Filed 3/14/16 Staniforth v. The Judges’ Retirement System CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FAY STANIFORTH et al., D068174
Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v. (Super. Ct. No.
37-2012-00093475-CU-MC-CTL)
THE JUDGES' RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
Defendant and Respondent;
JOHN CHIANG, as State Controller, etc.,
Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Joel M.
Pressman, Judge. Affirmed.
Jorn S. Rossi and Paul G. Mast for all Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Reed Smith, Harvey L. Leiderman, Dennis P. Maio and Jeffrey R. Rieger for
Defendant and Respondent.
No appearance for Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
More than 35 years ago, our Supreme Court issued its opinion in Olson v. Cory
(1980) 27 Cal.3d 532 (Olson I) addressing a 1976 amendment to the then-existing version
of Government Code1 section 68203 (section 68203). The Olson I opinion examined the
extent to which the 1976 amendment, aimed at placing a limit on cost of living
adjustments (COLA's) for the salaries payable to active jurists and (derivatively) also
limiting the pensions payable to certain judicial pensioners, could constitutionally be
applied to those active jurists and judicial pensioners. Since Olson I, numerous other
courts have addressed issues stemming from Olson I, including whether a constitutional
amendment designed to supersede Olson I and deprive active jurists and certain judicial
pensioners of the benefits provided by the uncapped COLA's was constitutional (see
Olson v. Cory (1982) 134 Cal.App.3d 85 (Olson II)), and whether interest was due on the
payments owed to active and retired judges under the judgment announced in Olson I.
(See Olson v. Cory (1983) 35 Cal.3d 390 (Olson III).) The present action, which
produced this court's opinion in Staniforth v. Judges' Retirement System (2014) 226
Cal.App.4th 978 (Staniforth I), represents the latest progeny of Olson I.
A. Staniforth I
As we explained in Staniforth I, petitioner Faye Staniforth filed the present action
on behalf of herself and similarly situated persons (together pensioners) alleging, as its
principal claim against respondent The Judges' Retirement System (JRS), that JRS had
not adhered to its obligations to pensioners under their interpretation of Olson I and that,
as a result, over three decades worth of pension payments had been underpaid to
pensioners. This principal claim, denominated the "Olson I claims" (Staniforth I, supra,
1 All further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise
specified.
2
226 Cal.App.4th at p. 981), sought a declaratory judgment that, under Olson I, jurists who
served on California's trial court or appellate court bench during the time that section
68203 provided for unlimited COLA's were entitled to have their pensions adjusted
upward based on the applicable COLA for each year, and the limit on the amount of
COLA's (enacted by legislation the impact of which was evaluated in Olson I) could not
constitutionally be applied to pensions earned by jurists who served on California's trial
court or appellate court bench during the time that section 68203 provided for unlimited
COLA's. The Olson I claims raised by pensioners sought to compel the JRS to adhere to
pensioners' interpretation of Olson I and to recalculate the amount of judicial pensions
owed to pensioners using the uncapped COLA's, and to pay arrearages and interest for
the decades of underpaid pension payments. (Staniforth I, at p. 981.)
In Staniforth I, we concluded the trial court correctly sustained the demurrer by
JRS to pensioners' Olson I claims, without leave to amend, because we agreed with the
trial court's conclusion that pensioners' Olson I claims directly conflicted with the correct
reading of Olson I. We concluded, contrary to pensioners' Olson I claims, pensioners
were not entitled under Olson I to perpetual uncapped COLA increases to their pensions.
(Staniforth I, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at pp. 990-991.) As we explained:
"Olson I merely reaffirmed that judicial pensioners had a right to a
percentage participation in the salaries paid to active jurists,
including 'the increment of pro-rata increase in the salary of the
judge occupying the office formerly occupied by [the pensioner,
which] salary fluctuates with cost-of-living increases' [quoting Olson
I, supra, 27 Cal.3d at p. 542, fn. 7], but did not confer on or
recognize any right of judicial pensioners to be exempted from
changes in the underlying salary structure applicable to such active
3
jurists, including changes to the COLA's adopted by the 1976
amendment." (Staniforth I, supra, at p. 990, fn. omitted.)
However, we also concluded in Staniforth I that the trial court erroneously denied
a subsequent motion that, in effect, sought leave to amend to separately state certain
additional claims by a subgroup of pensioners. That motion to amend asserted, even
assuming JRS had correctly (considering Olson I) implemented a system that employed
capped COLA's to calculate all judicial pensions after certain dates, there was a subgroup
of 10 class members allegedly not paid the entire amount due to them up to those certain
dates,2 and argued those additional claims by this subgroup could not be dismissed by
demurrer. The trial court denied the motion to amend as to this subgroup of claims,
concluding (1) this category of unpaid pension payments was not clearly part of the
original petition, and (2) even if these claims had been separately pleaded, the death of
the 10 jurists ended any further obligations by JRS to this subgroup of retirees under
section 20164 and, additionally, this category of claims was time-barred by Code of Civil
Procedure section 337.5. (Staniforth I, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at pp. 991-992.)
2 The motion argued the present action encompassed (1) claims that seven trial
judges whose retirement allowances should have been (but were not) calculated and paid
based on the salary of an active trial court jurist as increased by an uncapped COLA until
the first Monday in January of 1981, consistent with Olson I, and (2) claims that three
appellate court justices whose retirement allowances should have been (but were not)
calculated and paid based on the salary of an active appellate court jurist as increased by
an uncapped COLA until the first Monday in January of 1987, again consistent with
Olson I. The motion argued that, because the petition adequately alleged these 10 jurists
had not been paid their retirement allowances during the 1970's and 1980's in accordance
with this rate, the demurrer should be overruled as to this subgroup for these time periods
or, alternatively, they should be granted leave to amend to allow this subgroup to more
clearly and separately plead these claims. (Staniforth I, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at
p. 991.)
4
We rejected each of these three rationales and concluded the trial court should
have granted leave to amend to separately allege these additional claims by the subgroup
of pensioners. (Staniforth, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at pp. 992-994.) However, we
specifically "caution[ed] that our conclusion here is a limited one: the trial court should
not have dismissed this segment of the alleged claims for these 10 jurists on demurrer but
instead should have granted pensioners leave to amend to separately state this limited
segment of claims. Whether these claims, once distilled, may be subjected to a motion for
summary judgment based on properly introduced extrinsic evidence, or based on other
statutes of limitations that may be applicable but were not raised below, are matters that
must be determined on remand." (Id. at p. 994, italics added.)
B. Proceedings on Remand from Staniforth I
On remand, an amended petition was filed that separately stated claims by the heir
or successors to each of the 10 jurists (petitioners), alleging the three retired appellate
court justices had been underpaid their retirement allowances between 1977 and 1987,
and alleging the seven retired trial judges had similarly been underpaid on their
retirement allowances through 1981. The petition sought recovery of the unpaid
principal amounts, along with interest, on behalf of the various heirs of or successors to
the now-deceased jurists.
JRS demurred to this amended petition, arguing that all the stated claims, which
sought recovery for payments to the retired jurists that allegedly should have been paid
over two decades before the present action was filed, were barred by the statute of
limitations under any possibly applicable statute. JRS argued the action would be time-
5
barred by the three-year statute of limitations provided by Code of Civil Procedure
section 338, subdivision (a), providing a three-year statute of limitations for "[a]n action
upon a liability created by statute, other than a penalty or forfeiture," or by the four-year
"catch-all" statute of limitations provided by Code of Civil Procedure section 343. (See
Bogart v. George K. Porter Co. (1924) 193 Cal. 197, 201 (Bogart).) JRS also argued that
a judgment entered in 1986 in Olson v. Cory (Super. Ct. Los Angeles County, 1986,
No. CA000896) (Olson IV), directing the JRS to comply with Olson I and Olson II,
triggered the 10-year statute of limitations under Code of Civil Procedure section 337.5,
subdivision (b), for an "action upon a judgment or decree of any court . . . ."
Petitioners opposed the demurrer, asserting (1) the 1986 judgment in Olson IV was
not a final judgment that would have triggered the 10-year statute of limitations under
Code of Civil Procedure section 337.5, subdivision (b); (2) the present action was not an
"action upon a liability created by statute" but was instead an action to enforce the retired
jurists' contractual rights to pension benefits, rendering Code of Civil Procedure section
338, subdivision (a), inapplicable; and (3) the "catch-all" statute applies only to "action[s]
for relief not hereinbefore provided" and was therefore inapplicable because section
20164, subdivision (b), purportedly provides that no period of limitations applies when
the JRS owes money to a beneficiary.
The court sustained JRS's demurrer without leave to amend, and dismissed the
action. Petitioners timely appealed.
6
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
A party may demur to a complaint, alleging that the pleading does not state facts
sufficient to constitute a cause of action, when the claims are barred by the applicable
statutes of limitations. (Friends of Shingle Springs Interchange, Inc. v. County of El
Dorado (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1470, 1482.) "When a ground for objection to a
complaint, such as the statute of limitations, appears on its face or from matters of which
the court may or must take judicial notice, a demurrer on that ground is proper." (Duggal
v. G.E. Capital Communications Services, Inc. (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 81, 86.)
On appeal from an order dismissing a complaint after the sustaining of a demurrer,
we review the pleading to determine whether the facts alleged state a cause of action
under any possible legal theory. (Aubry v. Tri-City Hospital Dist. (1992) 2 Cal.4th 962,
966-967.) We give the complaint a reasonable interpretation, "treat[ing] the demurrer as
admitting all material facts properly pleaded," but do not "assume the truth of
contentions, deductions or conclusions of law." (Id. at p. 967.) We liberally construe the
pleading with a view to substantial justice between the parties. On appeal, we will affirm
a "trial court's decision to sustain the demurrer [if it] was correct on any theory."
(Kennedy v. Baxter Healthcare Corp. (1996) 43 Cal.App.4th 799, 808.) "[W]e do not
review the validity of the trial court's reasoning but only the propriety of the ruling itself."
(Orange Unified School Dist. v. Rancho Santiago Community College Dist. (1997) 54
Cal.App.4th 750, 757.)
7
B. The Action Is Time-barred Under Any Possibly Applicable Statute of
Limitations
The face of the complaint demonstrates, and petitioners do not dispute, that for the
subgroup of 10 retired jurists alleged by the present petition to have been underpaid, the
last "underpayment" occurred in early 1987, and every potential member or beneficiary
allegedly underpaid the benefits by JRS was deceased by January 1, 2005. The present
action, pleading a common count for "money owed" to the heirs of those deceased jurists,
was not filed until 2012, more than seven years after the last petitioner succeeded to his
or her pleaded claim and at least 25 years after the last underpayment pleaded in the
action.
The parties have not identified, and our independent research has not uncovered,
either statutory or decisional law on which specific statute of limitations applies to the
present claims. Indeed, petitioners' election to plead their claims as common counts
hinders a disciplined analysis of the applicable statute of limitations, because the pleading
obscures the theory on which they premise their claims. (See generally Miller v. Brown
(1951) 107 Cal.App.2d 304 [common count for money owed subjected to two-year
statute of limitations where premised on oral contract].) The complaint is unclear
whether the claims asserted constitute an action to recover for breach of an oral contract
(in which event the two-year statute of limitations under Code Civ. Proc., § 339 applies),
or is an action to recover for breach of a written contract (in which event the four-year
statute of limitations under Code Civ. Proc., § 337 applies), or is an action to recover for
breach of an obligation imposed by statute (in which event the three-year statute of
8
limitations under Code Civ. Proc., § 338, subdivision (a) applies), or is an "action for
relief not hereinbefore provided" (in which event the four-year statute of limitations
under Code Civ. Proc., § 343 applies), or is some other form of claim that may have other
requirements or statutes of limitations. Additionally, to the extent their common counts
for money owed were premised on a claim that JRS had not satisfied the obligations it
owed under the 1986 judgment in Olson IV, which was entered in an apparent class
action lawsuit on behalf of California's active and retired jurists and appears to have
compelled JRS to pay the class members in accordance with a pay rate based (at least in
part) on the rights established in Olson I and Olson II, the claims would be subject to the
10-year statute of limitations under Code of Civil Procedure section 337.5, subdivision
(b), for an "action upon a judgment or decree of any court . . . ."3
However, we conclude it is unnecessary definitively to divine petitioners' theory of
liability to identify the applicable statute of limitations because we are satisfied that,
under any and all of the possible theories underlying petitioners' common counts, all
3 Petitioners argue Olson IV was not a final judgment triggering Code of Civil
Procedure section 337.5, subdivision (b), because it did not compel the payment of any
money to class members. Although this argument does not undermine our conclusion
that all possible periods of limitation have elapsed on the claims, we also note the record
appears to undermine the claim that no order to pay class members was ever entered in
Olson IV. Although the judgment entered in June 1986 did not itself establish the
amounts due to individual class members or order payment thereof, the register of actions
for that case number indicates that, after the appeal of the declaratory judgment was
abandoned in November 1986, plaintiffs applied for an "Order Requiring Payment of
Salary Increases and Interest," and the register indicates that application was granted in
December 1986. Petitioners do not suggest that order, on becoming final, would not
qualify as a final judgment sufficient to trigger Code of Civil Procedure section 337.5,
subdivision (b).
9
claims by the heirs based on underpaid pension payments accrued at least seven years (if
not decades)4 before the present action was filed. Because even the longest of the
foregoing possible statute of limitations periods on the claims would have expired well
before petitioners commenced the present action, we affirm the trial court's ruling
sustaining JRS's demurrer on the basis of the expiration of the statute of limitations
(Kennedy v. Baxter Health Care Corp., supra, 43 Cal.App.4th at p. 808; Orange Unified
School Dist. v. Rancho Santiago Community College Dist., supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at
p. 757) unless, as argued by petitioners, no statute of limitations applies to their claims.5
Petitioners' only argument for preserving these claims is their interpretation of
section 20164, subdivision (b)(2), which they construe as providing no time limit for
4 The ordinary rule that would appear to govern accrual of a cause of action based
on alleged underpayment of a periodic pension payment would be the date of the
underpayment (see Abbott v. City of Los Angeles (1958) 50 Cal.2d 438, 462 [" 'The right
to receive periodic payments under a pension is a continuing one [citation], and any time
limitation upon the right to sue for each [installment] necessarily commences to run from
the time when that [installment] actually falls due," ' " quoting Dillon v. Board of Pension
Commrs. (1941) 18 Cal.2d 427, 430]), and the complaint below appears to allege the last
possible underpayment to any of this subgroup was in 1987. However, to the extent
petitioners' theory sought to pursue some independent cause of action possessed by the
heirs, those heirs had succeeded to the claim not later than 2005 (the death of the last
jurist of the subgroup of underpaid pensioners), at least seven years before this action was
filed.
5 JRS has requested this court take judicial notice of a judgment entered June 18,
1986, in Los Angeles Superior Court case No. CA000437, as the final judgment in Olsen
I, which triggered the 10-year statute of limitations under Code of Civil Procedure section
337.5, subdivision (b). Because we conclude that all possibly applicable statutes of
limitations have expired, we need not definitively determine if the judgment in Los
Angeles Superior Court case No. CA000437 triggered the 10year statute of limitations on
petitioners' claims, and we therefore deny the request for judicial notice because such
evidence is not relevant to our analysis and holding.
10
pensioners or (as in this case) the alleged heirs of pensioners to pursue collection of
purported underpayments by the JRS during the last century. Before examining this
argument, we note that statutes of limitations, which have been characterized as statutes
of repose (Neff v. New York Life Ins. Co. (1947) 30 Cal.2d 165, 169), are generally
designed to "protect defendants from the necessity of defending stale claims and require
plaintiffs to pursue their claims diligently. [Citations.] They are " ' "designed to promote
justice by preventing surprises through the revival of claims that have been allowed to
slumber until evidence has been lost, memories have faded, and witnesses have
disappeared. The theory is that even if one has a just claim it is unjust not to put the
adversary on notice to defend within the period of limitation and that the right to be free
of stale claims in time comes to prevail over the right to prosecute them." ' " (Romano v.
Rockwell Internat., Inc. (1996) 14 Cal.4th 479, 488.) Our Supreme Court in Bogart,
supra, 193 Cal. 197, discussing the Legislature's intent behind the comprehensive scheme
of statutes of limitations legislatively prescribed by Code of Civil Procedure section 312
et seq., stated at page 201 that "[t]he Legislature has there specified the limitations
applicable to a wide variety of actions, and then to rebut the possible inference that
actions not therein specifically described are to be regarded as exempt from limitations, it
has specified a four-year limitation upon '[a]n action for relief not hereinbefore provided
for' ([§ 343]); and where [the Legislature] has intended that an action shall be exempt
from limitations it has said so in clear and unmistakable language." (Italics added.)
Such "unmistakable language" is found, for example, in Code of Civil Procedure section
348, which entirely exempts from any limitations period a claim brought to recover
11
money or other property deposited with a bank, where the Legislature declared, "To
actions brought to recover money or other property deposited with any bank, banker, trust
company, building and loan association, or savings and loan society or evidenced by a
certificate issued by an industrial loan company or credit union there is no limitation."
(Ibid., italics added.)
We turn to petitioners' claim that section 20164 expressly exempts their claims
from any period of limitations. That section provides:
"(a) The obligations of this system to its members continue
throughout their respective memberships, and the obligations of this
system to and in respect to retired members continue throughout the
lives of the respective retired members, and thereafter until all
obligations to their respective beneficiaries under optional
settlements have been discharged. . . .
(b) For the purposes of payments into or out of the retirement fund
for adjustment of errors or omissions, whether pursuant to Section
20160, 20163, or 20532, or otherwise, the period of limitation of
actions shall be three years, and shall be applied as follows:
(1) In cases where this system makes an erroneous payment to a
member or beneficiary, this system's right to collect shall expire
three years from the date of payment.
(2) In cases where this system owes money to a member or
beneficiary, the period of limitations shall not apply.
(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), in cases where payment is
erroneous because of the death of the retired member or beneficiary
or because of the remarriage of the beneficiary, the period of
limitation shall be 10 years and shall commence with the discovery
of the erroneous payment.
(d) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), where any payment has been
made as a result of fraudulent reports for compensation made, or
caused to be made, by a member for his or her own benefit, the
period of limitation shall be 10 years and that period shall commence
12
either from the date of payment or upon discovery of the fraudulent
reporting, whichever date is later.
(e) The board shall determine the applicability of the period of
limitations in any case, and its determination with respect to the
running of any period of limitation shall be conclusive and binding
for purposes of correcting the error or omission."
Our role is to construe the statutory language to determine whether subdivision
(b)(2) of section 20164 was intended to exempt from any limitations periods an action
seeking to collect "payments . . . out of the retirement fund for adjustment of errors or
omissions," as contended by petitioners. When construing statutory language, "our
fundamental task . . . is to determine the Legislature's intent so as to effectuate the law's
purpose." (People v. Murphy (2001) 25 Cal.4th 136, 142.) We begin this task by
examining the statutory language, giving it a plain and commonsense meaning. (Ibid.)
However, "[w]e do not . . . consider the statutory language in isolation; rather, we look to
the statute's entire substance in order to determine its scope and purposes. [Citation.]
That is, we construe the words in question in context, keeping in mind the statute's nature
and obvious purposes. [Citation.] We must harmonize the statute's various parts by
considering it in the context of the statutory framework as a whole." (Los Angeles
County Metropolitan Transportation Authority v. Alameda Produce Market, LLC (2011)
52 Cal.4th 1100, 1107.) We must "attempt[] to harmonize different parts of a statutory
scheme, and to construe statutory language with a view toward achieving a result that
corresponds to legislative intent and avoids an absurd or unworkable result." (Holmes v.
Jones (2000) 83 Cal.App.4th 882, 891.)
13
These principles convince us that the phrase relied on by petitioners—section
20164, subdivision (b)(2)'s statement that "[i]n cases where this system owes money to a
member or beneficiary, the period of limitations shall not apply"—was intended only to
mean the "the period of limitations" discussed in subdivisions (b) through (d) (i.e., the
three-year or 10-year period for the system's ability to collect from a member for an
erroneous payment) applies only to claims by the system against a member, and the
specified period of limitations referred to in that subsection was not applicable when the
system owed money to a member. However, a statement that this specific period "shall
not apply" to actions in which the system owes money to its members is not, as
petitioners' argument posits, synonymous with a legislative intent that "no period of
limitations shall apply" when the system owes money to a member.6 First, petitioners'
interpretation requires us to rewrite language actually employed by the Legislature—i.e.,
"[i]n cases where this system owes money to a member or beneficiary, the period of
limitations shall not apply"—to language reading "[i]n cases where this system owes
money to a member or beneficiary, no period of limitations shall apply." We decline to
rewrite the language because the Legislature has shown, by its enactment of Code of
Civil Procedure section 348, that it is capable of clearly expressing an intention that no
statute of limitations applies to a specific action when that is in fact its intent. (Cf.
6 Our interpretation is also consistent with the grammatical terms employed by the
Legislature. The language employed in section 20164, subdivision (b)(2), used a definite
article ("the") to describe what "period of limitations" would not apply, connoting that it
was intended to refer to a specific period of limitations (i.e., the specific period described
in subdivision (b)(1)) rather than all periods of limitation.
14
County of San Diego v. San Diego NORML (2008) 165 Cal.App.4th 798, 825 ["Where
statutes involving similar issues contain language demonstrating the Legislature knows
how to express its intent, ' "the omission of such provision from a similar statute
concerning a related subject is significant to show that a different legislative intent
existed with reference to the different statutes." ' "].)
Second, and equally importantly, petitioners' construction of section 20164,
subdivision (b), appears inconsistent with other interrelated provisions of the statutory
scheme for correction of errors and omissions. Section 20164, subdivision (b),
specifically refers to "payments . . . out of the retirement fund for adjustment of errors or
omissions . . . pursuant to Section 20160," and section 20160 specifies:
(a) Subject to subdivisions (c) and (d), the board may, in its
discretion and upon any terms it deems just, correct the errors or
omissions of any active or retired member, or any beneficiary of an
active or retired member, provided that all of the following facts
exist:
(1) The request, claim, or demand to correct the error or omission is
made by the party seeking correction within a reasonable time after
discovery of the right to make the correction, which in no case shall
exceed six months after discovery of this right.
(2) The error or omission was the result of mistake, inadvertence,
surprise, or excusable neglect, as each of those terms is used in
Section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. [¶] . . . [¶]
(b) Subject to subdivisions (c) and (d), the board shall correct all
actions taken as a result of errors or omissions of . . . this system.
(c) The duty and power of the board to correct mistakes, as provided
in this section, shall terminate upon the expiration of obligations of
this system to the party seeking correction of the error or omission,
as those obligations are defined by Section 20164." (Italics added.)
15
These provisions, which place extremely limited time constraints on a member to
petition to correct errors by the system, appear antithetical to petitioners' claim that
section 20164, subdivision (b), was intended give the heirs of a retiree an unlimited time
to pursue alleged underpayments by the system. Contrary to petitioners' construction of
section 20164, "payments . . . out of the retirement fund for adjustment of errors or
omissions . . . pursuant to Section 20160" (§ 20164, subd. (b)) appear to be subject to the
requirements of section 20160, which includes a requirement that the retiree file a claims
notice "within a reasonable time after discovery of the right to make the correction, which
in no case shall exceed six months after discovery of this right," rather than the unlimited
time argued by petitioners.7
7 Indeed, because "payments . . . out of the retirement fund for adjustment of errors
or omissions" under section 20164, subdivision (b), appear to be subject to section 20160,
and section 20160, subdivision (c), in turn specifically states the "power of the board to
correct mistakes, as provided in this section, shall terminate upon the expiration of
obligations of this system to the party seeking correction of the error or omission, as
those obligations are defined by Section 20164," it appears the death of the member may
provide an outer time limit on the ability of anyone to seek "payments . . . out of the
retirement fund for adjustment of errors or omissions . . . ." (§ 20164, subd. (b).) That is,
because the statutory language states the obligations of the system to retired members
only "continue throughout the lives of the respective retired members" (§ 20164, subd.
(a), italics added), and also states the "power . . . to correct mistakes . . . shall terminate
upon the expiration of obligations of this system to the party seeking correction"
(§ 20160, subd. (c), italics added), the statutory scheme arguably contemplates that heirs
may not pursue any claim for "payments . . . out of the retirement fund for adjustment of
errors or omissions" (§ 20164, subd. (b)) not commenced by the member prior to his or
her death. We need not definitively decide what outer time limits may apply to claims
such as those asserted here, but instead make these observations because petitioners make
no effort to reconcile these apparent limitations with their assertion the Legislature
intended to exempt such claims from any time limits whatsoever.
16
Finally, we are mindful of the admonition that statutory language should be
construed, where possible, in a manner that "avoids an absurd or unworkable result."
(Holmes v. Jones, supra, 83 Cal.App.4th at p. 891.) Petitioners' construction of section
20164, subdivision (b)(2), as providing no period of limitations whatsoever on alleged
underpayments of retirement benefits would create an absurd or unworkable result.
Under petitioners' construction, JRS would be required to defend claims long after it had
lost the ability to effectively defend against the claims, because the deaths of the persons
to whom the benefits were allegedly owed would foreclose JRS from deposing those
persons or effectively obtaining records from them, and the passage of decades could
result in faded memories and unsalvageable internal records necessary to defending
against those claims.8 As the court in Waterman Convalescent Hospital, Inc. v. State
Dept. of Health Services (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 1433, 1441 observed in another context,
" '[l]imitations statutes are intended to enable defendants to marshal evidence while
8 Indeed, this case starkly illustrates the salutary purposes of requiring persons to
timely interpose their claims. In the judgment entered nearly 30 years ago in Olson IV, it
is possible that petitioners' ancestors were part of the class because they received proper
notice and did not elect to "opt out" of the class, and therefore the judgment would have
been binding on them (Cooper v. American Sav. & Loan Assn. (1976) 55 Cal.App.3d
274, 284), which in turn would permit JRS to defend the present claims by raising the res
judicata effect of the prior judgment. (See, e.g., Mattson v. City of Costa Mesa (1980)
106 Cal.App.3d 441, 446 [" '[T]he doctrine of res judicata operates as a bar to the
maintenance of a second suit between the same parties on the same cause of action.'
[Citations.] Under this aspect of res judicata the prior final judgment on the merits not
only settles issues that were not actually litigated but also every issue that might have
been raised and litigated in the first action."], italics added.) However, after the passage
of three decades, it may be impossible to produce documentary evidence of which, if any,
of petitioners' ancestors received the requisite notice but nevertheless remained in the
class bound by the judgment in Olson IV.
17
memories and facts are fresh and to provide defendants with repose for past acts.
[Citations.] . . . [T]he legislative goal underlying limitations statutes is to require diligent
prosecution of known claims so that legal affairs can have their necessary finality and
predictability and so that claims can be resolved while evidence remains reasonably
available and fresh.' [(Quoting Jordache Enterprises, Inc. v. Brobeck, Phleger &
Harrison (1998) 18 Cal.4th 739, 755-756.)] ' " '[T]he right to be free of stale claims in
time comes to prevail over the right to prosecute them.' [Citations.] The statutes,
accordingly, serve a distinct public purpose, preventing the assertion of demands[,] which
through the unexcused lapse of time, have been rendered difficult or impossible to
defend. . . . [Citation.]" ' [(Quoting Thomas v. Gilliland (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 427,
434.)]"
Although the Legislature undoubtedly may exempt claims from the general rules
that place time limits on such claims, when it "has intended that an action shall be exempt
from limitations it has said so in clear and unmistakable language." (Bogart, supra, 193
Cal. at p. 201.) Because section 20164, subdivision (b)(2), does not contain "clear and
unmistakable language" allowing claims against the JRS for alleged underpayment to be
prosecuted without limitation, but instead merely states that the three- (or 10-) year
period applicable to the system's ability to collect from a member for an erroneous
payment is not applicable to the converse situation, we reject petitioners' claim that
section 20164, subdivision (b)(2), reflects a legislative intent to entirely exempt their
claims from any period of limitations.
18
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
McDONALD, J.
WE CONCUR:
BENKE, Acting P. J.
IRION, J.
19