Larry R. Hedlund v. State Of Iowa, K. Brian London, Commissioner of the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Individually Charis M. Paulson, Director of Criminal Investigation, Individually Gerard F. Meyers, Assistant Director Division of Criminal Investigation, Individually

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 9, 2023
Docket22-0243
StatusPublished

This text of Larry R. Hedlund v. State Of Iowa, K. Brian London, Commissioner of the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Individually Charis M. Paulson, Director of Criminal Investigation, Individually Gerard F. Meyers, Assistant Director Division of Criminal Investigation, Individually (Larry R. Hedlund v. State Of Iowa, K. Brian London, Commissioner of the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Individually Charis M. Paulson, Director of Criminal Investigation, Individually Gerard F. Meyers, Assistant Director Division of Criminal Investigation, Individually) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Larry R. Hedlund v. State Of Iowa, K. Brian London, Commissioner of the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Individually Charis M. Paulson, Director of Criminal Investigation, Individually Gerard F. Meyers, Assistant Director Division of Criminal Investigation, Individually, (iowa 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 22–0243

Submitted April 11, 2023—Filed June 9, 2023

LARRY R. HEDLUND,

Appellee,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA, K. BRIAN LONDON, Commissioner of the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Individually; CHARLES M. PAULSON, Director of Criminal In- vestigation, Individually; GERARD F. MEYERS, Assistant Director Division of Criminal Investigation, Individually,

Appellants.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Paul D. Scott, Judge.

The State and named defendants appeal the district court’s grant of the

plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, which concluded that the 2019 amend-

ment to Iowa Code section 70A.28(5)(a) applies retrospectively. REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

McDermott, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Jeffrey C. Peterzalek (argued) and Wil-

liam R. Pearson, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellants.

Thomas J. Duff (argued) and Jim Duff of Duff Law Firm, P.L.C., West Des

Moines, and Roxanne Barton Conlin of Roxanne Conlin & Associates, P.C., Des

Moines, for appellee. 2

McDERMOTT, Justice.

Larry Hedlund filed a lawsuit in 2013 against the State and several state

officials (collectively, the “State”) asserting a claim for wrongful discharge under

Iowa’s whistleblower-protection law, Iowa Code section 70A.28 (2013). In 2019,

while Hedlund’s lawsuit was still pending, the legislature amended section

70A.28 to allow an aggrieved employee to pursue damages beyond those that the

prior version of the statute allowed. 2019 Iowa Acts ch. 109, § 1 (codified at Iowa

Code § 70A.28(5)(a) (2020)). Hedlund filed a motion arguing that the new amend-

ments should apply retrospectively to his claim. The district court ruled in his

favor. The State filed an application for interlocutory appeal challenging that rul-

ing, which we granted.

This case is no stranger to our court. In 2016, we decided an appeal chal-

lenging the district court’s dismissal of Hedlund’s wrongful-discharge-in-viola-

tion-of-public-policy claim and a related motion to amend the district court’s

ruling, ultimately dismissing the appeal as untimely. Hedlund v. State (Hedlund

I), 875 N.W.2d 720, 722–24, 727 (Iowa 2016). In 2019, we decided an appeal

challenging the dismissal of Hedlund’s section 70A.28 claim and two other

claims. Hedlund v. State (Hedlund II), 930 N.W.2d 707 (Iowa 2019). We reversed

the dismissal of his section 70A.28 claim but held that he wasn’t entitled to a

jury trial because the statute provided only equitable relief. Id. at 718. In both

appeals, we detailed Hedlund’s allegations and the earlier procedural history of

this case, and we will forego restating them in full here. Hedlund II, 930 N.W.2d

at 712–15; Hedlund I, 875 N.W.2d at 722–24. This appeal, as the parties observe, 3

presents a question of statutory interpretation about the temporal application of

the chapter 70A amendments. We pick up the relevant procedural history where

Hedlund II left off.

Three days after we filed our opinion in Hedlund II, an amendment to sec-

tion 70A.28(5)(a) went into effect. 2019 Iowa Acts ch. 109, § 1 (codified at Iowa

Code § 70A.28(5)(a) (2020)). Language added by that amendment to the existing

statute is shown here in italics:

A person who violates subsection 2 [(wrongfully discharging or re- taliating against an employee)] is liable to an aggrieved employee for affirmative relief including reinstatement, with or without back pay, civil damages in an amount not to exceed three times the annual wages and benefits received by the aggrieved employee prior to the violation of subsection 2, and any other equitable relief the court deems appropriate, including attorney fees and costs.

Iowa Code § 70A.28(5)(a) (2020). Compare id. § 70A.28(5)(a) (2020), with id.

§ 70A.28(5)(a) (2019).

Hedlund filed a motion asking the district court to declare that the statu-

tory amendments applied retrospectively to his claim and entitled him to pursue

the additional damages. He further argued that because the new damages au-

thorized under the statute compensate aggrieved plaintiffs for their losses, they

constitute legal relief entitling him to a jury trial. The district court, as men-

tioned, granted Hedlund’s motion, and this interlocutory appeal from the State

followed. The State makes three arguments on appeal: that the district court

erred in applying the amendments retrospectively; that the “law of the case” (our

decision in Hedlund II) forecloses a jury trial and compensatory damages; and

that Hedlund waived his right to a jury trial because, after the case had been 4

remanded, the parties agreed during a trial scheduling conference to set the case

for a ten-day nonjury trial and the district court entered a trial scheduling order

accordingly.

We begin with the State’s challenge to retrospective application of the

amendments. The district court used a multifactor test described in some of our

prior cases for determining whether a statute applies retrospectively. The first

step in this analysis considers “whether the legislature expressly stated its intent

that a statute should apply retrospectively.” Dindinger v. Allsteel, Inc., 860

N.W.2d 557, 563 (Iowa 2015). The second step assesses “whether the statute

affects substantive rights or relates merely to a remedy.” Anderson Fin. Servs.,

LLC v. Miller, 769 N.W.2d 575, 579 (Iowa 2009). If it relates to a remedy, the

statute is presumed to apply retrospectively, and the court then embarks on “a

three-part test to determine if retroactive application is consistent with legislative

intent.” Id. In this subtest seeking to ascertain legislative intent, the court is to

(1) “examine the language of the act,” (2) “consider the manifest evil to be reme-

died,” and (3) “determine whether there was an existing statute governing or lim-

iting the mischief that the new act is intended to remedy.” Janda v. Iowa Indus.

Hydraulics, Inc., 326 N.W.2d 339, 344 (Iowa 1982).

On the first step, the district court determined that the statute did not

expressly provide for retrospective application of the amendments. On the sec-

ond step, the district court looked to our definition of a “remedial” statute as one

that “provides an additional remedy to an already existing remedy or provides a 5

remedy for an already existing loss.” Iowa Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Theta Frater-

nity v. State, 763 N.W.2d 250, 267 (Iowa 2009). The district court determined

that the heightened damages added by the amendments met this definition, and

thus, the statute must be presumed retrospective. Turning then to the three-

part test to divine legislative intent, the district court chiefly relied on two news-

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