional method of calculating retirement benefits
for those who had chosen it during the 1969-72 election period.
Appellants argue that respondents' equal protection violation is a present, continuing one, so as to
extend the statute of limitations under the continuing violation doctrine. In Sigurdson v. Isanti
County, 448 N.W.2d 62, 67 (Minn. 1989), the supreme court recognized that a discriminatory act
always has some continuing consequences, but that in determining whether the continuing violation
doctrine applies, the proper focus is upon the time of the discriminatory acts, not upon the time at
which the consequences of the acts became most painful. (Emphasis and quotation omitted.)
In this case, the alleged equal protection violation occurred between 1973 and 1989, when certain
TRA members were given the option, at retirement, between two different funds, while appellants
were limited to a single fund. Although the consequences of these acts are most painful now,
when it is apparent that appellant's plan has not done as well as the other plan, the creation of two
classes of TRA members occurred between 1973 and 1989. We conclude that the alleged equal
protection violation is thus not a continuing one so as to extend the statute of limitations.
D E C I S I O N
The district court's determination that appellants' claims are barred by the six-year statute of
limitations and its dismissal of appellants' complaint are affirmed.
Affirmed.
Footnotes
* Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn.
Const. art. VI, § 10.
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