COUNCIL 13, AFSCME v. Casey

595 A.2d 670, 141 Pa. Commw. 199
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 1991
Docket200 M.D. 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 595 A.2d 670 (COUNCIL 13, AFSCME v. Casey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
COUNCIL 13, AFSCME v. Casey, 595 A.2d 670, 141 Pa. Commw. 199 (Pa. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

CRAIG, President Judge.

Petitioners, a state employees’ union and two representative members (AFSCME), has brought this original jurisdiction petition for review in the nature of mandamus and equity proceedings, seeking a peremptory mandamus order or preliminary injunction to compel the Commonwealth and the Governor to pay 19,781 employees of long standing, hired before October of 1978, their salary payments due to be paid on July 5, 1991 and July 12, 1991.

The court allowed the intervention, as additional petitioners, of another state employees’ union and two of its members (PSSU), because they represent approximately 2,000 additional employees of long standing in the same class as those represented by AFSCME.

The Commonwealth respondents justify not paying the salaries of the pre-October-1978 senior employees, as distinguished from junior employees hired thereafter, on the *201 ground that the absence of a general appropriation act in Pennsylvania since July 1, 1991 results in no appropriation authority for such payments as required by the Pennsylvania Constitution Article 3, § 24, which prohibits the issuance of payments without the authorization of an appropriations law.

The senior employees take the position that immediate relief, by peremptory mandamus or preliminary injunction, is warranted under the following alternative grounds:

Administrative Code Provisions
Wage Payment and Collection Law, 43 P.S. § 260.1 et seq.
Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 206(a)
Federal Civil Rights Law, 42 U.S.C. § 1983
United States Constitution Thirteenth Amendment

Because this court, on the basis of the evidence and the law, concludes that the July 5 and July 12 paydays relate to services performed during June, 1991, for which expenditures are authorized under the Administrative Code and the 1990-91 Appropriations Act, the senior employee’s rights to their salary payments are clear, and peremptory judgment in mandamus must issue. The other grounds for relief need not be considered.

The petitioners also sought relief against Robert C. Jubelirer, President Pro Tempore of the Senate and Robert W. O’Donnell, Speaker of the House of Representatives, directing them to adopt a general appropriations act or other appropriations law to fund the payments sought. The President Pro Tempore and the Speaker have filed preliminary objections to the count against them.

After argument and consideration of the preliminary objections, this court sustained those preliminary objections and dismissed the legislative leaders from the suit because (1) those leaders alone cannot possibly achieve enactment of an appropriations act, and (2) the enactment of a complex appropriations act, related to policy decisions concerning revenue sources, is a matter of broad and complex discre *202 tion vested in the legislature and is not subject to mandamus relief, applicable to judicial compulsion of nondiscretionary public acts.

Therefore, this case has proceeded solely upon the claims of the senior employees to receive their July 5 and July 12, 1991 paychecks for work done in June of 1991.

Analysis of Applicable Law

Along with the state constitutional provision, Pa. Const. Art. 3, § 24, requiring appropriation authorization, this case turns entirely upon pertinent provisions of the Administrative Code. Administrative Code § 223, 71 P.S. § 83, in subsection (a) provides:

(a) Each employee of an administrative department, of an independent administrative board or commission and of a departmental administrative board or commission, shall be paid his regular salary every other week.

Standing alone, that provision is a statutory mandate prohibiting the Commonwealth from missing any stated biweekly payday for its employees.

The constitutional requirement for appropriation authorization comes into play because of the absence of any such general appropriation authorization, thus far, during the month of July of 1991. However, there is no dispute as to the fact that the July 5 payday is the date for pay compensating each employee for work done during the period June 8-21, 1991, as to which there is appropriation authorization in effect for the 1990-91 fiscal year. Similarly, the July 12, 1991 payday is the date for payment of compensation to employees for work performed during the period June 15-28, 1991.

Section 621 of the Administrative Code, 71 P.S. § 240.1, in subsection (c), states as follows:

(c) Payments for personnel services shall be charged to the fiscal year in which the expense was incurred or the liability accrued.

*203 The fact is that the Commonwealth did not withhold paychecks on July 5 with respect to the junior state employees hired after October of 1978.

Also pertinent is the undisputed personnel compensation history of the Commonwealth, to the effect that between October 1978 and mid-1985, senior employees were paid on a before-the-fact basis, that is, a current basis under which they were compensated for two weeks of work on the final day of those two weeks. Junior employees hired after October 1978 have always been paid on an after-the-fact basis, under which they receive their compensation two weeks after the end of the period for which they were being thereby compensated. In July 1984, the General Assembly enacted Administrative Code, § 223, 71 P.S. § 83, in which subsection (c) defined after-the-fact pay and subsection (b) provided that all employees shall be paid on an after-the-fact pay basis. With respect to the senior employees, being then shifted from before-the-fact to after-the-fact, subsection (d) provides:

(d) Any employee on a before-the-fact pay basis on the date of conversion would receive a conversion payment equal to his bi-weekly salary in order to avoid any employee missing a payday in the process of conversion. Such conversion payments shall be recoverable by the Commonwealth upon severance of the employee from State service. After the date of conversion, employees shall continue to be paid every other week. (Emphasis added.)

Thus, although senior employees have been ahead by one paycheck since 1985, that payment — in effect a loan to them by the Commonwealth — be charged against them at this time; the Administrative Code clearly states that the Commonwealth can recover it from them only at the time of their respective terminations.

Indeed, the Commonwealth does not claim in this case that it is entitled to withhold the July 5 and July 12 pays from the senior employees on the basis of presently recoup *204 ing the conversion payment not actually owed by them until their departure from service.

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Bluebook (online)
595 A.2d 670, 141 Pa. Commw. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-13-afscme-v-casey-pacommwct-1991.