WINCHESTER, J.
¶ 1 Donald D. Thompson, petitioner/appellant, appeals the forfeiture of his judicial retirement benefits ordered by the Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System Board of Trustees
¶ 2 On August 18, 2004, Mr. Thompson submitted his Declaration of Intent to Retire, which was approved August 31, 2004. He began receiving his pension benefits. On January 20, 2005, the State of Oklahoma filed charges against him for Indecent Exposure. The trial ended on June 29, 2006, with a guilty verdict returned by the jury on all four counts.
¶ 3 The prosecuting attorney in the criminal case that resulted in Mr. Thompson's felony convictions notified the Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System (OPERS)
¶ 4 In the Board's Findings of Fact, it determined that Mr. Thompson had served as a State Representative from November 20, 1974, through November 19, 1980, with six years of participating service in OPERS. These benefits are not in dispute.
¶ 5 Mr. Thompson asserts that OPERS violated the Oklahoma Administrative Procedures Act when it forced him to forfeit his retirement benefits without proper notice as required by 75 O.S.2001, § 309, nor did he receive an individual proceeding providing him an opportunity to proffer evidence and present witnesses on his behalf as required by 75 O.S.2001, § 310. He further states OPERS' decision on September 12, 2006, to refuse further payment of his retirement benefits was premature, without any supporting evidence, and solely the result of hearsay, conjecture and innuendo.
¶ 6 The facts reveal that Tom Spencer, the Executive Director of OPERS made the decision to require forfeiture of Mr. Thompson's retirement benefits, and informed him by letter of that action. Mr. Spencer included that if Mr. Thompson was aggrieved by the decision, he had the right to an administrative hearing before the Board of Trustees pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act, and that the hearing was his exclusive remedy and must be requested in writing within thirty days of the receipt of the letter. This letter was not a final determination of the forfeiture, but served in a similar manner as a notice to show cause.
¶ 7 A show-cause order is not a binding opinion on the merits in an issue before a court, it is merely the means prescribed by law, in the nature of process, for bringing the party into court to answer certain demands.
¶ 8 The transcript of Mr. Spencer's testimony reveals he decided to notify Mr. Thompson of the forfeiture after examining the judgment and sentence sent by the district attorney. The district attorney's accompanying letter to Mr. Spencer concluded that the crimes for which Mr. Thompson was convicted occurred while he was presiding as judge over a trial. Mr. Thompson requested a hearing. At that hearing the hearing examiner placed the burden of going forward with the evidence on Mr. Thompson, so he presented his evidence after the hearing examiner already had before him the full record of Mr. Thompson's final felony convictions.
¶ 9 When Mr. Thompson challenged this procedure of providing notice of forfeiture on appeal, OPERS answered that it must act within the parameters of 51 O.S.2001, § 24.1(A),
¶ 10 After the prosecutor's initial conclusion that forfeiture is indicated and OPERS relays that conclusion to the state officer who is accused of violating the oath of office, that officer is entitled to an individual proceeding, but may still choose not to contest the accusation. If the officer chooses to contest the accusation, an individual proceeding must be held providing an opportunity for the officer to proffer evidence and present witnesses, all pursuant to 75 O.S.2001, § 309. At such hearing the burden is on the accusing party to show the officer has violated his oath of office.
¶ 11 The hearing examiner expressed his view that the hearing Mr. Thompson requested placed the burden of proof on him concerning whether his conviction violated his oath of office. Determining that a state official has violated his oath of office is an evidentiary matter. Stipe v. State ex rel. Bd. of Trustees of Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System, 2008 OK 52, ¶ 16, 188 P.3d 120, 124. The burden of proof remains with OPERS to establish facts tending to show that the state officer violated his oath of office during the commission of a felony. In this case, the judgment and sentence in the criminal matter established a prima facie case against Mr. Thompson. A prima facie case is made out of such evidence as in the judgment of the law is sufficient to establish a given fact, and if unrebutted, remains sufficient to uphold a judgment in favor of the issue that it supports. Sides v. John Cordes, Inc., 1999 OK 36, ¶ 14, 981 P.2d 301, 306; Glenn Smith Oil v. Sheets, 1985 OK 56, ¶ 9, 704 P.2d 474, 478. A felony conviction for indecent exposure on each of four counts, which acts occurred during four trials in which Mr. Thompson presided as judge, is sufficient to establish OPERS burden of proof that Mr. Thompson's retirement benefits are subject to forfeiture pursuant to the statute.
¶ 12 With a prima facie case established, the hearing examiner properly placed the responsibility on Mr. Thompson to proceed with the evidence to explain or contradict that his felony convictions did not violate his oath of office. The examiner mistakenly called this the "burden of proof," but it was actually the burden of proceeding with the evidence. Mr. Thompson presented as his defense that the felonies he committed did
¶ 13 Mr. Thompson received his requested hearing before a hearing examiner, and cannot claim that he failed to receive advance notice and an opportunity to fully present his case. The hearing examiner informed both parties near the conclusion of the hearing that:
¶ 14 The uncontested facts revealed multiple felonies committed while Mr. Thompson presided over jury trials, and the offended parties included court personnel. Court reporters observed the felonious exposure of Mr. Thompson's private parts, and testified to the fact during the criminal trial. That trial resulted in conviction of felonies. Those felonies violated Mr. Thompson's oath of office. This uncontested evidence presented by OPERS is sufficient to support forfeiture.
¶ 15 Mr. Thompson's wife, Paula R. Thompson, repeatedly sought participation in the administrative proceedings regarding forfeiture of Mr. Thompson's retirement benefits, and at each step was denied participation. She claims her due process rights were denied. She further claims that she has a vested property right because the pension benefits are an asset of her marriage to Mr. Thompson, and she asserts that all of the vested pension benefits were accrued during their marriage. Mrs. Thompson supports her argument by citing divorce cases. Those holdings are not applicable to the essential issue now before us, and that is whether a wife, such as Mrs. Thompson who was married to Mr. Thompson at the time of the forfeiture hearing, has a vested right to her spouse's retirement benefits when those benefits have been forfeited by operation of law.
¶ 16 OPERS argues that she is a surviving spouse beneficiary to one who has no current rights to his pension benefits. Determining whether an individual has been denied procedural due process is a two-step inquiry. First, we determine whether the individual possesses a protected interest to which due process protection applies, and if so, whether the individual was afforded an appropriate level of process. In re A.M., 2000 OK 82, ¶ 7, 13 P.3d 484, 487.
¶ 17 The statutes governing the Uniform Retirement System for Justices and Judges are found within title 20, Chapter 16. Section 1102C provides options for payment of benefits to a spouse. Subsection A reveals those benefits are available to a spouse or surviving spouse. In Woods v. City of Lawton, 1992 OK 167, 845 P.2d 880, the Court held that membership 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, with the rights being defined by the limits of the contract, which may provide that vesting is subject to contingencies that can cause a forfeiture. Woods, 1992 OK 167, ¶ 12, 845 P.2d at 883. Accordingly, contingencies provided by statute, more specifically, § 24.1 of Title 51, can provide that a violation of a state officer's oath of office results in a forfeiture of retirement benefits, in which case the officer would no longer have a vested interest in those benefits. If the officer has no vested interest in the benefits, neither does the spouse. Because this spouse has no protected interest, due process protection does not apply. The agency and the district court did not err in denying Mrs. Thompson's participation as a party in the forfeiture proceedings against Mr. Thompson.
¶ 18 Mr. Thompson asserts that strict construction of the forfeiture statute
¶ 19 This state has a strong policy against forfeitures, and will neither search for a construction that will bring about a forfeiture, nor adopt a meaning that would produce such an effect unless the language of the statute under consideration clearly demonstrates the legislature intended that a forfeiture take place. Hendrick v. Walters, 1993 OK 162, ¶ 7, 865 P.2d 1232, 1238-1239. The 1998 version of § 24.1
¶ 20 The statute covers elected state and county officials and state employees. If this Court accepted Mr. Thompson's construction of the statute, officials who were elected to multiple terms in office would be in a superior position to state employees who are hired and worked for exactly the same number of years. Under his suggested construction, Mr. Thompson would lose less than four years of benefits after serving twenty-two years as a district judge, while an employee of the state who was employed twenty-two years and commits a felony that violates the oath of office taken when the employment commenced, would lose a total of twenty-two years of benefits. We see no reason to believe the legislature intended such a disproportionate penalty between state employees
¶ 21 In the last two paragraphs of his reply brief, Mr. Thompson requests oral argument, attorney fees and costs. Based on the uncontested facts included in the original record, we see no reason to grant oral argument. Mr. Thompson also requested attorney fees. No argument is made, nor is any statute or case cited to support an award of attorney fees and costs, and this request is denied.
AFFIRMED.
ALL JUSTICES CONCUR.