02/14/2017
DA 16-0164
Case Number: DA 16-0164
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2017 MT 26
STATE OF MONTANA, JUDICIAL BRANCH,
OFFICE OF THE COURT ADMINISTRATOR,
and GEORGE W. HUSS,
Plaintiffs and Appellees,
v.
CHARLENE A. BERDAHL,
Defendant, Counter-Claimant,
Cross-Claimant, and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District,
In and For the County of Lewis and Clark Cause No. BDV 14-894
Honorable Jeffrey M. Sherlock, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Jory C. Ruggiero, Domenic A. Cossi, Western Justice Associates, PLLC,
Bozeman, Montana
For Appellees:
John G. Crist, Crist, Krogh, Butler & Nord, LLC, Billings, Montana
(for George W. Huss)
W. Anderson Forsythe, Moulton Billingham, P.C., Billings, Montana
Katherine Orr, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana
For Amicus Curiae, Montana Trial Lawyers Association:
Michael G. Eiselein, Eiselein Law Firm, PLLC, Billings, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: November 16, 2016
Decided: February 14, 2017
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
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Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Charlene A. Berdahl (Berdahl) appeals the declaratory judgment entered by the
First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, holding that the State of Montana
owed no duty to defend or indemnify George Huss (Huss) against claims filed by
Berdahl, and had no obligation to pay the stipulated settlement and confessed judgment
between Huss and Berdahl. We affirm, and address the following issue:
Did the District Court err by holding that the State bore no obligation to pay the
stipulated settlement between Huss and Berdahl?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶2 The facts found by the District Court for purposes of this declaratory action are as
follows. In 1991, Berdahl began working as a court reporter for the Sixteenth Judicial
District Court, in Forsyth. In November 2012, George Huss was elected as a district
court judge in the Sixteenth Judicial District. Huss oversaw Department Two of the
District and Berdahl worked directly for Huss as his primary court reporter. In this
capacity, Berdahl worked closely with Huss and often traveled with him to locations
within the District for official court business.
¶3 In February 2014, Berdahl filed a sexual harassment complaint against Huss with
the Montana Human Rights Bureau (HRB). Berdahl alleged that Huss, during work time,
had made various declarations of romantic interest, love, and undying devotion to her,
which Berdahl resisted. Berdahl stated that Huss bought her gifts, offered to make her
dinner while his wife was out of town, and expressed his desire to kiss and hug her.
Berdahl alleged that Huss retaliated against her in the workplace when she resisted his
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overtures. Berdahl’s detailed complaint set forth numerous further allegations about
Huss’s behavior, some of which was delineated by the District Court.
¶4 On February 24, 2014, Beth McLaughlin (McLaughlin), the State’s Court
Administrator, emailed Huss to advise that she had received Berdahl’s human rights
complaint, which had also named the State of Montana, and asked Huss to take no action
until McLaughlin had obtained counsel for the judicial branch. In reply, Huss asked,
“Will the State be providing me [with] counsel pursuant to [§] 2-9-305[,] MCA?”
McLaughlin responded that she would not know until she received advice from counsel.
Two days later, McLaughlin advised Huss by email that state counsel had been assigned
for the HRB complaint, but that the assigned attorney was not immediately available due
to scheduling conflicts.
¶5 On April 2, 2014, Huss’s attorney, John Crist (Crist), wrote to McLaughlin
requesting that the State “agree to defend and indemnify Judge George W. Huss”
regarding Berdahl’s HRB claims. Noting that Huss had previously contacted the State
about the complaint, Crist explained that “this letter is intended to be a more formal
notice as provided by statute. . . . [P]lease accept this letter as his formal tender of the
defense of this action filed against him, and his request for indemnity as provided by
Mont. Code Ann. § 2-9-305.” On April 25, 2014, the Agency Legal Services Bureau, on
behalf of the Court Administrator, wrote to Crist and affirmed that the State would
underwrite the costs of Huss’s defense, to be provided by Crist. The letter further
explained that:
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This tender of a defense is provided with a reservation of right not to
provide payment for attorney services should it appear from the
investigation by the Human Rights Bureau that Judge Huss was acting
outside the course and scope of employment or if other elements of Mont.
Code Ann. § 2-9-305(6) apply. In the case that any of these elements
apply, Judge Huss will have to pay for his own defense.
Similarly the Court Administrator has not made a decision of whether it
will provide indemnity with respect to the claims . . . but will do so at the
completion of the HRB investigation and based upon the factors considered
under Mont. Code Ann. § 2-9-305.
¶6 About four months later, on August 12, 2014, Crist again wrote to the State
requesting that it “acknowledge its legal obligation to indemnify Judge Huss with respect
to” the claims, and stating that “[t]he State does not need to await an investigator’s report
to make this determination.” Crist’s letter focused particularly on alleged actions taken
by Huss to retaliate against Berdahl after she resisted his romantic overtures. Crist also
requested that the State “meaningfully participate” in an HRB mediation on Berdahl’s
complaint, which had been scheduled for September 3, 2014. On August 26, 2014, the
State responded to Crist, citing authority for the proposition that sexual harassment by a
supervisor was not conduct within the scope of employment, and taking the position that
Huss’s alleged actions as stated in Berdahl’s complaint “were not performed as part of
Judge Huss’ duties as a Montana District Court Judge. . . . As a result, the State
concludes Judge Huss did not act in the course and scope of his employment and cannot
be defended and indemnified by the State.” Regarding Crist’s request that the State
participate in the scheduled mediation, the State’s counsel stated:
[T]he State does not intend to participate in or consent to any settlement of
this matter. If Judge Huss agrees to a monetary settlement[,] . . . it is
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without the consent of the State and Judge Huss cannot be subsequently
indemnified for any such settlement. Mont. Code Ann. § 2-9-305(6)(c).
¶7 Berdahl and Huss mediated on September 3, 2014, and although they did not reach
a settlement that day, they continued to negotiate and, on September 30, 2014, entered
into a “Stipulation and Confession of Judgment Resulting from the State of Montana’s
Refusal to Defend and Indemnify.” In this agreement, Huss confessed to judgment in
Berdahl’s favor in the amount of $744,371. He assigned his rights against the State to
Berdahl and agreed to “cooperate in jointly requesting entry of this Judgment by any
tribunal having jurisdiction.” Berdahl agreed not to seek execution of the judgment
against Huss.
¶8 The State became aware of the stipulated settlement when Berdahl sought
collection of the judgment from the State. The State wrote to Crist, advising that,
“[b]ased on George Huss’ dispute regarding whether he is entitled to defense and
indemnification, the State of Montana has concluded it should clarify its obligation to
Huss, as provided in Mont. Code Ann. § 2-9-305(7)” and “has commenced a declaratory
judgment action.” The parties, including Berdahl, Huss, and the State, appeared before
the HRB Hearing Officer and requested a stay of the administrative proceeding “while
the Office of the Court Administrator institutes a declaratory judgment action in District
Court, pursuant to Mont. Code Ann. § 2-9-305(7),” which the Hearing Officer ordered.
¶9 The State filed this action, seeking judicial declarations that Huss was not acting in
the course and scope of his employment with regard to his actions toward Berdahl, that
his actions constituted oppression, that he failed to cooperate with his defense, that the
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State had no duty to defend or indemnify Huss against the claims, and that Huss had
entered a settlement without the consent of the State, which was not enforceable against
the State. Berdahl counterclaimed, seeking declarations that the State had breached its
duty to defend, that the State was liable under principles of agency and respondeat
superior, that the settlement was enforceable against the State, and that she was entitled to
attorney fees and costs.
¶10 In a lengthy order, the District Court rejected Berdahl’s request for a declaration
that the State was responsible for the stipulated judgment entered by Berdahl and Huss,
and further held that the State owed no duty to defend or indemnify Huss in the action.
Regarding Berdahl’s respondeat superior claim against the State, the District Court
reasoned that Berdahl’s “exclusive remedy is under the Montana Human Rights Act,”
and that she could not assert the claim in this declaratory action. The District Court
dismissed the claim without prejudice to Berdahl pursuing her claim before the HRB.
Berdahl appeals.1
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment, using
criteria applied by the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56. Mont. Sports Shooting Ass’n
v. State, 2008 MT 190, ¶ 8, 344 Mont. 1, 185 P.3d 1003 [hereinafter Sports Shooting]
(citing Farmers Coop. Ass’n v. Amsden, LLC, 2007 MT 286, ¶ 24, 339 Mont. 445, 171
1
On October 1, 2014, HRB issued its Final Investigative Report, finding reasonable cause to
believe that Huss was guilty of sexual harassment, but concluding that Berdahl’s employer was
not liable because it had a policy and procedure in place to address complaints of sexual
discrimination, which was known to Berdahl, but she had failed to avail herself of this process.
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P.3d). A district court properly grants a motion for summary judgment when no genuine
issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law. Sports Shooting, ¶ 8 (citing Farmers Coop., ¶ 24). We review a district court’s
conclusions of law for correctness. Shattuck v. Kalispell Reg’l Med. Ctr., 2011 MT 229,
¶ 8, 362 Mont. 100, 261 P.3d 1021 (citing Gaston Eng’g & Surveying, P.C. v. Oakwood
Props., LLC, 2011 MT 44, ¶ 11, 359 Mont. 341, 249 P.3d 75).
DISCUSSION
¶12 Did the District Court err by holding that the State bore no obligation to pay the
stipulated settlement between Huss and Berdahl?
¶13 In her arguments seeking enforcement of the stipulated judgment, Berdahl
extensively cites and argues common law principles governing the duty to defend in a
commercial insurance setting. Application of these common law principles can require
an insurer to be responsible, in certain circumstances, for a stipulated settlement entered
by the parties. See Farmers Union Mut. Ins. Co. v. Staples, 2004 MT 108, 321 Mont. 99,
90 P.3d 381; Tidyman’s Mgmt. Servs. v. Davis, 2014 MT 205, 376 Mont. 80, 330 P.3d
1139. Berdahl argues these principles govern here because “[t]he State actually is an
insurer in this context.” In response, the State argues there is no insurance contract, no
insurance fund, and the State does not here act as an insurer. Further, because its
obligations regarding defense and indemnity of Huss arise, not from the common law
governing commercial insurers, but from the specific provisions of § 2-9-305, MCA, the
State argues that these common law principles do not govern here.
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¶14 The State is correct. “In this state there is no common law in any case where the
law is declared by statute.” Section 1-1-108, MCA; see Woods v. State, 2015 MT 8, ¶ 19,
378 Mont. 38, 340 P.3d 1254 (“Although the Woodses urge this Court to apply general
common law principles of foreseeability, . . . the Legislature rejected this approach when
it adopted § 27-1-1102, MCA.”). As the District Court reasoned, “insurance rules are
inapplicable. The statutory obligation is not commercial liability insurance, nor is it a
contract of indemnity. But [Berdahl’s argument] also fails on separate grounds because
imposition of the insurance rules as urged by Berdahl would require the Court to abrogate
the provisions of the statute.” This matter is governed and resolved solely under the
provisions of § 2-9-305, MCA.
¶15 Section 2-9-305, MCA, generally provides that “[i]t is the purpose of this section
to provide for the immunization, defense, and indemnification of public officers and
employees civilly sued for their actions taken within the course and scope of their
employment,” and also provides exceptions to that directive, as well as the process to be
followed to make such determinations. Pertinent to this matter, the statute provides:
(2) In any noncriminal action brought against any employee of a
state, county, city, town, or other governmental entity for a negligent act,
error, or omission . . . or other actionable conduct of the employee
committed while acting within the course and scope of the employee’s
office or employment, the governmental entity employer, except as
provided in subsection (6), shall defend the action on behalf of the
employee and indemnify the employee.
(3) Upon receiving service of a summons and complaint in a
noncriminal action against an employee, the employee shall give written
notice to the employee’s supervisor requesting that a defense to the action
be provided by the governmental entity employer. If the employee is an
elected state official or other employee who does not have a supervisor, the
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employee shall give notice of the action to the legal officer or agency of the
government entity defending the entity in legal actions of that type. Except
as provided in subsection (6), the employer shall offer a defense to the
action on behalf of the employee. . . . The employer shall notify the
employee, within 15 days after receipt of notice, whether a direct defense
will be provided. . . . Except as provided in subsection (6), the employer
shall pay all expenses relating to the retained defense and pay any
judgment for damages entered in the action that may be otherwise payable
under this section.
(4) In any noncriminal action in which a governmental entity is a
party defendant, the employee must be indemnified by the employer for any
money judgments or legal expenses, including attorney fees either incurred
by the employee or awarded to the claimant, or both, to which the
employee may be subject as a result of the suit unless the employee’s
conduct falls within the exclusions provided in subsection (6).
(5) . . . In an action against a governmental entity, the employee
whose conduct gave rise to the suit is immune from liability by reasons of
the same subject matter if the governmental entity acknowledges or is
bound by a judicial determination that the conduct upon which the claim is
brought arises out of the course and scope of the employee’s employment,
unless the claim constitutes an exclusion provided in subsections (6)(b)
through (6)(d).
(6) In a noncriminal action in which a governmental entity
employee is a party defendant, the employee may not be defended or
indemnified by the employer for any money judgments or legal expenses,
including attorney fees, to which the employee may be subject as a result of
the suit if a judicial determination is made that:
(a) the conduct upon which the claim is based constitutes oppression,
fraud, or malice or for any other reason [that] does not arise out of the
course and scope of the employee’s employment;
(b) the conduct of the employee constitutes a criminal offense as
defined in Title 45 chapters 4 through 7;
(c) the employee compromised or settled the claim without the
consent of the government entity or employer; or
(d) the employee failed or refused to cooperate in the defense of the
case.
(7) If a judicial determination has not been made applying the
exclusions provided in subsection (6), the governmental entity employer
may determine whether those exclusions apply. However, if there is a
dispute as to whether the exclusions of subsection (6) apply and the
governmental entity employer concludes that it should clarify its obligation
to the employee arising under this section by commencing a declaratory
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judgment action or other legal action, the employer is obligated to provide a
defense of the employee until a final judgment is rendered in that action
holding that the employer did not have an obligation to defend the
employee.
Section 2-9-305(2)-(7), MCA (emphasis added).
¶16 The statute states, unambiguously and repeatedly, as indicated by the italicized
text above, that defense and indemnification of a government employee will not be
provided if any of the exclusions in subsection (6) of the statute apply, including
subsection (6)(c), which excludes any obligation when “the employee compromised or
settled the claim without the consent of the governmental entity or employer.” Here, as
the District Court found and no one contests, Huss compromised and settled Berdahl’s
claims against him without the consent of the State, in direct violation of subsection
(6)(c), thereby voiding or eliminating the State’s obligation to defend and indemnify
Huss under the statute. Obviously, if there is no duty to defend or indemnify an
employee, then there can be no obligation to pay the employee’s stipulated settlement.
¶17 Berdahl seeks to avoid this result by arguing that the State violated the statute in
ways that should foreclose the application of subsection (6)(c), or estop the State from
invoking the provision. Citing the State’s ultimate determination that it did not owe a
duty to defend Huss, and its refusal to participate in the mediation process, Berdahl
argues that the State breached its statutory duty to defend “long before” Huss entered the
stipulated judgment, and therefore Ҥ 2-9-305(6), MCA, cannot be invoked to justify or
exonerate the State’s original, improper refusal to defend.”
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¶18 However, the State’s “original” determination was not a refusal to defend. Rather,
the State provided a defense to Huss in the HRB administrative proceeding under a
reservation of rights so that the matter could be investigated. Following Huss’s request
on August 12, 2014, that the State make an indemnification decision without waiting for
HRB’s final investigative report, the State advised Huss on August 26, 2014, that it had
determined that Huss had not acted within the course and scope of his employment and
that no duty to defend or indemnify was owed to Huss. Thus, the State provided a
defense to Huss until shortly before commencement of the mediation process that
ultimately led to the stipulated settlement. The State also advised Huss beforehand that it
would not be responsible for any such settlement, citing subsection (6)(c).2 However,
despite this admonition, Huss pursued a settlement instead of seeking a judicial
declaration of the State’s obligation to defend and indemnify. We conclude that the
State’s actions here did not negate the application of subsection (6)(c) or estop the State
from invoking it.
¶19 Berdahl also argues that the State violated subsection (7) of the statute by making
its own determination that the exclusions in subsection (6) applied to Huss. She argues
that the District Court erred by giving to state administrators “the power to render legally
binding, judicial coverage determinations.” However, as quoted above, subsection
(7) plainly states that “[i]f a judicial determination has not been made applying the
2
In accordance with § 2-9-305(7), MCA, when the State decided to pursue a declaratory action,
it again assumed Huss’s defense costs in the HRB action during the pendency of the action. That
matter remains stayed.
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exclusions provided in subsection (6), the governmental entity employer may determine
whether those exclusions apply.” Subsection (7) further provides that if there is a dispute
over the issue, the government employer may commence an action to obtain a judicial
determination if it “concludes that it should clarify its obligation to the employee.” The
discretionary language employed here authorizes the government employer to either
commence an action or to stand by its decision and allow other parties to initiate such an
action, if they so choose.
¶20 Berdahl briefly argues that § 2-9-305(6)(c), MCA, contradicts § 28-11-316,
MCA, which makes an indemnitor who “neglects to defend the person indemnified”
liable for a recovery against the indemnitee. However, § 2-9-305, MCA, is the specific
provision governing indemnification of government employees and controls over other,
general provisions. “It is a maxim of statutory interpretation that a general statute will
yield to a specific statute.” Simms v. Schabacker, 2014 MT 328, ¶ 29, 377 Mont. 278,
339 P.3d 832 (citing § 1-2-102, MCA; State v. Plouffe, 2014 MT 183, ¶ 27, 375 Mont.
429, 329 P.3d 1255).
¶21 We conclude the District Court did not err in holding that the stipulated judgment
was not enforceable against the State.
¶22 Berdahl also challenges the District Court’s holding that the discrimination
allegations against Huss did not come within the course and scope of his employment.
However, as correctly noted by the State, “the fact that Judge Huss entered into a
settlement agreement without the consent of the State itself requires the conclusion that
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the State is relieved of any obligation to defend or indemni[fy], regardless of whether the
claim arose from acts within the course and scope of employment.” Having concluded
that § 2-9-305(6)(c), MCA, acts here to void the State’s duty to defend and indemnify
Huss, we need not address the course and scope issue to resolve the matter before us.
CONCLUSION
¶23 We affirm the District Court’s determination that the State was not obligated to
pay the stipulated judgment entered by Berdahl and Huss. Consequently, it is
unnecessary to address the issue of whether Huss’s actions came within the course and
scope of his employment. Finally, as the District Court correctly noted, Berdahl may
pursue relief before the HRB, where the administrative proceeding on her complaint is
currently stayed.
/S/ JIM RICE
We concur:
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
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