PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE LODGE
NO. 89; INTERNATIONAL FIRE
FIGHTERS ASSOCIATION, Prince
George’s County Local 1619, Inc.;
DEPUTY SHERIFF’S ASSOCIATION,
Prince George’s County; PRINCE
GEORGE’S COUNTY CORRECTIONAL
OFFICERS ASSOCIATION, INC.; POLICE
CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION;
ISMAEL V. CANALES; DOUGLAS
BARTHOLOMEW; ROBERT A. CEASE;
CURTIS KNOWLES; ARTHUR C.
EMERY; MARYLAND PUBLIC
EMPLOYEES COUNCIL 67, a/w No. 09-2187
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,
COUNTY AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES,
AFL-CIO; AMERICAN
FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY AND
MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO,
Local 241; AMERICAN
FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY AND
MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO,
Local 1170; AMERICAN
FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY AND
MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO,
Local 2462;
2 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,
COUNTY AND MUNICIPAL
EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, Local 3389;
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,
AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, AFL-
CIO, Local 2735,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY,
MARYLAND,
Defendant-Appellant.
INTERNATIONAL MUNICIPAL LAWYERS
ASSOCIATION,
Amicus Supporting Appellant,
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF
LABOR AND CONGRESS OF
INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS,
Amicus Supporting Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Alexander Williams, Jr., District Judge.
(8:08-cv-02455-AW)
Argued: May 13, 2010
Decided: June 23, 2010
Before KING and DAVIS, Circuit Judges, and C. Arlen
BEAM, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 3
Reversed by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opin-
ion, in which Judge Davis and Senior Judge Beam joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: William Walter Wilkins, NEXSEN PRUET,
Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant. Bruce R. Lerner,
BREDHOFF & KAISER, PLLC, Washington, D.C., for
Appellees. ON BRIEF: Kirsten Small, NEXSEN PRUET,
Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant. Joel A. Smith, Dar-
ragh L. Inman, KAHN, SMITH & COLLINS, P.A., Balti-
more, Maryland, for AFSCME Appellees; Andrew D. Roth,
Jason Peckenpaugh, Laurence Gold, BREDHOFF & KAI-
SER, PLLC, Washington, D.C., for Public-Safety Appellees.
Charles W. Thompson, Jr., Devala A. Janardan, INTERNA-
TIONAL MUNICIPAL LAWYERS ASSOCIATION,
Bethesda, Maryland, for Amicus Supporting Appellant. Lynn
Rhinehart, James B. Coppess, AFL-CIO, Washington, D.C.,
for Amicus Supporting Appellees.
OPINION
KING, Circuit Judge:
The appellees — several labor unions as well as individuals
represented by those unions (collectively, the "Unions") —
initiated this declaratory and injunctive proceeding against
appellant Prince George’s County, Maryland (the "County").
Their three-count complaint alleges, on behalf of County
employees covered by collective bargaining agreements (the
"CBAs"), that an employee furlough plan implemented by the
County in September 2008 contravened County law and the
Contract Clause of the Constitution. The district court rejected
the two county-law claims, but agreed with the contention in
the complaint’s third count, namely, that the furlough plan
4 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
contravened the Contract Clause. See Fraternal Order of
Police v. Prince George’s County, Md., 645 F. Supp. 2d 492
(D. Md. 2009) [hereinafter "Opinion"]. The County has
appealed and, as explained below, we reverse.
I.
A.
Pursuant to its charter, the County must have a balanced
fiscal year budget, meaning that its expenditures must not out-
pace its revenues. The County’s ability to quickly increase
revenues is inherently limited, however, because the charter
specifies both that property tax rates cannot be increased
above the 1979 rate and that a tax increase or levy can only
be submitted for voter approval in a congressional election
year. By 2008, a severe downturn in the local housing market,
mimicking the national downturn, had adversely impacted the
County’s finances. Thus, during the budget process for fiscal
year 2009 ("FY 2009"), the County projected a serious reve-
nue shortfall. In June 2008, for example, the County projected
a deficit of $48 million for FY 2009.
In response to its anticipated revenue shortfall, the County
considered and adopted several measures to cut its FY 2009
expenditures. Of importance here, the County sought to cur-
tail the compensation costs of County employees, implicating
the Unions’ interests. In addition to specifying the hours and
wages of the union-represented employees, the CBAs grant
annual cost-of-living adjustments to them.1 On June 26, 2008,
County officials met with the Unions’ representatives and
requested that the unionized employees forfeit their cost-of-
living adjustments for FY 2009. The Unions rejected the
1
The relevant CBAs were apparently never submitted to the district
court in this proceeding, and thus are not part of the record nor included
in the Joint Appendix. Nevertheless, the parties do not dispute the relevant
terms of the CBAs.
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 5
County’s request, however, primarily because they believed
that less drastic alternatives were available. More specifically,
the County maintained at least two reserve funds containing
tens of millions of dollars, and the Unions argued that the
County could use these funds to balance the FY 2009 budget.
In September 2008, the County again revised its revenue
forecast to reflect data from the first two months of FY 2009.
Those revisions predicted that the annual deficit would actu-
ally be $57 million — $9 million more than had been forecast
in June. After making other budget cuts, the County sought to
identify more than $20 million in additional cuts so that it
could balance the FY 2009 budget without dipping into its
reserve funds. On September 15, 2008, the County’s represen-
tatives once again met with the Unions, explaining that the
County had decided to implement an employee furlough plan.
On September 16, 2008, the County Council adopted
County Resolution 81-2008, which formally implemented the
relevant employee furlough plan. The furlough plan required
approximately 5,900 employees to forego 80 scheduled work
hours in FY 2009 (two full work weeks), representing a
3.85% annual pay reduction for such employees and saving
the County approximately $20 million in compensation costs.
As authority for the furlough plan, the County relied on sec-
tion 16-229 of the County’s Personnel Law, which authorizes
the County to furlough certain employees when the County
Executive "determines that an ascertained shortfall in revenue
based upon available projections, during any fiscal year[,]
requires the compensation level of a department, agency, or
office to be reduced." P.G. County Code § 16-229(a)(1).
B.
Two days later, on September 18, 2008, the Unions filed
this lawsuit in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County,
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to the
furlough plan. The complaint alleged three claims against the
6 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
County: (1) that the furlough plan contravened section 16-
233(e) of the County’s Personnel Law, which authorizes a rat-
ified CBA to override any contrary provision of the Personnel
Law (Count One); (2) that the furlough plan did not abide by
the furlough authorization provision found in section 16-229
of the Personnel Law (Count Two); and (3) that the furlough
plan contravened the Contract Clause of the Constitution
(Count Three). On September 19, 2008, the County removed
the lawsuit to the District of Maryland.
Following limited discovery, the parties filed cross-motions
for summary judgment. By its decision of August 18, 2009,
the district court awarded summary judgment to the County
on the county-law claims in Counts One and Two, but granted
summary judgment to the Unions on the Contract Clause
claim in Count Three.2
In its decision, the district court first rejected Count One,
the Unions’ claim under section 16-233(e) of the Personnel
Law.3 More particularly, the court agreed with the County that
nothing in the relevant CBAs prohibited the County from fur-
loughing covered employees. See Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d at
504; see also Prince George’s County v. Fraternal Order of
Police, Prince George’s County, Lodge 89, 914 A.2d 199,
210 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2007) (observing that section 16-
233(e) authorizes specific CBA provisions to override general
Personnel Law provisions). In so ruling, the court relied on
the parties’ bargaining history, observing that between 1991
2
Because the Unions did not cross-appeal from the district court’s judg-
ment on the Personnel Law claims in Counts One and Two, those claims
are not specifically before us in this appeal. Nevertheless, the court’s
assessment of those claims is relevant to a proper evaluation of the claim
in Count Three.
3
Section 16-233(e) provides that "[u]pon adoption [of a CBA] by the
County Council, any provision in the applicable agreement contrary to the
provisions of this Subtitle shall have the effect of amending any such pro-
vision and enacting the provision into law applicable to that collective bar-
gaining agreement." P.G. County Code § 16-233(e).
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 7
and 1995, the CBAs specifically prohibited furloughs. See
Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d at 505. Thereafter, however, such
a "provision no longer appeared in any of the CBAs, render-
ing the CBAs silent on the issue of furloughs." Id. Accord-
ingly, the Unions could not "argue that they bargained for an
exemption from furloughs." Id. In short, because the CBAs
lacked any provision that could be read as specifically over-
riding section 16-229’s general authorization of furloughs, the
court awarded summary judgment to the County on Count
One.
Second, the district court rejected Count Two, the Unions’
claim that the County’s furlough plan contravened section 16-
229. See Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d at 505. The Unions alleged
that the furlough plan was impermissible because it was not
actually "required," particularly in light of the reserve funds
available to the County. In this respect, the County main-
tained that section 16-229 vests the County Executive with
the discretion to decide whether such a furlough plan is "re-
quired" by the circumstances. The court agreed with the posi-
tion of the County, concluding that the Personnel Law
unambiguously provided the County Executive with a broad
grant of discretion to determine whether and when a furlough
was "required." See id. at 507-08 ("[A]bsent a showing of bad
faith or unreasonableness, the County executive has full
authority under Section 16-229 to determine what is
‘required.’"). Accordingly, the court awarded summary judg-
ment to the County on Count Two.
Finally, however, the district court awarded summary judg-
ment to the Unions on the Contract Clause claim of Count
Three. See Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d at 508-18. Applying the
three-part Contract Clause analysis established by the
Supreme Court, the court ruled that (1) the furlough plan
impaired the CBAs, (2) such impairment was "substantial,"
and (3) it was not "reasonable and necessary." See id. at 509-
11. In assessing whether the CBAs had been impaired (under
prong one), the court simply explained that
8 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
[u]nder the [CBAs], covered employees were guar-
anteed certain salaries/wages and hours. By fur-
loughing employees, the County reduced these
salaries/wages and hours. The contracts were not
subject to unilateral adjustment by the County. To
find otherwise would render the contracts virtually
meaningless, because the union employees would
not be able to order their personal and business
affairs and rely upon the rights and obligations they
bargained for. Thus, the Court finds that the [fur-
lough plan] impaired the Unions’ CBAs.
Id. at 510 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The
court then concluded that the balance of the test was also sat-
isfied because such an impairment was substantial (under
prong two) and, given the County’s access to approximately
$97 million in reserve funds, the impairment was neither rea-
sonable nor necessary (under prong three). See id. at 510-17.
Accordingly, the court awarded summary judgment to the
Unions on the Contract Clause claim.
The County has timely appealed from the court’s summary
judgment award on Count Three, and we possess jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
We review de novo a district court’s award of summary
judgment, viewing the facts and inferences reasonably drawn
therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
See In re Peanut Crop Ins. Litig., 524 F.3d 458, 470 (4th Cir.
2008). Summary judgment is appropriate only if the record
shows that "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact
and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 9
III.
Notwithstanding the seemingly absolute terms of the Con-
tract Clause, the Supreme Court has long interpreted the
Clause as not uniformly prohibiting the impairment of either
government or private contracts. See U.S. Trust Co. of N.Y. v.
New Jersey, 431 U.S. 1, 21 (1977).4 Instead, the Court has
outlined a three-part test intended to balance the Contract
Clause’s protections against the states’ reserved police pow-
ers. See id. More specifically, a reviewing court must deter-
mine: (1) whether there has been an impairment of the
contract; (2) whether that impairment was substantial; and (3)
if so, whether the impairment was nonetheless a legitimate
exercise of the police power. See Balt. Teachers Union v.
Mayor & City Council of Balt., 6 F.3d 1012, 1015 (4th Cir.
1993). Under the third prong — stated alternatively as
whether the impairment was "reasonable and necessary to
serve an important public purpose" — a state’s impairment of
its own contracts is subject to greater scrutiny than its impair-
ment of private contracts. See U.S. Trust, 431 U.S. at 25-26.
On appeal, the County maintains, first of all, that the fur-
lough plan did not impair the County’s contractual obliga-
tions, and, in the alternative, that any impairment of the CBAs
was reasonable and necessary under the circumstances. The
Unions, on the other hand, maintain that the County has aban-
doned any contention that the CBAs were not impaired. The
Unions also maintain that the CBAs were in fact impaired,
and, alternatively, that if the County actually reserved the
right to implement furloughs, such a reservation would itself
contravene the Contract Clause.
As explained below, we agree with the County that it has
preserved its contention that the CBAs were not impaired. We
4
The Contract Clause provides that "[n]o State shall . . . pass any . . .
Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts . . . ." U.S. Const. art. I, § 10,
cl. 1.
10 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
further agree with the County that the furlough plan did not
impair the CBAs because, as a matter of County law, the Per-
sonnel Law’s authorization for furloughs — specifically, sec-
tion 16-229 — is part of the CBAs. Finally, we reject the
Unions’ assertion that the reservation of rights contained in
section 16-229 contravenes the Contract Clause.
A.
As a threshold matter, the Unions contend that the County
has abandoned any contention that the CBAs were not
impaired for purposes of the Contract Clause. The Unions
concede that the County advanced that contention in its sum-
mary judgment papers in the district court, but assert that the
County’s lawyer abandoned it in an exchange with the district
court during argument on the summary judgment motions.
The exchange relied upon is as follows:
COUNSEL: I would submit to the court that
the furlough plan must be ana-
lyzed under the contract clause
analysis as to whether, if it is an
impairment, whether under the
facts it was reasonable and neces-
sary for a public purpose.
THE COURT: Well, let’s get that out the way
right now. There was an impair-
ment. Now, all the cases say that.
Now, let’s understand that.
COUNSEL: Yes.
THE COURT: So, we’re not going to debate
that. There’s a significant impair-
ment here —
COUNSEL: Correct.
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 11
THE COURT: — of this contract. So, that’s not
a dispute with me. So, the issue,
again, is what’s required, what’s
necessary and so forth. That’s
what we’re talking about.
COUNSEL: Correct.
THE COURT: All right.
COUNSEL: Your Honor, to explain the coun-
ty’s advancement of the argu-
ment it was an impairment, only
because we overlapped the argu-
ment with the code that we were
authorized to do it.
J.A. 100-01.5 Shortly thereafter, however, the County’s law-
yer returned to the County’s basic position — that the CBAs
were not impaired because they did not preclude furloughs.
Specifically, the County’s lawyer stated that
I understand the court’s rationale, how it applies.
The difference is 16-233(e), when they talk about a
contract provision that supersedes, it is correct. . . .
The reality is 16-233(e) is limited to the provisions
that are included in the CBA. Furlough provisions
were not. And as the court rightly acknowledged ear-
lier, in the 1990’s the furlough protections were in
the CBAs. It stopped and then from 1995 to the pres-
ent, it is not.
Id. at 104-05.
5
Citations herein to "J.A. __" refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the
parties in this appeal.
12 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
Put simply, we must reject the Unions’ assertion that this
exchange manifested the County’s abandonment of its conten-
tion that the CBAs were not impaired. Instead, the County’s
lawyer appears to have recognized the district court’s differ-
ing viewpoint and its suggestion that the argument focus on
another issue.6 Under the Unions’ position, the County’s attor-
ney could have preserved its impairment contention only by
continuing to argue with the court after it had already force-
fully rejected the County’s position. Although a lawyer’s
statements may constitute a binding admission of a party, any
such statement must be "deliberate, clear, and unambiguous"
before we will afford it preclusive effect. Meyer v. Berkshire
Life Ins. Co., 372 F.3d 261, 265 n.2 (4th Cir. 2004) (alteration
and internal quotation marks omitted). In this instance, the
County attorney’s representations at oral argument do not,
when assessed in context, demonstrate the deliberate, clear,
and unambiguous abandonment of the contention that the
CBAs were not impaired by the furlough plan.7 Accordingly,
we are satisfied that the County adequately preserved that
contention below.
6
The Unions seek to bolster their abandonment contention by emphasiz-
ing that the County did not raise the issue of contract impairment in its
supplemental brief after the argument (and after limited discovery). The
County’s submission, however, was merely a supplement to its original
brief, which squarely raised the impairment contention. Supplemental
briefing was only authorized so that the parties could update their conten-
tions following discovery and the legal contention of whether there was
a contract impairment was not affected by the discovery proceedings.
7
Notably, even if the County’s lawyer had admitted that the CBAs were
somehow impaired by the furlough plan, it is far from clear that such an
admission would have bound the district court in assessing the Contract
Clause claim. See New Amsterdam Cas. Co. v. Waller, 323 F.2d 20, 24
(4th Cir. 1963) ("When counsel speaks of legal principles, as he conceives
them and which he thinks applicable, he makes no judicial admission and
sets up no estoppel which would prevent the court from applying to the
facts disclosed by the proof, the proper legal principles as the Court under-
stands them.").
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 13
B.
Turning to the merits of the Contract Clause claim of Count
Three, the district court erred in ruling, under the first prong
of the constitutional test, that the CBAs were impaired. Pursu-
ant to the terms of the County’s Personnel Law, each provi-
sion thereof — including the authorization for furloughs
contained in section 16-229 — must be read into the CBAs.
The Unions maintain that section 16-229 "does not clearly
manifest an intent on the County’s part to reserve to itself
such a unilateral contract modification power." Br. of Appel-
lees 21. Such a construction of section 16-229, however, is
foreclosed by the Personnel Law’s plain terms, which the dis-
trict court recognized when it awarded summary judgment to
the County on the two Personnel Law claims of Counts One
and Two.
1.
The County’s Personnel Law is found in Subtitle 16 of the
County Code. Section 16-103 provides that
the provisions of this Subtitle shall apply to any
employee occupying a position in the classified ser-
vice where said employee is governed by a collective
bargaining agreement . . . , except as specifically
provided otherwise under the provisions of Section
16-233.
P.G. County Code § 16-103(a)(3) (emphasis added). Section
16-233, in turn, refers specifically to this principle, stating
that "the provisions of this Subtitle shall apply to any
employee who is governed by a collective bargaining agree-
ment . . . , except as specifically provided otherwise in such
collective bargaining agreements." Id. § 16-233(a) (emphasis
added); see also id. § 16-233(b) ("[T]he provisions of this
Subtitle shall be presumed to be Countywide in nature . . . .").
14 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
Indeed, section 16-233(e) creates the only exception to the
principle that the Personnel Law is read into every CBA:
Upon adoption of [a CBA] by the County Council,
any provision in the applicable agreement contrary
to the provisions of this Subtitle shall have the effect
of amending any such provision and enacting the
provision into law applicable to that collective bar-
gaining unit.
Id. § 16-233(e).
The furlough provision in section 16-229, which is part of
Subtitle 16, provides that "[e]mployees occupying full or part-
time positions in either the classified or exempt service . . .
may be required to take leave without pay as a furlough." P.G.
County Code § 16-229(a). That provision further specifies
that furloughs may be implemented, inter alia, "[w]here the
County Executive determines that an ascertained shortfall in
revenue, based upon available projections, during any fiscal
year[,] requires the compensation level of a department,
agency, or office to be reduced." Id. § 16-229(a)(1). When the
County Executive makes such a determination, he must trans-
mit to the County Council a furlough plan in resolution form.
See id. § 16-229(b).
It is a cardinal principle of contract interpretation that the
parties are presumed to contract against the backdrop of rele-
vant law; thus, "all applicable or relevant laws must be read
into the agreement of the parties just as if expressly provided
by them, except where a contrary intention is evident." Lema
v. Bank of Am., N.A., 826 A.2d 504, 516 (Md. 2003) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Here, that paramount principle has
been accorded added force by section 16-103(a)(3), which
mandates that every provision of the Personnel Law —
including the furlough provision — apply to the County
employees governed by the CBAs. Thus, in light of the fore-
going provisions of the County’s Personnel Law, the CBAs
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 15
necessarily included as a term thereof the possibility of
employee furloughs.
In seeking to avoid this conclusion as to Count Three, the
Unions offer an interpretation of the CBAs that is expressly
foreclosed by the district court’s unappealed rulings on
Counts One and Two. See Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d at 503-
08. In short, the Unions assert that section 16-229 says "noth-
ing about the unilateral abrogation or modification of con-
tracts that prohibit furloughs." Br. of Appellees 28 (emphasis
added). The Unions are unable, however, to identify any pro-
vision of the applicable CBAs that actually prohibits fur-
loughs. If they had made such an identification, the Unions
would have been entitled to summary judgment on Count
One, as section 16-233(e) of the Personnel Law authorizes
such a CBA provision to override the general authority for
furloughs contained in section 16-229. Nevertheless, the court
awarded summary judgment to the County on Count One,
precisely because the applicable CBAs do not prohibit fur-
loughs. Indeed, although previous CBAs expressly barred fur-
loughs, they no longer do so. See Opinion, 645 F. Supp. 2d
at 505. Thus, even though the CBAs guarantee certain wages
and hours, those guarantees are subject to a significant caveat:
the County may yet implement furloughs pursuant to section
16-229.
The Unions seek to countermand this plain reading of the
Personnel Law by relying on our Baltimore Teachers Union
decision. See 6 F.3d at 1015-16. That decision is inapposite
here, though, because the Personnel Law applies section 16-
229’s authorization for furloughs to those employees covered
by CBAs. In Baltimore Teachers Union, the City had adopted
a furlough plan and then sought to defend a Contract Clause
claim by asserting, much like the County here, that it had
reserved the right to unilaterally modify the contracts. See id.
The City’s position was undercut, however, by the general
nature of the provision on which it relied for authority to
modify the contracts — Article VI, section 2(g) of the City
16 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
Charter. That provision provided that, where deficiencies
arose from the City’s failure to realize sufficient income, the
Board of Estimates "shall effect reductions . . . in appropria-
tions." Id. at 1016 n.3. Unsurprisingly, we recognized the
charter provision — which failed to reference contracts or
personnel practices — as far too general to "necessarily sub-
sume the power to modify contracts." Id. at 1016. Thus, we
concluded that the charter provision did "not clearly evidence
an intention to authorize such modifications." Id. at 1016.8
In this situation, however, the County does not rely on such
a general grant of authority regarding its ability to implement
furloughs. Rather, it points to a specific provision of the Per-
sonnel Law, entitled "Furloughs," and an equally specific pro-
vision of that Subtitle providing that each of the provisions
therein applies to employees covered by CBAs. The Balti-
more Teachers Union decision is thus readily distinguishable
from the circumstances presented in this appeal. Accordingly,
we reject the proposition that the furlough plan impaired the
CBAs.
2.
In the alternative, the Unions contend that, even if section
16-229’s furlough provision authorizes the County to modify
the CBAs, such a reservation of rights to the County would
itself contravene the Contract Clause. In support of this con-
tention, the Unions again rely on Baltimore Teachers Union,
this time resting on dicta found in a footnote of the majority
opinion. See 6 F.3d at 1016 n.5. In a concurring opinion,
Judge Widener had maintained that another provision of the
8
Further distinguishing Baltimore Teachers Union from this case, it was
questionable there whether the City’s furlough plan was even consistent
with the budget reduction procedures required by section 2(g) of the City
Charter. See 6 F.3d at 1016 n.4. By contrast, there is no suggestion of
irregularity with respect to the process by which this furlough was imple-
mented.
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 17
City law, the Neall Amendment, permitted the City to unilat-
erally modify the CBAs in question. See id. at 1024 (Widener,
J., concurring). The Neall Amendment was stated as broadly
as the City Charter, authorizing the City to "take any action
necessary, including any action to reduce a previously
approved appropriation." Id. The panel majority reasoned
that, even if the Neall Amendment could be read to authorize
furloughs (a proposition rejected by the majority), (1) there
would have been such a failure of mutual obligation that it
would be "doubtful" whether any contract existed and (2) "the
Amendment, so read, would almost certainly violate the Con-
tract Clause itself." Id. at 1016 n.5 (emphasis added).
The latter point — mere unsupported dicta — cannot be
read to invalidate the much narrower authorization for fur-
loughs found in section 16-229 of the Personnel Law. As an
initial matter, the hypothetical countered by the Baltimore
Teacher Unions majority — the concurrence’s broad reading
of the Neall Amendment — is distinguishable from the more
circumscribed authorization for furloughs contained in section
16-229. And, assuming that such dicta is applicable here, the
constitutional analysis therein is not supported by any legal
authority. In fact, the Unions are unable to identify any
authority that has invalidated, under the Contract Clause, a
statutory provision reserving to a governmental entity a lim-
ited right to modify its own contracts. Indeed, such a rule
would contradict Supreme Court precedent concerning the
incorporation of preexisting law into contracts. See, e.g.,
Home Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. Blaisdell, 290 U.S. 398, 429-30
(1934) ("[T]he laws which subsist at the time and place of the
making of a contract . . . enter into and form a part of it, as
if they were expressly referred to or incorporated in its terms."
(internal quotation marks omitted)). Indeed, the Court has
emphasized that this "principle embraces alike those [laws]
which affect [a contract’s] validity, construction, discharge,
and enforcement." Id. at 430 (internal quotation marks omit-
ted); see also Long Island Water Supply Co. v. Brooklyn, 166
U.S. 685, 692 (1897).
18 FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY
Moreover, the Unions’ contention that such a reservation of
rights would itself contravene the Contract Clause is belied by
yet another provision of the County’s Personnel Law: section
16-233(e). In short, the Unions maintain that any reservation
of authority to the County, such as that contained in the autho-
rization for furloughs in section 16-229, would unconstitu-
tionally impair the Unions’ ability to enter into meaningful
and binding contracts. That notion is undercut, however, by
section 16-233(e), which provides that a specific CBA provi-
sion can override any generally applicable provision of the
Personnel Law. In other words, if the Unions were to enter
into CBAs with the County that specifically prohibit fur-
loughs — as they once did — then section 16-233(e) would
preclude the County from furloughing the employees covered
by those CBAs, notwithstanding section 16-229. Simply put,
the Unions were free to protect any economic or financial
expectancy with regard to wages and hours by securing the
County’s concurrence in a CBA that prohibited such fur-
loughs, just as they had previously done. In essence, there-
fore, the Unions are simply asking for the benefit of a contract
provision that was left on the bargaining table.
Nevertheless, even under the current CBAs, the Unions
were not without a legal remedy. Due to the limitations
imposed on the County Executive and the County Council by
section 16-229, the Unions were entitled to pursue a claim
under the Personnel Law that the furlough plan contravened
section 16-229. Indeed, the Unions advanced such a conten-
tion in Count Two of their complaint. In rejecting that claim,
however, the district court simply ruled that the County’s fur-
lough plan was consistent with the Personnel Law. That ruling
should also have informed the court’s assessment of whether
the CBAs were impaired for purposes of the Contract Clause.
In short, because the CBAs provided for the possibility of fur-
loughs, the court erred in its application of the first prong of
the Contract Clause test. Accordingly, we must reverse the
summary judgment award to the Unions.
FRATERNAL ORDER v. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY 19
IV.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we reverse the judgment of the
district court on Count Three.
REVERSED