Donlon v. Montgomery Co. Public Schools
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Opinion
Harrell, J.
This is how it is today: The teachers are afraid of the principals. The principals are afraid of the superintendents. The superintendents are afraid of the board of education. The board is afraid of the parents. The parents are afraid of the children. The children are afraid of nothing!
-Milton Berle (1908-2002)
(TV and Motion Picture Icon)
Although Uncle Miltie's thesis is debatable, the quotation recognizes a chain-of-command structure popular in American public education systems. The present case has something to do with a part of that structure in Maryland.
We confront here the question of whether a teacher in the Montgomery County Public School ("MCPS") system (or any such system likely) is protected by the Maryland State Whistleblower Protection Law, Md. Code (1993, 2015 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.), §§ 5-301-314 (the "WBL") of the State Personnel and Pensions Article ("SPP"). Petitioner, Brian Donlon, contends that teachers employed by the county school board are embraced within the WBL because the county school board is a unit of the Executive Branch of State government. 1 Further, Donlon argues that Respondent, MCPS, should be estopped from contending that it is not a State agency because MCPS has asserted frequently in other contexts State agency status.
In its defense, MCPS finds comfort in
Chesapeake Charter, Inc. v. Anne Arundel County Board of Education
,
Facts and Proceedings
Because the question we confront is a purely legal one, we shall provide only such factual background as needed to supply important context.
In 2012, Donlon, a teacher at Rockville's Richard Montgomery High School ("RMHS") in the MCPS system, discovered what he believed was an inflation by RMHS staff and administration of its Advanced Placement ("AP") course statistics. Donlon accused RMHS of "awarding students credit on their report cards and transcripts when the[ ] [relevant] classes were in fact [Middle Years Program] classes and did not meet the criteria set by the College Board for AP credit." Donlon reported ultimately RMHS's alleged inflation of AP statistics to the County Superintendent. The Superintendent discounted Donlon's contentions.
Donlon contacted a journalist at The Washington Post, informing him of RMHS's "wrongdoing." The journalist interviewed members of the MCPS administration regarding Donlon's claim. As a consequence, Donlon contends that members of RMHS' faculty supervisors retaliated against him,
2
in violation
of the WBL, for his revelations to the print media. Donlon filed with the Maryland Department of Budget and Management ("DBM") a WBL complaint against MCPS.
3
Donlon requested "compensatory damages, punitive damages, costs and attorney's fees, and equitable relief."
Mont. Cnty. Pub. Sch. v. Donlon
,
The Office of the Statewide Equal Employment Opportunity Coordinator ("OSEEOC"), as the designee of the Secretary of the DBM, conducted a review of Donlon's whistleblower complaint. 4 The DBM concluded that Donlon's complaint
does not meet the jurisdictional requirements of the Maryland Whistleblower Law. In accordance with SPP § 5-301, the [WBL] applies to employees and State employees who are applicants for [a] position in the Executive Branch of State government .... MCPS [ ] is not an Executive Branch agency of State government, and therefore [Donlon's ] complaint is not subject to investigation by this office. Accordingly, [Donlon's] complaint is dismissed.
Donlon appealed the DBM's ruling to the Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings ("OAH"). After a hearing, an OAH Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") affirmed the DBM's decision, holding that
there was no jurisdiction to hear the whistleblower claim because Donlon was not an employee of the Executive Branch of State government. The ALJ noted that the State government's [E]xecutive branch contains 19 principal departments, each of which contain subordinate units, and that MCPS is not among them. The ALJ also observed that the State Board establishes policies and guidelines throughout the State, but that it is the county boards of education that employ principals and teachers. The ALJ found that Donlon submitted no evidence that he was an employee of the executive branch and that there was no employer/employee relationship between Donlon and the executive branch. Accordingly, the ALJ concluded that Donlon was not an executive branch employee, that he could not bring a whistleblower complaint pursuant to the WBL, and that DBM and the OAH did not have jurisdiction to hear the case.
Donlon
,
Donlon filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The circuit court, in reversing the ALJ, expressed disagreement with MCPS's argument that it may assert its status as a State entity under certain circumstances, but maintain that it is a local agency in other situations:
THE COURT: Just so I'm clear. So [MCPS] thinks it is okay to wrap itself within the protection of the [Eleventh] Amendment to avoid getting sued in federal court but when you come into the coordinate Brach [sic] and [S]tate courts [and] say no, no, no, no.
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Harrell, J.
This is how it is today: The teachers are afraid of the principals. The principals are afraid of the superintendents. The superintendents are afraid of the board of education. The board is afraid of the parents. The parents are afraid of the children. The children are afraid of nothing!
-Milton Berle (1908-2002)
(TV and Motion Picture Icon)
Although Uncle Miltie's thesis is debatable, the quotation recognizes a chain-of-command structure popular in American public education systems. The present case has something to do with a part of that structure in Maryland.
We confront here the question of whether a teacher in the Montgomery County Public School ("MCPS") system (or any such system likely) is protected by the Maryland State Whistleblower Protection Law, Md. Code (1993, 2015 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.), §§ 5-301-314 (the "WBL") of the State Personnel and Pensions Article ("SPP"). Petitioner, Brian Donlon, contends that teachers employed by the county school board are embraced within the WBL because the county school board is a unit of the Executive Branch of State government. 1 Further, Donlon argues that Respondent, MCPS, should be estopped from contending that it is not a State agency because MCPS has asserted frequently in other contexts State agency status.
In its defense, MCPS finds comfort in
Chesapeake Charter, Inc. v. Anne Arundel County Board of Education
,
Facts and Proceedings
Because the question we confront is a purely legal one, we shall provide only such factual background as needed to supply important context.
In 2012, Donlon, a teacher at Rockville's Richard Montgomery High School ("RMHS") in the MCPS system, discovered what he believed was an inflation by RMHS staff and administration of its Advanced Placement ("AP") course statistics. Donlon accused RMHS of "awarding students credit on their report cards and transcripts when the[ ] [relevant] classes were in fact [Middle Years Program] classes and did not meet the criteria set by the College Board for AP credit." Donlon reported ultimately RMHS's alleged inflation of AP statistics to the County Superintendent. The Superintendent discounted Donlon's contentions.
Donlon contacted a journalist at The Washington Post, informing him of RMHS's "wrongdoing." The journalist interviewed members of the MCPS administration regarding Donlon's claim. As a consequence, Donlon contends that members of RMHS' faculty supervisors retaliated against him,
2
in violation
of the WBL, for his revelations to the print media. Donlon filed with the Maryland Department of Budget and Management ("DBM") a WBL complaint against MCPS.
3
Donlon requested "compensatory damages, punitive damages, costs and attorney's fees, and equitable relief."
Mont. Cnty. Pub. Sch. v. Donlon
,
The Office of the Statewide Equal Employment Opportunity Coordinator ("OSEEOC"), as the designee of the Secretary of the DBM, conducted a review of Donlon's whistleblower complaint. 4 The DBM concluded that Donlon's complaint
does not meet the jurisdictional requirements of the Maryland Whistleblower Law. In accordance with SPP § 5-301, the [WBL] applies to employees and State employees who are applicants for [a] position in the Executive Branch of State government .... MCPS [ ] is not an Executive Branch agency of State government, and therefore [Donlon's ] complaint is not subject to investigation by this office. Accordingly, [Donlon's] complaint is dismissed.
Donlon appealed the DBM's ruling to the Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings ("OAH"). After a hearing, an OAH Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") affirmed the DBM's decision, holding that
there was no jurisdiction to hear the whistleblower claim because Donlon was not an employee of the Executive Branch of State government. The ALJ noted that the State government's [E]xecutive branch contains 19 principal departments, each of which contain subordinate units, and that MCPS is not among them. The ALJ also observed that the State Board establishes policies and guidelines throughout the State, but that it is the county boards of education that employ principals and teachers. The ALJ found that Donlon submitted no evidence that he was an employee of the executive branch and that there was no employer/employee relationship between Donlon and the executive branch. Accordingly, the ALJ concluded that Donlon was not an executive branch employee, that he could not bring a whistleblower complaint pursuant to the WBL, and that DBM and the OAH did not have jurisdiction to hear the case.
Donlon
,
Donlon filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The circuit court, in reversing the ALJ, expressed disagreement with MCPS's argument that it may assert its status as a State entity under certain circumstances, but maintain that it is a local agency in other situations:
THE COURT: Just so I'm clear. So [MCPS] thinks it is okay to wrap itself within the protection of the [Eleventh] Amendment to avoid getting sued in federal court but when you come into the coordinate Brach [sic] and [S]tate courts [and] say no, no, no, no. We're not [S]tate agencies for the purposes of [SPP] 5-301.
* * *
THE COURT: [MCPS]'s argument is frivolous, to be blunt.
* * *
[THE COURT:] It is deeply troubling to me that [MCPS] wants to be shielded when it is good for them and not part of the State when it's not good for them.
MCPS appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. As pertinent to the certiorari questions for which we granted the petition in this case (discussed
infra
), our appellate colleagues - in reliance on
Chesapeake Charter
,
in light of the "substantial weight" we accord DBM's view, see White [v. Register of Wills of Anne Arundel County ], 217 Md. App. [187], 193,90 A.3d 1213 , [1216 (2014) ] and the fact that nothing in the statutory text of SPP § 5-301 supports Donlon's argument, we conclude that, as a matter of statutory construction, the WBL does not apply to public school teachers employed by county boards of education because they are not employees of the executive branch.
Donlon
,
Therefore, in the context of Donlon's argument that MCPS should be estopped from disclaiming its State agency stature in the present case, the court held that the
applicability of the WBL to MCPS, and MCPS's assertion of sovereign immunity [ ] are both quintessential issues of law, not of fact. It doesn't matter whether a party takes an inconsistent position compared to one taken in previous litigation. Legal arguments are not judicially estopped.... [Thus,] [t]he county boards were simply asserting legal arguments available to them.... [and] MCPS is not judicially estopped from arguing that it is not a State agency for purposes of the WBL.
Donlon
,
We granted Donlon's petition for a writ of certiorari,
Donlon v. Mont. Cnty. Pub. Sch.
,
I. What is the relationship of county school employees to the State in the context of Maryland whistleblower protection laws?
II. What distinctions [, if any,] matter in Maryland's application of the doctrine of judicial estoppel?
Standard of Review
We explained in
Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Shea
,
[a] court's role in reviewing an administrative agency adjudicatory decision is narrow; it is limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in the record as a whole to support the agency's findings and conclusions, and to determine if the administrative decision is premised upon an erroneous conclusion of law.
In applying the substantial evidence test, a reviewing court decides whether a reasoning mind reasonably could have reached the factual conclusion the agency reached. A reviewing court should defer to the agency's fact-finding and drawing of inferences if they are supported by the record. A reviewing court must review the agency's decision in the light most favorable to it; ... the agency's decision is prima facie correct and presumed valid, and ... it is the agency's province to resolve conflicting evidence and to draw inferences from that evidence.
Despite some unfortunate language that has crept into a few of our opinions, a court's task on review is not to substitute its judgment for the expertise of those persons who constitute the administrative agency. Even with regard to some legal issues, a degree of deference should often be accorded the position of the administrative agency. Thus, an administrative agency's interpretation and application of the statute which the agency administers should ordinarily be given considerable weight by reviewing courts. Furthermore, the expertise of the agency in its own field should be respected.
See also Md. Code (1984, 2014 Repl. Vol.), § 10-222 of the State Government Article ("SG"). 6
The questions for which we granted Donlon's petition focus on whether county boards of education are units of the State Executive branch. These questions are purely questions of law. It is, thus, our "prerogative to determine whether [the] agency's conclusions of law are correct."
Bd. of Liquor License Comm'rs for Balt. City v. Kougl
,
In
Phillips
,
The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the real and actual intent of the Legislature. A court's primary goal in interpreting statutory language is to discern the legislative purpose, the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by the statutory provision under scrutiny.
To ascertain the intent of the General Assembly, we begin with the normal, plain meaning of the language of the statute. If the language of the statute is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute's apparent purpose, our inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the statute as written, without resort to other rules of construction. We neither add nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and unambiguous language of the statute, and we do not construe a statute with "forced or subtle interpretations" that limit or extend its application.
We, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we confine strictly our interpretation of a statute's plain language to the isolated section alone. Rather, the plain language must be viewed within the context of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute. We presume that the Legislature intends its enactments to operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and, thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent with the statute's object and scope.
Where the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and unambiguous when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when read as part of a larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process. In resolving ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it relates to other laws, its general purpose, and the relative rationality and legal effect of various competing constructions.
In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation, not one that is absurd, illogical, or incompatible with common sense.
In addition, we presume that the Legislature is
to have had, and acted with respect to, full knowledge and information as to prior and existing law and legislation on the subject of the statute and the policy of the prior law. Absent a clear indication to the contrary, a statute, if reasonably possible, is to be read so that no word, clause, sentence, or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless, or nugatory.
Bd. of Ed. of Garrett Cnty. v. Lendo
,
Analysis
I. County Boards of Education and the State Executive Branch.
Donlon grounds his contentions on what he believes to be well-established Maryland law holding that county boards of education are State agencies across-the-board. As this goes, county boards of education must be units of the State Executive branch because clearly they are not units of the Judicial or Legislative branches. The Maryland State Board of Education ("MSBE"), a county board's canonical State agency overseer,
7
exercises considerable administrative influence, control, and oversight over county boards. Thus, to the extent the Court of Special Appeals relied on the holding of
Chesapeake Charter
to reject Donlon's view, it did so based on an inappropriately expansive reading of that opinion. To that end, Donlon points to
Beka Indus., Inc. v. Worcester County Bd. of Educ.
,
Donlon urges upon us that the frequency of Maryland cases holding county school boards to be agents of the State should compel us to read the WBL to extend protection to public school teachers. Donlon insists, at the very least, that the WBL is ambiguous as to its coverage in this regard. Thus, recourse to the canon of statutory interpretation of in pari materia is necessary to pierce the enigma, by harmonizing the WBL with the Public School Employee Whistleblower Protection Act (the "PSEWPA"), Md. Code (2017, 2018 Repl. Vol.), §§ 6-901-906 of the Education Article ("Educ.") (effective 1 October 2017), which extends expressly whistleblower protection to "any individual who is employed by a public school employer or an individual of equivalent status in Baltimore City."
MCPS, in response, directs our attention to
Phillips
, contending that "an entity may qualify as a state agency for some purposes while being classified as a local agency for other purposes."
Furthermore, MCPS marshals as authorities the PSEWPA, Chesapeake Charter , and published opinions of the MSBE and the Maryland Attorney General's Office confirming the view that public school employees, like Donlon, are not extended WBL protection. The PSEWPA excludes State employees from its definition of "public school employee." See Educ. § 6-901 (b)(2) ("Public school employee" does not include a State employee.). Thus, if we were to hold county school boards to be State agents, then by PSEWPA definition, they are not protected "Public School Employees."
MCPS notes that, at the same time Donlon invokes the canon of in pari materia and implores this Court to meld the WBL with the PSEWPA, he offers no legal analysis for how the Court can blend harmoniously the two statutes to extend WBL coverage to public school teachers. MCPS contends as inapt applying in pari materia to two statutes that render relief to alternative classifications of employees through different enforcement mechanisms.
It is accurate to observe that we have referred to county boards of education as State entities in a variety of contexts, but none are consequential to the present case. Those expressions appeared only in dictum, for one thing. Even in those instances, it is obscure sometimes as to why those conclusory statements were made.
See
State v. Bd. of Educ. of Mont. Cnty.
,
Whether a county board of education is a State agency has arisen in recent times in the context of Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity challenges.
See
Lee-Thomas v. Prince George's Cnty. Pub. Sch.
,
To understand whether the powers and functions of the local boards of education support distinguishing their status as State or local entities, we begin with some perspective as to the MSBE's role. The MSBE exercises broad dominion and control over the administration of the public-school system in Maryland. We explained in
Bd. of Educ. of Prince George's Cnty. v. Waeldner
,
[u]nder [Educ.] § 2-205(g)(2)..., the State Board is directed to "exercise general control and supervision over the public schools and educational interests of this State." [ Educ. §] 2-205(b) empowers the State Board to "[d]etermine the elementary and secondary educational policies of this State"; § 2-205(c) directs the State Board to "adopt bylaws, rules, and regulations for the administration of the public schools." [ Educ. §] 2-205(e) provides that the State Board "shall explain the true intent and meaning of the provisions of ... [the Education Article] ... within its jurisdiction"; the same subsection mandates that the State Board "shall decide all controversies and disputes under these provisions" and further states that "[t]he decision of the Board is final."
The totality of these provisions has been described as a visitatorial power of such comprehensive character as to invest the State Board with the last word on any matter concerning educational policy or the administration of the system of public education. The broad sweep of the State Board's visitatorial power has been consistently recognized and applied since the principle was first enunciated in 1879 in Wiley v. School Comm'rs ,51 Md. 401 . The power of visitation vested in the State Board is one of general control and supervision; it authorizes the State Board to superintend the activities of the local boards of education to keep them within the legitimate sphere of their operations, and whenever a controversy or dispute arises involving the educational policy or proper adminsitration [sic] of the public school system of the State ....
(internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted). Moreover, "the [MSBE's] power authorizes it to correct all abuses of authority and to nullify all irregular proceedings" of county boards.
Waeldner
,
Maryland Code (1984, 2014 Repl. Vol.) § 8-201 of the State Government ("SG") Article lists 19 principal departments of the Executive branch of State government. As the Court of Special Appeals noted, county boards of education are not enumerated in SG § 8-201.
8
Nevertheless, county school boards exist by virtue of the acts of the General Assembly and have been categorized as State agencies, but also recognized as possessing a hybrid nature.
See
Beka
,
Dean v. Bd. of Educ. of Cecil County
,
We elaborated in
Chesapeake Charter
on the hybrid nature of county school boards of education. In
Chesapeake Charter
, we were charged with determining "whether [the Anne Arundel County Board of Education] is subject to the General Procurement Law
10
and, as a result, [Maryland State Board of Contract Appeals] [ ( ]MSBCA[ ) ] has any jurisdiction in this matter, hinges on whether a county school board is 'a unit' within the meaning of that law."
Chesapeake Charter
,
We explained that
although the county boards are generally regarded as State agencies because they are part of the State public education system, are subject to extensive supervision and control by the State Board of Education, and exercise a State function, from a budgetary and structural perspective, they are local in character. They are not divisions of or units within the State Department of Education. They are subject to the county, not the State, budget process and must justify their budget requests to the county government. Most of their operational funding comes from the county, not the State, government. When these factors are taken into account, it is clear that the general characterization of county boards of education as State agencies does not require a finding that they are entities "in the Executive Branch of the State government" for purposes of S.F.P. § 11-101(x).
[i]n 13 counties, the members of the board are elected by the voters of the county ( [Educ.] § 3-114 ); in Baltimore City, the members of the board, other than a student member, are appointed jointly by the Governor and the Mayor of Baltimore ( [Educ.] § 3-108.1 ); in the other counties, the members are appointed by the Governor from among the residents of the county ( [Educ.] § 3-108 ). The county school systems are funded in part by the State and in part by the counties . Hornbeck v. Somerset C[nty]. Bd. of Educ. ,295 Md. 597 ,458 A.2d 758 (1983). Although in terms of their composition, jurisdiction, funding, and focus, they clearly have a local flavor, the county school boards have consistently been regarded as State, rather than county, agencies.
Chesapeake Charter
,
[c]ounty school boards are considered generally to be State agencies because (1) the public school system in Maryland is a comprehensive Statewide system, created by the General Assembly in conformance with the mandate in Article VIII, § 1 of the Maryland Constitution to establish throughout the State a thorough and efficient system of free public schools, (2) the county boards were created by the General Assembly as an integral part of that State system, (3) their mission is therefore to carry out a State, not a county, function, and (4) they are subject to extensive supervision by the State Board of Education in virtually every aspect of their operations that affects educational policy or the administration of the public schools in the county.
Chesapeake Charter
,
The county school board is the head of the county department and is responsible for administering, in the county, the supervening State policy determined by the State Board of Education, in accordance with State Board's directives. See [Educ.] § 4-108. There is, as well, a county superintendent, who is the executive officer of the county board and, in essence, the chief executive officer of the county department. Finally, there are the teachers, principals, and other professional, administrative, clerical, security, transportation, and maintenance staff hired by the county school board to work in or service the schools in the county. Unlike the situation at the State level, the county superintendent and the employees of the county department of education are appointed and their salaries are set by the county school board upon recommendation of the county superintendent, [Educ.] § 4-103(a), in accordance with a personnel system established by the county board.
Chesapeake Charter
,
The holding of
Chesapeake Charter
may be "narrow," when examined through a particular lens.
Beka
,
Donlon contends that Beka cabined properly Chesapeake Charter by explaining that Chesapeake Charter represented an anomalous departure from the overwhelming support in our jurisprudence holding county boards of education as State agencies. We do not believe that Beka restricted Chesapeake Charter to the extent that Donlon suggests.
In
Beka
, one question
12
(ostensibly relevant here) was whether a county board of education retained its right to sovereign immunity asserted in defense to a breach of contract action under SG § 12-201.
13
Beka
,
In recognizing this distinction, the Court discussed Chesapeake Charter , stating
that a local school board is not a "unit" of State Government for purposes of the General Procurement Law because the "procurement of supplies and services by the county boards of education" in contrast to school construction, has never been subject to the general authority of the Board of Public Works, or the Department of General Services
Beka
,
Beka
reiterated that, for purposes of Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity analysis, local boards of education are entities of State government.
Beka
,
For present purposes, sovereign immunity is extraneous to the purpose and legislative history of the WBL. The contention here is whether the county board of education is a State agency subject to the WBL.
Accord
Chesapeake Charter
,
[t]he General Assembly finds that the interests of the citizens of Maryland demand a government which operates in accordance with the law and in avoidance of mismanagement, monetary waste, abuse of authority, and danger to public health and safety. In furtherance of these goals, it is essential that classified State employees be free to disclose impropriety in exercise of their constitutional right of free speech.
(emphasis added). The prefatory statement of H.B. 616 notes that its purpose "is to prohibit any State appointing authority 16 from using a personnel action as a retaliatory measure against an employee or applicant for State employment who has made a disclosure of illegality or impropriety." (emphasis added).
Local members of a county board are either: elected by the registered voters of their county, Educ. § 3-114 ;
17
appointed by the governor, Educ. § 3-108 ; or, selected by a
specific procedure in Baltimore City, Harford County, or Caroline County,
We elaborated specifically, in
Chesapeake Charter
,
Personnel matters are inherently local at their inception. "This becomes evident
when we examine the place of county school boards in the structure and governance of public education in Maryland."
19
Chesapeake Charter
,
The authority of [MSBE], codified in part in [Educ.] § 2-205, has been described as "a visitatorial power of the most comprehensive character," one that is "in its nature, summary and exclusive. It includes (1) determining the primary and secondary educational policies of the State, (2) explaining the true intent and meaning, causing to be carried out, and deciding all controversies and disputes arising under the provisions of the Education Article that are within its jurisdiction, (3) adopting by-laws, having the force of law, for the administration of the public schools, (4) through the State Superintendent of Schools, exercising general control and supervision over the public schools and educational interests of the State, (5) preparing the annual State public school budget, including appropriations for State aid to the counties for current expenses, student transportation, and public school construction, and, (6) specifying the information each county board is required to record and the form in which it is to be recorded.
Chesapeake Charter
,
For example, as it relates to the present question, county boards of education: (1) control educational matters affecting their counties, Educ. § 4-101 ; (2) carry out the provisions of the Education Article and the bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies of the MSBE while retraining the initial discretion over all local matters, Educ. § 4-108 ; (3) subject to Educ. § 6-203, the county superintendent shall decide 21 all controversies and disputes that involve the county board's rules and regulations and those involving the proper administration of the county school system, Educ. § 4-205 ; and, (4) may suspend or dismiss a teacher, principal, supervisor, assistant superintendent, or other professional assistant, Educ. § 6-202.
If disciplined, a teacher, principal, supervisor, assistant superintendent, or other professional assistant, may request a
hearing before the county board
within 10-days of receiving notice of the charges against the individual. Educ. § 6-202.
22
(emphasis added). The individual
may
appeal from
the decision of the county board to the MSBE
only after
a decision is rendered by the county board.
All regulations effecting educational matters are found within the Education Article, unless otherwise indicated in the statute. The WBL is located in the State Personnel and Pensions Article. It is bereft of any cross-references to statutes containing delegated authority to a local entity. The county boards' dominion over local personnel matters contrasts sharply with the jurisdictional control of the MSBE, which controls statewide educational matters.
See
Bernstein
,
The WBL, being a remedial statute,
24
is to be read broadly in favor of
claimants, where possible.
25
The WBL is not expansive enough, however, to cover under its umbrella county boards and their school teachers, a view shared by the MSBE.
26
Sovereign immunity claims aside, we have held that county boards of education are not State agencies.
Chesapeake Charter
,
Also of persuasive force are opinions from the Maryland Attorney General's Office regarding the status of a county board of education as a local entity. Although we are not bound by an Attorney General's opinion, "when the meaning of legislative language is not entirely clear, such legal interpretation [by the Attorney General] should be given great consideration in determining the legislative intention."
State v. Crescent Cities Jaycees
,
The Attorney General's Office demonstrated, over a long period of time, awareness of the complexity in actualizing a rigid or fixed local versus State classification for county boards of education. Indeed, former Maryland Attorney General Stephen H. Sachs explained that
[a]lthough, in dicta, the Court of Appeals referred to county boards of education as State agencies in Ruff [,278 Md. 580 ,366 A.2d 360 ] and referred to the Board of Education of Anne Arundel County as a State agency in McCarthy , [280 Md. 634 , 639-50,374 A.2d 1135 , 1138-43 ] we believe that the Court did not intend such designation to apply unvaryingly to county boards of education in all contexts . Rather ... it is apparent that the Court of Appeals recognizes that the appropriate designation of a county board of education depends on the context of the board authority or function in question . For some limited purposes the board of education might be designated as a State agency, while for other purposes it will be designated as a local agency.
65 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 356, n. 3 (1980) (emphasis added). General Sachs' opinion continued that "the [c]ounty [b]oard is not 'an executive agency of the State government' for purposes of the Maryland Public Ethics Law. Having so concluded, we believe that the members of the County Board may be viewed as 'local officials.' "
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that a county board of education is not an entity of the State (or, more specifically, a unit of the Executive Branch of State government) for purposes of the WBL. 27
It seems prudent to address whether WBL protection may extend otherwise to public school teachers. The WBL is located in the State Personnel and Pensions Article and renounces applicability to public school teachers. SPP § 5-307 lists three categories of employees entitled to whistleblower protection: (1) Employees in State Personnel Management System, (2) Employees of the University System of Maryland, and (3) Employees of Morgan State University. A county school teacher does not fall within any of these categories. In the 38 years since the WBL was enacted originally in 1980, no effort has been made by the Legislature to extend WBL protection to employees outside of these categories. Moreover, former Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, Jr. opined that the legislative intent behind the WBL was to extend protection only to executive branch employees. 77 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 147 (1992). We agree with General Curran's view. The plain language and legislative intent of the WBL extends no protection to county public school employees or teachers.
Perhaps the sharpest blade cutting against Donlon's claim is the Legislature's passage of the PSEWPA. At the outset, we highlight the pinnacle events as they relate to the progress of this case and enactment of the PSEWPA:
• 27 January 2015:
• DBM rejects Donlon's claim that MCPS retaliated against him in contravention of the WBL.
• 1 September 2015:
• ALJ affirms the DBM.
• 26 April 2016:
• The circuit court reverses the ALJ's decision.
• 24 May 2016:
• MCPS appeals the circuit court's judgment to the Court of Special Appeals.
• 9 February 2017:
• PSEWPA (H.B. 1145; there was no cross-filed Senate bill) was read, for the first time, before the House Committee on Ways and Means.
• 20 March 2017:
• PSEWPA was read, for the first time, before the Senate Committee on Finance
• 25 May 2017 :
• Governor Lawrence Hogan signs the PSEWPA into law.
• 30 August 2017:
• The Court of Special Appeals reverses the circuit court's ruling and finds no WBL law protection for Donlon.
• 1 October 2017:
• PSEWPA goes into effect, without any provision for retrospective application to Donlon's case specifically or generally.
Donlon urges upon us the canon of statutory interpretation that calls upon a reviewing court to "interpret statutory provisions that are
in pari materia
(in other words, dealing with the same subject matter) consistently with each other," if possible.
Phillips
,
Donlon would have us read concertedly the WBL and PSEWPA to give, what he believes, full effect to the WBL, by extending WBL protection to public school teachers. We do not believe the two statutes can be read harmoniously. To accept Donlon's urging would render nugatory portions of the PSEWPA.
The WBL and PSEWPA accord whistleblower protection to different classes of employees. Pointedly, the PSEWPA applies only to public school employees who are individuals "employed by a public school employer," 28 and excludes specifically State employees from the definition of "Public School Employees." Compare Educ. § 6-901(b), (c), with SPP § 5-301, and SPP § 5-307.
Moreover, the remedial mechanisms of the statutes are not comparable. The WBL explains that a complainant may appeal to the OAH only after receiving a final decision from the DBM. SPP § 5-310. Furthermore, as MCPS notes correctly,
[u]nder the WBL, an employee in the State Personnel Management System must elect to either file a complaint with the Secretary of the State[,] DBM[,] or [ ] file a grievance under Title 12 of the SPP. [SPP]§ 5-307(a). Likewise, employees of the University System of Maryland and employees of Morgan State University must elect to either file a complaint with the Secretary of the State DBM or, alternatively, file a grievance under Titles 13 and 14, respectively," of the Education Article. [SPP] § 5-307(b), (c).
The PSEWPA requires a public school employee to "exhaust any administrative remedies before instituting a civil action under this section." Educ. § 6-904(a). These administrative enforcement schemes, which (in Donlon's view) would have conclusively one method of enforcement applicable to State employees, and two methods applicable to public school employees, cannot be read harmoniously.
"The General Assembly is presumed to have intended that all its enactments operate together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, statutes will be interpreted, whenever reasonably possible, to avoid repeal by implication."
Farmers & Merchants Nat. Bank of Hagerstown v. Schlossberg
,
"Courts are inhibited, however, in their exercise of judgment as to how to effectuate the will of the Legislature." Lafarge , 443 Md. at 284, 116 A.3d at 504. Fortunately for us here, the will of the Legislature was illuminated during testimony before the Maryland General Assembly regarding the proposed PSEWPA.
Delegate Jimmy Tarlau (D., District 47A, Prince George's County), a sponsor of H.B. 1145 (2017), which became the PSEWPA, testified before the House Committee on Ways and Means stating that he "had assumed there was whistleblower protection for [public school employees] but found out there is no such protection. The [PSEWPA] would seem to address that issue."
Angela Wolf, a Montgomery County public school teacher, testifying before the same Committee in support of the PSEWPA, informed the legislators of a case that sounds remarkably like Donlon's, stating:
most recently, a high school teacher at one of the wealthiest schools, in a nationally ranked county here in Maryland, reported deceptive practices. The school was awarding students credit for classes being advanced placement when the curriculum taught in no way met the AP criteria set forth by the College Board. Not having protection, the teacher was retaliated against. But again, who is damaged most by this deceptive practice? Students.... [The PSEWPA gives public school teachers] a defense tool ... to expose waste, fraud, and abuse.
Notably also, John R. Woolums, Esq., a representative from MABE, 30 testified in opposition to H.B. 1145 stating:
why [ ] single out a public school employees for a standalone whistleblower protection act? The questions that flow from that focuses on the fact that this law does and does not track the [WBL], which has what we view to be tighter and more well-defined terms and procedures relative to reporting to the Attorney General's Office in certain instances and a number of other instances. [ ] That leads to questions about why wouldn't the inclination be to add school employees or other public employees in the State to the [ WBL ] to broaden the scope of that existing statute.
(emphasis added). Mr. Woolums maintained that the PSEWPA was unnecessary because the General Assembly need only amend the WBL to add public school employees to its coverage. Implicit in this view, the WBL did not extend protection to public school teachers in its un-amended form.
Delegate Tarlau, in response to Mr. Woolums' testimony, noted that the proposed PSEWPA is "modeled after the [Maryland State Whistleblower Act for Healthcare Employees] ... [The PSEWPA] covers people who are also not covered by the [Collective Bargaining Agreement rules]." Before the Senate Committee on Finance, Delegate Tarlau testified that the proposed PSEWPA "gives protection for public school employees. Maryland has also a State whistleblower law for all State employees but not public school employees." Mr. Woolums withdrew his opposition to the proposed PSEWPA before testimony was taken before the Senate Committee on Finance. Moreover, the fiscal and policy note to H.B. 1145 states that the current status of Maryland law "affords licensed or certified health care employees and State employees similar whistleblower protections ." (emphasis added). The note makes no mention of any existing whistleblower protection laws applicable to public school teachers or employees. Additionally, the Legislature, in enacting the PSEWPA, made no effort to express an intention that retrospective effect be extended to Donlon or his claim. 31
Thus, the rhetorical question bandied about at oral argument, why was the PSEWPA necessary if the WBL covered county public school employees, can be answered with confidence. The Legislature was of the view that the PSEWPA was needed because the WBL did not extend whistleblower protection to public school teachers.
II. Does Judicial Estoppel Have Any Role In This Case? (Spoiler - No.)
Donlon maintains that MCPS should be estopped from arguing that it is not a State agency because "MCPS regularly insists that it is a state agency that can assert sovereign immunity to defend against a teacher suing it for
violations of
The ALJ concluded that the "OAH does not have jurisdiction to hear the merits of [Donlon's] WBL claim ... [because Donlon] is not an employee of the Executive Branch of State Government, and therefore, cannot bring a claim pursuant to the [WBL]." The ALJ, in response to the parties' arguments relating to judicial estoppel, noted that once the OAH determined that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the case, "all other issues raised by the parties with respect to this matter are moot." On review of the ALJ's decision, the circuit court submitted that if it "concluded[,] for purposes of the [SPP] article[, Donlon] a [S]tate employee, [it does not] have to get to the question of estoppel...." The circuit court concluded that Donlon was a State employee, and found ultimately extraneous the need to determine whether judicial estoppel was applicable.
Judicial estoppel is a common law doctrine and not a matter of federal or State constitutional law.
See generally
Kramer v. Globe Brewing Co.
,
(1) one of the parties takes a [ ] position that is inconsistent with a position it took in previous litigation, (2) the previous inconsistent position was accepted by a court, and (3) the party who is maintaining the inconsistent positions must have intentionally misled the court in order to gain an unfair advantage. 33
Georg
, 456 Md. at 625, 175 A.3d at 724-25 (quoting
Dashiell v. Meeks
,
Contrary to Donlon's contention that "ambiguity exists as to whether judicial estoppel applied to inconsistent legal as well as factual positions," we explained in
Georg
that the inconsistency may be either factual or legal; "i.e., the application of judicial estoppel is not limited to situations where a party takes inconsistent factual positions only."
Georg
, 456 Md. at 654, 175 A.3d at 742 ;
see also
Dynacorp Ltd. v. Aramtel Ltd.
,
In light of our recent elaboration in
Georg
and
Blentlinger
on judicial estoppel, it is unnecessary to peel away further the layers of the doctrine's onion when the first prerequisite that must exist for its application is not satisfied here. Donlon argues that "the position that MCPS is an agency or arm of the State for Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity is in direct contrast with the position MCPS takes in the case at bar." Donlon is incorrect. As explained
supra
, the contention that an entity is immune from suit on
the grounds of sovereign immunity resulting from its State stature is not inconsistent with the assertion that county boards are neither units of the Executive Branch of our State government, nor entities of the State, for purposes of the WBL.
34
These
are quintessential questions of law. County school boards have both State and local characteristics, and the appropriate designation of a county board (be it State versus local) depends on the context of the board's particular authority or function under the microscope.
See
Beka
,
Estopping MCPS from claiming its local status for present purposes could have untoward future implications in imagined and unimaginable other litigation contexts. We share the concerns iterated by MCPS:
[A] ruling that MCPS is estopped from arguing that it is not a State agency would have perverse consequences for Maryland's county boards of education. The majority of, if not all, local boards of education have asserted Eleventh Amendment immunity at one time or another. If having done so estops them from disclaiming State agency status, then they would [not] be able to assert their predominantly local character in any other litigation.
(quotation marks committed). Judicial estoppel is necessary "to protect the integrity of the judicial system."
Dashiell
,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
188 A.3d 949, 460 Md. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donlon-v-montgomery-co-public-schools-md-2018.