Barbour County Com'n v. EMPLOYEES OF BARBOUR COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT.

566 So. 2d 493, 1990 Ala. LEXIS 610, 1990 WL 121825
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 3, 1990
Docket89-609
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 566 So. 2d 493 (Barbour County Com'n v. EMPLOYEES OF BARBOUR COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbour County Com'n v. EMPLOYEES OF BARBOUR COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT., 566 So. 2d 493, 1990 Ala. LEXIS 610, 1990 WL 121825 (Ala. 1990).

Opinion

The employees of the Barbour County sheriff's department, tax assessor's office, tax collector's office, and juvenile office ("employees") sued the Barbour County Commission ("Commission"), alleging that the Commission discriminated against the employees by not offering them certain retirement and insurance benefits. The case was submitted on a stipulation of facts, and the trial court ruled against the Commission, requiring it to offer certain retirement and insurance benefits to the employees. We affirm.

The trial court's order reads as follows:

"This case was assigned to the undersigned Special Judge by Order of Chief Justice Sonny Hornsby on the 9th day of February, 1989. The attorneys for the Plaintiffs and Defendants submitted this cause for determination under an Agreed Stipulation of Facts and certain evidence submitted without objection.

"For the sake of clarity, continuity, and easy reference, the written stipulated facts are hereby set out verbatim and a copy of the resolution in question is attached as Exhibit A to this Order [omitted from this opinion]:

" 'On August 29, 1972, the Defendant adopted a Resolution which stated, among other things, that the Barbour County Commission determined that it was desirable for the public employees of the Barbour County Commission to be covered under an annuity and pension plan and stipulated that all fully budgeted positions on a full normal working time basis should be eligible for participation. The Resolution excluded certain groups of personnel from the benefits of said Resolution and said excluded groups of personnel were identified as persons filling positions in the Tax Assessor's and Tax Collector's Office, Circuit Clerk's employees, Judges of Courts, Judge of Probate employees, Sheriff and Sheriff's Department employees, and Board of Education employees.

" 'At the time said Resolution was adopted in 1972, the Tax Assessor and Tax Collector were on the fee system and employed their own employees and paid said employees out of their personal funds. The said employees were not employees of the Barbour County Commission. The Judge of Probate was on the fee system and is still on the fee system and with the exception of Wilma Cook, Chief Clerk in the Clayton office, pays all of his employees out of his own funds. Act No. 82-855 enacted by the State Legislature on August 22, 1982, authorized the County Commission of Barbour County to employ a Chief Clerk to work in the Office of the Probate Judge; such employee was to be selected by the Probate Judge, and [the act] directed that said employee is to be paid out of the General Fund of the County. The Defendant hired Mrs. Wilma Cook, who had become Chief Clerk of the Clayton office and an employee of Probate Judge Mack Price when Price took office in 1976, as the person to continue serving in said position. At the time the County Commission converted Mrs. Cook, an employee of the Probate Judge paid out of the Probate Judge's funds, to a County employee paid out of the General Fund, she became a regular, full-time, budgeted employee of the Barbour County Commission working in the Probate Office. The Barbour County Commission, at a special meeting on October 19, 1982, honored Probate Judge W. Mack Price's request that Mrs. Cook be allowed to participate in the retirement program and the County Clerk was instructed to make said participation effective October 1, 1982.

" 'On October 1, 1982, pursuant to Section 40, Chapter 6A, Code of Alabama 1975, the Barbour County Tax Assessor and the Barbour County Tax Collector changed over from the fee system to a salary system, and at such time all of the personnel in said office[s] became County Commission employees who occupied fully budgeted positions on a full working time basis. The Circuit Clerk and his employees as well as the Judges of Court are now State employees and as such are covered by the State Judicial Retirement Act. The employees of the Board of Education are covered under the State Teachers and Employees' retirement fund[s]. The sheriff and *Page 495 the Sheriff's Department employees, as well as the employees of the County Juvenile Office, continue to be Barbour County Commission employees occupying fully budgeted positions on a full working time basis. Since 1972, the Defendant has included approximately 45 employees of the Road and Bridge Department, 4 employees of the County Commission's office, 1 employee of the Probate Office, 2 employees from the County Engineer's Department, all members of the County Commission, the County Attorney, and 2 employees of the Solid Waste Department under the insurance and retirement plan. The Defendant provides insurance benefits for employees who are under the direct supervision of the County Commission and also for Bob Bradley who works under the direct supervision of Bob Methvin, Tax Assessor, and Wilma Cook, Chief Clerk of the Probate Office in [the] Clayton Division, who works under the direct supervision of Probate Judge Mack Price, and all employees who work in the Sheriff's Department under the direct supervision of the Sheriff. Mrs. Cook was a member of the retirement system when she worked in the Probate Office of Bullock County prior to 1977, but was not a member of the retirement system during her tenure with Judge Mack Price as an employee of Judge Mack Price from January, 1977 until October 1, 1982.

" 'Plaintiffs, prior to filing suit, requested by and through their attorney as reflected in the March 14, 1988, County Commission Minutes, that they be accorded retirement and insurance benefits on an equal par with those County employees who were then receiving such benefits. At the April, 1988 meeting, Attorney Jimmy S. Calton, who appeared on behalf of said employees, received the Commission's answer that said request was being denied. Benelle Warr, Tax Collector of Barbour County, addressed a letter to Commission members on June 10, 1987, wherein she asked that the employees of the Tax Collector's Office be granted insurance and retirement benefits. No action was taken on said request.

" 'The employees of the Barbour County Commission who were assigned to work under the direction of the Sheriff, have at all times been full-time fully budgeted employees, working on a full working time basis. The employees of the Tax Collector's and the Tax Assessor's office became employees of the Barbour County Commission assigned to work in the Tax Collector's and the Tax Assessor's offices, in a full-time fully budgeted position as of October 1, 1982.

" 'The Juvenile Probation Office was created by the Judicial Article and became operational in January, 1976. The employees of the Barbour County Commission who work in the Juvenile Probation Office have at all times been full-time fully budgeted employees working on a full normal working time basis.

" 'The various county commissioners and the various county attorneys have been participants in said retirement plan since the adoption of the Resolution on August 29, 1972. The various county attorneys have all maintained separate full-time law practices in addition to performing their functions as County Attorney. The various county attorneys have been paid a regular monthly salary from which all applicable federal and state deductions were made. The various county commissioners since 1972 who were not retired, have all maintained other forms of employment to provide their prime monetary livelihood in addition to fulfilling their duties as elected county commissioners. The various county commissioners, as duly elected public officials, are on call 24 hours a day to fulfill their elected duties and obligations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Janie Ingalls v. U.S. Space and Rocket Center
679 F. App'x 935 (Eleventh Circuit, 2017)
Ex Parte Bronner
623 So. 2d 296 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1993)
Richards v. Jefferson County
789 F. Supp. 369 (N.D. Alabama, 1992)
Bronner v. Avant
623 So. 2d 292 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
566 So. 2d 493, 1990 Ala. LEXIS 610, 1990 WL 121825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbour-county-comn-v-employees-of-barbour-county-sheriffs-dept-ala-1990.