COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
UNPUBLISHED
Present: Judges O’Brien, AtLee and Chaney
Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia
MCDONNELL LANDSCAPING, INC.
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 1939-22-4 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN
APRIL 30, 2024
THE COUNTY BOARD OF
ARLINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ARLINGTON COUNTY
Louise M. DiMatteo, Judge
Thomas R. Lynch (Asmar, Schor & McKenna, PLLC, on briefs), for
appellant.
Scott D. Helsel (Minhchau N. Corr, County Attorney; Kevin P.
Black, Assistant County Attorney; Walton & Adams, P.C.; Arlington
County Attorney’s Office, on brief), for appellee.
This case concerns the steps a contractor must take to appeal from a county’s
disallowance of a payment claim under Code § 15.2-1246. Does the statute require a contractor
to submit to the county board a notice of appeal and bond within 30 days from the disallowance
decision, or may the contractor instead file its substantive complaint in circuit court within that
time frame—and then submit the notice of appeal and bond within six months? Here, the court
ruled that the notice of appeal and bond were required within 30 days and that the contractor,
McDonnell Landscaping, Inc. (“McDonnell”), could not satisfy the statute by only filing its
complaint within that time frame. The court sustained the Arlington County Board’s (“Board”)
special plea in bar of sovereign immunity and dismissed the case.
*
This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
On appeal, McDonnell argues the court erred by (1) finding that McDonnell failed to
comply with the statute, despite having filed its complaint before any 30-day deadline, (2) ruling
that, regardless of when it filed its complaint, McDonnell was nevertheless statutorily required to
provide the notice of appeal and bond to the Board’s clerk within 30 days, (3) finding that
McDonnell had not “substantially complied” with Code § 15.2-1246, and (4) finding that the
Board had sent a notice of disallowance sufficient to trigger any 30-day deadline. For the
following reasons, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
McDonnell won a construction contract to improve a public park in Arlington County.
By December 2020, McDonnell had substantially completed the project, and the park reopened
to the public. A compensation dispute arose, and McDonnell presented a claim for payment at a
Board meeting on July 19, 2022. The Board denied the claim and notified McDonnell of its
decision by letter emailed on July 28, 2022, and by certified mail the following day.
McDonnell attempted to appeal the Board’s decision by filing a complaint in circuit court
on August 17. In the complaint, McDonnell stated that the court had jurisdiction pursuant to
Code § 15.2-1246 “because the causes of action . . . arise from the decision of the Board . . . to
disallow a claim against the County.” The complaint specified that “[t]he causes of
action . . . constitute an appeal from this decision of the Board.”
McDonnell did not formally serve the complaint but instead emailed it to the Board on
September 12. As reflected in a consent order, the Board agreed to accept service by email,
without waiving objections to jurisdiction or other defenses, in exchange for an extension to file
responsive pleadings.
Accordingly, on October 7, the Board responded by filing a special plea in bar of
sovereign immunity, arguing that it was immune from suit because McDonnell did not comply
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with the notice and bond requirements in Code § 15.2-1246. Specifically, the Board argued that
McDonnell did not “serv[e] written notice on the clerk of the governing body and execut[e] a
cash or surety bond . . . in the amount of $250” as provided in the statute.
Hours after the Board filed its special plea, McDonnell submitted a notice of appeal and a
$250 law firm check to the Board’s clerk. McDonnell then filed a brief in opposition to the special
plea, arguing that Code § 15.2-1246 is ambiguous, that it gives six months to comply, and/or that
McDonnell had substantially complied regardless of the exact requirements. McDonnell further
argued that the clerk’s July 28 letter was insufficient notice to trigger any 30-day deadline because it
did not contain the words “disallowance” or “notice.”
The court granted the Board’s special plea and entered a final order dismissing McDonnell’s
suit with prejudice.
ANALYSIS
I. Assignments of Error 1 and 2
Whether Code § 15.2-1246 required notice of appeal and bond within 30 days
McDonnell argues the court erred by dismissing the case based on McDonnell’s
noncompliance with Code § 15.2-1246, which the court interpreted as requiring McDonnell to
submit a notice of appeal and $250 bond to the Board clerk within 30 days of the disallowance
decision. McDonnell asserts that the statute allows a claimant to appeal by filing a circuit court
complaint within the 30-day time frame and submitting the notice and bond to the clerk within 6
months.
Our standard of review is de novo because the material facts are undisputed, Bragg Hill
Corp. v. City of Fredericksburg, 297 Va. 566, 577 (2019), and the issues presented raise
questions of statutory interpretation, Ruderman v. Pritchard, 76 Va. App. 295, 302 (2022).
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Code § 15.2-1246 provides as follows:
When a claim of any person against a county is disallowed in whole
or in part by the governing body, if such person is present, he may
appeal from the decision of the governing body within 30 days from
the date of the decision. If the claimant is not present, the clerk of
the governing body shall serve a written notice of the disallowance
on him or his agent, and he may appeal from the decision within 30
days after service of such notice. In no case shall the appeal be taken
after the lapse of six months from the date of the decision. The
appeal shall be filed with the circuit court for the county. No appeal
shall be allowed unless the amount disallowed exceeds $10. The
disallowance may be appealed by serving written notice on the clerk
of the governing body and executing a cash or surety bond or
irrevocable letter of credit to the county in the amount of $250, with
condition for the faithful prosecution of such appeal, and the
payment of all costs imposed on the appellant by the court.
(Emphases added).
McDonnell was not present when the Board announced the disallowance decision at its
meeting on July 19, 2022. Accordingly, under the statute, McDonnell was entitled to “written
notice of the disallowance” and then had “30 days after service of such notice” to “appeal from the
decision.”
McDonnell received the written notice by email on July 28 and filed its circuit court
complaint on August 17, which was within 30 days.1 It did not, however, provide a notice of appeal
and bond to the Board clerk until October 7—hours after the Board filed its special plea of
sovereign immunity. McDonnell claims that its October 7 notice and bond were timely because the
statute gives a claimant six months to perfect an appeal, insofar as the statute provides that “[i]n no
case shall the appeal be taken after the lapse of six months from the date of the decision.” Id. We
consider (1) whether Code § 15.2-1246 required McDonnell to provide the notice and bond within
the 30-day time frame to effectively “appeal from the decision,” or (2) whether McDonnell could
1
Although the Board also sent the notice via certified mail, the record does not show
when McDonnell received that letter, and McDonnell does not argue that a different 30-day
deadline should apply.
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satisfy the statute by filing a circuit court complaint within the 30-day time frame, followed up by
submitting the notice and bond before the lapse of six months.
McDonnell argues that Code § 15.2-1246 permits both methods of appealing. He primarily
relies on the use of “shall” versus “may” in the statute. The statute first provides that an appeal
“shall be filed with the circuit court for the county.” According to McDonnell, this use of “shall”
reflects a legislative preference for initiating an appeal by filing in circuit court within 30 days. The
statute subsequently provides that a disallowance “may be appealed by serving written notice on the
clerk . . . and executing a cash or surety bond.” According to McDonnell, this “permissive
language” implies that the notice and bond procedure “was included only to offer claimants a
secondary means of preserving their appeal rights in situations where they are unable to file their
appeal with the appropriate circuit court within [30] days.” Furthermore, to the extent the notice
and bond are mandatory, McDonnell argues that the statute gives six months to comply. Again,
McDonnell bases that argument on the language in Code § 15.2-1246 that “[i]n no case shall the
appeal be taken after the lapse of six months from the date of the decision.” In summary,
McDonnell contends that so long as a claimant takes both steps within six months—filing a
complaint and submitting the notice and bond—it does not matter which step is taken first.
Code § 15.2-1246 constitutes a waiver of the Commonwealth’s sovereign immunity and
must be strictly construed, as it is a statute in derogation of the common law. See Rector &
Visitors of the Univ. of Va. v. Carter, 267 Va. 242, 245 (2004). “In interpreting this statute,
courts apply the plain meaning . . . unless the terms are ambiguous or applying the plain
language would lead to an absurd result.” Cnty. of Albemarle v. Camirand, 285 Va. 420, 424-25
(2013) (alteration in original) (quoting Baker v. Commonwealth, 284 Va. 572, 576 (2012)).
McDonnell’s arguments are not supported by the statute’s plain meaning or the Supreme
Court of Virginia’s interpretation of it. First, contrary to McDonnell’s argument, the statute’s use of
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“may” (a claimant “may appeal” within 30 days; the disallowance “may be appealed” by submitting
notice and bond) does not mean a claimant has multiple avenues for appealing; instead, “may”
simply refers to the fact that an appeal is permissible but not mandatory. See id. at 425-26. In
Camirand, the Supreme Court rejected an argument that the “repeated use of the word ‘may’ as
opposed to ‘must’” in the statute “permit[s] two methods of perfecting an appeal.” Id. at 425.
Instead, reviewing the statute as a whole, the Court found it “clear that the word ‘may’ is used
because an appeal is permissible but not required.” Id. at 426. Thus, under Camirand, the statute’s
use of “may” does not contemplate multiple avenues for appealing a disallowance decision.
Additionally, the statute’s use of “shall” in “[t]he appeal shall be filed with the circuit
court for the county” does not reflect a legislative preference for initiating an appeal by filing a
complaint. The term “shall” in this context mandates the venue for a claimant’s circuit court
appeal—that is, the circuit court for the county that disallowed payment.
The Supreme Court of Virginia has had multiple opportunities to construe Code § 15.2-1246
and has determined that a claimant must satisfy the notice and bond requirements within the 30-day
time frame. See Viking Enter., Inc. v. Cnty. of Chesterfield, 277 Va. 104 (2009); Specialty Constr.
Mgmt., Inc. v. Cnty. Bd. of Arlington, No. 111210 (Va. May 25, 2012) (order).
In Viking Enterprise, the Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal of a payment claim where
the contractor had merely appealed by filing a complaint in circuit court, without complying with
the notice and bond provisions in Code § 15.2-1246. 277 Va. at 107-08. The contractor argued that
Code § 15.2-1246 did not apply because it conflicted with the Public Procurement Act, which only
requires filing an appeal within six months of a disallowance decision. Id. at 107, 110; see also
Code §§ 2.2-4363(E), -4364(E).
The Supreme Court found that the statutes did not conflict and that the notice and bond
provisions in Code § 15.2-1246 were jurisdictional. Id. at 111-12. It relied on precedent reflecting
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that Code § 15.2-1246 is part of an “exclusive procedure for litigating claims against a county” and
“[f]ailure to allege compliance with these statutes is fatal to an action against a county.” Id. at 111
(alteration in original) (quoting New Kent Cnty. v. Worley Aviation, Inc., 255 Va. 186, 193 (1998)).
Additionally, principles of sovereign immunity required strictly enforcing the notice and bond
requirements:
The sovereign can be sued only by its own consent, and a state
granting the right to its citizens to bring suit against it can be sued
only in the mode prescribed. The same principles apply to a
county . . . , suable only in the mode prescribed in the law granting
the right to sue.
Id. (quoting Botetourt Cnty. v. Burger, 86 Va. 530, 533 (1889)). “[T]he notice and bond
requirements set forth in Code § 15.2-1246 are the ‘mode prescribed’ for pursuing an appeal from a
county’s disallowance of a monetary claim.” Id. (quoting Burger, 86 Va. at 533). Accordingly, the
claimant could not disregard these requirements even though the parties’ contract was also governed
by the Public Procurement Act. See id.
Viking Enterprise concluded that “when appealing from a county’s disallowance of a
claim . . . , the claimant must serve written notice of its appeal on the clerk of the county’s
governing body and execute a bond to the county, both within 30 days from the date of either the
decision or service of written notice of the denial.” Id. at 113 (emphases added).
McDonnell contends that this language is dicta because the central issue in Viking
Enterprise was the potential statutory conflict—not whether the 30-day time frame strictly
applies to the notice and bond provisions of Code § 15.2-1246. The language is not dicta,
however, because it was “necessary to [the] disposition of the case.” Deiter v. Commonwealth,
205 Va. 771, 775 (1965). To assess whether the statutes conflicted, the Supreme Court had to
determine what each required. See Viking Enter., 277 Va. at 110-11. The Court’s finding that
Code § 15.2-1246 requires a notice of appeal and bond within 30 days, not a substantive
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complaint, was necessary to its holding that the statute does not conflict with the Public
Procurement Act’s allowance of six months to file a complaint. Id. at 111-12.
Additionally, we find it significant that after Viking Enterprise, the legislature amended
the statute to specify the dollar amount for the bond requirement ($250) but did nothing to
change the Supreme Court’s interpretation that the notice and bond must be submitted within 30
days. See 2010 Va. Acts ch. 668. “[W]here the General Assembly acts in an area in which [the
Supreme] Court has already spoken, it is presumed to know the law as the Court has stated it and
to acquiesce therein.” Burns v. Bd. of Supervisors, 227 Va. 354, 360 (1984); see also Hardesty v.
Hardesty, 40 Va. App. 663, 669 (2003) (en banc).
The Supreme Court subsequently relied on Viking Enterprise in an unpublished order that
rejected the very argument McDonnell presents here—that the notice and bond provisions in Code
§ 15.2-1246 are not subject to the 30-day time frame but can be satisfied within 6 months. See
Specialty Constr. Mgmt., Inc., No. 111210 (SCM). In SCM, the claimant argued that filing a
complaint in circuit court within 30 days of a county board’s decision is an acceptable method for
appealing, so long as the claimant then submits the notice of appeal and bond within six months
“because they are merely technical requirements for perfecting the appeal.” Id., slip op. at 2. Citing
Viking Enterprise, the Supreme Court disagreed that these requirements were “merely technical”
and instead considered them jurisdictional. Id. at 2-3. It held that to appeal the county board’s
disallowance decision, Code § 15.2-1246 “requires that SCM have filed the notice of appeal and
executed the bond in the clerk’s office of the Board within [30] days of the disallowance.” Id. at 3
(emphasis added).
Thus, as SCM held, the statute’s prohibition on appeals “after the lapse of six months from
the date of decision” does not extend the time for submitting the jurisdictional notice and bond.
Instead, that sentence relates back to the prior sentence entitling claimants, who were not present for
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the decision, to written notice and giving them 30 days to appeal. Taken together, these sentences
simply provide that all appeal rights expire after six months. In this way, Code § 15.2-1246
operates as a statute of repose that requires claimants to appeal matters quickly, protecting the
Commonwealth from having to defend against stale claims. See Commonwealth v. Owens-Corning
Fiberglas Corp., 238 Va. 595, 598-99 (1989) (describing statutes of repose as mechanisms “aimed
at precluding litigation of stale claims” and “reflect[ing] a legislative policy determination that a
time should come beyond which a potential defendant will be immune from liability for [its] past
acts and omissions”).
Under its plain meaning, Code § 15.2-1246 required McDonnell to submit a notice of appeal
and bond within 30 days from notice of the disallowance decision. McDonnell only filed a
complaint within 30 days. Accordingly, the court properly determined that McDonnell failed to
comply with the statute.2
II. Assignment of Error 3
Whether McDonnell “substantially complied” with Code § 15.2-1246
Although McDonnell’s primary argument is that it strictly complied with Code
§ 15.2-1246, it alternatively contends that the court erred by finding it had not substantially
complied. According to McDonnell, by filing a circuit court complaint, serving its notice of
2
McDonnell’s reliance on Obenshain v. Halliday, 504 F. Supp. 946 (E.D. Va. 1980), is
unavailing. Although the federal district court in Obenshain held that a plaintiff has six months
to comply with the notice and bond requirements, the case was decided in 1980, well before the
Supreme Court’s 2009 decision in Viking Enterprise. 504 F. Supp. at 954-56. In SCM, the
Supreme Court essentially stated that Obenshain misinterpreted Code § 15.2-1246’s predecessor
statute, finding instead that the statute “clearly states that the notice of appeal must be filed and
the bond executed within [30] days.” SCM, slip op. at 2 n.1. Additionally, the plaintiff in
Obenshain actually served her complaint on the county within the 30-day time frame. 504
F. Supp. at 955. Here, by contrast, McDonnell filed but did not serve its complaint within 30
days and therefore did not provide the notice found to be sufficient in Obenshain. Accordingly,
Obenshain does not support reversing the judgment in this case.
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appeal on the clerk, and supplying security for the Board’s costs, it “completed all acts required
by the [s]tatute” and therefore the Board cannot claim surprise or prejudice.
Principles of sovereign immunity typically require strict compliance with procedures for
suing the government. See Viking Enter., 277 Va. at 111 (stating that “[t]he sovereign can be
sued only by its own consent” and “only in the mode prescribed” by statute (quoting Burger, 86
Va. at 533)); see also Phelan v. Commonwealth, 291 Va. 192, 195 (2016) (affirming dismissal
based on sovereign immunity where the plaintiff’s notice did not explicitly identify the
“agency . . . alleged to be liable” as required by the Tort Claims Act, Code § 8.01-195.6(A)).
Substantial compliance can rescue claims with technical defects in an appeal bond. See
Parker v. Prince William Cnty., 198 Va. 231, 234-36 (1956) (recognizing the possibility for
“substantial compliance” with Code § 15.2-1246’s predecessor statute but ultimately affirming a
dismissal where the claimant failed to submit an adequate surety bond until almost ten months
after the denial of his claim); see also Viking Enter., 277 Va. at 111 (referring to substantial
compliance but nevertheless stating that “failure to substantially comply with the statutory
requirement for executing a bond with sufficient surety ‘constitutes a jurisdictional defect’ that
prevents a circuit court from acquiring jurisdiction of an appeal from a county’s disallowance of
a monetary claim” (quoting Parker, 198 Va. at 235)). Even assuming McDonnell’s tardy bond
can be excused as merely a technical defect, these cases do not similarly excuse McDonnell’s
failure to submit the notice of appeal in 30 days.
The significance of the notice requirement was emphasized in Camirand. In that case,
county employees attempted to appeal a decision by the board of supervisors disallowing retirement
benefits. 285 Va. at 422. Although the employees filed a circuit court complaint, they did not serve
written notice of their appeal on the board clerk. Id. Instead, they served the clerk with a single
document entitled “Appeal Bond” expressing their “intention . . . to appeal.” Id. at 423-24
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(emphasis added). The Supreme Court determined that, although this document satisfied the bond
requirement,3 it did not also satisfy the notice requirement of Code § 15.2-1246. Id. Instead, the
document’s mere expression of intent was no more than an “implied notice” of appeal. Id. at 425.
“The clerk’s office cannot be expected to look to . . . language concerning an ‘intent to appeal’ and
divine a supplementary purpose to the document of providing actual notice of an appeal.” Id.
McDonnell insists that by filing the circuit court complaint, it substantially complied with
Code § 15.2-1246 because it put the Board on actual notice of the appeal within the 30-day time
frame. We disagree. Although McDonnell filed its complaint within 30 days, it did not serve it
until September 12—well after 30 days from the July 28 disallowance notice. Simply filing a
complaint with the circuit court did not put the Board on actual notice of the appeal. Without
service of the complaint, the Board could fairly assume that the litigation had ended. 4 See
Camirand, 285 Va. at 422-25; cf. Halberstam v. Commonwealth, 251 Va. 248, 251-52 (1996)
(holding that “actual notice” was insufficient to satisfy notice requirements of the Tort Claims Act,
Code § 8.01-195.6).
Additionally, Virginia law clearly establishes that McDonnell’s act of submitting the
notice of appeal after 30 days cannot amount to substantial compliance with the statute because
the requirement is jurisdictional. See Viking Enter., 277 Va. at 113; see also Bd. of Supervisors
3
The version of Code § 15.2-1246 in effect at the time did not contain a bond amount but
simply required “executing a bond to the county . . . to the clerk of the governing body.”
Camirand, 285 Va. at 423 n.*.
4
McDonnell cites page 147 of the record for its assertion that the Board received “actual
notice” of the complaint when it was filed in circuit court on August 17, 2022. Record page 147
is a screenshot showing “participant activity” for the circuit court case. It is not proof of service
or an indication that the filed complaint was somehow disseminated to the Board on the date of
filing. Indeed, no one representing the Board was added or participated until September 12,
2022. On brief, the Board admits that its deputy attorney “happened to learn about the lawsuit
shortly after it was filed.” Any inadvertent notice of appeal the Board happened to receive
cannot demonstrate McDonnell’s “substantial compliance” with Code § 15.2-1246.
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v. Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 271 Va. 336, 346-47 (2006) (collecting authorities that require strict
compliance with “jurisdictional” time limitations for noting appeals); cf. Rule 5A:6 (precluding
appeal to our Court “unless, within 30 days after entry of final judgment[,] . . . counsel files with
the clerk of the trial court a notice of appeal”); Watkins v. Fairfax Cnty. Dep’t of Fam. Servs., 42
Va. App. 760, 774 (2004) (stating that if the notice of appeal under Rule 5A:6 is not filed within
30 days, “the notice is ‘ineffective’ and the appeal is never properly perfected” (quoting Zion
Church Designers & Builders v. McDonald, 18 Va. App. 580, 583 (1994))). In Watkins, we
stated that the 30-day time frame for filing a notice of appeal serves the purpose of “set[ting] a
definite point of time when litigation should be at an end, unless within that time the prescribed
[appeal] has been made; and if it has not been, to advise prospective appellees that they are freed
of the appellant’s demands.” 42 Va. App. at 771 (quoting Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722,
751 (1991)). Likewise, the 30-day deadline in Code § 15.2-1246 “set[s] a definite point of time”
for a potential appellee to know whether the litigation has ended or will continue to a higher
court. Id. Nothing but strict compliance with the deadline will serve this purpose.
Any lack of surprise or prejudice to the Board is not relevant. Whether the governing
body suffered prejudice from a claimant’s noncompliance did not factor into the Supreme
Court’s analysis in Camirand, Viking Enterprise, or Parker. Instead, these cases reflect that
principles of sovereign immunity require suing the government only in the “mode prescribed” by
statute and thus compliance with the 30-day time frame for noting an appeal. Viking Enter., 277
Va. at 111 (quoting Burger, 86 Va. at 533); see also Camirand, 285 Va. at 422-25; Parker, 198
Va. at 234-36.
Finally, the cases on which McDonnell relies to support its “substantial compliance”
argument are distinguishable, involving disputes between private parties about contracts and
mechanic’s liens. See generally Akers v. James T. Barnes of Washington, D.C., Inc., 227 Va.
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367 (2017); Desai v. A.R. Design Grp., Inc., 293 Va. 426 (2017). These cases have nothing to do
with Code § 15.2-1246 or sovereign immunity. Accordingly, the court did not err by finding that
McDonnell did not substantially comply with Code § 15.2-1246.
III. Assignment of Error 4
Whether the Notice of Disallowance was Adequate
McDonnell argues the court erred by finding that the Board’s July 28, 2022 letter was a
notice of disallowance sufficient to trigger a 30-day deadline for appealing because the letter did not
use the words “disallowance” or “notice” or refer to Code § 15.2-1246. McDonnell further argues
the letter did not constitute notice because the parties’ contract did not refer to the statute’s “appeal
perfection process.”
These arguments are unpersuasive. The Board’s letter identified McDonnell’s claim and
contract number in its subject line and stated, “Please be advised that at its July 19, 2022 Recessed
Meeting, the County Board of Arlington, Virginia, denied the above-referenced claim.” This letter
clearly and precisely informed McDonnell about the subject and outcome of the payment claim.
Nothing in the statute required the Board to use the specific words of “disallowance” or “notice,”
nor does the statute mandate advising a claimant of any appeal deadlines or procedures. If the
General Assembly wants to prescribe specific language, it knows how to do so. See, e.g., Code
§ 15.2-2311(A) (providing that a notice of zoning violation must state the time to appeal to the
board of zoning appeals). We presume the legislature carefully chose the words it used when
enacting the relevant statute. Zinone v. Lee’s Crossing Homeowners Ass’n, 282 Va. 330, 337
(2011) (comparing statutes to determine legislative intent and “presum[ing] that the difference in the
choice of language was intentional”).
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Additionally, even assuming the parties’ contract did not detail the statutory appeals process,
McDonnell was clearly aware of the statute and its applicability. It expressly relied on the statute in
its complaint as the basis for jurisdiction.
CONCLUSION
The court did not err by sustaining the Board’s special plea in bar of sovereign immunity
and dismissing McDonnell’s action with prejudice.
Affirmed.
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