2020 IL 125330
IN THE
SUPREME COURT
OF
THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
(Docket No. 125330)
THE WILLIAMSON COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS et al., Appellees,
v. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL
RETIREMENT FUND et al., Appellants.
Opinion filed June 4, 2020.
JUSTICE KILBRIDE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Chief Justice Anne M. Burke and Justices Garman, Karmeier, Theis, Neville,
and Michael J. Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 The issue in this case is whether section 7-137.2(a) of the Illinois Pension Code
(40 ILCS 5/7-137.2(a) (West 2016)), altering the certification process and
eligibility requirements for elected county board members’ participation in the
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund (IMRF), violates the pension protection clause
of article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. XIII, § 5).
Plaintiffs’ continued eligibility and participation in IMRF was terminated, effective
February 2017, after the Williamson County Board of Commissioners failed to
comply with that provision. In an administrative hearing, the defendant Board of
Trustees of the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund (Fund) affirmed that decision.
¶2 On administrative review, the trial court reversed the Fund’s decision. In
relevant part, the court found that section 7-137.2(a) of the Pension Code was
unconstitutional because it violated the pension protection clause of article XIII,
section 5, of the Illinois Constitution.
¶3 The Fund appealed directly to this court. For the following reasons, we affirm
the circuit court’s judgment.
¶4 I. BACKGROUND
¶5 This controversy involves three plaintiffs, Robert Gentry, Ronald M. Ellis, and
James D. Marlo, all duly elected members of the Williamson County Board of
Commissioners. 1 In pertinent part, the Pension Code originally allowed elected
county board members to participate as contributing members and participants in
the IMRF if the following two conditions were met: (1) the IMRF participant must
occupy a position requiring 1000 hours of service annually if, as here, the employer
adopted a resolution or ordinance limiting IMRF participation to public employees
in positions expected to require 1000 hours of public service (40 ILCS 5/7-
137(b)(1), (e) (West 2012)) and (2) the public employee, here a county board
member, individually filed with the IMRF an election to participate in it (40 ILCS
5/7-137(b)(2) (West 2012)).
¶6 The parties agree that in 1968 the Fund, pursuant to authority granted by the
Pension Code (40 ILCS 5/7-198 (West 2012)), adopted an administrative rule
requiring the governing body of a participating employer to adopt a resolution
certifying that the position of elected governing body member required the hourly
standard for any individual member of that body to participate in the IMRF. Ill.
Mun. Ret. Fund Bd. Res. No. 1968-7273 (Nov. 22, 1968), superseded by Ill. Mun.
1
Williamson County operates under the commission form of government. See 55 ILCS 5/2-
4001 to 2-4010 (West 2016). It is governed by a three-person board of commissioners.
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Ret. Fund Bd. Res. No. 2019-05-09(d) (May 17, 2019). The parties also agree that
Williamson County, plaintiffs’ employer, complied with the Fund’s 1968
administrative rule.
¶7 There is also no dispute that all three plaintiffs satisfied the original
requirements for IMRF participation. Plaintiff Gentry was first elected to the
Williamson County Board of Commissioners in the 2004 general election and
became a participant member in IMRF on December 6, 2004. Plaintiff Ellis was
first elected to the Williamson County Board of Commissioners in the 2008 general
election and became a participant member in IMRF on November 12, 2008.
Plaintiff Marlo was first elected to the Williamson County Board of Commissioners
in the 2012 general election and became a participant member in IMRF on
November 30, 2012.
¶8 On August 26, 2016, however, the General Assembly enacted Public Act 99-
900, § 10 (eff. Aug. 26, 2016), amending parts of section 7-137 of the Pension
Code. This appeal focuses on the legislature’s creation of a new section 7-137.2 of
the Pension Code that altered the IMRF eligibility for elected county board
members. Generally, section 7-137.2 required for the first time that (1) all county
boards certify within 90 days of each general election that their county board
members were required to work sufficient hours to meet the hourly standard for
IMRF participation (40 ILCS 5/7-137.2(a) (West 2016)) and (2) county board
members who participate in IMRF submit monthly time sheets demonstrating that
they met the annual hourly standard (40 ILCS 5/7-137.2(b) (West 2016)).
¶9 Four days after the enactment of Public Act 99-900, the Fund issued “Special
Memorandum #334” to the authorized IMRF agent in every Illinois county. See 40
ILCS 5/7-135 (West 2016) (the authorized agent is an individual at every IMRF
participating employer who is designated to act on behalf of the employer). Special
Memorandum #334 explained that, for a county board member to be eligible for
IMRF participation, the county board must adopt a resolution certifying that the
position of county board member will require the performance of at least that
county’s applicable hourly standard. In addition, the resolution must be adopted
within 90 days of each election when a member of the county board is elected or
reelected.
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¶ 10 Special Memorandum #334 admonished that, “[i]f the County Board fails to
adopt the required IMRF participation resolution within 90 days after an election,
the entire Board will become ineligible and IMRF participation will end for those
Board members in IMRF, as of the last day of the last month in which the resolution
could have been adopted.” The memo further provided a variety of instructions on
compliance with the monthly time sheet requirements.
¶ 11 The Fund also sent a direct mailing to every individual county board member
who was participating in IMRF when Public Act 99-900 took effect. These direct
mailings were nearly identical, with the only substantive difference addressing the
applicable hourly standard. The Fund contends that plaintiffs were sent the “1,000-
hour standard” letter in a mass mailing on September 9, 2016. Although not at issue
in this appeal, plaintiffs deny that they received this letter.
¶ 12 On November 8, 2016, plaintiff Gentry was reelected to the Williamson County
Board of Commissioners, triggering the new requirement in section 7-137.2(a) that
the county board adopt a resolution certifying that the position of elected county
board member required the performance of duty in excess of 1000 hours per year.
Under the 90-day window of that provision, the resolution was required to be
adopted by February 6, 2017. The Williamson County Board of Commissioners,
however, did not adopt the required resolution until February 23, 2017, more than
two weeks after the lapse of the statutory deadline.
¶ 13 On March 9, 2017, the Fund notified plaintiffs Gentry, Ellis, and Marlo that the
Williamson County Board of Commissioners did not adopt within 90 days of the
2016 general election a resolution certifying that its members were expected to
work at least 1000 hours per year. Consequently, the written notice further informed
the plaintiffs that they were no longer eligible for continued IMRF participation
and were given administrative appeal rights.
¶ 14 Plaintiffs timely exercised their right to appeal and submitted through counsel
a written argument and supporting documentation. Plaintiffs contended that on or
about February 17, 2017, the Williamson County Clerk’s office was alerted by an
IMRF employee that Williamson County “was (now) required to adopt and pass a
new resolution for the county commissioners to participate in IMRF” and that “[i]t
was at that time Williamson County first became aware the resolution that was
active and on file with IMRF since 1987 was no longer sufficient.” Plaintiffs argued
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that Public Act 99-900 was unconstitutional under article XIII, section 5, of the
Illinois Constitution. Plaintiffs further argued that affected IMRF members were
not given direct notice of the potential change in eligibility and that the 90-day
requirement for a new resolution under section 7-137.2 was ambiguous.
¶ 15 The Fund responded and provided additional information substantiating its
efforts to notify individual county board members and the county board itself of
Public Act 99-900 being enacted into law. The Fund also allowed plaintiffs to
submit supplemental argument.
¶ 16 In March 2018, a hearing was held on plaintiffs’ appeal. Plaintiffs and their
counsel appeared and presented their position by counsel. The hearing officer
decided that “[t]he administrative staff determination terminating the [plaintiffs’]
participation in IMRF as of February 28, 2017[,] is hereby affirmed, without
deciding the [plaintiffs’] argument with the respect to the constitutionality of Public
Act 99-900.”
¶ 17 In May 2018, the Fund adopted the recommended decision of the hearing
officer. Accordingly, the Fund issued an order affirming the termination of
plaintiffs’ IMRF participation, effective February 28, 2017, without addressing
plaintiffs’ argument that Public Act 99-900 was unconstitutional.
¶ 18 In October 2018, plaintiffs filed a two-count amended complaint in Williamson
County circuit court. Count I sought administrative review of the Fund’s decision.
Count II sought a declaration that Public Act 99-900 was unconstitutional under
article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution. The Fund answered the complaint
and asked the court to affirm its decision.
¶ 19 In August 2019, the circuit court issued a judgment in plaintiffs’ favor. The
court entered an order reversing the Fund’s decision and finding Public Act 99-900
unconstitutional under article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution.
¶ 20 The Fund timely appealed the circuit court’s judgment directly to this court
pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 302(a) (eff. Oct. 4, 2011). The Fund later
filed a motion in this court pursuant to Rule 302(a) seeking an order remanding the
matter to the circuit court for compliance with Illinois Supreme Court Rule 18 (eff.
Sept. 1, 2006). We allowed the Fund’s motion for remand, retained jurisdiction over
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the matter, and directed the circuit court to enter an order in compliance with Rule
18.
¶ 21 On November 25, 2019, the circuit court entered an amended judgment and
order that again reversed the Fund’s decision and directed the Fund to reinstate
plaintiffs with “full rights, membership and participation.” The court’s amended
judgment clarified that its ruling was based solely on its determination that section
7-137.2(a) violated the pension protection clause.
¶ 22 More specifically, the circuit court’s amended judgment declared
“[Public Act] 99-900 as codified in 40 ILCS 5/7-137.2(a), which prohibits a
previously qualified IMRF participant county board member from continued
participation in IMRF absent the re-adoption and delivery to IMRF of a
resolution within 90 days of the election of a county board member is
unconstitutional as violative of the Illinois Constitution, Article 13, Section 5.”
The court expressly declined to consider plaintiffs’ claim seeking administrative
review of the Fund’s decision (count I) or the constitutionality of any other part of
Public Act 99-900.
¶ 23 This appeal followed.
¶ 24 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 25 The sole issue for our consideration is whether section 7-137.2(a) of the Pension
Code violates article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, commonly
referred to as the pension protection clause. It is settled that statutes carry a strong
presumption of constitutionality, and this court will uphold a statute as
constitutional whenever reasonably possible. Moline School District No. 40 Board
of Education v. Quinn, 2016 IL 119704, ¶ 16. The party challenging the statute
carries the burden to rebut clearly this strong judicial presumption. Wingert v.
Hradisky, 2019 IL 123201, ¶ 28.
¶ 26 We review de novo the constitutionality of a statute because it presents a
question of law. Piccioli v. Board of Trustees of the Teachers’ Retirement System,
2019 IL 122905, ¶ 17. To the extent this appeal requires construction of the Pension
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Code, the statutory language is also subject to de novo review. Raab v. Frank, 2019
IL 124641, ¶ 18.
¶ 27 Section 7-137.2(a) of the Pension Code, enacted by Public Act 99-900 on
August 26, 2016, provides:
“An elected member of a county board is not eligible to participate in the Fund
with respect to that position unless the county board has adopted a resolution,
after public debate and in a form acceptable to the Fund, certifying that persons
in the position of elected member of the county board are expected to work at
least 600 hours annually (or 1000 hours annually in a county that has adopted a
resolution pursuant to subsection (e) of Section 7-137 of this Code). The
resolution must be adopted and filed with the Fund no more than 90 days after
each general election in which a member of the county board is elected.” 40
ILCS 5/7-137.2(a) (West 2016).
¶ 28 The Fund argues that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that section 7-
137.2(a) is unconstitutional under the Illinois Constitution’s pension protection
clause. According to the Fund, this court must first decide whether plaintiffs’
continued IMRF participation is a benefit of the enforceable contractual
relationship resulting from plaintiffs’ prior IMRF membership. The Fund contends
that even if plaintiffs were previously eligible for IMRF membership their
continued IMRF participation is not a guaranteed contractual benefit if they no
longer qualify under the applicable requirements. The Fund notes that positions that
do not meet the IMRF eligibility requirements are not entitled to IMRF service
credit.
¶ 29 Plaintiffs respond that there is no dispute that they qualified for IMRF
participation prior to enactment of section 7-137.2(a) and its new process for
certifying eligibility of elected county board members. Similarly, plaintiffs would
have qualified for continued IMRF participation under the original statutory
requirements in effect when they first qualified for IMRF participation. Thus,
plaintiffs urge this court to conclude that their continued participation in IMRF is
constitutionally protected.
¶ 30 Plaintiffs emphasize that the record contains no evidence and the Fund makes
no allegation that plaintiffs failed to continue to qualify for IMRF membership
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under the terms of the Pension Code as it existed prior to the enactment of Public
Act 99-900. Plaintiffs’ IMRF participation was terminated only because of the new
requirements in section 7-137.2(a) of the Pension Code. Plaintiffs argue that “[t]his
action constitutes a unilateral and unconstitutional change in the ‘enforceable
contractual relationship’ of the parties and the terms of the pension plan in effect at
the time the employees became members in the pension system.”
¶ 31 This court’s jurisprudence on the Illinois Constitution’s pension protection
clause is well developed. Found in article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois
Constitution, the clause provides that
“[m]embership in any pension or retirement system of the State, any unit of
local government or school district, or any agency or instrumentality thereof,
shall be an enforceable contractual relationship, the benefits of which shall not
be diminished or impaired.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. XIII, § 5.
Our decisions have uniformly construed its plain meaning to protect any benefit of
the enforceable contractual relationship arising from membership in one of the
pension or retirement systems of the State and any local unit of government or
school district from diminishment or impairment. Carmichael v. Laborers’ &
Retirement Board Employees’ Annuity & Benefit Fund, 2018 IL 122793, ¶ 25; In re
Pension Reform Litigation, 2015 IL 118585, ¶ 45 (Heaton); Kanerva v. Weems,
2014 IL 115811, ¶ 38.
¶ 32 In other words, “a public employee’s membership in a pension system is an
enforceable contractual relationship, and the employee has a constitutionally
protected right to the benefits of that contractual relationship.” Jones v. Municipal
Employees’ Annuity & Benefit Fund, 2016 IL 119618, ¶ 29. The constitutional
protection is broad because it “protects all of the benefits that flow from the
contractual relationship arising from membership in a public retirement system.”
Matthews v. Chicago Transit Authority, 2016 IL 117638, ¶ 54 (citing Kanerva,
2014 IL 115811, ¶ 38). That protection “attach[es] once an individual first embarks
upon employment in a position covered by a public retirement system, not when
the employee ultimately retires.” Heaton, 2015 IL 118585, ¶ 46. Effectively, the
clause prohibits unilateral legislative action that diminishes or impairs the
constitutionally protected benefit. Matthews, 2016 IL 117638, ¶ 54 (citing Kanerva,
2014 IL 115811, ¶ 40).
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¶ 33 In accord with that authority, we agree with plaintiffs that their continued IMRF
participation was constitutionally protected from unilateral legislative
diminishment or impairment when they became IMRF participants and began
accruing the service credits used to calculate a retirement annuity. Respectively,
plaintiffs Gentry, Ellis, and Marlo became IMRF participants in December 2004,
November 2008, and November 2012.
¶ 34 Notably, the Fund does not dispute that plaintiffs were active and eligible IMRF
participants for several years prior to the August 2016 enactment of section 7-
137.2(a). Instead, the Fund argues that, if we find that plaintiffs had a protected
contractual right to continued IMRF participation, “[s]uch a broad interpretation of
the pension protection clause creates absurd results where an individual need only
qualify for participation once and then be entitled to future participation for an
indefinite amount of time.”
¶ 35 The Fund is mistaken. We do not conclude that plaintiffs were entitled to
unlimited future IMRF participation for an indefinite time period. Plaintiffs are,
however, entitled to constitutional protection of the contractual relationship of their
IMRF membership when they began employment. Carmichael, 2018 IL 122793,
¶ 26 (citing Heaton, 2015 IL 118585, ¶ 46). Thus, as plaintiffs correctly
acknowledge, their continued IMRF participation is dependent upon them
satisfying the contractual terms for public pension system participation existing at
the time of their initial application for membership in IMRF. It is worth repeating
that the Fund has never alleged that plaintiffs have at any point failed to satisfy the
original requirements for IMRF participation in effect when plaintiffs first became
IMRF members.
¶ 36 Contrary to the Fund’s assertion, that conclusion is not absurd. Instead, it is
entirely consistent with this court’s settled pension clause jurisprudence—the
original requirements for plaintiffs’ IMRF participation cannot be changed
unilaterally by the legislature. As we have explained, “once a person commences
to work and becomes a member of a public retirement system, any subsequent
changes to the Pension Code that would diminish the benefits conferred by
members in the retirement system cannot be applied to that person.” Carmichael,
2018 IL 122793, ¶ 26 (citing Heaton, 2015 IL 118585, ¶ 46).
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¶ 37 The Fund further argues that, even if this court concludes that plaintiffs’
continued participation in IMRF was a benefit entitled to constitutional protection,
section 7-137.2(a) is nonetheless constitutional because it does not diminish,
impair, or otherwise impact plaintiffs’ pension benefits. The Fund posits that this
case is fundamentally different than every other case when this court has found a
statutory change violated the pension protection clause.
¶ 38 Specifically, the Fund observes that the adoption of section 7-137.2(a), on its
own, did not diminish or impair plaintiffs’ pension benefits. The Fund asserts that
in this court’s prior pension clause cases the affected parties had lesser benefits as
soon as the applicable statutory changes became effective. Here, in contrast,
plaintiffs’ benefits on the day section 7-137.2(a) became effective were the same
as their benefits before that provision existed. It took an intervening act or failure
to act by the Williamson County Board of Commissioners for plaintiffs’ pension
benefits to be impacted.
¶ 39 Plaintiffs disagree, arguing that this court should conclude that their
constitutionally protected right to continued IMRF participation must be governed
by the terms in effect when they first became eligible for IMRF participation.
Plaintiffs contend that section 7-137.2(a) is an entirely new statutory requirement
for IMRF participation that, by definition, did not exist when they began public
employment. Plaintiffs also contend that it is irrelevant whether the Williamson
County Board of Commissioners failed to adopt a new resolution pursuant to
section 7-137.2(a) because that provision cannot be applied to plaintiffs without
violating the pension protection clause. Plaintiffs urge this court to conclude that,
“[o]nce the plaintiffs met the requirement for IMRF membership and participation,
the legislature was prohibited from establishing a new condition for these plaintiffs’
IMRF membership.”
¶ 40 In our view, plaintiffs’ position best comports with our decisions interpreting
the pension protection clause in article XIII, section 5. Although the Fund correctly
recognizes that many of our prior decisions involved statutory changes that made
immediate and direct diminishments to public pension benefits, we observe that
that is not the only category of unilateral legislative change prohibited by article
XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution.
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¶ 41 In fact, “this court has consistently held that the contractual relationship
protected by section 5 of article XIII is governed by the actual terms of the contract
or pension plan in effect at the time the employee becomes a member of the
retirement system.” Matthews, 2016 IL 117638, ¶ 59; see also Matthews, 2016 IL
117638, ¶ 116 (Theis, J., specially concurring, joined by Karmeier, J.) (“Our case
law instructs that [the pension protection clause] did create one very simple de facto
vesting rule: Public employees’ rights to benefits are constitutionally protected
when they begin their jobs.”).
¶ 42 Two decisions from this court illustrate this distinct protection of article XIII,
section 5, of the Illinois Constitution that prohibits the legislature from unilaterally
imposing new limitations or requirements on public pension benefits that did not
exist when the public employee was hired. The first decision, Buddell v. Board of
Trustees, 118 Ill. 2d 99 (1987), involved a state university employee, Dr. William
Buddell, who sought to purchase military service credit from the State University
Retirement System. When Dr. Buddell started his university employment, section
15-113 of the Pension Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 108½, ¶ 15-113(i)) allowed
employees to purchase service credit for time spent in military service without
limitations. The provision was later amended, in relevant part, to allow the credit
only if the eligible member applied for the credit prior to September 1, 1974 (Ill.
Rev. Stat. 1975, ch. 108½, ¶ 15-113(i)). Buddell, 118 Ill. 2d at 100-01.
¶ 43 Dr. Buddell applied to the State University Retirement System to purchase
military service credit in 1983, but his application was denied because he failed to
comply with the statutory deadline contained in the amended section 15-113 of the
Pension Code. On administrative review, the circuit court reversed after concluding
that the amendment to section 15-113 adding that deadline violated article XIII,
section 5, of the Illinois Constitution because there was no time limitation on
military service credit when Dr. Buddell became a participant in the State
University Retirement System. Buddell, 118 Ill. 2d at 101-02.
¶ 44 On direct review in this court, we agreed with the circuit court that the
amendment adding the deadline was unconstitutional under the Illinois
Constitution’s pension protection clause. After reviewing the historical
development of the pension protection clause and the contract principles underlying
its protections, we emphasized that when Dr. Buddell became a public employee,
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the Pension Code allowed him to purchase military service credit. We concluded
that “[t]his right to purchase additional credit became a contractual right under
article XIII, section 5, of our 1970 Constitution,” and “the legislature cannot divest
[Dr. Buddell] of these rights.” Buddell, 118 Ill. 2d at 105-06.
¶ 45 More recently, in Carmichael, 2018 IL 122793, we again considered a
unilateral legislative change to the Pension Code that modified a public pension
benefit that was available when the public employee was hired. Specifically, this
court reviewed the General Assembly’s amendments to the Pension Code that
eliminated the ability of the plaintiffs to purchase service credit during a leave of
absence to work for a local union. In concluding that the pension protection clause
applied to that change, we explained that it was
“undisputed that, when plaintiffs began their employment and became members
of the public pension system, they had the statutory right to count time spent on
leave of absence with their local labor organization in their annuity calculations.
The benefit plaintiffs seek to enforce is their right that existed in the Pension
Code before the amendments of Public Act 97-651 to purchase, if they so
choose, service credit during a leave of absence in the future to work for a local
union. If that benefit is part of the contractual relationship resulting from
membership in the public retirement system, it is protected by the pension
clause even if the participant has not yet exercised the option before the
amendments of the Act took effect.” Carmichael, 2018 IL 122793, ¶ 27 (citing
Buddell, 118 Ill. 2d at 105-06).
¶ 46 We further concluded in Carmichael that the statutory right to earn service
credit on a leave of absence from a public employer to work for a local labor
organization was a “benefit” within the meaning of the pension protection clause.
Explaining our conclusion, this court observed that each of the plaintiffs was either
employed in a public position when the option to earn service credit was a benefit
or started public employment and joined the retirement system after the benefit was
already in place. We held in Carmichael that the amendment to the Pension Code
was “unconstitutional to the extent that it eliminated as a pension benefit for current
participants the ability to earn union service credit previously bestowed by the
legislature.” Carmichael, 2018 IL 122793, ¶ 32.
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¶ 47 We agree with plaintiffs that Buddell and Carmichael support their argument
that section 7-137.2(a) of the Pension Code similarly violates article XIII, section
5, of the Illinois Constitution. The legislature’s unilateral decision to create section
7-137.2(a) effectively imposes a new requirement for continued IMRF participation
that did not exist when plaintiffs began their public employment. The Fund does
not contest plaintiffs’ assertion that they would qualify for continued IMRF
participation but for section 7-137.2(a)’s new requirement that all county boards
certify within 90 days of each general election that their county board members are
required to work sufficient hours to meet the applicable hourly standard.
¶ 48 As plaintiffs argue, their continued IMRF participation is relevant to the
calculation of the applicable service credits and annuity calculation. Under the
Pension Code, an individual qualifies for an IMRF retirement annuity if, on the date
of retirement or separation from public employment, the individual had at least
eight years of creditable service. See 40 ILCS 5/7-141(a)(4) (West 2012). In turn,
the calculation of retirement annuity benefit is based on a formula that considers
the number of service credits of the employee and the employee’s final earnings on
the date of retirement. See 40 ILCS 5/7-142 (West 2012). Generally, the greater the
number of years of recognized service credit and the greater the member’s final
earnings, the larger the member’s annuity benefit. Obviously, the termination of
plaintiffs’ continued IMRF participation, effective February 28, 2017, predicated
on the new requirements of section 7-137.2(a), decreased their service credits and
negatively impacted their annuity benefit calculation.
¶ 49 The Fund does not argue, and has never argued, that any of the plaintiffs failed
to meet the original requirements for continued IMRF participation that were
effective when they started their public employment. It is those original
requirements, effective when plaintiffs became members of IMRF, that govern this
dispute. See Matthews, 2016 IL 117638, ¶ 59 (collecting cases for the proposition
that article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution protects a contractual
relationship governed by the actual terms of the contract or pension plan in effect
when the employee becomes a member of the public retirement system).
¶ 50 Necessarily, then, we reject the Fund’s contention that section 7-137.2(a) of the
Pension Code does not constitute a new requirement for plaintiffs’ continued IMRF
participation that diminished or impaired their protected public pension benefits.
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We emphasize that in this case there is no dispute that plaintiffs satisfied the
original IMRF eligibility requirements in effect when they became IMRF members.
The only reason their IMRF participation was terminated in February 2017 was the
failure of the Williamson County Board of Commissioners to pass the service-hours
resolution within the requisite 90 days, as required by section 7-137.2(a). This
newly created requirement in the Pension Code did not exist when plaintiffs began
their public employment and participation in IMRF. Thus, it cannot be
constitutionally applied to plaintiffs. Buddell, 118 Ill. 2d at 104-06; Carmichael,
2018 IL 122793, ¶ 32; Matthews, 2016 IL 117638, ¶ 59.
¶ 51 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 52 For the reasons stated, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment holding
unconstitutional section 7-137.2 of the Pension Code (40 ILCS 5/7-137.2(a) (West
2016)) under article XIII, section 5, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970,
art. XIII, § 5) and its order directing the Fund to reinstate plaintiffs with full rights,
membership, and participation.
¶ 53 Circuit court judgment affirmed.
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