Higgins v. Municipality of Anchorage

810 P.2d 149, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 30, 1991 WL 63836
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1991
DocketS-3417
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 810 P.2d 149 (Higgins v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. Municipality of Anchorage, 810 P.2d 149, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 30, 1991 WL 63836 (Ala. 1991).

Opinion

*150 OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

Patrick Higgins appeals from the denial of his motion for a new trial of his wrongful reclassification action against the Municipality of Anchorage, alleging that newly discovered evidence shows that the Municipality misrepresented its policy on the arbitrability of reclassification disputes. Treating his motion as a Rule 60 request for relief from an earlier judgment of this court, we grant the motion and remand for further proceedings.

I

This case, arising out of the reclassification of Higgins’s job and subsequent termination of his employment, came to us once before on a petition for review. Municipality of Anchorage v. Higgins, 754 P.2d 745 (Alaska 1988) (Higgins I). The underlying facts are set out there and need not be repeated here. Id. at 746. On review we “limited our consideration solely to the issue of whether the trial court erred in denying the [Municipality’s] motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Higgins failed to exhaust his administrative-arbitration remedy.” Id. at 746 n. 6.

The trial court had denied the municipality’s affirmative defense that Higgins’s claim was barred by his failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The trial court’s reasoning was that exhaustion of the administrative remedy was unnecessary, because a grievance in this case would have been futile. The first two steps of the grievance procedure involved appeals to Higgins’s immediate superior, Frank Austin, and to then-Mayor Tony Knowles, the individuals who reclassified Higgins in the first place.

We did not have to decide whether the first two steps of the grievance procedure would have been futile, because we accepted the municipality’s argument that there was no showing or argument that the mandated third step of the procedure — binding arbitration before a neutral arbitrator— would also have been futile. Id. at 747-48. We concluded that “in light of the undisputed availability of arbitration under the rules, we think it plain that the superior court erred in denying the municipality’s exhaustion of remedies claim based upon the futility exception.” Id. at 748. We therefore reversed the trial court’s denial of summary judgment. Id.

Higgins argued in the alternative that the municipality was estopped from asserting an exhaustion of remedies defense, because Austin had represented to him that grievance of the reclassification was not available in his case. Id. After finding the record unclear as to whether a factual dispute existed concerning what Austin had said to Higgins, we remanded for reconsideration of the estoppel issue. Id. A bench trial was held on December 6, 1988. In a Memorandum Opinion and Judgment issued May 15, 1989, the superior court ruled that, “contrary to Higgins’ claims, Frank Austin did not represent to him that he did not have the right to grieve the reclassification of his position.” The court then dismissed Higgins’s suit because of his failure to exhaust his administrative remedies.

On May 26, 1989, Higgins moved for a new trial based on new evidence. The new evidence consisted of an affidavit by a former municipal official to the effect that the municipality has consistently considered reclassification issues to be nongrievable and nonarbitrable. Higgins also directed the court’s attention to pleadings the municipality made in a contemporaneous case in which the municipality adopted the position that a reclassification issue was not arbi-trable. Higgins asserted that this evidence directly contradicted the testimony of Austin, on which the court had placed great reliance in making its decision. Higgins concluded that “[t]his evidence of misrepresentation would change the result of a new trial.”

On August 4, 1989, the superior court denied the motion for a new trial on the grounds that “[t]he evidence offered does not appear to be newly discovered, and even if it was, it is not of a nature that it could not have been discovered before trial by due diligence.” Higgins appeals to this court, contending that the superior court *151 abused its discretion in denying his motion for a new trial.

II

When this case first came up for review, we specifically determined that the availability of arbitration was fatal to Higgins’s argument concerning the futility of his administrative remedies. Higgins I, 754 P.2d at 747-48. Higgins now claims that although the municipality argued in Higgins I that arbitration was available, its longstanding policy has been that arbitration is not available to resolve reclassification disputes. We consider first whether there is an inconsistency in the municipality’s position. Concluding that there is an inconsistency, we then discuss the consequences it has for the disposition of this case.

' A

According to Higgins, the essence of the municipality’s position before this court in Higgins I was that arbitration was available as part of the grievance procedure. As evidence, he cites the argument headings of the municipality’s brief to this court:

2. Under the Rules Higgins could have challenged the 1984 executive appointment by grievance.
3. Under the Rules Higgins could have compelled Anchorage to arbitrate the validity of the 1984 executive appointment.
4. Higgins would have had an unbiased arbitrator.
5. Anchorage would have paid the entire cost of arbitration.
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7. The employee’s right to challenge an alleged violation of the Personnel Rules goes together with the employer’s right to answer that challenge in an arbitration rather than in court.
8. Arbitration would save Higgins, Anchorage, and the Alaska courts from the burdens and expenses of litigation.

Higgins directs our attention to materials presented by the city to the superior court in two other cases. 1 Their essence is that since 1981 the municipality, in its own words, “has steadfastly refused all requests to arbitrate reclassification issues. Anchorage has maintained that reclassification issues are not substantively arbitra-ble.” The AMEA cases concluded with a ruling by the superior court, just before Higgins’s trial, that “the Municipality of Anchorage need not submit grievances associated with the above-captioned case to binding arbitration.”

Higgins also presents an affidavit by John Alexander, former Labor Relations Manager for the municipality, which was submitted along with the motion for a new trial. Alexander, who worked under Frank Austin from 1983 to 1988, avers that

[djuring the time I was employed by the Municipality in that position, it was my understanding that, as a matter of policy, issues involving reclassification of employees were not grievable or arbitrable.

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Bluebook (online)
810 P.2d 149, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 30, 1991 WL 63836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-1991.