Reiter v. Firemen's Pension Fund
Reiter v. Firemen's Pension Fund
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In this action of mandamus the executor of the estate of Frank Reiter seeks to recover $4,918.63, being the balance remaining in his account in the Firemen’s Pension Fund of the City of Sharon at the time of his decease, December 10, 1966. The pension fund involved was held invalid in Taylor v. Abernathy, 422 Pa. 629,
Reiter was employed by the City of Sharon under the old pension plan from 1927 to 1958, when he retired. Under the old plan an employe’s individual account was segregated upon retirement and he received an agreed sum per month, not less than $50 and no more than half of his salary. When the individual fund was exhausted the fireman received no more retirement allowance. If he died before the account was exhausted the balance was paid to his widow, minor children, or his estate. In this case he contributed $7,024.46 and was paid $13,552.50 after retirement, leaving a balance of $4,918.63, the amount here sued for. The Taylor case, supra, involved, among others, a Mrs. King, the widow of a fireman, and the estate of a policewoman, Mrs. Miller, in both of which the pensioner died before the new plan became effective. The Supreme Court held that although no contractual rights were created under the old pension plan, the estate of Miller and the widow of King were entitled to the money segregated in their accounts “in order to return the parties to a reasonable approximation of where they might have been had the city not adopted an invalid pension plan . . .”
The court below held that the Miller and King cases, in Taylor v. Abernathy, supra, did not control and entered judgment for the defendant.
In general the Supreme Court in Taylor v. Abernathy, supra, exercised its equitable powers and allowed recovery where the retirees had died while the old pension plan was in effect, and before the new plan came into being, stating at page 642 as to the Miller case, “We are unwilling to permit the city to thwart her justifiable expectations [of retirement benefits and death benefits to her family] after she has passed away.” In granting relief to parties who had retired
The present appeal is therefore controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in Taylor v. Abernathy, supra, especially that involving Mrs. Miller, the policewoman, whose estate was awarded the balance remaining in the fund allocated to her account. Any other result would be highly inequitable.
Judgment reversed with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.