Present: Carrico, C.J., Compton, Lacy, Keenan, Koontz and
Kinser, JJ.
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 982635 JUSTICE LAWRENCE L. KOONTZ, JR.
January 14, 2000
DOUGLAS W. LUZIK, ET AL.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
Theodore J. Markow, Judge
In this appeal, we consider whether the Commonwealth has
waived its right to assert the bar of sovereign immunity to a
suit by state employees in state court for back overtime wages
under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C.
§ 201, et seq.
BACKGROUND
On June 25, 1992, Douglas W. Luzik and fifteen other
juvenile probation officers (the complainants), who work in
various Court Service Units for the Virginia Department of Youth
and Family Services (the Department), 1 filed a bill of complaint
against the Commonwealth alleging a violation of the FLSA. The
complainants asserted that they are “non-exempt” employees under
the FLSA and sought to enforce the right provided therein to
receive hourly payment of time and one half if and when they
work more than 40 hours in a workweek. The complainants sought
1
By amendment to Code § 66-1 in 1996, this department became
the Department of Juvenile Justice.
back overtime wages, enforcement of future overtime pay, and
attorney’s fees and costs.
The Commonwealth’s initial response was to file a plea in
bar of sovereign immunity, asserting that it was exempt from
being sued in its own courts by its employees for an alleged
violation of the FLSA. The Commonwealth asserted that the
Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution precludes
Congress from subjecting a state and its officials to being sued
in federal court absent an express intent in a given statute to
permit such suits. Contending that there is no abrogation of
the sovereign immunity of the states express in the FLSA, the
Commonwealth asserted that it cannot be sued for a violation of
that law in federal court and, by extension, neither can it be
sued in state court. The Commonwealth contended that is so
because in the absence of a waiver by the General Assembly, the
Commonwealth and her officials have absolute immunity from the
award of damages sought by the complainants. The Commonwealth
further contended that such immunity also applies to any
injunctive relief requiring future payment of overtime pay as
the establishment and revision of wages and salaries is
discretionary under the laws of the Commonwealth.
After receiving briefs and hearing argument, by letter
opinion dated March 11, 1993, the chancellor denied the
Commonwealth’s plea in bar. The chancellor reasoned that
2
language within the FLSA defining an employer to include a
“public agency,” 29 U.S.C. § 203(d), which is further defined as
“the government of a State” and “any agency of . . . a State,”
29 U.S.C. § 203(x), evinces an intent on the part of Congress to
subject the states to enforcement of the FLSA in federal courts,
thus answering the Commonwealth’s assertion that such an action
is barred therein by the Eleventh Amendment. The chancellor
further reasoned that to bar the suit in state court under a
theory of sovereign immunity “would [improperly] allow state law
to determine the applicability of federal law.”
The Commonwealth noted an appeal of this ruling to this
Court. The Commonwealth’s petition for appeal was limited to
the issue of whether sovereign immunity barred state employees
from bringing suit against the state in state court. Finding
that there was not yet an appealable order, Code § 8.01-670, we
refused the Commonwealth’s petition for appeal and its
subsequent petition for rehearing.
The complainants then filed an amended bill of complaint
joining eighty-seven additional juvenile probation officers as
complainants. The Commonwealth filed a demurrer, again
asserting the application of the bar of sovereign immunity and
the preclusive effect of the Eleventh Amendment. The
Commonwealth further asserted that application of the FLSA to
the states exceeded congressional authority as limited by the
3
Tenth Amendment. The chancellor took no action with reference
to the Commonwealth’s demurrer. Thereafter, the Commonwealth
filed an answer, which it subsequently amended, and the matter
proceeded to an ore tenus hearing before the chancellor.
The principal issues before the chancellor were whether the
complainants were salaried employees and, if so, whether their
employment requirements and job duties caused them to fall
within one of the recognized exemptions within the FLSA as
administrative, professional, or executive employees under the
“short test” promulgated in the regulations implementing the
FLSA for determining the exempt status of salaried employees.
The Commonwealth contended that all the complainants are
salaried and that ninety-nine of the complainants are subject to
administrative or professional exemptions. The Commonwealth
contended that the remaining four employees are exempt executive
employees.
The complainants contended that they are not salaried
because they are subject to a reduction in pay for less than a
workweek under a disciplinary policy applicable to all employees
of the Department. With the exception of three of the
complainants, who conceded that they were “executives,” the
complainants further contended that their job duties do not
qualify for any of the exemptions provided for under the FLSA.
4
One complainant contended that she was neither salaried nor an
exempt executive.
On May 5, 1995, the chancellor entered an order awarding
judgment to the Commonwealth. In an accompanying opinion
letter, the chancellor found that the complainants are salaried
employees despite the existence of the disciplinary policy.
Applying the “short test” applicable to salaried employees, the
chancellor found that the majority of the complainants have job
duties that reflect the requirements for either administrative
or professional employee status. The chancellor further found
that the one “executive” employee who had challenged the
application of that exemption to her is an executive employee
for purposes of the FLSA.
The complainants appealed the judgment to this Court,
assigning error to the chancellor’s finding that they are
salaried employees and that they are subject to the exemptions
of the FLSA. In its brief in opposition, the Commonwealth
asserted as an assignment of cross-error the failure of the
chancellor to sustain the Tenth Amendment claim raised in its
demurrer to the amended bill of compliant. 2 The Commonwealth did
2
There is no merit to this assertion. Congress has the
power to extend the coverage of the FLSA to public sector-
employees consistent with the Tenth Amendment. See Garcia v.
San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority, 469 U.S. 528, 555-57
(1985).
5
not assign cross-error to the denial of its claim of sovereign
immunity. On December 20, 1995, this Court refused the petition
for appeal.
The complainants then filed a petition for a writ of
certiorari in the United States Supreme Court. The first of the
three questions presented in that petition challenged the
chancellor’s determination that the complainants are salaried
employees even though they are subject to potential reductions
in pay in amounts less than a full workweek’s pay “regardless
whether any actual deductions have occurred.” On February 24,
1997, the Court granted the petition and by order vacated the
judgment and remanded the case “for further consideration in
light of Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. [452] (1997).”
Auer involved a claim under the FLSA for overtime pay by
sergeants and a lieutenant employed by the St. Louis, Missouri
Police Department. Id. at 454. In Auer, an opinion of the
Secretary of Labor, presented to the Court in the form of an
amicus curiae brief, stated the Department of Labor’s position
that employees “covered by a policy that permits disciplinary or
other deductions in pay ‘as a practical matter’” are not
“salaried” employees “if there is either an actual practice of
making such deductions or an employment policy that creates a
‘significant likelihood’ of such deductions.” Id. at 461. The
Court held that the Secretary’s opinion was controlling since it
6
constituted an interpretation “of the Secretary’s own
regulations.” 3 Id.
On July 29, 1997, we remanded the case to the chancellor
for further proceedings consistent with the order of the United
States Supreme Court. The complainants, first in a letter brief
to the chancellor and subsequently by formal brief and argument,
contended that the remand was not limited to the issue addressed
in Auer but, rather, permitted them to address all aspects of
the case with respect to the possible controlling effect of
opinions from the Secretary of Labor.
Agreeing with the complainants’ contention on the scope of
the mandated reconsideration, the chancellor determined that he
was required to reconsider the exempt status of the employees
with respect to Department of Labor letter rulings he had
previously discounted. 4 The chancellor confirmed his prior
3
The Court rejected a claim by the Police Department that
the suit, which originated in federal court, was barred by the
Eleventh Amendment, because the City of St. Louis was “not an
‘arm of the state’ for Eleventh Amendment purposes.” Auer, 519
U.S. at 456 n.1. There is no dispute in the present case that
the Department is an agency of the Commonwealth.
4
The chancellor also examined the application of the
specific holding of Auer with respect to his prior determination
that the complainants are salaried employees. He determined
that Code § 2.1-114.5(11), which authorizes the creation of
regulations permitting reductions in pay as a disciplinary tool,
is “nominally applicable” to the entire range of personnel in
the Department. As such, the chancellor found that there is not
a “significant likelihood” that the complainants would be
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ruling that all the complainants are salaried employees.
However, relying on four Department of Labor letter rulings
which address the status of juvenile and adult probation
officers generally and “child protective investigators,” the
chancellor found, contrary to his prior ruling, that the
complainants are not exempt as administrative or professional
employees. With respect to the one complainant who had
previously been found to be an exempt executive employee, the
chancellor concluded that the Commonwealth “has not met its
burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that
[the complainant’s] primary duties relate to supervisory
management . . . . She is not exempt from the overtime
provisions of the FLSA.”
In an order dated November 25, 1997, the chancellor entered
judgment for the complainants and referred the matter to a
commissioner in chancery for a determination of the back
overtime wages due them from the Commonwealth. On December 24,
1997, the Commonwealth filed a motion reasserting its plea of
sovereign immunity. In a terse letter to counsel, the
chancellor stated that “[a]t best, the Commonwealth is too late;
subject to such reductions. Accordingly, the chancellor
confirmed his prior ruling that all of the complainants are
salaried employees. The complainants do not challenge this
finding in this appeal.
8
at worst, it is requesting reconsideration . . . . There must
be finality to a case!” The chancellor stated that he was
summarily overruling the Commonwealth’s motion; however, no
order memorializing that action appears in the record.
After receiving the report of the commissioner in chancery,
the chancellor entered a final order dated September 21, 1998,
in which the procedural history of the case from its inception
is recounted and the interlocutory and final rulings are
memorialized. Relevant to this appeal, the order makes express
mention of the Commonwealth’s original plea in bar and the
denial of that motion. The chancellor awarded the complainants
judgment for back overtime wages in the amounts determined by
the commissioner in chancery, $254,770.92 in attorney’s fees,
and $16,638.21 costs.
The Commonwealth filed a petition for appeal assigning
error to the chancellor’s failure to sustain its plea in bar and
to the determination that the complainants are not exempt
employees under the FLSA. By order dated April 8, 1999, we
awarded the Commonwealth this appeal.
On June 23, 1999, after the Commonwealth had filed its
opening brief, the United States Supreme Court decided the case
of Alden v. Maine, ___ U.S. ___, 119 S.Ct. 2240 (1999). The
procedural history and factual background of Alden are
remarkably similar to those of the present case. Alden involved
9
the claims of juvenile probation officers employed by the State
of Maine for back overtime wages under the FLSA. The claims
raised in Alden had first been asserted in a suit filed in
federal court, but this suit was dismissed before judgment was
entered following the determination in Seminole Tribe of Florida
v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44 (1996), that Congress lacked the
authority to abrogate the states’ sovereign immunity from suit
in the federal courts. An action was then filed in state court
in Maine, where it was dismissed on the ground that, absent a
waiver by the state, sovereign immunity barred that suit also.
The Maine Supreme Judicial Court upheld this ruling and the
United States Supreme Court granted certiorari.
In affirming the judgment of the Maine courts, the Court
held that “the powers delegated to Congress under Article I of
the United States Constitution do not include the power to
subject nonconsenting States to private suits for damages in
state courts.” Alden, ___ U.S. at ___, 119 S.Ct. at 2246. The
Court further found that Maine had not waived its sovereign
immunity and, thus, had not consented to the suit. Id. It is
important to note that sovereign immunity was the only issue
addressed in Alden. Although the opinion states that Maine “has
altered its conduct so that its compliance with the federal law
cannot now be questioned,” id. at ___, 119 S.Ct. at 2269, the
10
Court did not address whether these particular juvenile
probation officers were “exempt” or “nonexempt” employees.
On July 28, 1999, we granted the Commonwealth’s motion to
file a supplemental brief addressing the application of Alden
and, thereafter, briefs were filed by both parties.
DISCUSSION
Alden clearly establishes that the Commonwealth may not be
sued by state employees in its own courts for an alleged
violation of the FLSA without its consent. That consent in the
context of an FLSA action brought by state employees must be
established by a waiver of the Commonwealth’s sovereign
immunity. Here, the Commonwealth asserts that it has not
consented to such suits and, therefore, the trial court’s
judgment must be reversed. The complainants contend, however,
that by its actions and omissions in this case, the Commonwealth
has waived its claim of sovereign immunity. We disagree with
the complainants.
The complainants’ initial contention is based on the
established rule of appellate procedure in this Commonwealth
that if a matter is appealed and a party fails to preserve a
challenge to an alleged error made by the trial court by
assignment of error or cross-error, the judgment of the trial
court becomes final as to that issue, a doctrine commonly
referred to as the “law of the case,” and precludes further
11
litigation of that issue if the case is remanded to the trial
court for further proceedings by the appellate court. See
Lockheed Information Management Systems v. Maximus, 259 Va. ___,
___, ___ S.E.2d ___, ___ (2000)(decided today); Searles’ Adm’r
v. Gordon’s Adm’r, 156 Va. 289, 294-98, 157 S.E. 759, 761-62
(1931). Although the Commonwealth has asserted its sovereign
immunity throughout the proceedings in the trial court, as
recited above the Commonwealth did not assign cross-error in the
initial appeal to the trial court’s ruling that the Commonwealth
was not immune from this suit under the doctrine of sovereign
immunity. However, this rule of appellate procedure and the
resulting finality of judgments are not applicable to the issue
of sovereign immunity in this case.
This is so because only the legislature acting in its
policy-making capacity can abrogate the Commonwealth’s sovereign
immunity. In the absence of such action by the legislature, the
courts of this Commonwealth do not have the necessary
jurisdictional authority to entertain FLSA actions brought
against the Commonwealth by its employees. Thus, the issue of
wavier of sovereign immunity in this case does not turn upon the
preservation of arguments about the defense, but upon whether
the Commonwealth acting through the legislature has acted to
vest the circuit court with jurisdiction to entertain this
action. Accordingly, we initially conclude, contrary to the
12
complainants’ contention, that the actions of an attorney for
the Commonwealth on a procedural matter are obviously not those
of the legislature in its policy-making capacity and, therefore,
those actions cannot constitute the Commonwealth’s waiver of its
sovereign immunity and consent to the FLSA suit in this case.
The complainants further contend that even if the
Commonwealth has not waived its right to assert sovereign
immunity by its actions in this case, it has done so generally
by statute. Citing Code § 8.01-192, which provides in pertinent
part that “[w]hen the Comptroller or other authorized person
shall disallow . . . any such claim against the Commonwealth as
is provided for by [§ 2.1-223.1] . . . the person presenting
such claim may petition an appropriate circuit court for
redress,” the complainants contend that their claim for back
wages should be construed as a claim to recover a debt owed
under their contracts of employment. They assert that because
the chancellor ultimately found that they were non-exempt
employees entitled to receive overtime pay, their suit
constitutes a valid “pecuniary claim against the Commonwealth.”
Code § 2.1-223.1.
We will assume, without deciding, that a claim for unpaid
wages by a state employee would be subject to the waiver found
in Code § 8.01-192. But see Code § 2.1-116.06(C) (providing
that the “establishment and revision of wages” is not subject to
13
grievance hearing). The principal difficulty with the
complainants’ contract debt theory, however, is that their suit
was not brought in the style of a contract claim or in the
manner prescribed for such claims by the statutory scheme and
case law they cite in support of their position. Although the
complainants’ assert on brief that they pursued administrative
remedies prior to advancing their claims in litigation, the
record does not support this assertion. Moreover, even if we
were to accept this assertion, their suit still would not
satisfy the requirements for seeking payment of a contract debt
from the Commonwealth as prescribed by the statute.
The complainants’ urge, however, that the waiver of
sovereign immunity for claims against the Commonwealth should be
broadly construed to act as a general waiver whenever the remedy
sought might be characterized as a claim for a debt owed under a
contractual relationship regardless of the nature of the
proceeding in which the claim is brought or the theory advanced
to assert that claim. This proposition ignores the basis
underpinning the Commonwealth’s assertion of sovereign immunity
in this case.
As the Commonwealth notes, the plea in bar was advanced in
order to exercise the Commonwealth’s prerogative not to be
subject to suit in her own courts pursuant to an act of
Congress. The issue is not one of the avoidance of a just
14
contract debt, but of the preservation of a right reserved to
the states by the United States Constitution. We see no reason
to vitiate that right by a broad and unwarranted interpretation
of the legislative intent behind the limited waiver of sovereign
immunity in Code § 8.01-192, and nothing in our cases
interpreting that statute suggests that it should be applied in
circumstances other than in claims properly instituted under
that statute and the scheme provided for pursuing such claims in
Code §§ 8.01-193 to -195.
Finally, the complainants contend that due process requires
that the Commonwealth be barred from asserting its sovereign
immunity in order to avoid liability for “an unconstitutional
taking without just compensation.” In essence, they are
asserting that the back overtime wages they allege they are owed
under the FLSA is a property right of which they have been
unjustly deprived. 5 This novel theory rests on the faulty
premise that the complainants’ entitlement to an award of
damages as prescribed by the FLSA for the Commonwealth’s alleged
failure to comply with the Act’s overtime provisions accrues
5
Within the same argument the complainants assert that the
taking is the result of the Commonwealth not fulfilling its
obligation to pay overtime under their employment contracts.
This assertion is merely an attempt to recast the prior
contention that their suit should be deemed a contract debt
action.
15
independent of the complainants’ ability to maintain and prevail
in an action for those damages. Under the complainants’ theory,
the Commonwealth’s potential liability on any claim would
require a “due process waiver” of its sovereign immunity since
the failure to pay the putative damages would, prospectively,
constitute a governmental taking without just compensation.
Contrary to the complainants’ assertion, the failure to
compel the Commonwealth to make this “due process waiver” does
not unjustly deprive them of a remedy under the FLSA. As noted
in Alden, for example, the FLSA provides for a remedy in the
form of a suit by the federal government on behalf of the
employees. Alden, ___ U.S. at ___, 119 S.Ct. at 2269.
Moreover, even in the absence of an alternative remedy, it is
self-evident that the doctrine of sovereign immunity cannot be
overcome simply on the ground that it deprives a claimant of a
recovery, for that is the very nature of the doctrine when it is
properly applied.
For these reasons, we hold that the Commonwealth has not
waived its sovereign immunity and, thus, has not consented to be
sued in its own courts by its employees for an alleged violation
of the FLSA. Accordingly, applying Alden, we will reverse the
chancellor’s denial of the Commonwealth’s plea of sovereign
16
immunity and enter final judgment for the Commonwealth with
respect to those claims. 6
Reversed and final judgment.
6
Because we hold that the Commonwealth was not subject to
being sued by its employees in its own courts, we need not
consider the Commonwealth’s further assignment of error
addressing the chancellor’s finding that the complainants were
non-exempt employees. Moreover, we reject the complainants’
contention that even if the Commonwealth was entitled to assert
its claim of sovereign immunity, the fact that they “prevailed”
on the merits after that claim was erroneously denied entitles
them to recover the attorney’s fees and costs awarded to them by
the chancellor. Because of our holding that the Commonwealth
cannot be sued by its own employees under the FLSA, it cannot be
required to pay the attorney’s fees and costs of such litigants
when a suit is allowed improperly to go forward.
17