St. Ex Rel. Teach. Assts. v. Wis.-Madison Univ.

292 N.W.2d 657, 96 Wis. 2d 492
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedApril 15, 1980
Docket78-628
StatusPublished

This text of 292 N.W.2d 657 (St. Ex Rel. Teach. Assts. v. Wis.-Madison Univ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Ex Rel. Teach. Assts. v. Wis.-Madison Univ., 292 N.W.2d 657, 96 Wis. 2d 492 (Wis. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

96 Wis.2d 492 (1980)
292 N.W.2d 657

STATE EX REL. TEACHING ASSISTANTS ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
The UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON and Glen Pound, as Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Defendants-Appellants.[†]

No. 78-628.

Court of Appeals of Wisconsin.

Argued May 3, 1979.
Decided April 15, 1980.

*493 For the defendants-appellants there were briefs by Bronson C. La Follette, attorney general, Charles D. Hoornstra, assistant attorney general, and David C. Rice, assistant attorney general, and oral argument by Charles D. Hoornstra, assistant attorney general.

For the plaintiff-respondent there was a brief by John S. Williamson, Jr., and Habush, Gillick, Habush, Davis *494 & Murphy, S.C., of Milwaukee, and oral argument by John S. Williamson, Jr.

Before Gartzke, P.J., Bablitch, J. and Dykman, J.

BABLITCH, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and order of the circuit court for Dane County entered pursuant to the Wisconsin Arbitration Act, ch. 298, Stats., confirming in all respects an arbitration award in favor of the plaintiff Teaching Assistants Association (TAA). The award orders the defendants-appellants (hereafter referred to as "university") to bargain collectively with the TAA as the exclusive representative of all teaching assistants employed by the University of Wisconsin-Madison on the subject of wages, among other subjects; to cease and desist from certain practices which the arbitrator found to be in violation of labor agreements between the parties; and to make whole all teaching assistants who incurred financial losses as a result of the university's failure to implement during the 1977-78 school year an across-the-board, seven percent pay increase for teaching assistants in conformity with its practice in prior years.

On appeal the university raises eleven separate issues and many subissues, most of which concern the legal power of the university to enter into collective bargaining agreements with unclassified state employees and agreements with respect to wages absent express statutory authority. Despite the importance of these issues, we are compelled to conclude that this case must be reversed for two interrelated threshold reasons which preclude this court from reaching the merits of the dispute.

Even if the university has the power to enter a collective bargaining agreement with the TAA, and even if the agreements involved in this suit could be construed as requiring the university to bargain the issue of wages, courts do not have unlimited power to enforce such agreements. Courts can act only within the scope of the *495 powers conferred upon them by statutes and the constitution of this state, and can exercise those powers only when they have been properly invoked. This case presents a unique test of those powers.

This is a lawsuit by unclassified state employees seeking the protection of the Wisconsin Arbitration Act against a state agency, the university. The legislature has expressly withheld the protection of the Wisconsin Arbitration Act from unclassified state employees. Other statutes permitting lawsuits against the state under certain conditions were not invoked, and the conditions which are prerequisite to the court's power to act under those statutes were not complied with. Courts therefore do not have the power to consider the contentions of either the TAA or the university in this action.

The Issues

In our view the dispositive issues on appeal are: (1) whether the circuit court had jurisdiction under ch. 298, Stats., or at common law to decide the merits of this lawsuit, and (2) whether the action is barred in any event by art. IV, sec. 27 of the Wisconsin Constitution, which embodies the doctrine of the state's sovereign immunity from suit without the legislature's express permission.

The TAA has not responded to the university's contention that the circuit court had no power to act under ch. 298, Stats. Both parties address the difficult issue of sovereign immunity in a single paragraph of their briefs on this appeal, with but a single case citation each.

Courts are required by law to observe the limits of their powers and to inquire into their jurisdiction over an action, even if neither party raises the question.[1] Because we conclude that the courts are without jurisdiction *496 over this action, we may not address the many other issues raised on appeal.

Factual Background

In April 1969, the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the TAA entered into a "structure agreement" pursuant to which the TAA was recognized as the exclusive bargaining representative for all teaching assistants at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The agreement provided that the collective bargaining relationship between the parties would be governed by secs. 111.80 to 111.94, Stats. (1969), which then comprised the entire State Employment Labor Relations Act (SELRA) regulating the employment relationship between classified state employees and the state.[2] Since teaching assistants are unclassified state employees, they were not and are not presently covered by SELRA. Sec. 111.81 (15).

Section 111.91, Stats. (1969),[3] excluded wages, as a mandatory subject of collective bargaining for state employees.[4]*497 The structure agreement provided that "stipends and such other elements of Teaching Assistant remuneration as are established at an all university or legislative level cannot be susceptible to collective bargaining culminating in a legally binding agreement," and excluded those subjects from collective bargaining between the parties. It further provided that the parties would "meet and discuss" such subjects in an effort to arrive at a joint recommendation to be submitted to the appropriate decision-making bodies, and that both were free to "submit their own independent recommendations" concerning the same in the event no agreement could be reached. The parties agreed that in all other respects the collective bargaining relationship between them would be governed by SELRA, and that disputes concerning the interpretation of sec. 111.91, "as applied to the peculiar relationship between the TAA and the University," were to be submitted to binding arbitration.[5] The Board of Regents approved this structure agreement in April 1970.

*498 Pursuant to the structure agreement, the parties negotiated collective bargaining agreements covering various conditions of employment in the years following 1969. The 1976-77 agreement[6] provided in part:

There shall be two classifications of teaching assistants based on seniority:

(a) an inexperienced teaching assistant
(b) experienced teaching assistant

An inexperienced teaching assistant shall be a teaching assistant with less than one and two-thirds (12/3) semester-units of seniority.

The agreement further provided that experienced teaching assistants "shall be remunerated at the `experienced teaching assistant' pay scale set by the Regents of the University of Wisconsin," and established a system for calculating a teaching assistant's movement from the inexperienced to the experienced pay category.[7]

On May 28, 1976, the parties executed an addendum to the structure agreement to provide a machinery for

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Bluebook (online)
292 N.W.2d 657, 96 Wis. 2d 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-ex-rel-teach-assts-v-wis-madison-univ-wisctapp-1980.