Patrick Morrisey, Attorney General v. WV AFL-CIO

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 2020
Docket19-0298
StatusSeparate

This text of Patrick Morrisey, Attorney General v. WV AFL-CIO (Patrick Morrisey, Attorney General v. WV AFL-CIO) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick Morrisey, Attorney General v. WV AFL-CIO, (W. Va. 2020).

Opinion

No. 19-0298 - Patrick Morrisey, West Virginia Attorney General, FILED and The State of West Virginia v. West Virginia April 21, 2020 AFL-CIO; West Virginia State Building and Construction released at 3:00 p.m. Trades Council, AFL-CIO; United Mine Workers of America, EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS AFL-CIO; Chauffeurs, Teamsters, and Helpers, Local No. 175; OF WEST VIRGINIA Amanda Gaines; and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, Locals 141, 307, 317, 466, 596, and 968.

Justice Workman, concurring and dissenting:

I reluctantly concur in the judgment of the Court, as I believe that the result in this

case is compelled by the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Janus v. American

Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council, __ U.S. __, 138 S.Ct. 2448

(2018). Given my judicial colleagues’ refusal to give more than a cursory nod to our unbroken

line of precedents permitting -- and sometimes requiring -- us to “interpret [the West Virginia]

Constitution to require higher standards of protection than afforded by comparable federal

constitutional standards,” Pauley v. Kelly, 162 W. Va. 672, 679, 255 S.E.2d 859, 864 (1979)

(internal citation omitted), 1 it is inevitable that any decision striking down the agency fee ban

contained in W. Va. Code § 21-1A-3 would last only as long as it took for the petitioners herein to

file a petition for writ of certiorari.

1 The majority concludes that the petitioners have presented “no grounds for heightened protections,” apparently finding all of petitioners’ arguments made both below and in this Court to be without constitutional substance. Additionally, the majority cavalierly discounts the application of Pauley and its progeny by emphasizing (both literally and figuratively) that provisions of our Constitution “may, in certain instances, require higher standards of protection than afforded by the Federal Constitution.” Pauley, Syl. Pt. 2, in part. Presumably, a case involving the protection of West Virginia workers’ hard-won right to engage in collective bargaining presents no such “instance.”

1 Make no mistake about it: I believe that the carefully crafted decision of the circuit

court was absolutely correct in its associational rights and takings analyses 2 – absolutely correct

at the time it was written, in a pre-Janus world. I believe that Janus was wrongly decided, and I

join wholeheartedly in the legal analysis set forth in the dissenting opinion by Justice Kagan on

behalf of herself and Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor. However, I also believe that

although Janus was a decision involving only public employees’ unions, you don’t need a

weatherman to know which way the wind blows; 3 there is no principled basis on which to conclude

that under the legal analysis upon which Janus is based, a prohibition on the collection of agency

fees is constitutional for public employees’ unions but unconstitutional for private employees’

unions. See, e.g., Zuckerman v. Bevin, 565 S.W.3d 580, 602 (Ky. 2018) (“the Supreme Court’s

analysis of the ‘free rider problem’ in its recent decision in Janus … conclusively refutes, for

several reasons, the Unions’ claim that they will be compelled to provide services without

compensation.”).

2 I am less convinced by the court’s very brief liberty interest analysis, perhaps because the jurisprudential concept of liberty interest has become a moving target in cases involving hot-button issues. At a time when naked partisan politics seem to be seeping – nay, gushing – into the fabric of the judiciary, one judge’s “liberty interest” is another judge’s “legalistic argle bargle.” U. S. v. Windsor, 570 U.S. 744, 799, 133 S.Ct. 2695, 2709 (2013) (Scalia, J., dissenting). Additionally, my reading of the petitioners’ arguments is that their constitutional underpinning is more congruent with concepts of substantive due process than with the more elusive concepts of liberty interest, see State ex rel. Harris v. Calendine, 160 W. Va. 172, 179, 233 S.E.2d 318, 324 (1977) (“Inherent in the due process clause of the State Constitution are both the concept of substantive due process and the concept of equal protection of the laws. In order for the statutory scheme ... to withstand constitutional scrutiny under the substantive due process standard, it must appear that the means chosen by the Legislature to achieve a proper legislative purpose bear a rational relationship to that purpose and are not arbitrary or discriminatory.”) (footnotes omitted). However, petitioners have not squarely addressed a substantive due process issue and “‘[w]e have noted on many occasions that “casual mention of an issue in a brief is cursory treatment insufficient to preserve the issue on appeal.’ State v. Lilly, 194 W.Va. 595, 605 n. 16, 461 S.E.2d 101, 111 n. 16 (1995).” State v. Lambert, 236 W. Va. 80, 89 n.12, 777 S.E.2d 649, 658 n.12 (2015).

3 Bob Dylan, Subterranean Homesick Blues (1965).

2 I join in Justice Hutchison’s separate opinion, wherein he writes convincingly of the

benefits of unionization in this state and this country. I am not as sanguine as he, however, that

the role of the judiciary is so limited that it can be summed up in the artfully coined phrase, “what

the Legislature gives, the Legislature can constitutionally take away.” It cannot be gainsaid that

on numerous occasions, the Legislature has been mindful of politics and careless of the

Constitution in enacting certain laws; and on those occasions, this Court has not hesitated to fulfill

its role in our tripartite system of government by invalidating such laws. The fact that I do not

believe we can invalidate W. Va. Code § 21-1A-3, due to the constraints placed on us by the

constitutional analysis contained in the Janus opinion, does not signal my willingness to have the

judicial branch of government simply “knuckle down” to the legislative branch. Our review of

legislative enactments is highly deferential, see, e.g., Syl. Pt. 1, State ex rel. Appalachian Power

Co. v. Gainer, 149 W.Va. 740, 143 S.E.2d 351 (1965); 4 however,

[t]he system of ‘checks and balances’ provided for in American state and federal constitutions and secured to each branch of government by ‘Separation of Powers' clauses theoretically and practically compels courts, when called upon, to thwart any unlawful actions of one branch of government which impair the constitutional responsibilities and functions of a coequal branch.

Louk v. Cormier, 218 W. Va. 81, 88, 622 S.E.2d 788, 795 (2005) (internal citations omitted).

4 “In considering the constitutionality of a legislative enactment, courts must exercise due restraint, in recognition of the principle of the separation of powers in government among the judicial, legislative and executive branches. Every reasonable construction must be resorted to by the courts in order to sustain constitutionality, and any reasonable doubt must be resolved in favor of the constitutionality of the legislative enactment in question. Courts are not concerned with questions relating to legislative policy. The general powers of the legislature, within constitutional limits, are almost plenary. In considering the constitutionality of an act of the legislature, the negation of legislative power must appear beyond reasonable doubt.”

3 I choose to write separately from Justice Hutchison because I do not, and cannot,

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