#26683, #26746-aff in pt, rev & rem-SLZ
2014 S.D. 60
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
****
ERIC D. KOLDA, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
CITY OF YANKTON, a municipal
corporation and the YANKTON
POLICE DEPARTMENT, Defendants and Appellees.
****
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
YANKTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
****
THE HONORABLE STEVEN R. JENSEN
Judge
****
TIMOTHY R. WHALEN
Lake Andes, South Dakota Attorney for plaintiff
and appellant.
LISA HANSEN MARSO
JASON R. SUTTON of
Boyce, Greenfield, Pashby & Welk, LLP
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendants
and appellees.
****
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
ON APRIL 28, 2014
OPINION FILED 08/06/14
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ZINTER, Justice
[¶1.] The City of Yankton (the City) terminated Eric Kolda, a police officer,
for violating police department policies. Kolda was notified of his termination by
letter. Kolda appealed to the city manager. Following an evidentiary hearing, the
city manager found cause for the disciplinary action and upheld the termination.
Kolda then sued in circuit court, claiming wrongful discharge. On separate motions
for summary judgment, the circuit court ruled that Kolda could only be terminated
for cause with notice and the City failed to provide pre-termination notice. A jury
found cause for the termination, precluding Kolda’s claim for damages arising after
the notice and evidentiary hearing. However, the circuit court awarded Kolda
procedural due process damages for lost wages that accrued between the time of his
summary termination and the post-termination evidentiary hearing. Kolda appeals
the jury verdict finding just cause for the termination; and the City—by notice of
review—appeals the judgment awarding procedural due process damages. We
reverse and remand for the circuit court to vacate the award of damages because
Kolda failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.
Facts and Procedural History
[¶2.] In 1998, Eric Kolda was hired as a jailer by the City, a city-manager
form of government. In 1999, he was promoted to a police officer position. Kolda’s
position was the lowest level in the chain of command at the Yankton Police
Department.
[¶3.] In 2004, Kolda was suspended for twenty-eight days for violating
several police department policies. On January 15, 2009, he was terminated for a
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new violation of department policies. Kolda’s 2009 termination is the subject of this
appeal.
[¶4.] The termination occurred as a result of events that started in the
spring of 2007. At that time, when both were off duty, a fellow officer told Kolda
that the fellow officer had stolen a chainsaw. Department policy required Kolda to
report the theft. However, Kolda did not do so. Later in 2007, Kolda’s fellow officer
applied for a job with the Nebraska State Patrol, which required a polygraph test.
The officer told Kolda that he did not get the job because he admitted stealing the
chainsaw. Kolda still did not report the theft.
[¶5.] Kolda eventually reported the theft in November 2008, which triggered
an investigation of Kolda’s fellow officer by the Division of Criminal Investigation.
In January 2009, following the investigation, four of Kolda’s superiors met and
recommended that Kolda be terminated for his failure to timely report the theft. It
was noted during this meeting that Kolda’s failure to report the theft violated many
of the same policies he violated in 2004.
[¶6.] Kolda was terminated on January 15, 2009, by delivery of a
termination letter. The letter was prepared and signed by the chief of police. The
letter indicated that Kolda had a right to appeal his termination to the city
manager, who was also the City’s grievance officer. Kolda appealed, and an
evidentiary hearing was held on January 29, 2009. At the conclusion of the
hearing, the city manager upheld Kolda’s termination for cause. Kolda did not
appeal to the Department of Labor and Regulation. Instead, Kolda sued in circuit
court, alleging wrongful discharge.
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[¶7.] The City moved for summary judgment. It argued, in part, that
Kolda’s claim was barred as a matter of law because he failed to exhaust his
administrative remedies. The City also argued that SDCL 9-10-9 and SDCL 9-10-
13 granted the city manager absolute power to remove Kolda, making him an at-
will employee subject to termination without notice and opportunity to be heard.
Circuit Judge Glen W. Eng denied the motion.
[¶8.] Judge Eng ruled that Kolda was not an at-will employee. Judge Eng
first ruled that Kolda was not subject to the unrestricted removal power of the city
manager because Kolda was not employed in the “administrative service of the
municipality[.]” See SDCL 9-10-13 (granting the city manager the “power to
appoint and remove all officers and employees in the administrative service of the
municipality”). Judge Eng then ruled that Kolda was not an at-will employee
because the City had adopted an employee handbook that only allowed termination
for cause. See Hollander v. Douglas Cnty., 2000 S.D. 159, ¶ 14, 620 N.W.2d 181,
185 (describing the narrow exception to South Dakota’s general at-will status for
employees “when an employer’s discharge policy provides that termination will
occur only for cause”). Because Kolda could only be terminated for cause, Judge
Eng concluded that Kolda “had a property interest sufficient to trigger due process
protections.” See id. ¶ 16 (“Because [the employee] could only be terminated for
cause, he had a property interest sufficient to trigger due process protections.”).
Judge Eng finally concluded that Kolda’s procedural due process rights were
violated when the City failed to provide pre-termination notice and an opportunity
to be heard. See id. ¶ 17 (quoting Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S.
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532, 542, 105 S. Ct. 1487, 1493, 84 L. Ed. 2d 494 (1985)) (“[W]e must ask whether
[the employee] had notice and an opportunity to be heard, ‘before he was deprived of
any significant property interest.’”). Judge Eng did not address the City’s other
arguments because he concluded that “[t]he remaining issues, even if ruled upon in
the City’s favor, would not entitle the City to judgment as a matter of law in light of
the court’s finding of a due process violation.”
[¶9.] Following additional motions, Kolda moved for summary judgment.
The circuit court, Circuit Judge Steven R. Jensen then presiding, granted Kolda’s
motion in part. Like Judge Eng, Judge Jensen ruled that Kolda was not an at-will
employee, and therefore, he had a protected property interest in his continued
employment that triggered procedural due process protection. Judge Jensen further
ruled that the City failed to provide pre-termination due process when it summarily
terminated Kolda’s employment by the January 15 letter. However, Judge Jensen
ruled that the January 29 evidentiary hearing provided Kolda with due process.
Therefore, Judge Jensen ruled that, as a matter of law, Kolda was only entitled to
claim procedural due process damages that accrued between his January 15
termination and his January 29 hearing. Judge Jensen ruled that Kolda’s claim to
post-January 29 damages depended on whether there was cause for the
termination, and that was a question of fact for a jury.
[¶10.] A jury trial was held to determine whether cause existed to terminate
Kolda. During and after trial, the City moved for a judgment as a matter of law.
The City again argued that Kolda’s claim was barred because he was an at-will
employee who was subject to termination without notice and cause and he failed to
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exhaust his administrative remedies. The circuit court denied the City’s motions.
The jury found that cause existed to terminate Kolda’s employment, and his
wrongful discharge claim was denied. However, the circuit court ruled that Kolda
was entitled to procedural due process damages that accrued between his January
15 summary termination and his January 29 post-termination hearing. The court
awarded $2,097.93 for wages lost during that period, plus prejudgment interest.
Decision
[¶11.] Because the City's motions for judgment as a matter of law are
dispositive of all claims, we address the City’s notice of review appealing the circuit
court’s denial of those motions. 1 The City first contends that Kolda was barred from
recovering any damages because SDCL 9-10-9 granted the city manager absolute
power to remove police officers, making Kolda an at-will employee. The City points
out that at-will employees generally have no protected property interest in
continued employment and therefore no right to due process protections. See
Hollander, 2000 S.D. 159, ¶ 12, 620 N.W.2d at 185 (citing Loudermill, 470 U.S. at
538, 105 S. Ct. at 1491) (explaining that whether due process must be given
“depends in large part on the presence of a property right in continued
employment”).
[¶12.] “[I]t is within the exclusive province of the [L]egislature to determine
terms under which employment may be terminated.” Finck v. City of Tea, 443
1. “This Court reviews both a motion for judgment as a matter of law and a
renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law for an abuse of discretion.”
Bertelsen v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2013 S.D. 44, ¶ 16, 833 N.W.2d 545, 554
(citations omitted).
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N.W.2d 632, 634 (S.D. 1989). By enacting SDCL 60-4-4, the Legislature “has
created ‘employment at will’ in this state.” 2 Finck, 443 N.W.2d at 634 (citations
omitted). Finck v. City of Tea recognized that the Legislature had not departed
from SDCL 60-4-4’s at-will status for appointed officers in aldermanic-governed
municipalities. See id. at 635. We explained that SDCL 9-14-13 gave “the mayor
‘full and absolute power to remove appointed officers[,]’” and, in aldermanic-
governed municipalities, the Legislature had not limited that power. 3 Id. at 634-35
(citations omitted). However, Finck did not address the effect of a municipality’s
personnel policy manual on a mayor’s statutory removal power. We addressed that
issue in Patterson v. Linn, 2001 S.D. 135, 636 N.W.2d 467.
[¶13.] Patterson rejected an appointed officer’s claim that a municipality’s
personnel policy—which outlined legal procedures that had to be followed before
discharging employees—limited the mayor’s statutory removal power. See id. ¶¶ 8,
11. We explained that “[c]ity policies, like city ordinances, must stay within
‘reasonably strict’ adherence to their statutory ambit.” Id. ¶ 9 (quoting City of
2. SDCL 60-4-4 provides: “An employment having no specified term may be
terminated at the will of either party on notice to the other, unless otherwise
provided by statute.”
3. SDCL 9-14-13, when Finck was decided, provided:
In an aldermanic-governed city the mayor shall have power
except as otherwise provided to remove from office any officer
appointed by him, whenever he shall be of the opinion that the
interests of the city demand such removal, but he shall report
the reasons for his removal to the council at its next regular
meeting.
See Finck, 443 N.W.2d at 634.
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Marion v. Schoenwald, 2001 S.D. 95, ¶ 6, 631 N.W.2d 213, 216). We concluded that
the municipality’s personnel policy did not adhere to the statutory removal power in
SDCL 9-14-13. Consequently, to allow the policy to govern would impermissibly
“lead[] to the inconsistent result that a city [could] override the [removal] powers
conferred upon it by the Legislature.” Id. ¶ 11.
[¶14.] The City argues that under the principles of Finck and Patterson, the
policies in the City’s employee handbook could not eliminate Kolda’s at-will
employment status recognized in SDCL 60-4-4. The City acknowledges that unlike
Finck and Patterson, it is a city-manager form of government rather than an
aldermanic form of government. But the City contends that like the mayors in
Finck and Patterson, the city manager in this case had the similar absolute power to
remove Kolda under a similar statute (SDCL 9-10-9), making Kolda an at-will
employee. The City, however, misconstrues SDCL 9-10-9.
[¶15.] “[S]tatutes must be construed according to their intent, [and] the
intent must be determined from the statute as a whole, as well as enactments
relating to the same subject.” Trumm v. Cleaver, 2013 S.D. 85, ¶ 10, 841 N.W.2d
22, 25 (second alteration in original) (quoting In re Estate of Hamilton, 2012 S.D.
34, ¶ 7, 814 N.W.2d 141, 143). In this case, unlike Finck and Patterson, two
different statutes—SDCL 9-10-9 and SDCL 9-10-13—regulate a city manager’s
removal power. We construe these statutes together.
[¶16.] SDCL 9-10-9 allocates the appointment and removal powers in city-
manager municipalities among the governing body, certain municipal officeholders,
and the city manager. The statute provides:
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The auditor, attorney, library board of trustees, and the
treasurer shall be appointed by the governing body and may be
removed at any time by such governing body.
The auditor and the treasurer shall each appoint all deputies
and employees in his office.
All other officers and employees, including all members of
boards and commissions, except as otherwise provided by law,
shall be appointed by the manager and may be removed by him.
The City contends that the Legislature granted the city manager absolute removal
power through the language of the third sentence. That sentence grants city
managers the power to appoint and remove “[a]ll . . . officers and employees” not
removable by the other appointing authorities. See id. However, this appointment
and removal power is not absolute. It is limited when “otherwise provided by law[.]”
See id.
[¶17.] SDCL 9-10-13 is another provision of law, adopted as a part of the
same act, 4 otherwise governing the city manager’s appointment and removal
powers. That statute specifically limits the city manager’s appointment and
removal power to the “officers and employees in the administrative service of the
municipality[.]” SDCL 9-10-13 provides:
The manager shall be responsible to the governing body for the
proper administration of all affairs of the first or second class
municipality placed in his charge. To that end, except as
otherwise provided by law, he shall have power to appoint and
remove all officers and employees in the administrative service of
the municipality and may authorize the head of any department
or office responsible to him to appoint and remove subordinates
in such department or office. Appointments made by or under
the authority of the manager shall be made without definite
4. See 1935 S.D. Sess. Laws ch. 158, §§ 3, 7.
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term on the basis of executive and administrative ability and of
the training and experience of such appointees in the work
which they are to perform.
(Emphasis added.) Therefore, SDCL 9-10-13 limits the scope of the city manager’s
appointment and removal powers granted in SDCL 9-10-9.
[¶18.] This interpretation is supported by two long-standing principles of
statutory construction. First, SDCL 9-10-9 is the more general statute that
allocates appointment and removal powers among entities, whereas SDCL 9-10-13
is a more specific statute that places a limitation on the scope of those powers.
“‘[S]tatutes of specific application take precedence over statutes of general
application.’” In re Estate of Hamilton, 2012 S.D. 34, ¶ 12, 814 N.W.2d at 144
(alteration in original) (quoting Schafer v. Deuel Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 2006 S.D.
106, ¶ 10, 725 N.W.2d 241, 245). Additionally, if the Legislature intended the
language in SDCL 9-10-9 to exclusively define the scope of a city manager’s
appointment and removal powers, then the limiting language of SDCL 9-10-13
would be superfluous, rendering it ineffective. However, a statute must “be
construed so that effect is given to all its provisions, so that no part will be
inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant[.]” Wheeler v. Farmers Mut. Ins.
Co. of Neb., 2012 S.D. 83, ¶ 21, 824 N.W.2d 102, 109 (quoting 2A Norman J. Singer,
Sutherland Statutory Construction § 46.06, 181-92 (6th ed. 2000)). Accordingly, we
conclude that notwithstanding the broad appointment and removal powers
allocated to city managers in SDCL 9-10-9, the language in SDCL 9-10-13 limits the
scope of those powers.
[¶19.] SDCL 9-10-13 limits a city manager’s removal power to the “officers
and employees in the administrative service of the municipality[.]” (Emphasis
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added.) Therefore, as Judge Eng noted, the question is whether Kolda was
employed in the administrative service of the City.
[¶20.] An administrative position manages the affairs of a department or
office. Cf. Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009) (defining “administration” in
relevant part as “[t]he management or performance of the executive duties of a
government, institution, or business” and “[i]n public law, the practical
management and direction of the executive department and its agencies”); The
American Heritage College Dictionary 17 (3d ed. 1997) (defining “administration” in
relevant part as “[t]hose who manage an institution”); Webster’s Third New
International Dictionary 28 (1976) (defining “administration” in relevant part as the
“performance of executive duties: Management, direction, superintendence”).
[¶21.] In this case, Kolda was not responsible for managing the affairs of the
police department. He was a police officer, a position at the lowest level of the chain
of command. Because Kolda’s job was not an administrative position, the city
manager’s removal power under SDCL 9-10-13 did not apply. And because the city
manager did not have legislatively granted removal power, the policies of the City’s
employee handbook were not negated under the principles applied in Patterson.
[¶22.] The City’s employee handbook explicitly provided that Kolda could
only be terminated with notice and for “just cause[.]” Therefore, the narrow
exception to at-will employment applied. See Hollander, 2000 S.D. 159, ¶ 14, 620
N.W.2d at 185 (citation omitted) (explaining that this Court has recognized a
narrow exception to the general at-will status of employees under SDCL 60-4-4
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“when an employer’s discharge policy provides that termination will occur only for
cause”).
[¶23.] In sum, Kolda was not an at-will employee. The terms of his
employment included the terms of the employee handbook, which required that
termination be preceded by notice and implemented for just cause. We affirm the
circuit court’s denial of the City’s motions for judgment as a matter of law on the
issue of Kolda’s employment status.
[¶24.] The City, however, also argues that the circuit court erred in denying
its motions for a judgment of matter of law because Kolda failed to exhaust his
administrative remedies. The City points out that it adopted a grievance procedure
in the employee handbook, and Kolda used that procedure to appeal his termination
to the city manager. But the City also points out that Kolda did not appeal the city
manager’s decision to the Department of Labor and Regulation before suing in
circuit court. Therefore, the City contends that Kolda’s claim is barred because he
failed to appeal to the Department and exhaust his administrative remedy before
suing.
[¶25.] At the time of Kolda’s termination, SDCL 3-18-15.1 required
municipalities to establish “a procedure which its employees may follow for the
prompt informal dispositions of their grievances.” 5 “If, after following the grievance
5. In 2013, the Legislature enacted SDCL 3-18-15.5, which excluded “employees
of public subdivisions” from the provisions of SDCL 3-18-15.1 “unless those
employees [were] members of a public employee union or the governing body
of a political subdivision [had] adopted an ordinance or resolution
establishing a grievance procedure for all employees of the political
subdivision.” See 2013 S.D. Sess. Laws ch 23, § 1. Because Kolda initiated
(continued . . .)
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procedure enacted by the governing body, the grievance remain[ed] unresolved . . . it
[could] be appealed to the Department of Labor and Regulation[.]” SDCL 3-18-15.2.
After a final decision of the Department, an employee could appeal to the circuit
court. See SDCL 1-26-30.2 (“An appeal shall be allowed in the circuit court to any
party in a contested case from a final decision, ruling, or action of an agency.”).
[¶26.] In this case, the City handbook upon which Kolda relies for this
lawsuit included a grievance procedure. The grievance procedure provided “the
opportunity for all municipal employees to discuss grievances concerning the
application and interpretation of the provisions of [the City’s] personnel manual.”
City of Yankton Uniform Personnel Rules and Regulations Manual 79. It further
required that the procedure “must be followed when an employee has a grievance.”
Id. The final step of the grievance procedure provided that “[t]he City Manager,
after [a] hearing, shall render a decision on the employee’s grievance. Decisions of
the City Manager shall be final and subject to appeal only as provided by State or
Federal law.” Id. (emphasis added).
[¶27.] Kolda concedes that he did not appeal to the Department of Labor and
Regulation as provided in SDCL chapter 3-18. However, Kolda argues that he was
excused from using the administrative process because he contends that chapter 3-
18 applies only to public unions, not to all public employees. Kolda overlooks the
definition of “public employee.”
________________________
(. . . continued)
his action before this enactment, the new provision does not apply in this
case.
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[¶28.] SDCL 3-18-1 defines a “public employee” as “any person holding a
position by appointment or employment in the government of the State of South
Dakota or in the government of any one or more of the political subdivisions thereof
. . . or any other branch of the public service.” Kolda was a public employee within
the meaning of chapter 3-18. Unionization of City employees was irrelevant to the
application of the grievance procedure.
[¶29.] Kolda also contends that he was pursuing an “appeal” before the city
manager rather than a grievance. Again, Kolda overlooks definitions in chapter 3-
18. SDCL 3-18-1.1 defines “grievance” to include any alleged violation of any
agreement, contract, or policy of the City. 6 Kolda’s “appeal” before the city manager
was grounded on the allegation that numerous City policies had been violated. 7
6. A “grievance” is defined, in relevant part, as:
a complaint by a public employee . . . based upon an alleged
violation, misinterpretation, or inequitable application of any
existing agreements, contracts, ordinances, policies, or rules of
the government of the State of South Dakota or the government
of any one or more of the political subdivisions thereof . . . as
they apply to the conditions of employment.
SDCL 3-18-1.1 (emphasis added).
7. In his complaint, Kolda alleged numerous violations of the City’s personnel
policies, specifically that: the City “failed to follow the procedures [set forth in
the City’s employee handbook] for disciplining or terminating an employee”;
the City “disciplined and terminated [Kolda] . . . without cause and in
violation of its personnel policies”; “the personnel policies are clearly designed
to afford every employee . . . procedural . . . due process before they were to be
disciplined or their employment terminated”; the City “did not apply the
policies and procedures . . . in the same fashion as they had with other
employees and thereby violated the terms and conditions of their personnel
policies[.]”
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These allegations fit the statutory definition of a grievance. 8
[¶30.] In this case, Kolda used the City’s grievance procedure to appeal his
termination to the city manager. Yet he failed to follow the next step of the
procedure and appeal the city manager’s decision to the Department of Labor and
Regulation. Therefore, Kolda failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, and the
circuit court lacked jurisdiction to resolve Kolda’s claims. See Reynolds v. Douglas
Sch. Dist., 2004 S.D. 129, ¶ 10, 690 N.W.2d 655, 657 (quoting Small v. State, 2003
S.D. 29, ¶ 16, 659 N.W.2d 15, 18-19 (per curiam)) (“It is a settled rule of judicial
administration that no one is entitled to judicial relief for a supposed or threatened
8. Kolda contends that reinstatement issues could not be resolved by the
Department of Labor and Regulation because, under Kierstead v. City of
Rapid City, 248 N.W.2d 363 (S.D. 1976), reinstatement is an executive
function over which the Department does not have jurisdiction. We disagree.
In Kierstead, the lead opinion stated “that under SDCL 3-18-15.2 the Director
has authority to act only on grievances that do not involve the exercise of an
executive or legislative power of the governmental agency or the performance
of a governmental function.” See id. at 366. It then stated that a mayor’s
absolute power to remove certain employees under SDCL 9-14-13 was an
executive power. See id. The lead opinion concluded that the administrative
agency did not have jurisdiction to act on a claim concerning the exercise of
the mayor’s absolute removal power. See id. at 367.
We first note that only one member of the Court adopted the foregoing
conclusion. See id. at 368. We also note that even if the lead opinion had
been the holding of the Court, that opinion is not applicable in this case. The
lead opinion involved the jurisdiction of the Department of Labor to consider
a claim involving a mayor’s absolute removal power in an aldermanic-
governed municipality. See id. at 366. This case involves the city-manager
form of government, and as previously explained, the city manager did not
have the absolute statutory power to remove Kolda. Therefore, the lead
opinion’s language is inapplicable in this case. Cf. Gettysburg Sch. Dist. v.
Larson, 2001 S.D. 91, ¶ 17, 631 N.W.2d 196, 202 (“Under SDCL 3-18-15.2, the
[D]epartment [of Labor] has authority to order reinstatement as of the date
[a teacher] was improperly released. That authority does not infringe on
school board autonomy; it requires a board to follow the procedures it
contractually adopted.”).
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injury until the prescribed administrative remedy has been exhausted. Failure to
exhaust is a jurisdictional defect.”); cf. Schloe v. Lead-Deadwood Indep. Sch. Dist.,
282 N.W.2d 610, 613 n.1, 614 (S.D. 1979) (explaining that the Department of
Labor’s “jurisdictional base is lost if appellant’s grievance is not timely filed in
accordance with the grievance procedure”; and noting that “the trial court could
have no better jurisdiction than that of the [Department]”); Krentz v. Robertson, 228
F.3d 897, 904 (8th Cir. 2000) (citations omitted) (“[A]n employee waives a
procedural due process claim by refusing to participate in post-termination
administrative or grievance procedures made available by the state.”).
[¶31.] We reverse the circuit court’s denial of the City’s motions for judgment
as a matter of law on the issue of exhaustion of administrative remedies. This
matter is remanded to the circuit court to vacate the award of pre-hearing due
process damages. Because Kolda’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies is
dispositive, we do not address the other issues raised on appeal.
[¶32.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and KONENKAMP, SEVERSON, and
WILBUR, Justices, concur.
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