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State ex rel. Terra State Community College v. Ohio School Bd. Emps. Retirement Sys.

Ohio Ct. App.October 12, 2021No. 20AP-288
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Beatty Blunt
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
Appeal from magistrate's decision; writ of mandamus denied

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The court upheld the magistrate's decision that Ohio School Bd. Emps. Retirement Sys. (SERS) properly determined Donna Eickholt was entitled to employee membership and service credit under R.C. 3309.01(B)(2), and that Terra State Community College was obligated to remit employer and employee contribution shares to SERS. The writ of mandamus was denied.

Excerpt

The magistrate correctly found that R.C. 3309.01(B)(2) clearly and unambiguously defines employee membership in SERS retirement plan, and that the board properly applied R.C. 3309.01(B)(2) to the evidence in this case when it determined that Donna Eickholt was a public employee for the relevant time frame that she was entitled to service credit for those years and that Terra State was obligated to remit both the employer's and the employee's shares of contributions into SERS for such years. Objections overruled, magistrate's decision adopted as our own, and the requested writ of mandamus is denied.

What This Ruling Means

**What happened:** Terra State Community College challenged a decision by the Ohio School Employees Retirement System (SERS) about employee Donna Eickholt's retirement benefits. The college disagreed with SERS' determination that Eickholt qualified as a public employee who was entitled to retirement service credit for certain years she worked. The college also objected to being required to pay both the employer and employee portions of retirement contributions to SERS for those years. **What the court decided:** The court sided with SERS and upheld the retirement system's decision. The judge found that Ohio law clearly defines who qualifies for employee membership in the retirement plan, and that SERS correctly applied this law to Eickholt's situation. The court determined that Eickholt was indeed a public employee during the time period in question and was entitled to retirement service credit. Terra State was therefore required to pay the retirement contributions as ordered. **Why this matters for workers:** This ruling protects workers' retirement benefits by confirming that employers cannot easily avoid their obligations to contribute to employee retirement systems. When workers qualify for public retirement benefits under state law, their employers must fulfill their contribution responsibilities, ensuring employees receive the retirement security they've earned.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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