Avoyelles Parish Justice of the Peace v. Avoyelles Parish Police Jury

758 So. 2d 161, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 543, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 2030, 1999 WL 415391
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1999
DocketNo. 98-543
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 758 So. 2d 161 (Avoyelles Parish Justice of the Peace v. Avoyelles Parish Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avoyelles Parish Justice of the Peace v. Avoyelles Parish Police Jury, 758 So. 2d 161, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 543, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 2030, 1999 WL 415391 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

11 COOKS, Judge.

Plaintiffs are Justices of the Peace, Constables, and the District Attorney, all duly elected public officials holding offices in/or for the Parish of Avoyelles. Several of the Justices of the Peace and Constables were elected and holding office at the time they qualified for re-election in July 1996; the others were seeking office for the first time. Eddie Knoll, then serving as District Attorney for Avoyelles Parish, also sought re-election to his position for a fifth six-year term. At the time the Justices of Peace and Constables qualifíed and were duly elected to hold office, the salary of those holding the offices they sought was fixed by the Avoyelles Parish Police Jury at $125.00 monthly. This amount was higher than the $30.00 statutory minimum the Police Jury was legislatively mandated to pay as provided by La.R.S. 33:1702 which states:

The police jury in all parishes having a population of over five thousand shall fix the pay of constables and justices of the peace and said salary shall not be less than thirty dollars per month.

| ¡When Eddie Knoll was elected to serve as District Attorney in 1972, La.R.S. 16:271 mandated the Avoyelles Parish Police Jury pay him, “in addition to the salary [now] paid him by the state, an annual salary of three thousand six hundred dollars, payable monthly on his own warrant. ...” In 1973, the Legislature enacted La,R.S. 16:14 entitled “Annual salary of district attorneys and assistant district attorneys payable by parishes,” to remove any restriction, limitation or ceiling which may have been interpreted or interposed as preventing the several parishes from paying district attorneys and their assistants additional salaries higher than the statutorily mandated minimum.1 Although [163]*163the $3,600.00 minimum Avoyelles Parish was mandated to pay |3Eddie Knoll was not increased, La.R.S. 16:14 allows the Parish to pay him a higher supplement at its discretion. Through the years that followed, Avoyelles Parish Police Jury periodically increased the supplemental amount it paid Eddie Knoll annually from $3,600.00 to $24,000.00, the sum it was paying him at the time he qualified and was elected unopposed to serve a fifth term as District Attorney.

Subsequent to election but prior to commencement of the noted officials’ new terms of office, the Avoyelles Parish Police Jury met in December 1996 and proposed certain budget changes for the fiscal, year targeting for reduction the salaries of “all elected officials who would be sworn in to take office [beginning] January 1, 1997.” The proposed budget earmarked the salaries previously paid from the general fund to the District Attorney, Constables, and Justices of the Peace, reducing them to the minimum the Parish was legislatively mandated to pay these elected officials.2 As a consequence, the Police Jury decreased the supplemental salaries of the Justices of the Peace and the Constables from $125.00 to $30.00 monthly and the District Attorney from $24,000.00 to $3,600.00 annually beginning January 1, 1997, the first day of their new terms of office.

On June 23, 1997, the Justices of the Peace and Constables filed suit “seeking restoration of their salaries, retroactive to January 1, 1997, the date the reduction became effective.” Specifically, they alleged “[t]he passage of the resolution of December 10, 1996, by the Avoyelles Parish Police Jury, [was] violative of [their] property rights and of the legislative intent of La.Const art.V, § 21 and art. X, § 23 Land/or reduce their salaries to a level where performance of their duties is impossible.” Normally, the District Attorney serves as the legal representative for the Police Jury; but, he elected to recuse himself and his assistants from all matters involving the Police Jury during the pen-dency of this dispute. Eventually, the Attorney General authorized the Avoyelles Parish Police Jury to retain private counsel to represent it. The District Attorney later filed an intervention petition also seeking “to restore his pay retroactive to the date of reduction.” In addition to echoing the allegations asserted in the principal suit, the District Attorney urged that the Polite Jury, by reducing his salary, deprived him of a property interest without due process.3

Answering the claims of plaintiffs, the Police Jury maintained its action was lawful and not in violation of any constitutional prohibition because “the salary [reductions were] prior to the takiny of office by these officials.” The Police Jury also sought injunctive relief requesting an order directing the “District Attorney’s oí-[164]*164fice to represent [it] in all matters other than those in which the District Attorney was a party.”

After hearing, the trial judge concluded the Police Jury’s action in reducing the salary of the noted public officials was not constitutionally impermissible because it did not “occur during the term of office, or after the official [had] taken the oath of office.” He then found the Justices of the Peace and Constables performed multiple functions “at all hours of the day and night” and “they would not have offered their candidacy had they been aware that their compensation would be so drastically cut,” so much so that the “travel expenses incurred in the performance of the duties might well exceed the amount to which their compensation had been reduced.” Borrowing 1 slanguage from State ex Rel. Thurmond v. City of Shreveport, 124 La. 178, 50 So. 3 (La.1909), cited in State ex Rel. Bass v. Mayor & Bd. Of Aldermen, 204 La. 940, 16 So.2d 527, 530 (1944), he reasoned the Policy Jury was not “at liberty ‘to abolish a statutory office or to starve out the incumbent’... prior to his being sworn into office.” The trial judge invalidated the Police Jury’s October 10, 1996 resolution and reinstated the Justices of the Peace and Constables compensation retroactive to January 1, 1997. However, he rejected Eddie Knoll’s request for relief “notwithstanding the validity of his complaint” finding “[t]he evidence showed that his funds aré such that his office can function.” Subsequently, the trial judge granted Eddie Knoll a new trial expressing concern that he may have overly focused on the funds available to the District Attorney rather than considering whether the reduction was “such that it would provide the District Attorney a sum entirely inadequate for his representation of the Police Jury.” He noted the other revenue he receives may be “for the myriad of other responsibilities and duties incumbent on this office.” When the trial judge revisited the matter involving Eddie Knoll, he voiced other misgivings about the Police Jury’s resolution. In addition to those mentioned as reasons for reconsidering his ruling, he stated: “I’m disturbed by some of the manner-the timing and fact that the salary had been established and then on the heels of the election you might say all this occurred without any meaningful hearing or anything like that.” He reinstated the District Attorney’s salary retroactive to January 1, 1997 finding, ultimately, the Police Jury’s action was “rather arbitrary.”

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERRORS

The Avoyelles Parish Police Jury appeals the trial court’s issuance of a Writ of Mandamus against it in favor of the Avo-yelles Parish Justices of the Peace, Constables, and District Attorney and assigns the following errors for our review:

1.

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758 So. 2d 161, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 543, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 2030, 1999 WL 415391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avoyelles-parish-justice-of-the-peace-v-avoyelles-parish-police-jury-lactapp-1999.