University of Nevada v. State Employees Ass'n, Inc.

520 P.2d 602, 90 Nev. 105, 1974 Nev. LEXIS 326
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1974
Docket7460
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 520 P.2d 602 (University of Nevada v. State Employees Ass'n, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Nevada v. State Employees Ass'n, Inc., 520 P.2d 602, 90 Nev. 105, 1974 Nev. LEXIS 326 (Neb. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Gunderson, J.:

In this action instituted by 31 classified state civil service *107 employees and their bargaining agent, the district court permanently enjoined the University of Nevada and its Board of Regents from contracting for food service at the University’s Reno campus with anyone except classified state employees, and from laying off classified employees in order to obtain food service from anyone else. On appeal, the University and Regents contend that in the circumstances prevailing, they lawfully may terminate the existing state-managed food service, lay off its classified employees, and thenceforth obtain meals through a private contractor. Having reviewed the record, consisting of unchallenged documentary evidence and stipulations of fact, we agree.

The food service is evidently intended to be self-sustaining; the Legislature appropriates no subsidy; dormitory residents remit lump-sum fees each semester; guests and faculty pay per meal. On the University’s Las Vegas campus, food service has always been obtained through an independent contractor, without deficit. However, at Reno, the state-managed food service has for several years incurred an increasing deficit, exceeding $220,000 for fiscal 1972-73. Thus, the Regents ultimately felt constrained to consider eliminating these deficits by increasing student fees, or by organizational changes.

To study alternatives, a joint student-administration committee was created, which suggested abolishing the existing food service, and purchasing meals as in Las Vegas, from a private entity bearing the risk of profit or loss. The President of the University of Nevada, Reno, with the concurrence of the Chancellor, recommended this plan to the Board of Regents, which approved it. Accordingly, the University negotiated a contract to obtain prepared meals through a private contractor at agreed prices, relying on a state personnel law which declares that “institutions may contract for the services of persons as independent contractors.” NRS 284.173(1). Then, on May 29, 1973, the University notified food service employees at the Reno campus that effective June 30 they would be laid off, subject to civil service bumping and reemployment rights. Appellants predicated these layoffs on another personnel statute which provides that “an appointing authority may lay off an employee in the classified service whenever he deems it necessary by reason of shortage of work or funds or the abolition of a position or of other material changes in duties or organization.” NRS 284.380(1 ). 1

On June 18, respondents brought this action, contending the *108 contemplated layoffs would derogate civil service principles embodied in NRS Chapter 284 as a whole, and the district court agreed. 2 On appeal, the University and Regents urge inter alia that, as the district court applied it, NRS Chapter 284 infringes the Regents’ constitutional right and duty to “control and manage the affairs of the University and the funds of the same.” Nev. Const, art. XI, § 7; see also, art. XI, § 4; cf. King v. Board of Regents, 65 Nev. 533, 200 P.2d 221 (1948). Without reaching constitutional arguments, we reverse the district court, holding that on the facts disclosed by the record, appellants’ actions do not appear to violate either the letter or the spirit of Nevada’s merit system laws, as contained in NRS Chapter 284.

1. Respondents contend that, despite good faith and superficial conformity with NRS 284.173(1) and NRS 284.380(1), a “functional analysis” shows that appellants’ plan is tantamount to a sham abolition of established civil service positions, merely supplanting classified employees with outside personnel. In this regard, respondents rely on City of Phoenix v. Powers, 113 P.2d 353 (Ariz. 1941), and Winslow v. Bull, 275 P. 974 (Cal.App. 1929), in which civil servants were ousted by “abolishing” their positions and designating others to perform substantially the same duties under different titles. In each case, although the appointing authority claimed to have acted for reasons of economy, the court found otherwise, holding no actual abolition of the position had occurred, and intimating that the appointing authority was really merely circumventing the civil service laws. The courts ordered the original incumbents reinstated.

On their facts, these decisions appear sound. Moreover, we agree with respondents that mere good intentions, good will, or “good faith” on appellants’ part cannot justify supplanting *109 permanent civil service employees through a reorganization functionally equivalent to a sham abolition of existing positions. 3 Still, in this case, we cannot agree that appellants’ reorganization plan is functionally a mere sham abolition of existing positions.

After all, we cannot assume that the private contractor’s methods of operation will duplicate those the University has utilized. Apparently, it is expected that the contractor’s expert approach will be quite different; for merely eliminating civil service status for employees could not, of itself, correct a deficit now approaching $14 million per year. Except for requiring that students be employed as needed for certain unskilled work, the contemplated agreement affords the contractor a free choice of methods. It may select new material sources, use its own buying techniques, utilize its own inventory and accounting procedures, and provide greater or less supervision for employees different in training, function and number from those now employed. In short, the agreement does not envision that the contractor will merely supply services of substantially the same kind as those now provided by classified personnel. Instead, the contractor is to supply prepared meals, at stipulated prices, meeting its own material costs, management salaries, employees’ wages, industrial and liability insurance premiums, and other expenses.

Thus, in our view, a “functional analysis” does not establish appellants’ contemplated actions to be equivalent to a sham abolition of the existing positions.

2. We would agree, however, that even a good faith, actual abolition of classified positions may be unlawful if done *110 without a sufficient, legally cognizable reason. This point may be illustrated by contrasting the case on which respondents rely most heavily, Cunningham v. Community College District No. 3, 489 P.2d 891 (Wash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
520 P.2d 602, 90 Nev. 105, 1974 Nev. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-nevada-v-state-employees-assn-inc-nev-1974.