KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.
In 2011, Rhode Island enacted legislation modifying various state-run pension plans for government employees, including a plan that covered municipal firefighters and police officers. Generally speaking, the modifications reduced the value of the benefits payable under the plan in order to ameliorate what the State perceived to be a serious and growing liability that would be difficult to fund. The unions representing the firefighters and police officers employed by the City of Cranston (the "Unions") filed this lawsuit claiming that the modifications unconstitutionally repudiated contractual obligations owed to the Cranston employees.
We affirm the district court's dismissal of the complaint. In so doing, we find that the complaint fails as a matter of law to allege that the challenged legislation unconstitutionally impaired any contractual rights of the Unions' members. We also find that federal court is not the proper forum within which to litigate the Unions' undeveloped claims that the City of Cranston is failing to live up to the terms of its ordinances or collective bargaining agreements, and we find that this lawsuit provides no opportunity to challenge the terms of a settlement by other parties in another lawsuit. Our reasoning follows.
Since 1936, Rhode Island has maintained a retirement system for state employees, administered by a retirement board.
At least one municipality, the City of Cranston, also operated its own municipal retirement system. By the mid-1990s, Cranston was experiencing a severe operating deficit and its municipal pension plan was critically underfunded. The Unions and the City came up with a potential solution: all new hires, and perhaps some recent hires, would transfer to the state retirement system. One significant impediment to this rescue plan stood in the way: the state system provided less favorable benefits. Cranston and the Unions overcame this impediment by convincing representatives from the state retirement board to submit special legislation that would provide certain Cranston police officers and firefighters who joined the state system with benefits in excess of those provided to others under that system. The Rhode Island General Assembly passed the special legislation, which became law on August 9, 1996. 1996 R.I. Pub. Laws Ch. 374 ("1996 Special Legislation").
The 1996 Special Legislation amended state law to allow new members and certain existing members of the Cranston Fire and Police Departments to opt into the state's Optional Police and Fire Retirement System, to provide higher "final compensation" for purposes of calculating their pension benefits, to provide a higher annual cost of living adjustment ("COLA") payment (three percent compounded), and to increase employee contributions from seven percent to ten percent. The statute also provided that Cranston Fire and Police Department enrollees who transferred from the municipal pension plan into the state system would, upon joining, "waive and renounce all accrued rights and benefits of any other [municipal] pension or retirement system." Finally, the statute invited the City to approve the changes: "This act shall take effect upon passage and be applicable to the City of Cranston upon the affirmative vote of a majority of the City Council adopting the provisions hereof." The Cranston City Council duly enacted two ordinances so providing, the details of which we discuss in a later section of this opinion.
By 2011, Rhode Island's public employee pension system itself faced dire underfunding, which the state legislature labeled a "fiscal peril" that threatened the ability of Rhode Island's municipalities to provide basic public services. The legislature passed the Rhode Island Retirement Security Act of 2011 (the "2011 Act"), which contained a series of pension reforms designed to bring the state system into financial health. As relevant to the Unions, the 2011 Act added a minimum retirement age of fifty-five where previously none had existed, changed the years of minimum service from twenty to twenty-five, reduced the pension accrual percentage per credited year of service, and made the calculation for workers' final compensation less favorable. These changes applied to future retirees, not those already receiving benefits. The 2011 Act also changed the annual COLA payment from three percent to a variable percentage for current and future pensioners. Overall, the 2011 Act substantially reduced the value of public employee pensions provided by the Rhode Island system.
A variety of municipal employee unions and retiree groups sued the State in the wake of the 2011 Act. Eventually, those unions and groups entered into a class settlement with the State. In return for dismissal of the claims against it, the State in 2015 enacted certain additional amendments
The Unions filed this case in March of 2016 on behalf of current Cranston firefighters and police officers, challenging the curtailment of their future pension benefits. Counts I-III of the complaint train exclusively on the enactment of the 2011 Act, as amended in 2015, as the challenged wrongful conduct. The counts assert that the legislation infringed upon the rights of the Unions' members under the Contracts, Due Process, and Takings Clauses of the United States Constitution. The complaint's factual averments seek to portray the 1996 Special Legislation as a contract between the State and those Cranston firefighters and police officers who joined the state retirement system. The complaint also refers to the Unions' collective bargaining agreements ("CBAs") with the City and to "vested and contractual rights" under two Cranston ordinances. The complaint offers no hint as to how or even whether the alleged wrongful conduct (enactment of the 2011 Act, as amended in 2015) impaired or took away any rights under the CBAs or the ordinances. Nor do the Unions' briefs on appeal so clarify. Count IV of the complaint is something of a detour. It seeks to challenge a term of a class settlement that prohibits retired Cranston public safety officers (who are not represented by the Unions) "from ... proposing, supporting, encouraging and/or advocating relief for" the unions in this case.
The district court dismissed (without prejudice) counts I-III to the extent they depended on the assertion that the 1996 Special Legislation was a contract that was unconstitutionally impaired by the amended 2011 Act to the detriment of the Unions' members in violation of the Contracts, Takings, or Due Process Clauses of the United States Constitution.
Because the district court dismissed the Unions' challenge to the
We begin our analysis of the Contracts Clause claim as we have begun such an analysis before in considering whether a state statute constitutes a contract. "We need not decide whether the statute ever gives rise to a contractual relationship,"
The modifications at issue here appear on their face to be material. There is no claim, though, that they apply to persons who had already retired at the time they were made (nor do the plaintiff Unions include any retirees). Importantly, there is no allegation that the value of the benefits as modified falls below the value of the respective employees' contributions to the plan. We therefore read the complaint as challenging a reduction in the amount by which the value of the benefit exceeds the value of any contribution by the employees to fund the benefit.
A claim that a state statute creates a contract that binds future legislatures confronts a tropical-force headwind in the form of the "unmistakability doctrine."
Never once has our court found that state or federal legislation clearly and unequivocally expressed a legislative intent to create private contractual rights enforceable as such against the state. Our discussion in
Similarly, in
The quite plausible but nevertheless not unmistakable textual commitments that we found to be insufficient in
In the 1996 Special Legislation at issue here, there is no language that comes remotely close to that found sufficient in
The conclusory allegation that the state "received something in return" could be made of every pension program in which there is a contribution requirement (such as federal Social Security). In
Our case law does leave open for future consideration the possibility that the mere creation of a retirement plan to which members contribute a portion of their own pay clearly and unequivocally creates a contractual commitment requiring the state to repay member contributions and, perhaps, reasonable interest.
Finding no clear markers of a contractual commitment in the statutory text, the Unions argue that the circumstances surrounding the passage of the 1996 Special Legislation supply enough evidence of legislative intent to bind the State notwithstanding the conclusion we would otherwise reach based on the text alone. It is certainly true that courts have looked at circumstances surrounding a law's enactment in the course of determining whether the statute creates a constitutionally-protected contractual entitlement. In all such United States Supreme Court cases (and there are no such First Circuit cases), however, reference to such circumstances served to reinforce a conclusion already made quite clear by the statute's express language. Thus, in
And even if we were to accept in theory the possibility that extra-textual circumstances by their own might carry the day for the Unions, the circumstances in this case do not provide unequivocal support for the Unions' reading of the 1996 Special Legislation. For starters, because Rhode Island does not record legislative history, the Unions have an uphill battle explaining how the "legislature as a whole,"
Even if we were to ignore this gap, we would find the circumstances themselves to be incapable of serving as the required clear and unequivocal evidence of intent. The principal circumstance to which the Unions point is the fact that, like a party
There are other important relevant circumstances, too, that cut strongly against the Unions' reading. Just two years before passing the 1996 Special Legislation, the Rhode Island legislature expressly repealed a prior legislative grant of state pension benefits (described in a different section of the state pension regime) to employees of teachers' unions, and returned member contributions with interest.
We therefore agree with the district court that, as a matter of law, the 1996 Special Legislation did not constitute a constitutionally binding commitment precluding Rhode Island from making the 2011 and 2015 modifications to the pension plan in which the Unions' members were participants. The lack of any allegation that the current benefits provided by the State fall below the present value of the contributions made by the Union pensioners, coupled with the absence of the alleged contract, also eliminates the basis for a claim under the Takings Clause.
Having disposed of the Unions' claim against the State that the amended 2011 Act impaired a contractual commitment made in the 1996 Special Legislation, we turn to the Unions' arguments that we should vacate the district court's decision to dismiss their claims involving the City. In their briefs on appeal, the Unions never actually say what those claims are, and it remains a mystery to us. The Unions describe this lawsuit as seeking "a declaratory judgment that the [2011 Act, as amended] violated the [U.S. Constitution]." In the complaint's summary statement of the pleaded counts, the only alleged wrongful conduct is the enactment of the amended 2011 Act. The City, though, did not enact the 2011 Act or the 2015 Amendments. And because the Unions fail to explain how the actions of a third party, the State, operate to impair the purported contractual obligations promised by the City in its ordinances and in the CBAs, there is no developed claim that the amended 2011 Act impairs any asserted contract other than the 1996 Special Legislation.
The complaint does allege that certain Cranston ordinances and the CBAs between the City and the Unions created "vested and contractual rights" in favor of the Unions' members. It further alleges, without specificity, that the City is violating its ordinances "on information and belief."
The district court apparently gleaned from all of this, with the City's acquiescence, a claim (or rather, an assertion) "that the [Unions' members] have contractual and otherwise constitutionally protected rights to certain retirement benefits pursuant to various CBAs, sections of the Cranston Code of Ordinances, and/or R.I. Gen. Laws § 45-21.2-1." Pointing to ongoing state court litigation brought by retired Cranston firefighters and police officers challenging specific actions by the City related to benefits described in its ordinances and CBAs, the district court invoked
Without any developed explanation by the Unions of what the City has done that violates or threatens an imminent violation of federal law, we can find no coherent basis for litigating any claims against the City in this federal case. If the City has violated the CBAs, then presumably the arbitrator hearing the pending grievances will so rule. And if the City is violating its own ordinances, those ostensible state law claims can be heard in state court. More importantly, there is no independent jurisdictional basis upon which the district court might hear such state law claims between non-diverse parties. And to the extent that supplemental jurisdiction might have otherwise attached to the Unions' undeveloped claims against the City, the early dismissal of the federal claims — which we now affirm — generally calls for a refusal to continue exercising jurisdiction over any supplemental claims.
We turn, finally, to the Unions' request that the district court declare that retired Cranston police and firefighters are not bound to comply with a provision of the class settlement approved and implemented by the Rhode Island state court. The Unions do not claim to represent any of the retirees. The Unions nevertheless claim standing to challenge the lawfulness and enforceability of the state judgment implementing the class settlement agreement because the judgment "prevents Cranston Retirees from presenting the testimony of Cranston retirees, which is extremely relevant to the [Unions'] claims" in this case.
We see all sorts of potential problems with this claim, from a likely lack of cognizable standing, to the retirees' apparent decision not to challenge the settlement or the judgment approving and implementing the settlement, to an unsupported assumption that A has an ability to prevent B and C from agreeing that they won't talk to A, or to the fact that nothing in the class settlement agreement appears to prevent anyone from testifying in response to a
For the reasons described above, we