City of Lawton v. International Union of Police Associations, Local 24

2002 OK 1, 41 P.3d 371, 73 O.B.A.J. 128, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 1, 171 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3208, 2002 WL 27598
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 8, 2002
Docket95,122
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 2002 OK 1 (City of Lawton v. International Union of Police Associations, Local 24) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lawton v. International Union of Police Associations, Local 24, 2002 OK 1, 41 P.3d 371, 73 O.B.A.J. 128, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 1, 171 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3208, 2002 WL 27598 (Okla. 2002).

Opinion

OPALA, J.

T1 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the Court of Civil Appeals erred in not dismissing the appeal for lack of jurisdiction? We answer in the affirmative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

T2 The City of Lawton [City] terminated the employment of Damion Hart [Hart], a police officer. He challenged the discharge by filing a grievance with the City. Upon its denial he demanded grievance arbitration asserted as authorized by a collective bargaining agreement 1 between the City and the International Union of Police Associations, Local 24 [IUPA] (Hart's bargaining agent). Hart obtained an "arbitration award" 2 [award], which restored him to his former position with some backpay allowance. The City brought a district court suit to vacate the arbitration decision. 3 Hart and IUPA counterclaimed for judicial confirmation and enforcement. Both parties moved for summary judgment. Hart requested "partial summary adjudication" of the tendered issues, which would withhold from disposition only his claim to backpay, attorney's fee and interest. The City moved for the arbitration decision's vacation. The trial court's 24 July 2000 order here on review (a) denied the City's quest to vacate the arbitration decision, (b) determined the decision to be eligible for confirmation and enforcement, (c) decided most of the counterclaim issues by granting summary relief to the defendant, (d) directed the parties to pay their own fees and costs, and (e) "reserved for later hearing, if necessary," the amount of compensation due Hart on his counterclaim for confirma-tion. 4 The City then secured a trial court's certification of the July 24 order 5 for submission of the case to this court as a petition for certiorari to review a certified interlocutory order. 6 Twenty-five days later, the City brought here an appeal (instead of a petition for certiorari to review that order), which it sought to prosecute by the accelerated-track method (designed for review of summary judgments). 7

*374 T3 The Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] affirmed the July 24 order. Because the nisi prius order on review does not resolve the backpay compensation issue, we granted cer-tiorari (on 10 October 2001) to examine into the COCA's subject-matter jurisdiction as well as into our own. Attached to and tendered with the City's supplemental brief on certiorari is a copy of the parties' stipulation (dated 30 October 2001 when this case stood pending on certiorari review) as to the amount of compensation (including interest) due Hart (for the period of 8 September 1996 through 23 December 2001). 8

II

THE JULY 24 ORDER DOES NOT QUALIFY AS AN APPEALABLE DISPOSITION

T4 Although the City's petition in error states that the appeal is from summary judgment that disposed of all claims by the parties, it also motes that "any issues as to the calculation of the backpay award" stood undecided and their resolution postponed "for later hearing, if necessary." According to the petition in error, the parties anticipate filing at nisi prius a stipulation on the amount of the compensation due Hart.

15 This appeal is prosecuted from an unappealable order that stops short of rendering judgment. To serve as a judgment, the adjudication here on review would have been required to determine all the issues tendered by the counterclaim for confirmation of the arbitration decision. 9 A decision disposing of the principal claim but leaving a related counterclaim unresolved is not appealable as final. 10 The order sought to be reviewed does not hence rise to the status of a judgment in the 12 0.S.1991 § 681 11 sense. 12 Nay, the July 24 journal entry establishes facially that no judgment was entered. 13 This is so because it fails to adjudicate the exact amount of compensation and interest, if any, due the defendant. The City's appeal is from nothing more than a set of some summarily resolved issues anterior to a judgment. In other words, it is prosecuted from an intermediate order in the case. 14

III

THE JURISDICTIONAL FLAW CANNOT BE CURED (AND THE APPEAL SAVED FROM DISMISSAL) BY AN IMPERMISSIBLE POSTAPPEAL NSI PRIUS STIPULATION TENDERED ON CERTIORARI

T6 The City has attempted to cure the jurisdictional flaw by attaching to its certiorari brief a copy of a postappeal stipulation filed in the trial court. The parties *375 inform us that by this stipulation there are no longer any disputed issues left to be decided and that no other nisi prius hearings will be necessary. The City's mid-certiorari attempt to cure the jurisdictional flaw by its effort to diminute, in this fashion, the record for appeal comes too late.

T7 The supplementation sought to be made is unauthorized. This is so because the material had neither been tendered to the trial court during the pre-order stages nor had been acted upon when the decision on review was made. 15 An appellate court is confined to that record which was before the nisi prius court at the time of its decision on review. The content of the record for appeal cannot be supplemented by attaching to the briefs a postappeal stipulation. 16 |

A.

The July 24 Order Cannot Be Reached For Nunc Pro Tunc Correction f

18 The jurisdictional defect that taints this appeal cannot be cured by a nune pro, tune correction. Orders nune pro tune are designed neither to bring into the record what a court might or should have done nor what it might or should have intended to do. The function of a nune pro tune entry is to amend a judgment in order to make it speak the truth about what actually transpired or was considered and adjudged. 17 Nune pro tune relief stands limited to supplying inadvertent clerical omissions and to correcting facial mistakes in recording judicial acts that actually took place. 18 In short, a nune pro tunc order can and will place of record what was actually decided by the court but was incorrectly recorded. The device may neither be utilized as a vehicle for the trial court's review of its judgment (to excise legal errors found in it) nor as a means of securing a different judgment. 19

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Bluebook (online)
2002 OK 1, 41 P.3d 371, 73 O.B.A.J. 128, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 1, 171 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3208, 2002 WL 27598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lawton-v-international-union-of-police-associations-local-24-okla-2002.