ZARELLA, J.
The primary issue in this case is whether the defendants, the city of Meriden (city) and the Meriden Municipal Pension Board, properly calculated the health insurance emoluments of the plaintiffs, which they receive as part of their pension from the city. The plaintiffs consist of two groups of claimants: (1) widows of deceased Meriden police officers or firefighters (plaintiff widows); and (2) retired Meriden police officers or firefighters who have been divorced or widowed since they retired (plaintiff retirees).
The record reveals the following facts, as stipulated to by the parties, and procedural history, much of which is also set forth in Awdziewicz v. City of Meriden, 317 Conn. 122, 115 A.3d 1084, 2015 WL 3461017 (2015), a companion case arising out of the same factual circumstances but involving distinct legal issues. Upon retirement, Meriden police officers and firefighters are entitled to collect a pension
Among the pension benefits to which retired Meriden police officers and firefighters and their spouses are entitled are health insurance emoluments, which the city agreed to provide when it entered into a stipulated judgment with the Retired Police and Firemen's Association of Meriden, Inc., among others, in 1982. In the stipulated judgment, the city agreed to provide retired Meriden police officers and firefighters and their dependents with the option to participate in group health, dental and life insurance policies that the city offers to active police officers and firefighters, or to receive cash payments from the city of equivalent value. In effect, the city either pays a certain percentage of the cost of insurance for each retiree and his dependents, or, if a retiree chooses to opt out of the coverage offered by the city, the city adds to the retiree's pension benefit the amount that it would have paid for the retiree's insurance coverage if the retiree had opted to retain such coverage.
Since 1989, the city has been self-insured. The city calculates pensioners' health insurance emoluments on the basis of the cost of health insurance for active employees, which the city obtains each year from its insurance administrator. The cost of health insurance for each active employee depends on the number of dependents that the employee claims; the greater the number of dependents, the greater the cost. Thus, a retiree's or surviving spouse's health insurance emolument is determined by the number of dependents that are claimed. The city assigns insureds to one of three plans: an insured who claims no dependents is placed in the "single" plan; an insured who claims one dependent is placed in the "member [plus] one" plan; and an insured who claims more than one dependent is placed in the "family" plan. Although the precise coverage provided to insureds under each plan may change from year to year, the city generally pays about 25 percent more for insureds in the family plan than for insureds in the member plus one plan, and generally pays about twice as much for insureds in the member plus one plan than for insureds in the single plan, regardless of whether the insured is an active employee, retiree or surviving spouse. With respect to each of the foregoing plans, a retiree receives approximately one half of the emolument
In administering these health insurance plans for retirees and surviving spouses, the city changes their status when there is a change in the number of dependents that they can claim. That is, when the number of dependents an insured can claim increases, whether through marriage or having a child, or decreases, whether through divorce, the death of a dependent, or when a dependent reaches the age at which he or she becomes ineligible to participate, the city transfers insureds from one plan to another accordingly.
In the present case, the city reduced the plaintiffs' health insurance emoluments after the number of dependents that they could claim decreased. With respect to two of the plaintiff widows, each of them had been married to a retiree with no other dependents and, thus, were participating in the member plus one plan before their husbands died. A third plaintiff widow had been married to a Meriden police officer who died while he was actively employed.
It was the foregoing practice of the city that precipitated the present action. The plaintiff widows objected to the city changing their status from family or member plus one to single after their spouses died, and the plaintiff retirees objected to the city changing their status from member plus one to single after they became divorced or their spouses died.
The case was tried together with Awdziewicz v. Meriden, Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven at Meriden, Docket No. NNI-CV-07-4014676-S.
The trial court rejected the plaintiffs' interpretation of §§ 85D and 85G and rendered judgment for the defendants. The trial court reasoned that "the plaintiffs' construction would create a scenario whereby, in essence, the city would be awarding a health insurance emolument to [a] deceased person, which can only be considered a bizarre result." The plaintiffs appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199(c) and Practice Book § 65-1.
On appeal, the plaintiffs raise the same claim that they raised at trial, namely, that, under § 85D, the plaintiff retirees are entitled to a health insurance emolument based on their status at the time of their retirement, and that, under § 85G, the plaintiff widows are entitled to a health insurance emolument based on their status when their spouses died. In essence, the plaintiffs contend that these provisions of the city charter prohibit the city from reducing their health insurance emolument when the number of dependents they can claim decreases. In response, the city asserts that the trial court correctly concluded that, under §§ 85D and 85G, the city was free to change the plaintiffs' health insurance emoluments when the number of dependents they could claim changed. As an alternative ground for affirmance, the city argues that the plaintiffs' claims are barred by laches and two statutes of limitations. The city concedes, however, that the trial court rendered judgment in its favor without addressing these special defenses on their merits. We conclude that the city improperly reduced the health insurance emoluments of the plaintiff widows but not those of the plaintiff retirees. Accordingly, we reverse in part the judgment of the trial court and remand the case to that court with direction to determine whether the defendants' special defenses serve to bar the claims of the plaintiff widows for a writ of mandamus, and alleging breach of contract and a violation of the stipulated judgment, and, if not, to determine the relief to which the plaintiff widows are entitled.
"As with any issue of statutory construction, the interpretation of a charter or municipal ordinance presents a question of law, over which our review is plenary.... In construing a city charter, the rules of statutory construction generally apply.... In arriving at the intention of the framers of the charter the whole and every part of the instrument must be taken and compared together. In other words, effect should be given, if possible, to every section, paragraph, sentence, clause and word in the instrument and related laws." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Broadnax v. New Haven, 270 Conn. 133, 160-61, 851 A.2d 1113 (2004).
We begin our analysis by examining the language of the city charter provisions at issue. Section 85D sets the pension rate for a retired Meriden police officer or firefighter at "one-half of the prevailing rate of pay for the rank he has attained and holds at the time of his retirement." Section 85D defines "[p]revailing rate of pay" as "the annual pay as fixed from time to time by the [state]
We conclude that the language of §§ 85D and 85G is plain and unambiguous. Section 85D establishes generally that retired Meriden police officers and firefighters are entitled to receive from the city one half of the compensation that active Meriden police officers and firefighters of the same rank receive, including any "other emolument," such as health insurance. Section 85G establishes that the surviving spouse of a Meriden police officer or firefighter is entitled to receive one half of the compensation that his or her deceased spouse was collecting at the time of his or her death. Conspicuously absent from either §§ 85D or 85G is any reference to the precise amount to which a retiree or surviving spouse is entitled for his or her health insurance emolument, or how the health insurance emolument is to be administered by the city. Rather, §§ 85D and 85G only set forth in relative terms the pension benefits to which retirees and surviving spouses are entitled.
In view of our interpretation of §§ 85D and 85G, we conclude that the city improperly reduced the health insurance emoluments of the plaintiff widows but not those of the plaintiff retirees. Under § 85G, the plaintiff widows are entitled to collect a pension that is one half of what their spouses were collecting at the time of their deaths. At the time of their deaths, two of those spouses were collecting a pension that included the member plus one health insurance emolument, one was collecting the family health insurance emolument, and one was an active employee. Thus, according to § 85G, two of the plaintiff widows are entitled to collect one half of the member plus one health insurance emolument for retirees, which is equal to the member plus one health insurance emolument for widows, one is entitled to collect one half of the family emolument for retirees, which is equal to the family emolument for widows, and one is entitled to collect one half of the health insurance emolument that her husband received as an active employee at the time of his death. By transferring the plaintiff widows to the single plan and reducing their health insurance emoluments, the city violated § 85G.
Even were we to assume that the city, in fact, adjusts the status of active employees when there is a change in the number of dependents they can claim,
We also reject the city's contention that surviving spouses should not be allowed to remain in the member plus one or family plan when they do not have the requisite number of dependents because that would effectively require the city to pay a health insurance emolument for a deceased or otherwise ineligible person. The city's concern is mitigated at least partially by the fact that a surviving spouse is entitled to only one half of what his or her deceased spouse was entitled to collect at the time of death. The plaintiff widows do not claim that they are entitled to the full emolument they were receiving when their spouses died but, rather, that they are entitled to one half of that amount. More to the point, however, the city's claim is without merit because it is unconnected to the controlling provisions of the city charter. Sections 85D and 85G do not specify the particular amount that a retiree or surviving spouse is entitled to receive as a
For the same reason, the city's emphasis on the term "active" in § 85D is misplaced. In interpreting § 85D, the city and the trial court both focused on the fact that § 85D makes a retiree's pension benefit dependent on the compensation "as may be granted to the active members of the fire and police departments...." (Emphasis added.) It is clear that the term "active" in § 85D refers to persons currently employed by the Meriden Police Department or Meriden Fire Department, as opposed to retired or deceased employees of those agencies. There is no dispute that a retiree's pension is directly tied to the compensation of active employees under § 85D. However, as we previously discussed, this connection between retirees and active employees does not change the fact that, under § 85G, a surviving spouse's pension benefit is tied directly to the pension benefit to which his or her deceased spouse was entitled at the time of the spouse's death.
Likewise, the city's claim that it should not have to pay a health insurance emolument for a deceased person because the stipulated judgment bases the emolument on "the participation of each retired policeman and fireman and his respective dependents" also is without merit. (Emphasis added.) As counsel for the defendants conceded at oral argument, retirees and their dependents are not required to participate in the group health insurance plan offered by the city in order to receive a health insurance emolument. Rather, the stipulated judgment allows retirees to elect to receive an equivalent cash payment from the city. The city's reliance on the term "participation" therefore does not alter our interpretation of §§ 85D and 85G. Thus, we conclude that the city improperly reduced the plaintiff widows' health insurance emoluments because the city did not provide them with one half of the emolument to which their respective spouses were entitled at the time of their deaths, as required by § 85G.
We do not reach the same conclusion with respect to the plaintiff retirees, however, because § 85G expressly pertains only to the surviving spouses of Meriden police officers and firefighters. The plaintiff retirees' pension benefits are controlled by § 85D, and, unlike § 85G, § 85D does not require retirees' benefits to be determined as of a particular point in time. Rather, § 85D expressly makes retirees' pension benefits dependent on the compensation of active police officers and firefighters, "as fixed from time to time by the [state] board of public safety...." (Emphasis added.) Given that § 85D ties a retiree's health insurance emolument to that of an active employee, the determinative factor for purposes of § 85D is how the city treats active employees when there is a change in the number of dependents they can claim for health insurance purposes. The plaintiffs failed to present any evidence to establish that the city does not change the status of active Meriden police officers and firefighters for health insurance purposes when the number of dependents they can claim changes. Accordingly, the plaintiff retirees cannot prevail on their claim that the city improperly reduced their health insurance emoluments under § 85D.
The plaintiff retirees purport to make two additional claims, but neither actually
Second, the plaintiff retirees argue that the trial court improperly extended deference to the city's practice of changing the health insurance emolument of an insured in proportion to the number of dependents that the insured can claim. Nowhere in the trial court's memorandum of decision, however, does the trial court indicate that it deferred to the city's practice of changing the status of insureds, and the plaintiff retirees do not provide a citation indicating such. In their brief, the plaintiffs discuss how the city's corporation counsel advised city officials that deference should be afforded to the city's past practices, but they never establish that the trial court adopted the same position. Accordingly, we conclude that the plaintiff retirees' argument does not constitute a colorable claim.
In sum, we conclude that the city improperly reduced the health insurance emoluments of the plaintiff widows in violation of § 85G but not those of the plaintiff retirees. Because the trial court made no findings of fact with respect to the city's special defenses, we decline to consider those defenses as alternative grounds for affirming the trial court's judgment with respect to the plaintiff widows. See, e.g., White v. Mazda Motor of America, Inc., 313 Conn. 610, 619-20, 99 A.3d 1079 (2014) ("[b]ecause our review is limited to matters in the record, we ... will not address issues not decided by the trial court").
The judgment is reversed with respect to the plaintiffs Evangeline Kiewlen, Eleanor Barnard, Lynn Goff, and Gloria Clancy, and the case is remanded with direction to determine whether one or more of the defendants' special defenses bar the claims of those plaintiffs for a writ of mandamus, and alleging breach of contract and a violation of the stipulated judgment, and, if not, to determine, in accordance with this opinion, the relief to which those plaintiffs are entitled; the judgment is otherwise affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
With respect to the plaintiff Gloria Clancy, the record is not clear as to why she was removed from the family plan and placed in the single plan instead of the member plus one plan after her husband's death. It appears that change in her status was the result of her child or children no longer being eligible as dependents for health insurance purposes.
There is nothing bizarre, however, about structuring pension benefits around a surviving spouse's circumstances at the time of his or her spouse's death. If the legislature no longer wishes to fix a surviving spouse's pension benefit as of the time of his or her spouse's death, then it is free to amend § 85G. But we are not at liberty to ignore the plain language of § 85G simply because there may be a manner in which health insurance emoluments could be administered to allow surviving spouses in the same position to receive an identical amount.