Michigan State Employees Ass'n v. Civil Service Commission

177 Mich. App. 231
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1989
DocketDocket Nos. 98098, 99196
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Mich. App. 231 (Michigan State Employees Ass'n v. Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michigan State Employees Ass'n v. Civil Service Commission, 177 Mich. App. 231 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Pee Curiam.

Defendant Michigan Civil Service Commission appeals from various orders and judgments of the Court of Claims and the Ingham Circuit Court holding that the commission violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 USC 621 et seq., by implementing certain changes in a life insurance plan for state employees. Plaintiff, Michigan State Employees Association, cross appeals from a Court of Claims judgment on damages. In a consolidated companion case, defendant commission also appeals from a Court of Claims order granting the association’s motion to amend the judgment and to grant attorney fees. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

This case arose out of changes made in 1973 in the life insurance coverage available to state employees over sixty years of age. Prior to the changes, retired state employees could purchase life insurance with a maximum benefit of $2,500. Active state employees could participate in a [235]*235group insurance plan that provided a life insurance benefit equal to an employee’s salary, rounded up to the next thousand dollars, with a minimum benefit of $10,000. The premium rate was thirty-two cents biweekly for each $1,000 of coverage. The state paid seventy-five percent of the premium, i.e., twenty-four cents; the employee paid twenty-five percent of the premium, i.e., eight cents. All employees, regardless of age, paid the same amount.

In 1973, the Group Insurance Advisory Committee, made up of both management and employee representatives, recommended that at age sixty-one an employee’s benefits be reduced fifteen percent each year until at age sixty-five an employee has twenty-five percent of the benefit he or she had at age sixty. Retirees would be affected in the same manner. Prefaced by other various committees’ recommending this modification, defendant commission adopted this modification plan in December, 1973. After obtaining the necessary approvals, the modification became effective July 1, 1974.

On April 8, 1974, Congress amended the adea so as to make it applicable to the states as employers, effective May 1, 1974. 29 USC 630(b). The commission’s modification, having already been approved, took effect as scheduled on July 1, 1974, two months after the effective date of the pertinent amendment to the adea. Soon after, in the fall of 1974, the modification in the group insurance plan drew complaints. It was suggested that Michigan was not in compliance with the adea. The State Compensation Advisory Board recommended that the plan be rescinded. However, the plan remained viable until December, 1975, when, incidentally, one month after this lawsuit was filed, defendant commission rescinded the modification. Defendant [236]*236commission ordered that, effective October 1, 1976, each active state employee, regardless of age, receive a life insurance benefit equal to his or her salary rounded up to the next thousand dollars.

In November, 1975, the employees association and one Russ Wright filed suit in Ingham Circuit Court on behalf of all other state employees age sixty-one or older who were similarly situated, alleging, among other things, that the modified insurance plan violated the adea. Defendant Civil Service Commission counterclaimed that, if it was liable to the employees association, the employees association, in turn, should be liable to it because members of the association participated in developing the modified plan. The circuit court thereafter confirmed the class. Approximately 1,100 potential class members responded to the notice. The following years saw the wheat separated from the chaff until the list of class members ultimately was winnowed down to a mere 146.

On April 2, 1985, the Ingham Circuit Court ruled that it did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to hear the case, but transferred the case to the Court of Claims under MCR 2.227 to be heard by the same judge who had been hearing it as a circuit judge.

On September 25, 1985, following a bench trial on the liability issue, the court found that the insurance modification plan violated the adea and dismissed the Civil Service Commission’s counterclaim. In its order of October 23, 1985, the court provided that members of the class could collect both compensatory and liquidated damages if they could prove them.

Trial as to damages continued. By order dated October 22, 1986, the court held that the proper measure of damages for employees who had purchased replacement insurance would be the premi[237]*237ums paid for such insurance. Damages for the beneficiaries of employees who had died without purchasing replacement insurance would be the premiums not paid by defendant commission as a result of the modification. On January 7, 1987, the court awarded $2,227.66 in compensatory and liquidated damages to nineteen class members, but entered a judgment against the remaining 127 members.

On January 27, 1987, the commission appealed the judgments entered January 7, 1987, and October 23, 1985, and orders confirming the class and transferring the case to the Court of Claims.

On January 29, 1987, the employees association moved to amend the judgment, for partial relief from the judgment, and for costs. On February 6, 1987, the association asked for attorney fees. By order dated March 6, 1987, the court granted the motions to amend judgment and for attorney fees, but denied the motions for costs and for partial relief from the judgment. The commission also appeals from this order. The association cross-appeals from the order of January 7, 1987, and the order of March 6, 1987, denying its motion for partial relief from judgment, challenging the measure of damages.

On appeal, the parties raise several issues. First, did the circuit court err in holding that the Court of Claims had subject-matter jurisdiction? We hold that it did not.

MCL 600.6419; MSA 27A.6419 sets forth the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims, and provides in pertinent part:

Except as provided in sections 6419a and 6440, the jurisdiction of the court of claims, as conferred upon it by this chapter, shall be exclusive. The state administrative board is hereby vested with [238]*238discretionary authority upon the advice of the attorney general, to hear, consider, determine, and allow any claim against the state in an amount less than $1,000.00. Any claim so allowed by the state administrative board shall be paid in the same manner as judgments are paid under section 6458 upon certification of the allowed claim by the secretary of the state administrative board to the clerk of the court of claims. The court has power and jurisdiction:
(a) To hear and determine all claims and demands, liquidated and unliquidated, ex contractu and ex delicto, against the state and any of its departments, commissions, boards, institutions, arms, or agencies.

However, this jurisdiction does not extend to claims for which an adequate remedy exists in federal court. See MCL 600.6440; MSA 27A.6440.

Here, a remedy did not exist in federal court. Although Congress can abrogate a state’s Eleventh Amendment right to immunity from suit in federal court, it can do so only by making its intention "unmistakably clear” in the language of the statute. See Welch v State Dep’t of Highways & Public Transportation, 483 US —; 107 S Ct 2941; 97 L Ed 2d 389, 397-398 (1987), and Atascadero State Hospital v Scanlon,

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Bluebook (online)
177 Mich. App. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-state-employees-assn-v-civil-service-commission-michctapp-1989.