Mashek v. Department of Public Health & Human Services

2016 MT 86, 369 P.3d 348, 383 Mont. 168, 2016 Mont. LEXIS 311, 206 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3085
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 2016
DocketDA 15-0410
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 MT 86 (Mashek v. Department of Public Health & Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mashek v. Department of Public Health & Human Services, 2016 MT 86, 369 P.3d 348, 383 Mont. 168, 2016 Mont. LEXIS 311, 206 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3085 (Mo. 2016).

Opinion

JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 The Department of Public Health and Human Services, Human Resources Division (the Department), appeals from an order entered by the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, reversing the Board of Personnel Appeals and reentering the Hearing Officer’s decision that awarded damages to the Plaintiffs. We reverse.

¶2 The Department raises five issues on appeal and the Plaintiffs raise two issues on cross-appeal, but we address only the following issue:

Did the hearing officer and the District Court err in concluding the Broadband Pay Plan factors, set forth in § 2-18-301(4), MCA, constitute stand-alone requirements that preempt the collective bargaining process ?

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Plaintiffs are Compliance Specialists within the Child Support Enforcement Division of the Department. They constitute the majority of Compliance Specialists, Pay Band 6, employed by the State of Montana, and belong to MEA-MFT Local 4573, a bargaining unit of approximately 500 state employees. The collective bargaining agreements to which MEA-MFT Local 4573 and the State are parties have two-year terms, beginning on July 1st. of odd years following the Legislative session, and ending two years later, on June 30th.

¶4 MEA-MFT Local 4573 negotiated collective bargaining agreements with the State that covered the 2007-2009,2009-2011, and 2011-2013 contract years. In May 2011, while MEA-MFT Local 4573 was negotiating for the 2011-2013 contract period, Plaintiffs filed a complaint against the Department alleging Plaintiffs’ pay was not “internally equitable” in comparison with Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists in other State agencies, in violation of § 2-18-301(4), MCA. Plaintiffs did not contend the collective bargaining agreements were *170 otherwise invalid or unenforceable.

¶5 The District Court initially certified as a class those union and non-supervisory employees of the Department who are or were Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists. However, the District Court subsequently dismissed the complaint without prejudice on the ground that Plaintiffs had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies by pursuing a grievance before the Board of Personnel Appeals (BOPA).

¶6 In July 2012, Plaintiffs filed a grievance with BOPA. BOPA assigned the matter to a Hearing Officer, who conducted a hearing in May 2013 and issued his Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Recommended Order in November 2013. The Recommended Order held Plaintiffs were aggrieved by receiving pay that was not internally equitable with other Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists for the years 2007-2013, and awarded damages. Both parties submitted objections to the Recommended Order to BOPA. In June 2014, BOPA issued its Final Order rejecting the Recommended Order and dismissing the grievance. BOPA held that Plaintiffs had no independent right to internally equitable pay with other Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists, but, instead, internal equity was a factor to be considered during the collective bargaining process. BOPA reasoned that because Plaintiffs had entered into valid collective bargaining agreements for each year covered by the Hearing Officer’s Recommended Order, a disparity in pay between Plaintiffs and other Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists provided no basis for an award of damages.

¶7 Plaintiffs appealed to the District Court for judicial review of BOPA’s Final Order. The District Court vacated and reversed BOPA’s Final Order, agreeing with the Hearing Officer’s conclusions regarding Plaintiffs’ right to pay that is internally equitable with other Pay Band 6 Compliance Specialists. The Department appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶8 We review an order from a district court acting in an appellate capacity to determine whether the district court reached the correct conclusions under the appropriate standards of review. In re Transfer Terr. From Poplar Elem. Sch. Dist. No. 9 to Froid Elem. Sch. Dist. No. 65, 2015 MT 278, ¶ 10, 381 Mont. 145, 364 P.3d 1222. An agency’s conclusions of law will be upheld if the agency’s interpretation of law is correct. State Pers. Div. v. Dep’t of Public Health and Human Servs., 2002 MT 46, ¶ 20, 308 Mont. 365, 43 P.3d 305.

DISCUSSION

¶9 Did the hearing officer and the District Court err in concluding the *171 BroadbandPay Plan factors, set forth in §2-18-301(4), MCA, constitute stand-alone requirements that preempt the collective bargaining process?

¶10 We construe a statute by “reading and interpreting the statute as a whole, without isolating specific terms from the context in which they are used by the Legislature.” MC, Inc. v. Cascade City-County Bd. of Health, 2015 MT 52, ¶ 14, 378 Mont. 267, 343 P.3d 1208 (citation and internal quotations omitted). “Statutory construction is a holistic endeavor and must account for the statute’s text, language, structure and object.” MC, ¶ 14 (citation and internal quotations omitted). “[T]his Court presumes the Legislature would not pass meaningless legislation and we must, as much as possible, harmonize statutes relating to the same subject giving effect to each.” Wild v. Fregein Constr., 2003 MT 115, ¶ 20, 315 Mont. 425, 68 P.3d 855. We must also “read and construe each statute as a whole so as to avoid an absurd result and to give effect to the purpose of the statute.” MC, ¶ 14 (citation and internal quotations omitted).

¶11 Section 2-18-301(4), MCA, provides “[t]he department shall administer the pay program established by the legislature on the basis of competency, internal equity, and competitiveness to the external labor market when fiscally able.” 1 Based on this statute, Plaintiffs argue they have a free standing right, independent of their collective bargaining agreements, to pay that is internally equitable. The Department argues that internal equity is a goal achieved through collective bargaining, not an independent actionable right that preempts the function of collective bargaining conducted by each agency and its employees to negotiate wages. We agree with the Department.

¶ 12 The primary error in the analysis employed by the Hearing Officer and the District Court is the interpretation of “internal equity” in isolation from the context in which the term is used by the Legislature, running afoul of a basic principle of statutory construction. MC, ¶ 14. Regardless of what the phrase “internal equity” means, the conclusion that it serves as a stand-alone right ignores the rest of the statute’s language. The preceding words “shall administer the pay program ... on the basis of” mean that competency, internal equity, and competitiveness are the factors to be considered in administering the *172 pay program. Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary 102 (11th ed. 2003) (“Basis” means “something on which something else is established.”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 MT 86, 369 P.3d 348, 383 Mont. 168, 2016 Mont. LEXIS 311, 206 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mashek-v-department-of-public-health-human-services-mont-2016.