Wetovick v. County of Nance

782 N.W.2d 298, 279 Neb. 773
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 2010
DocketS-08-1302
StatusPublished
Cited by173 cases

This text of 782 N.W.2d 298 (Wetovick v. County of Nance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wetovick v. County of Nance, 782 N.W.2d 298, 279 Neb. 773 (Neb. 2010).

Opinion

782 N.W.2d 298 (2010)
279 Neb. 773

Rodney M. WETOVICK, Nance County Attorney, appellee and cross-appellant,
v.
The COUNTY OF NANCE, a body politic and corporate, et al., appellants and cross-appellees.

No. S-08-1302.

Supreme Court of Nebraska.

April 29, 2010.

*304 George E. Martin III and Aimee C. Bataillon, Omaha, of Spencer, Fane, Britt & Browne, L.L.P., for appellants.

Mark M. Sipple, Columbus, of Sipple, Hansen, Emerson & Schumacher, for appellee.

Rodney M. Wetovick, Nance County Attorney, pro se.

HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, GERRARD, STEPHAN, McCORMACK, and MILLER-LERMAN, JJ.

CONNOLLY, J.

SUMMARY

The appellee, Rodney M. Wetovick, the Nance County Attorney, submitted a budget with a salary request for a full-time secretary. The appellant Nance County Board of Supervisors (Board) refused to approve Wetovick's budget and instead voted to require Wetovick to employ part-time secretaries. Wetovick sued Nance County, the Board, and its members, seeking a declaratory judgment that his salary determination was reasonable and that the Board's disapproval of his decision was unreasonable. For simplicity, we will refer only to the Board.

After a bench trial, the court found that Wetovick's request was reasonable and that the Board had unreasonably required him to have part-time secretaries. It ordered the Board to approve Wetovick's budget request for a full-time secretary.

The issue is not whether a county board can cut an officeholder's budget. It can. The issue is whether a county board can dictate the terms of employment for an officer's employee absent proof that the officer's terms are unreasonable. It can't. We conclude that under Neb.Rev.Stat. § 23-1111 (Reissue 2007), the Board lacked authority to disapprove Wetovick's reasonable salary request absent a finding that the request was arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable.

BACKGROUND

Wetovick was elected Nance County Attorney in November 2006. Before taking office in January 2007, he informally surveyed other county attorneys in the area to determine the staffing requirements and the reasonable compensation for legal secretaries. He concluded that he would need a full-time legal secretary and that reasonable compensation was $24,000.

On January 4, 2007, after conducting interviews for secretaries, Wetovick hired Cyndy Pilakowski. Pilakowski's salary was $24,000 on an annualized basis, or $12,000 through June 30, 2007, which was the end of the county's 2006-07 fiscal year. Pilakowski was already a county employee and was covered under the county's health insurance policy.

Wetovick believed that under § 23-1111 and the Board's personnel policy manual, he had authority to hire a secretary and set the position's salary and working conditions. *305 The manual provided that each county official had hiring authority and the duty to inform new employees of their salary, benefits, and working conditions. He also determined that the remaining funds in the county budget for his office were inadequate to pay a secretary. So he spoke to the Board about adjusting his budget for the remainder of the fiscal year. The Board agreed and paid Pilakowski's salary from January to June 2007. The board did not complain about his hiring choice or Pilakowski's performance.

Earlier, in 2003, the county had stopped offering new employees secondary health insurance for family members because of rising health insurance costs. After the change, new employees could obtain only single coverage for themselves. But because Pilakowski was a county employee before the change, she carried family coverage when she started working for Wetovick in January 2007.

In April 2007, the Board asked Pilakowski to accept a monthly incentive payment to drop her health insurance coverage because her husband carried insurance. To save money, the county paid employees a $200 monthly incentive if they dropped their single coverage insurance and a $400 monthly incentive if they dropped their family coverage. Pilakowski agreed to drop her family coverage. The county, however, treated her as a new employee and paid her only a $200 monthly incentive for dropping her coverage. But Pilakowski filed a successful grievance, and the county paid her the $400 monthly incentive for dropping family coverage. This dispute occurred before Wetovick submitted his 2007-08 budget in June 2007.

Also in the spring of 2007, the Board paid for a comparability study of other county attorneys' budgets and services. The study concluded that Nance County had twice the average number of felony cases as the other counties surveyed and significantly more open child support cases. But it also concluded that the budget for the Nance County Attorney's office was much lower than in other counties. This study was presented to the Board in May 2007.

The 2007-08 fiscal year began on July 1, 2007. In his June budget, Wetovick estimated $24,720 for his secretary's annual salary, which presented a 3-percent cost-of-living raise. In response, the Board proposed to budget him $6,120 for a fulltime secretary during the first 3 months of the fiscal year—July, August, and September. This amount represented 3 months' salary at the agreed-upon annual salary of $24,720. For the remaining 9 months of the fiscal year, the Board proposed to budget Wetovick $15,000 for part-time secretaries.

The Board's proposed budget of $15,000 for 9 months represented an annual budget of $20,000 for part-time secretaries, or a reduction of $4,720 from Wetovick's submitted estimate for his full-time secretary's annual salary. The Board's chairperson testified that for the last 9 months of the fiscal year, Pilakowski would have earned $18,600, instead of the $15,000 the Board budgeted Wetovick's office. Also, the Board concluded that Pilakowski would no longer be eligible for insurance after September 2007. So under its requirement of part-time secretaries, the Board would avoid paying Pilakowski monthly incentives for dropping her insurance. Avoiding these payments would reduce the county's costs by $3,600 for the last 9 months of the 2007-08 fiscal year. But the Board's chairperson agreed that Wetovick's estimated budget with a full-time secretary and the Board's proposed budget with part-time secretaries were about $7,700 to $8,900 apart. The range apparently *306 represented the cost savings for 9 months compared with a full year.

In September 2007, Wetovick appeared at the Board's budget hearing. The Board reiterated its position that he should employ only part-time secretaries to avoid paying benefits. Wetovick told the Board that his office was already short of the hours required under the county's contract with the State to perform child support enforcement. He stated that he did not believe he could meet his obligation with part-time employees. He explained to the Board that he needed to avoid turnover in his office because the State's computerized child support system had an extensive learning curve. The Board formally adopted its proposed revision of Wetovick's budget to reduce his budget for clerical staff from full-time to part-time.

After October 1, 2007, at Wetovick's request, his secretary continued working for him full time at a reduced salary and without her monthly incentive payments. In November, Wetovick sued the Board.

WETOVICK'S COMPLAINT

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Boone River, LLC v. Miles
318 Neb. 760 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2025)
Becher v. Becher
970 N.W.2d 472 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2022)
SID No. 67 v. State
309 Neb. 600 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2021)
Hawley v. Skradski
304 Neb. 488 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2019)
In re Application No. OP-0003 -- (TransCanada)
303 Neb. 872 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2019)
Weyh v. Gottsch
303 Neb. 280 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2019)
Dean D. v. Rachel S.
26 Neb. Ct. App. 678 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2018)
Jordan v. LSF8 Master Participation Trust
300 Neb. 523 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2018)
White v. White
296 Neb. 772 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2017)
Jeffery Lake Dev. v. Central Neb. Pub. Power
Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2016
Cohrs v. Bruns
Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2016
Troy v. RFD-TV The Theater, LLC
498 S.W.3d 550 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2016)
Cain v. Custer Cty. Bd. of Equal.
291 Neb. 730 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2015)
State v. Casterline
290 Neb. 985 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2015)
State ex rel. Loontjer v. Gale
288 Neb. 973 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2014)
Vlach v. Vlach
835 N.W.2d 72 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2013)
Muzzey v. Ragone
831 N.W.2d 38 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
782 N.W.2d 298, 279 Neb. 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetovick-v-county-of-nance-neb-2010.