Flores v. Herrera

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 2015
Docket32,693 33,413
StatusPublished

This text of Flores v. Herrera (Flores v. Herrera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flores v. Herrera, (N.M. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number: ___________

3 Filing Date: April 7, 2015

4 NO. 32,693

5 JAMES FLORES,

6 Plaintiff-Appellant,

7 v.

8 MARY HERRERA, individually and as 9 Secretary of State of the State of New Mexico,

10 Defendant-Appellee,

11 and

12 NO. 33,413

13 MANNY VILDASOL,

14 Plaintiff-Appellee,

15 v.

16 STATE OF NEW MEXICO, 17 SECRETARY OF STATE’S OFFICE 18 and MARY HERRERA,

19 Defendants-Appellants. 1 APPEALS FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY 2 Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge (No. 32,693) 3 Raymond Z. Ortiz, District Judge (No. 33,413)

4 Garcia Ives Nowara 5 Matthew L. Garcia 6 Albuquerque, NM

7 for Appellant Flores

8 Cuddy & McCarthy, LLP 9 M. Karen Kilgore 10 Evelyn A. Peyton 11 Santa Fe, NM

12 for Appellee (No. 32,693)

13 Law Offices of Michael E. Mozes, P.C. 14 Michael E. Mozes 15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellee Vildasol

17 Hinkle Shanor LLP 18 Ellen S. Casey 19 Jaclyn M. McLean 20 Loren S. Foy 21 Santa Fe, NM

22 for Appellants (No. 33,413) 1 OPINION

2 SUTIN, Judge.

3 {1} We address two appeals that raise issues concerning the scope of the

4 Whistleblower Protection Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 10-16C-1 to -6 (2010).

5 During her term as Secretary of State, Defendant Mary Herrera terminated the

6 employment of James Flores and Manny Vildasol. Separately, Mr. Flores and Mr.

7 Vildasol sued Ms. Herrera claiming that, in relevant part, by terminating their

8 employment, Ms. Herrera violated the Act. The two cases were decided by different

9 district judges sitting in the First Judicial District. Ms. Herrera lost the general

10 election in November 2010 and left office at the end of 2010. Mr. Flores filed his

11 lawsuit December 22, 2010. Mr. Vildasol filed his lawsuit in April 2011, after Ms.

12 Herrera had left office. In Cause No. 32,693, Mr. Flores appeals the district court’s

13 dismissal of his lawsuit. Cause No. 33,413 is an interlocutory appeal in which Ms.

14 Herrera appeals the district court’s denial of her motion to dismiss Mr. Vildasol’s

15 lawsuit against her, individually.

16 {2} At issue is whether Ms. Herrera may be sued pursuant to the Act in her

17 “individual capacity.” We conclude that Ms. Herrera’s status as a former officer does

18 not exclude her from the purview of the Act. We further conclude that she may be

19 sued pursuant to the Act in her individual capacity. Accordingly, we affirm the 1 district court’s order denying Ms. Herrera’s motion to dismiss Mr. Vildasol’s claim

2 under the Act, and we reverse the district court’s order dismissing Mr. Flores’s claim

3 under the Act.

4 BACKGROUND

5 {3} Section 10-16C-3 provides that “[a] public employer shall not take any

6 retaliatory action against a public employee because the public employee” engaged

7 in specified protected activity1. The Act defines a “public employee” as “a person

8 who works for or contracts with a public employer[.]” Section 10-16C-2(B). A

9 “public employer” includes “every office or officer” within “state government[.]”

10 Section 10-16C-2(C)(1), (4).

11 {4} A public employer that violates the Act

12 shall be liable to the public employee for actual damages, reinstatement 13 with the same seniority status that the employee would have had but for 14 the violation, two times the amount of back pay with interest on the back 15 pay and compensation for any special damage sustained as a result of the 16 violation. In addition, an employer shall be required to pay the litigation 17 costs and reasonable attorney fees of the employee.

1 18 The protected activity is set out in Section 10-16C-3 and consists of 19 communicating “to the public employer or a third party information about an action 20 or a failure to act that the public employee believes in good faith constitutes an 21 unlawful or improper act”; providing information to or testifying before “a public 22 body as part of an investigation, hearing[,] or inquiry into an unlawful or improper 23 act”; or objecting to or refusing “to participate in an activity, policy[,] or practice that 24 constitutes an unlawful or improper act.”

2 1 Section 10-16C-4(A).

2 {5} Ms. Herrera served as Secretary of State from January 2007 through December

3 2010. Mr. Flores worked as Ms. Herrera’s public information officer from January

4 2007, when Ms. Herrera took office, until September 2010, when Ms. Herrera

5 terminated his employment. Mr. Vildasol was appointed by Ms. Herrera to the

6 position of office administrator in January 2007. Ms. Herrera terminated Mr.

7 Vildasol’s employment in September 2010. The details underlying Mr. Flores’s and

8 Mr. Vildasol’s respective terminations are not relevant to this appeal, except to say

9 that each of them claimed that their employment was terminated in retaliation for

10 having, in good faith, reported to the FBI and, in Mr. Vildasol’s case, to other

11 authorities, what they perceived as criminal activity by Ms. Herrera and the Office of

12 the Secretary of State.

13 {6} Mr. Flores filed a complaint against Ms. Herrera “individually and as Secretary

14 of State” for having violated the Act. Mr. Vildasol filed a complaint against the

15 Secretary of State’s Office and Ms. Herrera claiming, in relevant part, that the

16 Secretary of State’s Office and Ms. Herrera had violated the Act.

17 {7} In each case, Ms. Herrera moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject

18 matter jurisdiction, claiming that she could not be sued in her individual capacity for

19 violating the Act, and also claiming that because she was no longer Secretary of State

3 1 she could not be sued in her official capacity. The district court in Mr. Flores’s case

2 granted Ms. Herrera’s motion to dismiss on the ground that it lacked subject matter

3 jurisdiction over the complaint because Ms. Herrera was no longer Secretary of State.

4 The court further reasoned that Mr. Flores could not recover against Ms. Herrera in

5 her individual capacity because “such recovery is inconsistent with the statute which

6 protects ‘public’ employees from the acts of their ‘public’ employers.” As to Mr.

7 Vildasol’s complaint, the district court denied Ms. Herrera’s motion to dismiss.

8 {8} On appeal, Mr. Flores argues that the district court erroneously differentiated

9 between Ms. Herrera’s individual and official capacities which, according to Mr.

10 Flores, in the context of the Act is a meaningless distinction. Additionally, he argues

11 that, contrary to the district court’s interpretation, the Act applies to former public

12 officials and that the district court’s narrow interpretation of the Act was inconsistent

13 with the liberal construction afforded to whistleblower statutes, generally.

14 {9} In her appeal from the court’s denial of her motion to dismiss Mr. Vildasol’s

15 lawsuit, Ms. Herrera argues that the Act does not permit claims against former

16 officers, generally, nor does it permit claims against them in their individual capacity.

17 Additionally, Ms. Herrera argues that because Mr. Vildasol does not now, nor did he

18 ever, qualify as a “public employee” who “works for or contracts with a public

19 employer[,]” he was ineligible to bring a lawsuit pursuant to the Act.

4 1 {10} We conclude that notwithstanding the fact that Ms. Herrera is a former officer,

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