Marzec v. CalPERS
Annotate this CasePlaintiffs, former police officers and firefighters employed by local public agencies, filed suit alleging that CalPERS's failure to pay enhanced retirement benefits under the Public Employees' Retirement Law (PERL), Gov. Code section 20000 et seq., gave rise to a variety of causes of action. In these consolidated appeals, the court affirmed in part and concluded that neither the PERL nor plaintiffs' contracts entitle plaintiffs to the additional retirement benefits they seek and therefore, their causes of action for breach of statutory duty and breach of contract fail as a matter of law. Further, plaintiffs' causes of action for constitutional torts also fail because, as a matter of law, CalPERS's interpretation of the applicable statutory provisions does not deny plaintiffs due process or equal protection of law and does not effect an unconstitutional impairment of contract. The court reversed, however, as to the causes of action for rescission and breach of fiduciary duty where plaintiffs' pleading was sufficient to survive demurrer and therefore demurrer should have been overruled as to these causes of action. In this case, plaintiffs alleged that CalPERS failed to disclose the potential loss of the value of purchased service credit if plaintiffs suffered disability - a disclosure that CalPERS, as a fiduciary, is alleged to have been required to make.
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