IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
Opinion Number: ___________
Filing Date: December 12, 2013
Docket Nos. 32,330 and 32,321 (consolidated)
NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF
WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS and
NEW MEXICO STATE PERSONNEL
OFFICE,
Respondents-Appellants,
v.
SANDRA PEREZ,
Petitioner-Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
Valerie A. Huling, District Judge
N.M. Department of Workforce Solutions
Office of General Counsel
Marshall J. Ray
Rudolph P. Arnold
Albuquerque, NM
for N.M. Department of Workforce Solutions
Morrissey * Lewis, LLC
Jason J. Lewis
Albuquerque, NM
for N.M. State Personnel Office
Youtz & Valdez, P.C.
Stephen Curtice
Shane Youtz
Albuquerque, NM
for Appellee
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OPINION
SUTIN, Judge.
{1} Terminated from her position as personnel director under New Mexico’s Personnel
Act, Sandra Perez sought unemployment compensation. The district court determined that
Ms. Perez was entitled to compensation, reversing administrative decisions to the contrary.
The crux of the issue in the proceedings and on appeal is whether the personnel director
position was designated pursuant to state law as a major nontenured advisory position. If
so, compensation was properly denied. We hold that compensation was properly denied and
reverse the district court.
BACKGROUND
{2} Whether Ms. Perez as personnel director has a right to unemployment compensation
is governed by the definition of “employment” under NMSA 1978, Section 51-1-44(A)
(1978) of New Mexico’s Unemployment Compensation Law. In relevant part, Section 51-1-
44(A)(5)(a) reads as follows:
For purposes of the Unemployment Compensation Law:
A. “employment” means service performed by an individual in
the employ of a governmental entity unless such service is performed by an
individual in the exercise of his duties:
...
(5) in a position which, under or pursuant to state law, is
designated as:
(a) a major nontenured [policymaking] or advisory
position[.]
{3} In analyzing whether Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) applies to a state personnel director,
the determinative factor is the state law that establishes the position of state personnel
director. The Personnel Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 10-9-1 to -25 (1961, as amended through
2009), establishes a “personnel board” and a “personnel director.” Section 10-9-3(A), (B);
see §§ 10-9-8 to -12. The personnel board is appointed by the governor. Section 10-9-8.
One of the duties of the personnel board is to hire, with the approval of the governor, a
personnel director. Section 10-9-10(C). The designated statutory duties of the personnel
director position are the following:
The director shall:
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A. supervise all administrative and technical personnel activities
of the state;
B. act as secretary to the board;
C. establish, maintain[,] and publish annually a roster of all
employees of the state, showing for each employee his division, title, pay
rate[,] and other pertinent data;
D. make annual reports to the board;
E. recommend to the board rules he considers necessary or
desirable to effectuate the Personnel Act; and
F. supervise all tests and prepare lists of persons passing them
to submit to prospective employers.
Section 10-9-12; see 1.7.1.8(A) NMAC (6/15/2010) (“Pursuant to the provision of . . .
Section 10-9-12(A)[,] the director shall supervise all administrative and technical personnel
activities of the state.”). The personnel director’s service is covered by the Personnel Act
unless the personnel board determines that the position of director is one of policymaking.
Sections 10-9-3(C), -4(N). Nothing in the record indicates that the personnel board has
determined that the position of director is one of policymaking, and the parties do not argue
one way or the other in that regard.
{4} The New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions (the Department) initially
denied Ms. Perez’s unemployment benefits through the administrative process. After
appealing the decisions of the Department, the Appeals Tribunal and the Board of Review
(the Board) also held against Ms. Perez. The Board adopted the Appeals Tribunal’s findings
and conclusions in reaching its decision. The pertinent findings and conclusions were as
follows.
FINDINGS OF FACT
4. [Ms. Perez] was nominated to the position of director by the (then)
governor along with two other candidates also nominated by the
governor. The State Personnel Board . . . appointed [Ms. Perez] as
director in July 2004 and her appointment was approved by the
governor.
5. [Ms. Perez’s] duties as State Personnel Director include “recommend
to the board rules [she] considers necessary or desirable to effectuate
the Personnel Act.” (Section 10-9-12(E) NMSA 1978).
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6. Per Section 1.7.1.8(A) NMAC (“Approval Authority”), [Ms. Perez]
as director “shall supervise all administrative and technical personnel
activities of the state.”
7. [Ms. Perez] initiated, recommended[,] and drafted proposed
regulations to the New Mexico Administrative Code for adoption by
the Board and for subsequent public comment. She also provided
advice, guidance[,] and direction to the Secretaries of various state
government agencies and the governor regarding the administration
of the State Personnel Act.
CONCLUSION
Here, the evidence establishes that [Ms. Perez] regularly acted in an advisory
capacity to the State Personnel Board and to other state agencies in her
position as State Personnel Director. While [Ms. Perez] correctly notes that
final rules and regulations affecting the State Personnel Act were
promulgated by the Board and not by the Director, [Ms. Perez’s] function in
initiating, drafting[,] and recommending such regulations that “[she]
consider[ed] necessary or desirable to effectuate the Personnel Act” clearly
indicate she acted in an advisory position as contemplated by [Section] 51-1-
44(A)(5)(a). Therefore, as [Ms. Perez] acted in an advisory position in the
exercise of her duties, her wages do not constitute wages in covered
employment.
{5} The foregoing conclusional paragraph is instructive of how the administrative
decision-makers viewed the evidence upon which they relied for their determinations. Their
denial of Ms. Perez’s “employment” coverage under Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) was based
both on Ms. Perez’s actual activity, that is, having “regularly acted in an advisory
capacity[,]” and on the statutorily designated duties of the state personnel director, for
example, the duty to “recommend to the board rules . . . necessary or desirable to effectuate
the Personnel Act.” Section 10-9-12(E). As we discuss later in this Opinion, however, a
position-holder’s actual activities are irrelevant and should be considered a non-factor by
future administrative decision-makers faced with the question whether to apply Section 51-1-
44(A)(5)(a). Nevertheless, the administrative decision-makers were correct in considering
the statutorily designated duties of a personnel director, and their decision to deny Ms.
Perez’s employment benefits claim was proper.
{6} In this case, the administrative decision-makers focused on whether Ms. Perez’s
position as personnel director was advisory and did not consider whether it was
policymaking. See § 10-9-12(A), (E); § 51-1-44(A)(5)(a). There was no issue concerning
whether Ms. Perez was a nontenured employee. The district court, therefore, based its
decision on whether the position was a major advisory one. Accordingly, in this Opinion,
we limit our review to the question whether the position of personnel director is “major” and
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“advisory” as those terms are used in Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a).
{7} The primary rationale for the district court’s rejection of an advisory designation
followed from the court’s comparison of the position of personnel director with the positions
of department secretaries under NMSA 1978, Section 9-1-3(B)(1) (1977) and NMSA 1978,
Section 9-1-5(B)(11) (1977) found in the New Mexico Executive Reorganization Act,
NMSA 1978, §§ 9-1-1 to -13 (1977, as amended through 1983). The Executive
Reorganization Act creates an executive cabinet headed by the governor and a cabinet
department structure. Sections 9-1-3, -4. The principal unit of the executive branch is a
“cabinet department” headed by a “secretary” who is appointed by the governor. Sections
9-1-2, -3(A), (B)(1). Among several express duties of the secretaries, who are executive
cabinet members, are the specific duties to “advise the governor on problems of state
government[,]” to “recommend methods of interagency cooperation[,]” and to “assist the
governor in defining policies and programs to make the government responsive to the needs
of the people.” Section 9-1-3(A), (B)(1), (4), (7). The governor is required to call meetings
of the executive cabinet and “seek the advice of the cabinet members.” Section 9-1-3(C).
{8} Relying on Black’s Law Dictionary, (5th ed. 1979), the district court found that
“recommending” and “advising” were synonyms. Thus, the court implicitly acknowledged
that the position of personnel director is an “advisory” one. “Even so,” the court reasoned,
in comparing the position of personnel director with the executive cabinet positions, “what
and to whom [Ms. Perez] advises do not make her position ‘major.’ ” The court noted that
unlike members of the executive cabinet, Ms. Perez “[did] not advise on ‘problems of state
government’ or ‘assist the governor in defining policies and programs to make the
government responsive to the needs of the people.’ ” The court reasoned further that “this
comparison demonstrate[s] that [Ms. Perez’s] position was not ‘major,’ but it also show[ed]
that when the [L]egislature felt it appropriate to use the word ‘advise,’ it did.”
{9} Considering the Legislature’s use of the term “major” in Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a)
and continuing to contrast the positions of personnel director and cabinet members, the court
observed that “[t]here is no doubt that advising the [g]overnor[] is ‘major.’ ” The court
supported this observation by noting that cabinet secretaries are required to post a twenty-
five-thousand-dollar bond, yet the personnel board and director are not required to post any
bond, “most probably because they do not directly advise the [g]overnor and are therefore
not thought of as occupying ‘major’ or critical positions.” See § 9-1-5(B)(11) (setting out
the bond amounts for department secretaries). Further, the court noted that the various
“principal unit[s]” of the executive branch and the heads of those units were set out in
Section 9-1-4(A) of the Executive Reorganization Act, but that nothing in this section
depicted boards and their directors. See id. (stating that “the principal unit of the executive
branch is a ‘department,’ headed by a ‘secretary’ ”; “the principal unit of a ‘department’ is
a ‘division,’ headed by a ‘director’ ”; “the principal unit of a division is a ‘bureau,’ headed
by a ‘chief’ ”; and “the principal unit of a bureau is a ‘section,’ headed by a supervisor’ ”).
And, finally, the court noted the “limited number of cabinet secretaries” in comparison with
the “over one hundred . . . statutorily created boards and commissions, . . . each with any
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number of employees [who make] recommendations to them.” From this observation, the
court concluded that were it to read Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) as the Board of Review read
it, all employees that make recommendations to their respective boards and commissions
would hold major advisory positions, disentitling them to unemployment compensation,
rendering meaningless the Legislature’s “intentional use of the word ‘major’ ” in Section 51-
1-44(A)(5)(a).
{10} In conclusion, the district court stated that:
Rather than explore [Ms. Perez’s] statutory duties, the Board of
Review based its decision on the statements of an individual who knew that
on occasion [Ms. Perez] may have exceeded her duties. Section 51-1-
44(A)(5)(a), however, requires an examination of the employee’s position
pursuant to statute. Based on that examination, [Ms. Perez] did not occupy
a major policy-making position. She advised a board on rules, but she did
not advise the governor on problems of state government. The entity she
advised was not a member of the cabinet, and its only direct contact with the
governor was through presentation of an annual report at the end of each
year. . . . [Section] 10-9-10(F)[.]
Consequently, the district court reversed the Board’s decision and ordered that Ms. Perez
was entitled to unemployment benefits.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
{11} We focus on the administrative decision-makers’ rulings and rationales. Our
standard of review is the same as that required of the district court. See San Pedro
Neighborhood Ass’n v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs of Santa Fe Cnty., 2009-NMCA-045, ¶ 11, 146
N.M. 106, 206 P.3d 1011 (“We will conduct the same review of an administrative order as
the district court sitting in its appellate capacity, while at the same time determining whether
the district court erred in the first appeal.” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
omitted)); see also NMSA 1978, § 51-1-8(N) (2004, amended 2013) (relating to decisions
by the secretary or board of review appealable to the district court); NMSA 1978, § 39-3-1.1
(1999) (relating to final decisions by state agencies appealable to the district court); Rule 1-
074(A), (R) NMRA (relating to statutory review by district court of administrative decisions
or orders); Rule 1-077(J) NMRA (relating to appeals pursuant to unemployment
compensation laws).
{12} We review whether the administrative decision-makers acted fraudulently, arbitrarily,
or capriciously; whether, based upon a whole-record review, the administrative decisions
were supported by substantial evidence; whether the decision-makers abused their discretion
by acting outside the scope of authority; and whether the administrative decisions were
otherwise not in accordance with law. San Pedro Neighborhood Ass’n, 2009-NMCA-045,
¶¶ 10-11. “The decision of the agency will be affirmed if it is supported by the applicable
6
law and by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.” Fitzhugh v. N.M. Dep’t of Labor,
1996-NMSC-044, ¶ 24, 122 N.M. 173, 922 P.2d 555. In the case now before us, we review
only whether the administrative decisions were in accordance with law.
{13} On appeal to this Court, the parties discuss the evidence in relation to both a
policymaking and an advisory position. As we have indicated, however, we see nothing in
the administrative decisions that indicates any determination relating to a policymaking
position. The sole issue on review is whether state law designates the position of personnel
director to be a major advisory position.
DISCUSSION
{14} As we have noted, Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) states that an employee is not eligible
for unemployment compensation benefits if she is “in a position which, under or pursuant
to state law, is designated as . . . a major . . . advisory position[.]” Analysis of whether the
position of personnel director is “a position which, under or pursuant to state law, is
designated as . . . a major . . . advisory position[,]” requires the interpretation of three key
terms used in Section 51-1-44(A)(5). Specifically, we must consider what the Legislature
intended to convey by its inclusion of the terms “designated,” “major,” and “advisory
position” in the context of Section 51-1-44(A)(5). We turn first to the Legislature’s use of
the term “designated.”
Interpretation of “Designated”
{15} It is reasonable to assume that the Legislature’s use of the term “designated” in the
phrase “designated as a . . . major . . . advisory position” was in part intended to create a
standard by which to measure whether a potential employee would, by reading the statutorily
prescribed duties of a position, be placed on notice that his or her position was not covered
employment for the purposes of unemployment compensation. This purpose was explained
in Conroy v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 693 A.2d 254, 256-57 (Pa.
Commw. Ct. 1997).
The logic of the [l]aw . . . is plain. The exclusion imposes ineligibility on the
basis that any occupant of such a position can anticipate the possibility of job
termination upon a change of administration, so that unemployment in such
circumstances cannot be regarded as sudden and unexpected. The required
official designation hence provides a basis for that expectation; when the
nature of the position is designated by law, there is thus an official signpost
which informs the jobholder, upon assuming the position, of what can be
expected.
(Omission in original.) (Alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted.) We
conclude that in the phrase “designated as . . . a major . . . advisory position[,]” the concept
of designation is a reference to the statutorily described job duties, which, when read by a
7
prospective employee should alert her to the nature of the position, including whether the
position is “major” and “advisory.”
{16} Nothing in Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) indicates that the Legislature intended
“designated” to mean the position-holder’s actual activities in carrying out the duties of the
position. See Zerbe v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, 681 A.2d 740, 743-44 (Pa.
1996) (stating that “[n]othing in the language of [the unemployment compensation statute]
require[d] a factual determination as to whether the . . . claimant actually performed major
policymaking or advisory functions” and stating further that “[c]learly, our legislature has
decided that it is the designation which is controlling as to whether a government employee
is eligible for unemployment compensation benefits upon loss of employment”); Odato v.
Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, 805 A.2d 660, 662 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 2002) (stating
that the claimant’s “actual job activities [were] immaterial to the determination of whether
he [was] entitled to unemployment benefits”). Nor do we believe that our Legislature
intended the compensation determination to be made on the basis of the extent to which and
manner in which an employee engaged in activities.
Interpretation of “Advisory”
{17} Ms. Perez argues that state law must specifically name the position in question, that
of personnel director for example, to be a major advisory position. She further argues that
the designation must include the word “advisory.” We disagree. Instead, we read
“designated” to include advisory duties and responsibilities necessarily implied from the
designation. Cf. Odato, 805 A.2d at 663 (reversing the denial of the employee’s
unemployment benefits because the statute, which “set[] forth only a functional description
of job duties” did not “reveal any responsibility for [policymaking] or service in an advisory
role” and therefore failed to inform the employee what he could expect upon taking the
position); Conroy, 693 A.2d at 256 (“It is not necessary that the designation contain the
precise words ‘major’ or ‘policymaking’ or ‘advisory,’ although it can be done that way.”
(citation omitted)). Nevertheless, “[i]t must, at a minimum, be a written statement of policy
which has the clear and intended effect of establishing the . . . employment status attached
to the position.” Id. at 257.
{18} We now turn to the question whether, under or pursuant to Section 10-9-12(A), (E),
and (F), the designation of the personnel director position is one of an advisory position and
gives notice to a prospective personnel director that the particular duties and responsibilities
enumerated in Section 10-9-12 come within the intended meaning of “advisory position.”
Although the administrative decision-makers made their determinations based on actual
activities, their decisions were apparently governed by Subsection (A)’s generally stated
duty to “supervise all administrative and technical personnel activities of the state” and
Subsection (E)’s generally stated duty to “recommend to the board rules [that she] considers
necessary or desirable to effectuate the Personnel Act[.]” Section 10-9-12(A), (E). We
observe that the Appeals Tribunal’s administrative findings quoted Section 10-9-12(E) and
Regulation 1.7.1.8(A) NMAC, which mimics Section 10-9-12(A).
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{19} We do not believe that the Legislature’s omission of the term “advisory” from
Section 10-9-12 is indicative of the Legislature’s intent to exclude the position of personnel
director from the purview of Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a). It is noteworthy that “supervise” is
synonymous with direct, manage, govern, regulate, oversee, and guide. Roget’s Int’l
Thesaurus ¶¶ 693.2, .4, .5, at 481-82 (7th printing 1951); see also
http://thesaurus.com/browse/supervise (describing “supervise” being synonymous with,
among other things, administer, be in charge, be responsible for, control, direct, oversee,
preside over, and superintend). Synonyms for “advise” are “admonish, caution, counsel,
consult, forewarn, inform, notify, [and] recommend[.]” The New Int’l Webster’s Pocket
Thesaurus of the English Language (hereinafter Webster’s) 16 (1997). “Advice” means
“[g]uidance offered by one person . . . to another.” Black’s Law Dictionary 63 (9th ed.
2009); see also Webster’s, supra, 16 (stating that “advice” is synonymous with “counsel,
guidance, lesson, [and] suggestion”). “Recommend” can mean “advise or counsel.” Black’s
Law Dictionary 1436 (Rev. 4th 1968); see also http://thesaurus.com/browse/recommend
(describing “recommend” being synonymous with, among other things, acclaim, advance,
advocate, counsel, justify, propose, steer, suggest, and urge); Webster’s, supra, 247 (stating
that “recommend” is synonymous with “commend, praise, endorse, suggest, prescribe, urge,
[and] advise”).
{20} A reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the personnel director’s statutorily
designated statewide duties is that they necessarily include advising the board and all
government employees and agencies that come within the Personnel Act in regard to
personnel matters. In particular, by its use of the terms “supervise” and “recommend” in the
context of Section 10-9-12(A) and (E), the Legislature expressed its intent that the personnel
director was expected, if not required, to advise state agencies covered under the Personnel
Act in regard to any number of “problems” and issues that may arise throughout state
government with respect to employees. Likewise, by requiring the personnel director to
“recommend” rules to the board, we believe the Legislature contemplated that the personnel
director would advise the board regarding the adoption of personnel-related rules affecting
all state employees covered by the Personnel Act. Thus, notwithstanding the Legislature’s
omission of the term “advisory” from Section 10-9-12, its use of synonyms thereof evoke
a clear sense of the “advisory” nature of the position of personnel director such that a
prospective candidate for the position would expect that position to come within the purview
of “advisory” in Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a). See Conroy, 693 A.2d at 256-57 (explaining the
purpose behind designating positions as major policymaking or advisory). Turning to
dictionary definitions and synonyms is one method of attempting to understand what the
Legislature intended by words that it uses. See, e.g., Tri-State Generation Transmission
Ass’n v. D’Antonio, 2012-NMSC-039, ¶¶ 18-20, 289 P.3d 1232 (recognizing that the
dictionary is a useful tool in the analysis of legislative intent because it provides the ordinary
meaning of the Legislature’s chosen terms); State ex rel. Gaming Control Bd. v. Ten Gaming
Devices, 2005-NMCA-117, ¶ 12, 138 N.M. 426, 120 P.3d 848 (relying on synonyms and
dictionary definitions to determine legislative intent). Dictionary definitions and synonyms
do not end the discussion. But as the statute reads and under the circumstances here, we
conclude that our approach in understanding legislative intent is reasonable and practical and
9
that any narrowing or detailing of meaning should be left to the Legislature.
Interpretation of “Major”
{21} The final question and the more difficult one is whether the advisory aspect of the
position reaches the status of “major.” The analysis in regard to what constitutes “major”
finds little, if any, guidance in the language of Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a). The word “major”
has several dictionary meanings. Closest for the purpose of this case are “greater in number,
extent, or importance” and “notable or conspicuous in effect or scope[.]” The Merriam-
Webster Dictionary 296 (2005). Synonyms of the term “major” include “important,
significant, main, [and] principal.” Webster’s, supra, 194. In our view, the personnel
director’s statewide personnel supervisory duty and the personnel director’s role of
recommending rules relating to administration of the Personnel Act constitute duties that are
notable, conspicuous in effect and scope, important, and significant. As such, the statutory
duties of the personnel director come within the meaning of “major.”
{22} Ms. Perez fails to point to any place in the record where she provided to the
administrative decision-makers or to the district court any instances in which any positions
in government other than those of executive cabinet secretaries carried express policy or
advisory designations under or pursuant to state law at all comparable to those in Section 10-
9-12. The dissent points to none. Further, although not critical to our decision, on the issue
of whether Section 51-1-44(A)(5) should pertain solely to persons who can be appointed or
whose positions can be terminated only by the governor or perhaps another member of the
executive cabinet, it is important to note that the governor has substantial control over the
decision as to who will be hired to the position of personnel director. As discussed earlier
in this Opinion, the personnel board, which is appointed by the governor, is tasked with
hiring a personnel director, and final say as to the hiring decision rests with the governor.
See §§ 10-9-8, 10-9-10(C). Further, and nowhere contested by Ms. Perez, the Appeals
Tribunal entered the following findings of fact.
4. The claimant was nominated to the position of director by the (then)
governor along with two other candidates also nominated by the
governor. The State Personnel Board . . . appointed the claimant as
director in July 2004 and her appointment was approved by the
governor.
....
9. The claimant filed for unemployment benefits . . . . In the claimant’s
statement . . . she indicated “As an exempt employee in an at will
status, I work at the pleasure of the governor and the governor found
another State Personnel Director.”
Thus, to the extent that the exclusion in Section 51-1-44(A)(5) is grounded in electoral
10
politics and permits new administrations to “pick their own” to hold major nontenured
advisory positions, we see little distinction to be drawn between the governor’s direct
appointment of cabinet secretaries and the governor’s recommendation of an up or down
vote as to who may be hired as personnel director, particularly when the candidate is selected
by the governor’s hand-picked personnel board members, not to mention Ms. Perez’s own
statement that she worked at the pleasure of the governor and the governor replaced her.
In Sum
{23} As the statute reads, courts are to address positions as they are designated under or
pursuant to state law. The only designations before the administrative decision-makers, the
district court, and this Court were that of personnel director and those of the executive
cabinet members. The record was not developed in a manner that can permit even
speculation in regard to designations of positions of persons employed or appointed by
various boards or commissions or executive functionaries in the state. There exists no basis
for wonder about other jobs that have no designations. Other than those of executive cabinet
members, none were presented for comparison or contrast. The personnel director has
statutorily designated duties. Although Section 10-9-12 does not expressly and specifically
state that any duty is “advisory,” embedded in the personnel director’s broad supervisory
duties and duty to recommend rules is obviously a duty and responsibility to advise state
government officials, employees, and agencies at all levels of state government in regard to
personnel matters within the purview of the Personnel Act and to assist the board in
considering rules and regulations for statewide administration of the Personnel Act.
Considering the critical importance of personnel in and throughout state government, these
duties and responsibilities can be considered major ones. The dissent’s assertion that the
personnel director is to oversee a system designed to treat the ill of mass employment change
upon changes in administration does not, in our view, constitute a rational basis on which
to read the position out of the Section 51-1-44(A)(5) exclusion.
{24} On a final note, in regard to the Legislature’s use of the term “major” in Section 51-
1-44(A)(5)(a), for the benefit of future tribunals faced with the interpretation of this section,
we reject the reasoning employed by the district court. The district court’s analysis is that
“major” under Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) should necessarily be limited to cabinet members
because of their advisory duties vis-a-vis the governor and perhaps also to possible advisory
duties of the lower executive branch employees mentioned in Section 9-1-4(A) who do not
have a close advisory position in regard to the governor. We cannot accept this rationale.
We see no reason why a personnel director cannot be considered to hold a major advisory
position when (1) she is the administrative director of a governmental office in charge of
Personnel Act matters throughout the entirety of state government; (2) she must supervise
and advise other employees, agencies, departments, divisions, bureaus, sections, boards, and
commissions in regard to personnel issues and problems; and (3) she must recommend and
advise the entity responsible for adopting rules for administration of the Personnel Act.
Furthermore, we cannot accept a rationale that the personnel director should be entitled to
unemployment compensation, yet, as implied in the district court’s decision, such
11
compensation should be denied to a director of a division, a chief of a bureau, and a
supervisor of a section simply because these units of government are named in Section 9-1-
4(A) of the Executive Reorganization Act and may consist of a considerably fewer number
of employees than exist in the world of boards and commissions. The application of “major”
to an advisory position requires a case-by-case, position-by-position, designation-by-
designation analysis.
{25} We hold that advisory duties and responsibilities stemming from the express duties
found in Section 10-9-12 fairly come within the language “designated as” in Section 51-1-
44(A)(5). We further hold that the personnel director’s broadly designated duties to
supervise and recommend along with the director’s advisory responsibilities can be
considered major because they are notable, conspicuous in effect and scope, important,
significant, and a major part and aspect of the personnel director’s full gamut of duty. Thus,
the administrative decision-maker’s ruling denying Ms. Perez’s unemployment benefits
pursuant to Section 51-1-44(A)(5)(a) was in accordance with the law and is hereby affirmed.
See Fitzhugh, 1996-NMSC-044, ¶ 24 (stating that the administrative decision-maker’s
determination will be affirmed if it is supported by the applicable law).
CONCLUSION
{26} The administrative decision-makers did not err in denying Ms. Perez unemployment
compensation. We reverse the district court and affirm the determination of the Appeals
Tribunal adopted by the Board of Review.
{27} IT IS SO ORDERED.
____________________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
I CONCUR:
____________________________________
LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge (dissenting).
Bustamante, Judge (dissenting)
{28} I respectfully dissent. In my view the majority Opinion does not sufficiently honor
the policy considerations that underlie the exclusion.
{29} Though the majority is correct that the focus should be on the “designated” nature
of the position itself, the Opinion does not carry the analysis far enough. As the majority
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notes, the designation of a position should be sufficiently clear to place an employee on
notice that the position is “not covered employment for the purposes of unemployment
compensation.” See Majority Opinion ¶ 15. The Opinion does not delve into the policy
reasons that would support excluding a position from coverage.
{30} The best, most historically and administratively grounded explanation for exclusion
from coverage I have found comes from Gahres v. Commonwealth, 433 A.2d 152, 154 (Pa.
Cmmw. Ct. 1981). The Gahres court stated:
The logic of such a requirement is plain. The exclusion imposes
ineligibility on the basis that any occupant of such a position can anticipate
the possibility of job termination upon a change of administration, so that
unemployment in such circumstances cannot be regarded as sudden and
unexpected. The required official designation hence provides a basis for that
expectation; when the nature of the position is designated by law, there is
thus an official signpost which informs the jobholder, upon assuming the
position, of what can be expected.
433 A.2d at 154.
{31} The passage’s emphasis on job termination tied to a “change of administration”
grounds the exclusion in electoral politics. Administrations have the right to ensure that
their policymakers and advisors carry out the goals of that administration. As such, they
should be able to pick “their own” to hold those positions. In turn, people holding such
positions should be aware that they can be replaced at any time and should expect to be
replaced with changes in administration. This rationale for exclusion from unemployment
compensation makes sense and provides a guide for assessing whether a position’s
designation gives sufficient notice to an employee.
{32} As the district court noted, positions such as cabinet secretaries are
obviously—almost inherently—political in nature and the Legislature rather clearly labeled
them as such. The difficulty arises when one considers positions—such as Ms.
Perez’s—which are not so obviously political. How are the courts to decide whether they
should be subject to exclusion from coverage? I submit that courts should err on the side of
caution and limit the number and type of positions subject to the political winds.
{33} In my view the majority Opinion is not appropriately cautious in its policy choice.
Section10-9-12 describes an important position in state government but there is nothing in
the description which obviously indicates that the holder of the position should be subject
to change as a consequence of election results. The Opinion goes astray with its emphasis
on dictionary definitions of “advice” and “recommend.” Rhetorically speaking, what
position of any consequence does not involve giving advice and making recommendations?
Are all such jobs to be subjected to the exclusion simply because they include those
functions? The question answers itself.
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{34} A better approach to the problem is to be found in the Conroy case that the majority
cites with approval. Conroy involved a claim for unemployment compensation by a former
borough police chief. The former chief wrote, and the borough counsel adopted, the manual
of policy and procedures for the police department. 693 A.2d at 255. The manual included
a description of the police chief’s position which explicitly included policymaking and
advisory duties. Id. There, as here, the employer argued that the position description as
adopted by the borough constituted a designation of a major policymaking and advisory
position. Id. at 256. The court in Conroy disagreed, finding the borough’s “analysis
insufficient, as it does not consider the underlying purpose of the [l]aw.” Id. Relying on and
quoting from Gahres, the Conroy court concluded that to come within the exclusion the
designation would have to be more than a functional description of the job. Id. at 257. It
would have to clearly relate to job security and establish job terms and employment status
as it relates to a change in administration. Id. Applying the approach followed in Conroy
leads to affirmance of the district court.
{35} The purpose of the Personnel Act is to “establish for New Mexico a system of
personnel administration based solely on qualification and ability[.]” Section 10-9-2. The
aim of the Personnel Act was to limit to the extent possible the practice of wholesale changes
in state employment after elections. Persons of a certain age will recall the difficulties
attendant to government employment ruled by patronage and the old “spoils” system. The
personnel director’s job is to oversee the system that put a stop to those difficulties. It seems
to me eminently good policy not to subject the position to even the restrained version of
political influence that necessarily persists.
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MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
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