RONALD E. BUSH, United States Magistrate Judge.
Now pending before the Court are (1) Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Docket No. 100), (2) Defendants' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Docket No. 117), and (3) Plaintiff's Motion to Strike (Docket No. 130). Having carefully considered the record, participated in oral argument, and otherwise being fully advised, the Court enters the following Memorandum Decision and Order:
The parties in this case have each filed a motion for partial summary judgment, asking the Court to rule as a matter of law upon the meaning of Idaho Code section 40-503. Plaintiff Pamela Lowe ("Lowe") contends that she was wrongfully terminated from her position as the Director of the Idaho Transportation Department ("ITD") — a named Defendant in this action. Section 40-503 provides in relevant part:
Lowe contends that section 40-503 grants her a property interest in her continued employment, which requires, as a matter of constitutional law, that she be given notice of any claimed problems with her performance as Director, and an opportunity to respond to those allegations (referred to in the law as "due process") before she could be removed from her position. The ITD-related Defendants contend that the statute does not grant such rights, that Lowe was an "at-will" employee who could be terminated at any time, and that the reasons set out in the statute for her removal do not give rise to a property interest in continued employment in any event. ITD's position is drawn from its contention that the ITD Board has unfettered discretion upon the termination of the Director, given the language in the statute that the Director "shall serve at the pleasure of the board."
The Court has a responsibility to apply the plain, obvious, and rational meaning of the statute, if that meaning is readily apparent. The Court also must seek to give meaning to each word in the statute, not emphasizing some words to the exclusion of others. If, on the other hand, the statute is ambiguous, the Court may consider extrinsic evidence to assist it in discerning the intent of the Legislature in enacting the legislation, so that the Court has further guidance in interpreting the statute in a way that meets the intention of the Legislature.
The record in this case contains voluminous records of government activity in the early 1970s, when Idaho state government was extensively reorganized and when the ITD was first created. There are numerous sworn statements from various politicians, including several former governors and former legislators, and from multiple public employees, including agency directors and former staff employees. The great bulk of this evidence was submitted to the Court in support of the parties' respective positions on the perceived intent of the Idaho Legislature in creating the ITD, and the position of the ITD Director, in 1974. In addition, there is extensive briefing containing the argument of counsel for the parties upon these issues.
After full and thoughtful consideration of that record, the Court rules in this Decision that, under both a plain meaning interpretation of section 40-503 and under the most sensible construction of the statutory meaning intended by the Legislature, Lowe did have a property interest in her employment with ITD, and that she was entitled to due process before she could be discharged from her employment. The Court rules that section 40-503 provides that the ITD Board is charged with hiring and firing the ITD Director. The hiring of the Director is constrained by the requirement that the Director "have knowledge and experience in transportation matters." The ITD Board may also fire the Director, but that decision is constrained by the requirement that the Director must have done something in his or her employment that, in the judgment of the ITD Board, constitutes inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance, or nonfeasance in office.
This Decision does not rule upon the specific due process protections to which Lowe was entitled before she was removed from her position. The Decision also does not rule upon whether or not ITD's actions contemporaneous to the time of Lowe's dismissal satisfied any due process protections to which she might have been entitled. Those issues will be the subject of further proceedings in the case. This Decision simply settles the waters as to whether or not Lowe had a property interest
The factual backdrop to the issues raised by the cross-motions for partial summary judgment is set out at length in the Court's prior orders, and the parties' briefing. The essential details are recounted again here.
Lowe had been a long-time employee of the ITD, serving in various positions of responsibility since 1993, eventually becoming ITD's Director in January 2007. She was terminated from that position by the ITD Board in July 2009. Lowe challenges her termination, contending, among other things, that she had a property interest in her continued employment with ITD and that, by not providing her with an opportunity to challenge the reasons given for her dismissal, she was denied her due process rights.
ITD disagrees, arguing that Lowe was an at-will employee at the time of her firing. As an at-will employee, ITD further argues that Lowe was not entitled to procedural protections and, thus, did not have a property interest in continued employment as ITD Director.
Whether Lowe had a property interest in her continued employment as ITD Director turns on the application of Idaho Code section 40-503. Under that section:
See I.C. § 40-503(1). Through her Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, Lowe argues that section 40-503's inclusion of specified reasons for removal in the statute reflects, as a matter of law, the Idaho Legislature's intent to provide ITD's Director with an expectation of continued employment after initial appointment — terminable only for cause after due process. In contrast, but also relying on the statute's own wording, ITD moves for partial summary judgment on the same issue, countering that section 40-503's reference to the ITD's Director serving "at the pleasure" of the ITD Board, and the absence of any fixed term of employment, demonstrate the at-will nature of the ITD Director's employ — one that carries no corresponding expectation of continued employment.
Although this case is now before the Court on cross-motions for partial summary judgment, it has been at issue for some time and the parties already have engaged in extensive motion practice, briefing, and discovery. Their skirmishing first began with Lowe originally filing a motion for partial judgment on the pleadings. The briefing on Lowe's initial motion was comprehensive; the record, however, was not, because that motion was made upon the pleadings, not a fully-developed record.
In response, the Court wrote a "proposed" memorandum decision and order. See Prop. Mem. Decision and Order, attached to Req. for Add'l Briefing (Docket No. 47). Such an avenue is unusual, though not unprecedented. The Court chose such a procedural route because much of the evidence and argument in the record centered about the issue of what the Legislature had in mind at the time section 40-503 was enacted. If deemed to be ambiguous, the question of the Legislature's intentions informed the Court's thinking in considering whether the exercise of statutory construction would lead to the same meaning reached by the Court as to the plain, obvious, and rational meaning
Even though the parties had previously provided some legislative history in the initial briefing on Lowe's motion for partial judgment on the pleadings, and even though the Court had done additional research on its own into matters that seemed clearly appropriate for judicial notice, the subsequent requested briefing from the parties unexpectedly dwarfed what had been done before. Extensive records of the Idaho Legislative Reorganization Commission ("Commission"), which developed a plan for the reorganization of state government in 1973 and early 1974, were submitted to the Court, along with dozens of pages of the record of legislative committee work on the same. Multiple declarations were submitted from persons who had been in or around the reorganization process.
After receiving and reviewing the submitted material — consisting of hundreds of pages of new briefing and supporting materials — the Court requested that the parties prepare new motions for partial summary judgment on the issue, so that there would be no remaining constraints or procedural limitations upon the Court's ability to fully consider all of the more fully-developed record. See 3/31/11 Mem. Decision and Order (Docket No. 78). The parties have since done so, also filing ancillary motions related to the evidentiary issues raised by the nature of the new record. Multiple requests for page limitation waivers and briefing deadline extensions were received, and granted. After the record was finally settled, the Court heard oral argument, and now issues this Decision.
A principal purpose of summary judgment "is to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported claims...." Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323-24, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986). It is "not a disfavored procedural shortcut," but is instead the "principal tool[] by which factually insufficient claims or defenses [can] be isolated and prevented from going to trial with the attendant unwarranted consumption of public and private resources." Id. at 327, 106 S.Ct. 2548. "[T]he mere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not defeat an otherwise properly supported motion for summary judgment; the requirement is that there be no genuine issue of material fact." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986).
The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Devereaux v. Abbey, 263 F.3d 1070, 1076 (9th Cir. 2001). To carry this burden, the moving party need not introduce any affirmative evidence (such as affidavits or deposition excerpts) but may simply point out the absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party's case. Fairbank v. Wunderman Cato Johnson, 212 F.3d 528, 532 (9th Cir.2000).
This shifts the burden to the non-moving party to produce evidence sufficient to support a jury verdict in its favor. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 256-57, 106 S.Ct. 2505. The non-moving party must go beyond
The party bearing the burden of proof at trial "must establish beyond controversy every essential element of its ... claim." S. Cal. Gas Co. v. City of Santa Ana, 336 F.3d 885, 889 (9th Cir.2003) (adopting decision of district court "as our own"). A party who does not have the burden "may rely on a showing that a party who does have the trial burden cannot produce admissible evidence to carry its burden as to the fact." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c)(1)(B) advisory committee's note.
As a general rule, the Court is "not required to comb through the record to find some reason to deny a motion for summary judgment." Carmen v. San Francisco Unified Sch. Dist., 237 F.3d 1026, 1029 (9th Cir.2001) (quoting Forsberg v. Pac. Northwest Bell Tel. Co., 840 F.2d 1409, 1418 (9th Cir.1988)). Instead, the "party opposing summary judgment must direct [the Court's] attention to specific triable facts." S. Cal. Gas Co., 336 F.3d at 889. An exception to this rule exists when cross-motions for summary judgment are filed. In that case, the Court must independently search the record for issues of fact. Fair Housing Council of Riverside Co., Inc. v. Riverside Two, 249 F.3d 1132, 1136 (9th Cir.2001). Cross-motions for summary judgment — where both parties essentially assert that there are no issues of material fact — does not vitiate the court's responsibility to determine whether disputed issues of material fact are present. Id. Accordingly, since a court already has a duty to review the record to resolve cross motions for summary judgment, the Carmen line of cases discussed above does not apply to cross-motions.
In this case, there are strongly opposing personal views expressed by some declarants as to their understanding of the meaning of section 40-503, a disagreement also reflected in the parties' briefing and argument. However, those differences are matters of argument and not contested issues of material fact. The Court is satisfied that there are no genuine issues of material fact upon the facts relied upon in this Decision.
In Johnson v. N. Idaho Coll., 2008 WL 4000128 (D.Idaho 2008) (unpublished) (reversed on other grounds), U.S. District Judge Edward J. Lodge outlined the protocol for construing statutes in Idaho. Finding no reason to depart from its rationale (the parties supply no contrasting authority), it will be applied here:
See id. at *11 (internal citations omitted); see also St. Luke's Reg. Med. Ctr. v. Bd. of Comm'rs of Ada County, 146 Idaho 753, 203 P.3d 683, 685 (2009) ("function of the
Recognizing that the interpretation of section 40-503 is a question of law, this Court must first examine the statute's literal words. If plain and not ambiguous, effect is given to the statute as-written, without engaging in further statutory construction. See Twin Falls Cnty. v. Cities of Twin Falls and Filer, 143 Idaho 398, 146 P.3d 664, 668 (2006) (dissent) ("Where a statute is unambiguous, statutory construction is unnecessary and courts are free to apply the plain meaning.") (citing Martin v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 138 Idaho 244, 61 P.3d 601, 603 (2002)).
Importantly, parties' differing interpretations do not operate as a de facto finding of ambiguity. See Twin Falls Cnty., 146 P.3d at 668 (citing Rim View Trout Co. v. Higginson, 121 Idaho 819, 828 P.2d 848, 852 (1992)). If ambiguous, however, the Court next engages in statutory construction to ascertain the legislative intent and, in turn, defer to that intent, including the statute's literal words, its context, the public policy behind the statute, and its legislative history. See Twin Falls Cnty., 146 P.3d at 668 (citing State v. Rhode, 133 Idaho 459, 988 P.2d 685, 688 (1999)).
The instant dispute turns first upon the meaning of section 40-503. If the Court were to agree with ITD's statutory interpretation, the issue would be resolved. ITD has a further argument, however, that even if the Court were to agree with Lowe's interpretation of the statute, the language Lowe relies upon nevertheless does not give rise to a constitutionally-protected right. The parties are in polite, but strident, disagreement about these two issues. The Court will address them in turn.
Because "the best guide to legislative intent is the words of the statute itself," the interpretation of a statute must begin with the literal words of the statute. See In re Permit No. 36-7200, 121 Idaho 819, 828 P.2d 848, 853 (1992). Here, both Lowe and ITD argue that Idaho Code section 40-503's plain meaning coincides with their respective statutory interpretations.
Lowe contends that "the plain meaning of the words in the statute make clear that the Director can only be removed for cause." See Pl.'s Mem., pp. 5-6 (Docket No. 22) ("The statute provides termination of the Director for only limited reasons. Specifically, the Director may be removed by the Board only for `inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance in office.'"); see also Pl.'s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 4-9 (Docket No. 101).
ITD contends that the Director's "servi[ce] at the pleasure of the board" unequivocally "creates an employment relationship that `is at the will of the authority which appointed the officer.'" See Defs.' Opp., pp. 5-6 (Docket No. 28); see also Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 5-9 (Docket No. 118). In this nuanced respect, ITD argues that, "while [section] 40-503 lists subjective grounds for removal, because of the `serve at the pleasure' language, the ITD Board has exclusive discretion to decide whether any of those grounds exist." See Defs.' Resp. to Req. for Add'l Briefing, p. 12 (Docket No. 50).
Lowe's account of section 40-503's purported plain meaning is not without infirmities. First, it leapfrogs the statute's explicit direction that the ITD Director "shall serve at the pleasure of the board" and, by doing so, fails to reconcile the
In such crosscurrents, it might seem that ambiguity is inescapable. However, the fact that different readings can be made of the statute does not automatically equate to ambiguity — were that so, all statutes that are the subject of litigation could be considered ambiguous. Consider that:
John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, 68 Idaho 185, 191 P.2d 359, 362 (1948) (internal citations omitted). Here, both parties understandably mine section 40-503 for language supporting their own arguments. Yet, each of the competing templates offered to the Court fails to give sufficient meaning to all the words of the statute as this Court must attempt to do.
In its proposed decision, the Court drew upon the nature of the reorganization of
Some of the Court's reasoning in that regard was subject to legitimate criticism from ITD. ITD pointed out that the regional make-up of a state highway board (which is one protection against overtly politically-pressured decision-making on highway decisions) had come into existence not with the reorganization of highway department as part of the Commission's work, but rather had existed in statute as the "Board of Highway Directors" for a number of years prior to that. Therefore, ITD contends that the Court's emphasis upon the political firewall created in the ITD Board as one basis for the Court's reading of section 40-503 was unsupportable as being a pre-existing choice of the Legislature, not a "new" direction drawn at the time of the executive branch reorganization.
ITD also contends that the Court's proposed reading of the statute was completely at odds with the intention of the Legislature toward executive department heads generally. In that regard, both ITD and Lowe dissect at some length the particular manner in which other department employees are appointed, and the nature of their employment relationship, under Idaho law. See Pl.'s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 5-7, 12-15 (Docket No. 101); Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 9-13, 21-22 (Docket No. 118).
ITD argues that a close reading of the statutes dealing with other department heads illustrates a consistent intention to treat such positions as "at-will" in nature. See, e.g., Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 21-22 (Docket No. 118). Lowe argues that a close reading demonstrates that there was no such consistency. See Pl.'s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 5-7 (Docket No. 101).
Despite ITD's argument (and the declaration testimony of various of its witnesses (see, e.g., Andrus Decl. at ¶¶ 10-12 (Docket No. 51)); Batt Decl. at ¶¶ 8, 15 (Docket No. 52); Manning Decl. at ¶¶ 35, 39, 44-45 (Docket No. 54); Welch Decl. at ¶¶ 28-31 (Docket No. 55)) that the Legislature intended for all agency heads to be at-will employees, in reality, there are both minor and major differences in the statutes that create the various department heads. And, because ITD places much of its emphasis upon the non-classified nature of the ITD Director position as a source of its purported at-will status, it is also useful to look at the Legislature's treatment of agency board members by way of comparison, as they are also non-classified employees.
If there had been a common mind — a deliberate intention — to treat each and every agency head identically for purposes of their "at-will" employment status, that could have been easily done. However, although some department heads fit neatly in such a cubbyhole, that is not universally so. Rather, there are variations in who has the power to appoint; in whether the agency head position is indefinite in the term of service, or limited to a set time period; in whether the person serves simply at "the pleasure" of the governor (or a board) who made the appointment; in whether or not there are limited circumstances under which the person can be
At the same time, however, the fact that some other department heads (most notably, the Director of the Department of Water Resources) are treated in a manner inconsistent with at-will status does not necessarily mean that the ITD Director is in the same camp. The ITD Director's employment rights, whatever they may be, are those prescribed by section 40-503, and, as described by the Court in its "proposed" decision, that statute is unlike any other statute of similar purpose in the Idaho Code.
Arguing in the alternative, ITD contends that whatever reading the Court may give to section 40-503, the statute nonetheless does not confer a property right upon Lowe in this case because the identified reasons for dismissing the ITD Director are too broad and too subjective. Such reasons, according to ITD, are not "particularized standards" that "significantly constrain" the ITD Board's discretion to remove its Director, thus eliminating any possibility that Lowe has a property interest in her ITD Director employment. See Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 1 & 5-9 (Docket No. 118).
"Whether a state statute creates an expectation of entitlement sufficient to create a property interest recognized by federal constitutional law `will depend largely upon the extent to which the statute contains mandatory language that restricts the discretion of the [decisionmaker].'" Allen v. City of Beverly Hills, 911 F.2d 367, 370 (9th Cir.1990) (quoting Jacobson v. Hannifin, 627 F.2d 177, 180 (9th Cir. 1980)). If there are no "particularized standards or criteria that significantly constrain" the discretion of the decision-maker to confer a benefit, no property right/entitlement exists. Fidelity Fin. Corp. v. Fed. Home Loan Bank, 792 F.2d 1432, 1436 (9th Cir.1986). The converse is, of course, true as well. Therefore, in determining whether section 40-503 confers upon the ITD Director a property interest in continued employment, the Court must inspect whether section 40-503 imposes particularized standards or criteria that significantly constrain the ITD Board's discretion to remove the Director.
According to ITD, the language of "shall serve at the pleasure of the board," contained in section 40-503, is "broad discretionary language" that gives the ITD Board "exclusive discretion" as to whether or not the ITD director stays or goes. Such broad discretion, ITD argues, means that "no ... protectable property interest exists in the position of the Director of ITD." See Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., p. 18 (Docket No. 118). Here again, however, ITD's argument would give no meaning whatsoever to the remainder of the Legislature's language upon the subject — the four conditions set out in the "may be removed for" clause. Even so, the reasons for removal — inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance, or nonfeasance — must still be considered as to
"A regulation granting broad discretion to a decision-maker does not create a property interest." Doyle v. City of Medford, 606 F.3d 667, 672-73 (9th Cir. 2010) (citing Jacobson, 627 F.2d at 180).
For instance, in Edwards v. Brown, 699 F.2d 1073 (11th Cir.1983), the court addressed an ordinance which provided that an employee "shall serve during good behavior and efficient service, to be judged by the commissioner or a designee," concluding that, because the ordinance at issue placed no limit on the commissioner's discretion to determine whether an employee had fulfilled the standards of "good behavior and efficient service," it created no protected property interest. See id. at 1077 ("Instead of providing for a discharge for cause, we equate this provision with a discharge `at the will' of the commissioner.").
Similarly, in Dorr v. Butte Cnty., 795 F.2d 875 (9th Cir.1986), the court found that an employee's probationary rejection "may be based on the appointing authority's subjective evaluation of the employee's performance" when the applicable rules defined probationary rejection as "the termination... of an employee who in the opinion of the appointing authority fails to demonstrate satisfactory performance in [his] position." See id. at 878 ("The power of the appointing authority to determine, on a purely subjective basis, whether a probationary employee has performed satisfactorily undercuts any expectation of continued employment that might otherwise arise by virtue of the requirement that disciplinary dismissal be grounded upon objectively reasonable cause.").
Like Dorr, in Blanton v. Griel Mem'l Psychiatric Hosp., 758 F.2d 1540 (11th Cir.1985), the court found that a probationary employee may be discharged if, in the appointing authority's opinion, the employee's
But here, in addition to the fact that the ITD Director is not a probationary employee (compare with Dorr and Blanton), section 40-503 provides a structured set of boundaries (inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance, or nonfeasance in office) that, to the Court's view, does meaningfully circumscribe and constrain the ITD Board's ability to remove the ITD Director in ways that differentiate this matter from Edwards, Dorr, and Blanton.
This Court's conclusion on this issue is buttressed by the fact that Idaho law is replete with similar language found in other statutes that set out the same (or similar) justifications for the removal of employees. See, e.g., I.C. § 20-203 ("The governor may not remove any member of the board [of correction] except for disability, inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office."); I.C. § 33-103 ("The governor is empowered to remove from membership on the state board [of education] any member who has been proved guilty of gross immorality, malfeasance in office or incompetency...."); I.C. § 67-4221(e) ("A member of the [park and recreation] board may be removed for inefficiency, neglect of duty, misconduct in office...."); I.C. § 42-1803 ("The governor may remove the director of the department of water resources for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or misconduct in office...."). While these other code sections may also discuss time stints of employment or due process procedures, the point here is that the four statutory reasons for the ITD Director's removal are not made invisible by invocation of the "serve at the pleasure of" language in a statute. To the contrary, because these same terms are used over and over, throughout Idaho's state agencies' operative statutes, they must have some corresponding substantive significance. Said another way, just as ITD argues that the "serve at the pleasure of" turn of phrase has an understood meaning given its use elsewhere within the Idaho Code and/or case law interpreting those particular words, the same can (and should) be said for statutory language discussing the reasons for removing an agency employee. When doing so, section 40-503's references to inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance, and nonfeasance in office provide the weight and impact that the section, read in its entirety, requires.
The implications of ITD's argument seem to reach too far in other ways as well. Lowe points out that some of the same terms used in regard to removal of the ITD Director are also used by the Legislature to define the reasons that allow an ITD Board member to be removed. See Pl.'s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 5-6 (Docket No. 101); compare I.C. § 40-503 ("The director ... may be removed by the board for inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance in office."); with I.C. § 40-305 ("The governor may remove any board member for incompetency, inefficiency, intemperance,
Lowe also highlights the appearance of the same or similar words in many other sections of Idaho law, including the statutory standards by which classified employees under Idaho's personnel system can be terminated from employment. See Pl.'s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 6-7 (Docket No. 101).
ITD challenges such comparisons by pointing out that none of the statutes relied upon by Lowe contains the same "at the pleasure of" language found in § 40-503, and others — unlike § 40-503 — also contain a prescribed notice and hearing process. See Defs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J., pp. 9-12 (Docket No. 118).
The Court has already noted that section 40-503 is different in some respect from every other Idaho statute the Court has reviewed that pertains to the employment of a state agency head, or board member. But there is no uniformity otherwise, and nearly all of the statutes dealing with the same subject matter are unique in some way. Even so, the Legislature has commonly used the same or very similar terms of reasons for dismissal, as found in section 40-503, in many similar statutes. Ultimately, the nature of ITD's argument as to the significance of that fact is circular and unhelpful. Consider for instance the emphasis given by ITD to the statutes dealing with the agency board members or agency heads who are not specifically described as serving "at the pleasure of" the governor, or their board, as the case may be, which include:
Other departments have yet other templates for the appointment and discharge of board members, or directors. One notable example is the Department of Health and Welfare, which has an eleven member board, of which only seven members are "voting" members. See I.C. § 56-1005.
Such a broad review of the various agencies in Idaho state government, and the various ways in which the directors and boards of those agencies are appointed and the circumstances under which they can be removed from their position is useful to the decision in this case in several respects. First, it illustrates unmistakably that the "at-will only" status that ITD contends generally exists for non-classified employees in Idaho government (and therefore also exists for the ITD Director), is not a uniform, cookie-cutter, status across state government. Second, it illustrates that the word "may," in reference to the conditions under which someone's employment may be terminated, is not a statutory aberration in the Idaho Code; rather, it appears frequently in the context of setting out those circumstances under which the person may be terminated from their employment, exactly the use of the word in section 40-503.
The Court has reconsidered its prior proposed ruling upon the plain meaning of section 40-503, with the benefit of the supplemented record, the parties' additional briefing, and oral argument. Having done so, and in giving meaning and importance to each word of the statute as the Court is required to do under Idaho rules of statutory construction, the Court finds that the plain meaning of section 40-503 is as follows: The phrase "[t]he director shall serve at the pleasure of the board and may be removed by the board for inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance in office," means that the ITD Board — the entity charged by the Legislature with the mandatory "shall" — has the authority to appoint the Director (as distinct from those positions that are appointed by the governor, or appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the Senate). Further, the ITD Board "may" remove the ITD Director (but is not required to do so) in its discretion, if the ITD Board concludes that the Director's job performance is unsatisfactory for one or more of the four enumerated reasons.
Said another way, the ITD Board is charged with hiring and firing the ITD Director. The nature of the hiring is constrained by Idaho Code section 40-503's requirement that the ITD Director have "knowledge and experience in transportation matters." I.C. § 40-503(1). The firing is also the province of the ITD Board, but is constrained by the requirement that the ITD Director must have done, or failed to do, something that, in the judgment of the ITD Board, constitutes inefficiency,
This ruling allows the purportedly irreconcilable portions of the statute to be read together to give full meaning to the entire statute. See Norton v. Dep't of Emp't, 94 Idaho 924, 500 P.2d 825, 829 (1972) ("[A] statute should be construed so that effect is given to all its provisions, so that no part thereof will be inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant, and so that one section will not destroy another.").
The Court's plain reading of Idaho Code section 40-503 appropriately gives significance to each word of the statute, in a collectively reasonable interpretation. Nonetheless, the Court acknowledges that the statute is not the model of clarity, and there likely was no thought at the time it was enacted that it would, years later, lead to such a litigation swivet as now exists before the Court.
Idaho Code section 40-503 is awkward. Nonetheless, even if the Court were to say that the language of section 40-503 is ambiguous so that it is necessary to look to something other than the plain language of the statute to determine its meaning, the Court is still persuaded that the reading it has given to the statute as a matter of plain meaning is also the intended meaning of the Idaho Legislature.
On this subject of statutory construction, there is a remarkable array of evidence that the parties have placed into the record, including numerous declarations of people with various and sundry connections to the statute, depositions of former directors of the ITD and others, and gigabytes of electronically scanned documents dating from the time of the reorganization of state government in the early 1970s.
A starting point to determine the Legislature's intent is often the legislative package, which includes a statement of purpose. Here, the "Statement of Purpose" prepared by the Commission for Senate Bill 1295, which created the ITD as an executive department of the state, includes a specific reference to the ITD Director's appointment and removal, stating that the Director "shall serve at the pleasure of the board and may be removed only for stated cause." See Stmt. of Purpose (Docket No. 22, Att. 3); see also Proposal No. 12 (Docket No. 49, Att. 9).
On its face, the Statement of Purpose is compelling. However, the Court is mindful that there are other pieces of legislative history. Other materials, such as study commission findings, the text of the introduced bill, amendments, procedural history, journals, committee/interim committee hearing materials, etc. may also be instructive. But the parties acknowledge that little exists in the way of such information. Perhaps in an attempt to fill that void, ITD has supplemented the record with after-the-fact testimony from individuals involved in the reorganization of Idaho state government. These individuals consistently testify that the ITD Director was never intended to be anything other than an at-will position; however, they are altogether unable to explain how, then, section 40-503's actual verbiage can be read to legitimately suggest something different — in fact, quite the opposite.
It is this inability — in essence, the failure to explain how such contradictory language made its way into section 40-503 — that weakens ITD's position on this issue.
Governor Cecil D. Andrus, whose service included the time during his first residency in the governor's office when state government was reorganized as a direct result of his initiative, states that he "only learned at some point late in the process [of the executive branch reorganization] that there would be a position of Director established in the new Idaho Department of Transportation .... appointed by the Board." See Andrus Decl. at ¶ 10 (Docket No. 51). As to that new position, Governor Andrus says he did not intend "to approve a statute that provided the Director of ITD with job protection or a status different from that of the directors of all the other Idaho departments being established at that time .... [and][i]f that had been the legislative intent, it would have been so unusual that [he is] certain it would have been called to [his] attention." See id. at ¶ 11. Governor Andrus, who served longer as governor of Idaho than any other person, states further that "not once during all of those years, or since for that matter, [has he] ever had or received any inclination or suggestion that the Director of ITD did not serve at the pleasure of the board as that term was commonly understood and applied...." See id. at ¶ 13.
Significantly, both Governor Andrus and Governor Phil E. Batt (discussed infra) agree that the nature of the responsibilities of the ITD required some insulation from political vagaries.
Governor Andrus makes no specific mention of the problematic "may be removed" language in the statute, other than to say that he had read the Court's "tentative interpretation of the Legislature's intent" regarding the new ITD Director, and understood from that, that the Court's tentative conclusion was that the "Legislature intended to vest the Director of ITD with rights similar to those enjoyed by a classified or permanent employee." See id. at ¶ 4.
However, in the Court's view, the proposition that an ITD Director who had a property interest in his or her employment created by virtue of section 40-503 was necessarily then equivalent to a classified employee, is not supported by this record or by the germane statutes that create the personnel system. As to whether such a concept for the ITD Director would have been "so unusual" that it surely would have been brought to his attention (see Andrus Decl. at ¶ 11 (Docket No. 51)), the Court has no way to know what may or
That such a detail might not have been focused upon by staff in the governor's office when reviewing the minutiae of the admirable, and enormous, effort to bring order to the previously chaotic and balkanized world of state government is certainly conceivable. But it does not change the fact that the "may be removed" clause, and the Commission's direct and plain explanation that the Director of the new department may be removed only for stated cause, were already footprints in the legislative cement by the time the new ITD, and its Director, were concreted into law by Governor Andrus's signature.
In 1974, former Governor Phil E. Batt was in the midst of his lengthy and much distinguished legislative career, then serving as majority leader of the Idaho State Senate. He was a member of the Commission charged with the overhaul of the executive branch. In his declaration, Governor Batt also recounts his instrumental role in the creation of the Idaho Personnel System in 1965, which created the state employee personnel procedures, and the general distinctions between classified employees and non-classified employees, that still exist today. See Batt Decl. at ¶ 7 (Docket No. 52).
As with Governor Andrus, Governor Batt says that, during the reorganization process, the Legislature had:
See id. at ¶ 8. Governor Batt recognizes the "question or potential ambiguity created by the phrase `and may be removed for inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance'" contained in Idaho Code section 40-503, but says he has "no recollection of how or why the `may' clause was added to this provision of the statute." See id. at ¶ 14. However, he is certain that it was not the intent of the Commission or the Legislature in 1974 "to vest the Director of ITD with a position remotely analogous to that of a classified employee." See id. He goes on to say that in his later service as an ITD Board member from 1988 until 1991, he knew "that it would be very detrimental and disruptive if the ITD board did not have discretion to remove its
Governor Batt's declaration reflects the precise and careful thinking that has marked the public service for which he has long been admired. But certain of his observations are belied by other evidence in the record. For instance, despite his firm belief that there was never any intent to make the ITD Director a permanent ITD employee similar in nature to a classified employee (see id. at ¶ 8), he was a member of the Commission and would have had on his desk the same statutory language, and Commission explanation, described earlier. What other Commission members may have thought of that language, and their intentions upon the same, he cannot say. Additionally, in the January 30, 1974 meeting of the Senate's ad hoc "Executive Reorganization Committee," then Senator Batt seconded the motion to send Senate Bill 1295, which contained the legislation creating the Director's position in the newly-created ITD and its "may be removed" language, to the floor with a do-pass recommendation. See (Docket No. 49, Att. 11).
Finally, even though the nature of the ITD Director's employment may well have been different than many of the executive agency heads, it does not seem to have been anomalous. As previously described, Idaho law contains a variety of different statutory provisions regarding the appointment and service of non-classified employees, such as agency board members and agency directors. Even at the contemporaneous moments of the creation of the ITD, other positions were also being created that were not of the "at-will" model focused upon by ITD's declarants. In one such example, then Senator Batt made a specific motion during the December 20, 1973 meeting of the Commission to change the Commission's tentative proposal for the director of the Department of Water Resources from one which called for the director to be appointed by the governor and to serve at the governor's pleasure, to one which called for the director to be appointed by the governor to serve during the same period of time as the governor, but with the added limitation that the director could "be removed only for cause." See 12/20/73 Minutes (Docket No. 49, Att. 6). The motion passed, and the ultimate, Commission-prepared, legislation for the Director of Water Resources position contained the same "may be removed" language that appears in section 40-503, along with similar reasons for removal, e.g., "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or misconduct in office." I.C. §§ 42-1801, 1803.
General Darrell Manning, one of Idaho's most storied and well-regarded of citizen servants, has a multi-angled perspective upon the question, as he served as a lay member of the Commission (following earlier service in both the Idaho House of Representatives and the Idaho Senate), as a member of the ITD Board, and an ITD Director (the ITD's first Director). But, also of significance, he is a Defendant in this case, having been the Chairman of the ITD Board at the time the decision was made to terminate Lowe's employment. See Manning Decl. at ¶¶ 3-4 (Docket No. 54).
General Manning also says that in 1973 he read the report titled "A Tentative Proposal for the Reorganization of Idaho State Government," which he says was "the product of the Commission's work over the preceding seven months." See id. at ¶ 39. This report was made available to the public, and the Commission then held a series of public hearings around the state to receive public input regarding the proposals, in order to consider such input before submitting a final set of recommended proposals to the Legislature in January of 1974. See id. He recalls no discussion during that process of the ITD Director position being "anything other than an exempt employee, serving at the pleasure of the board." See id.
General Manning then says that he is "aware now" that the Commission Proposal 12 (for the new ITD) contained the phrase "and may be removed by the board only for stated cause" after the language "shall serve at the pleasure of the board." See id. at ¶ 40. He says that he also knows that the section of the legislation adding the ITD Director's position "contains the phrase `and may be removed for inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance' after the phrase `shall serve at the pleasure of the board.'" See id. However, he goes on to say that he does not know the source of that language, does not know who suggested "the addition of these phrases," and has no memory of having discussed them. See id. He says further that although he read Proposal No. 12 as it was submitted to the Legislature in January of 1974, and he read the proposed legislation, he does not recall the relevant phrases and does not recall "attaching any particular significance to them in terms of altering or changing the legislative intent that the director served at the pleasure of the board." See id. at ¶ 41.
Here also, a person who was very close to the stage as this particular legislation moved forward, expresses no knowledge, nor understanding, of how the "may be removed" language was enacted into law. The person who also served as the first Director of ITD, and then in multiple periods as an ITD board member, seems to indicate that until this litigation arose, he was unaware that section 40-503 contained any language that might be read to limit the manner in which the ITD Director could be removed from that employment.
General Manning's view of how Idaho Code section 40-503 should be interpreted
ITD also calls upon Joe Welch for his recollection of the process by which the ITD was created. Mr. Welch had been a staff member with Governor Andrus prior to his appointment as the Assistant Director of the Commission. See Welch Decl. at ¶ 1 (Docket No. 55). Mr. Welch recounts the work he did for the Commission, including the work that was done by the staff in preparing draft proposals for the reorganization at the direction of the Commission. See id. at ¶ 2.
In all, there were three successive sets of draft proposals. See id. at ¶¶ 11-12. The third such set of proposals were "comprehensive and detailed," including as they pertained to the new form of the ITD. See id. Before any of the draft materials were finalized, they were reviewed and approved by former Governor Robert Smylie, who served as legal counsel to the Commission. See id. at ¶ 17. Governor Smylie also had an immediate understanding of the issues involved in how employees were selected, and retained or not retained, as he had been "instrumental in creating the Idaho Personnel System during his administration." See id. at ¶ 13.
Mr. Welch also claims no knowledge of the origin of the "may be removed" clause pertaining to the ITD Director. See id. at ¶ 27. Yet, he otherwise describes a careful and thorough process that the Commission, its staff, and its counsel went through in preparing and revising drafts, and submitting the final recommended proposals to the Legislature.
Kermit Kiebert, a former state legislator and former ITD Director, provides a declaration
See id. at ¶ 8 (emphasis added).
Mr. Kiebert's declaration reflects the battle of wills that occurred between Governor Andrus and the ITD Board at the time of his criminal case, but perhaps unintentionally he also highlights the very distinction that ITD wants the Court to overlook in this case. That is, the ITD Board has the authority to hire and fire the Director, but if the Board chooses to fire the Director, the Board must do so for one of the "justifiable" (to borrow Mr. Kiebert's word) reasons set out in section 40-503.
Mr. Kiebert also says that he left ITD "for personal reasons ... and for professional reasons." "My professional reasons for leaving the Department included that both the ITD Board and I felt that at the time the Director position was no longer a good fit for me or for ITD." See id. at ¶ 10 (emphasis added). The disconnect, of course, is that Mr. Kiebert's stated understanding of his at-will employment relationship with ITD would lend no importance whatsoever to whether he felt that the Director position was no longer a good fit for him, at the same time that the ITD Board felt that the position was no longer a good fit for him as well.
Mr. Kiebert also states in his declaration that his interpretation of section 40-503 "was consistent with the ITD Board's interpretation and how the Board had viewed its past directors." See id. at ¶ 7. Certainly that is true with General Manning's declaration, as discussed earlier, but it is not true as to others. For instance, Lowe says that she worked at ITD under prior Directors Dwight Bower and David Ekern. See Lowe Decl. at ¶ 3 (Docket No. 104). She says that she was frustrated with Director Ekern's management, and was told by high level officials in ITD that "the Board could not just fire Mr. Ekern because there was Idaho law that required cause justifying his termination." See id. at ¶¶ 4-5. She also states (and the Court acknowledges the potential for her bias in doing so) that when she became the ITD Director, she received an "appointment letter" stating that she was a non-classified employee, and thus "at-will," but that she nonetheless understood from what she had been previously told, that she was "confident that I could only be removed as Director for cause." See id. at ¶ 8.
Frank Bruneel, another former Chairman of the ITD Board (including at the time that Ms. Lowe was hired as the ITD Director), submitted a declaration filed by Lowe that describes his role and that of the ITD Board in the departure of David Ekern, another prior Director. See Bruneel Decl. at ¶ 1 (Docket No. 105). He testifies about the nature of his knowledge of the Director's position, and the process by which the ITD Board went about ending its relationship with David Ekern. His
Lowe offers the declaration of Richard Hutchison, who is perhaps the most expert of all the outside viewpoints on the intricacies of state employment in Idaho. Mr. Hutchison spent his entire working career in Idaho state government, including 12 years as the Deputy Director of the Idaho Personnel Commission, followed by 15 years as the Director of that Commission, from which he retired. See Hutchison Decl. at ¶¶ 2-3 (Docket No. 106). Mr. Hutchison says that in his over 25 years at the Personnel Commission, he "gained a wealth of knowledge and expertise about civil service employees in Idaho and particularly with respect to state employees' due process protections and rights." See id. at ¶ 5.
Mr. Hutchison was asked to assist the ITD Board in a search for a new Director in 1993, at the request of the then-ITD Board Chairman, Jack Combo. See id. at ¶ 7. As part of that process, Mr. Hutchison worked directly with Mr. Combo on an ongoing basis, and worked closely with the persons being considered for the position, including Dwight Bower who ultimately was hired by the Board. See id. at ¶¶ 7-11. In regard to the status of the Director position, Hutchison states:
See id. at ¶ 12.
Dwight Bower, the Director hired in 1993 after the search assisted by Mr. Hutchison, was deposed in this case. Among other things, he testified that he was very much concerned about the nature of the ITD Director's employment status, and whether it was a political appointment, such as by the governor, or something else:
See Bower Depo. at 17:20-23:10, attached as Ex. O to Squyres Decl. (Docket No. 123, Att. 1).
Mr. Bower further explained his understanding of the Director position in this manner:
See id. at 20:4-22:20.
Significantly, when questioned further on in his deposition by ITD's counsel, Bower said that even though he believed he was not an "at-will" employee, he also did not think he was a "classified" employee.
The Court has considered, in depth, the materials added to the record offered in support of the submitting parties' particular statutory interpretations.
In the Court's view, the argument gleaned from the current record by ITD is largely directed at a unsupported premise — to wit, (1) that the position of the ITD Director is either a classified or a non-classified employee; (2) non-classified employees are at-will employees with no property interest and due process rights in their continued employment; (3) the ITD Director is not a classified employee (as the parties have stipulated, early on in the case); and (4) therefore, the Director is an at-will employee with no property interest and due process rights in continued employment.
The fallacy in the syllogism is the assumption that whether the ITD Director has any property interest in his or her employment (and due process rights as to any decision by the ITD Board to end that employment) is answered centrally by whether or not the ITD Director is a classified or non-classified state employee.
Title 67, Chapter 53 of the Idaho Code creates a personnel system for Idaho state employees. The beginning point of that system differentiates between "classified" employees and "non-classified" employees. In its most simple characterization, each state employee is a classified employee unless his or her specific position is specifically excluded from that status. See I.C. § 67-5303.
I.C. § 67-5315(2).
Chapter 53 does not, however, define whether a non-classified employee has any property interest in his or her employment, or, if so, what due process rights accompany that property interest. The Act simply says that some employees are "non-classified," and therefore are not subject to the "system of personnel administration" prescribed in Chapter 53. It is evident therefore, but not dispositive for purposes of this lawsuit, that a non-classified employee does not have the specific due process rights provided to a classified employee — by definition, Chapter 53 does not extend those specific rights to non-classified employees.
For many non-classified employees, the nature of their employment is so constrained that it cannot reasonably be argued that any sort of property interest exists in their employment. However, the Legislature did not declare that all non-classified employees have no property interest, nor that each and every non-classified employee is a purely "at-will" employee. Many Idaho statutes, including some described in this decision and discussed at length in the briefing filed by the parties, set out conditions of employment for a particular non-classified employee.
Accordingly, the testimony by many of the declarants who say that there is an absolute distinction between classified employees (and property rights in their employment) and non-classified employees such as agency directors (who can never have a property right in their employment), and the argument drawn from their testimony, is not consistent with what the Idaho legislature has done in regard to many positions of authority in state government. Even in the process of the reorganization of the executive branch in the early 1970s, there was particular discussion of those points both in the Commission
Hence, one underpinning of ITD's argument fails to support its weight. That is, the record does not support ITD's argument that the ITD Director cannot be anything other than a purely at-will employee, because the Commission, the Legislature, and Governor Andrus intended that all agency heads be treated that way. The question then turns to whether there was something so anomalous about the language used in Idaho Code section 40-503 that the Court should conclude that the phrase "... and may be removed by the board for inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance in office" has no meaning.
The consideration of this question begins, in part, with ITD's argument that the language is anomalous because no other agency directors are treated in such a fashion. As described above, there is no pervasive uniformity in the employment description of all of the various state agency heads. Accordingly, there is no anomaly in section 40-503 merely because it is somewhat different in its language than other statutes of a common purpose.
Next, the Court has considered ITD's argument that the Legislature could not possibly have intended the ITD Director to have some due process protection in his or her employment, because no one seems to think that was the intent of either the Commission, or the Legislature, and no one seems to remember how the particular "and may be removed" language found its way into the statute.
If the record contained some evidence that there had been a scrivener's error that went unnoticed and undetected in the course of a large, multi-faceted, legislative overhaul of state government, there might be some persuasive value to this part of ITD's argument. But the record is to the contrary. The record establishes that there was discussion as to many of the agencies about how the agency head should be selected, and whether it should be by the governor or an agency board. The record establishes that there was discussion about whether agency heads should serve a term of office, and whether an agency director's dismissal from employment should be conditioned upon some evidence of particularized faulty performance. The record establishes that the drafts of the legislation were carefully prepared by the professional staff of the Commission, and that everything was reviewed by the Commission's counsel, Governor Smylie, before it was put into final form. The record establishes that details of the agency director employment status were part of the Commission's formal "Explanation" to the Legislature about the proposed legislation, including as to the ITD Director that the ITD Board was to "appoint a director having knowledge and experience in transportation matters, who shall serve at the pleasure of the board and may be removed only for stated cause." Proposal No. 12/Explanation
Additionally, the Commission and the Legislature were dealing with very similar issues in regard to the ITD Board itself. There was concern about protection from undue political influence. There was a concern about obtaining and maintaining professionalism in one of the largest agencies in government (in both employee numbers and budget). The Commission considered various options to deal with those concerns, and ultimately chose to create an ITD Board that was very similar to the pre-existing Board of Highway Directors. In doing so, and in recommending a final form of the ITD Board to the Legislature, the Commission came up with very similar language to that of the Director's position. First, the board members are appointed by the governor, provided they meet certain qualifications. See, I.C. § 40-302. "Then, while serving, a board member "may" be removed by the governor for incompetency, inefficiency, intemperance, misconduct in office, neglect or dereliction of duty." See, I.C. § 40-305. Just as with the Director, the board members are appointed in the discretion of the appointing authority, provided that the person meets the statutory qualifications. Following the appointment, the person "may" be removed by the appointing authority if that person's performance implicates one of the stated reasons for removal from office, again in the discretion of the appointing authority.
The Court understands, and finds somewhat problematic, the fact that most other similarly-situated agency directors to the ITD Director generally have a prescribed term of employment, or a specified process for notice to be given to the employee of plans to terminate their employment, with an opportunity to be heard. ITD argues that even if the Court listens closely to Lowe's argument about section 40-503's "may be removed" clause, the fact that there is no specified term to the Director's employment, and no specified process for notice and opportunity to be heard, eviscerates any possibility that the ITD Director is anything but an at-will employee.
The Court discussed this issue in its proposed decision, in a manner that elicited criticism from various of the declarants who have provided testimony on behalf of ITD, and the Court has reconsidered its earlier assessment of what may or may not have been on the Commission's collective mind, and the Legislature's collective mind, at the time that sections 40-305 (dealing with the ITD Board) and 40-503 (dealing with the ITD Director) were enacted. After doing so, the Court remains persuaded that its original perspective is still the most sensible assessment of the legislative intent behind section 40-503, and that accordingly, even if the statute is deemed ambiguous, the same meaning that the Court attaches in its reading of the "plain meaning" of the statute so as to give effect to each part of its language, is also the Legislature's intended meaning. The record before the Court also contains information that provides a sensible explanation for the ITD structure contained in the Commission's proposal, regardless of whether or not a set term of office was included for the Director, or whether a specific notice and opportunity to be heard was spelled out. To begin, the Court found multiple references to concerns over the role of politics in highway decisions,
Further, as the Court described in its proposed order, Idaho's history always has been marked by regional interests competing for transportation project dollars. Our state is divided by geography and culture into distinct regions, where business and economic decisions do not always honor or value political boundaries. Although any decision made upon transportation projects can have statewide impacts,
The competition for such projects has always been fierce; the dollars for such projects limited. Hence, there is a logic that the Commission recommended, and the Legislature created, an ITD Board that continued to represent specific regions of the state (as the Board of Highway Directors had done previously), thus ensuring that each region's interests would be represented, but also in a way that would encourage cooperation to meet statewide interests. See, e.g., I.C. § 40-303. The direct political influence of the governor was thereby constrained, but not eliminated, as the governor was given the responsibility to appoint the board members, but also limited in how he or she might seek to remove such board members. See I.C. § 40-302. In that regard, the Legislature set specific time periods upon the term to be served by these Board members and specifically outlined the procedures to remove members. See I.C. §§ 40-303, 40-305. A political balance was required of the Board, with a prescribed equilibrium imposed between the two major political parties in the state. See I.C. § 40-302. The Legislature prohibited any Board member from serving in a separate elective, appointed, or political party position. See id. In so doing, the Legislature unmistakably was seeking to create a decision-making body that would reflect the regional interests competing for transportation projects, but would be a layer removed from the direct political influences that might seek to place a thumb upon such decisions.
The Legislature then created a professional position in the form of the ITD Director, in a manner that emphasized the need to operate the engineering, oversight, and public fisc responsibilities of the ITD in a professional manner. See, e.g., I.C. § 40-505. The person filling that position was to both advise the Board and manage the Department as the "technical and administrative officer of the Board," and, under the Board, was to have "general supervision and control of ... the department." See id.
As with other of the many "citizen" boards of Idaho state government, the part-time ITD Board members (although "well informed and interested in the construction and maintenance of public highways and highway systems (see I.C. § 40-302)") generally have neither the time nor the expertise to manage the operations of
Hence, the Legislature understandably could have chosen to structure the ITD Director's position to meet that need. Unlike the Board members, who can come from entirely unrelated professional or educational backgrounds, Idaho Code section 40-503 requires the ITD Board to "appoint a director having knowledge and experience in transportation matters." See I.C. § 40-503. The Legislature additionally required that "[t]he director shall not hold any other public office, nor any office in any political committee or organization, and shall devote full time to the performance of his official duties." See id. Furthermore, it is the ITD Director who is charged with "appoint[ing] a chief engineer of the department" with "actual experience in highway engineering ... in an administrative capacity involving the direction of a substantial technical engineering staff." See id.; see also I.C. § 40-503(2).
The requirement that the ITD Director be professionally qualified by "knowledge and experience in transportation matters" was further evidence that the Legislature also understood that even in that position, the Director needed to be able to professionally manage ITD, without fear of political reprisal. Yet, such a position cannot have been intended to create a taxpayer-funded sinecure for the incompetent or irresponsible; hence, the Legislature identified four specific reasons — inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance or nonfeasance — of unsatisfactory performance upon which the Board could choose to discharge the Director.
The Court has given careful attention to the fact that some of the players on the field at the time — Governor Andrus, Governor Batt, and General Manning in particular — have said in their declarations that this Court's assessment of the legislative record is, to paraphrase, "not the way it was." But in the Court's view of the entire record and the argument of the parties, the conclusion reached here is more consistent with the purposeful, repeated, references to the "may be removed only for cause" nature of the ITD Director's position found in the Commission's records (including the legislation's Statement of Purpose), and is more consistent with the nature of the testimony before the Commission about the need for a relative degree of autonomy in the workings of the ITD. The Court's decision is also more consistent with the Commission's and the Legislature's decision to give certain other large agency directors, and agency board members, limited protections in their employment, and is more consistent with the underlying public policy behind a Legislature choosing to encourage apolitical decision-making in one of the state's largest agencies.
The Court is not saying, in reaching this decision, that the Legislature could not have chosen differently. The Court is satisfied
With all this in mind, the Court concludes that its reading of what it has described as the plain meaning of the statute is also consistent with this above-referenced legislative backdrop. Accordingly, the Court finds that the statute's meaning supports Lowe's position that she had a property interest as ITD's Director.
ITD has argued that even if section 40-503 extends a property right interest to the ITD Director, in Lowe's instance, she knowingly surrendered any such rights at the time she was hired. ITD points to the December 14, 2006 employment letter agreement between (and signed by) Lowe and ITD's then-Chairman, Frank Bruneel, which states in part: "[t]his position is non-classified by Idaho Code 67-5303 and, therefore, is an `at-will' position." See Ex. A to Defs.' Answer to Second Am. Compl. (Docket No. 9, Att. 1). Lowe has argued that this letter's content does not operate to overcome the requirements of section 40-503 concerning removal of the ITD Director. See Pl.'s Mem., p. 10 (Docket No. 22) ("It stands to reason that similarly, ITD cannot override I.C. § 40-503 with an offer letter dictating that Ms. Lowe's position `is an `at-will' position.'") (citing Boudreau v. City of Wendell, 147 Idaho 609, 213 P.3d 394 (2009)).
In Boudreau, the appellant was appointed to the position of Wendell City Clerk and, at the time of her appointment, was provided with a Personnel Manual, outlining "the right to notice and a hearing for employees in the event of discharge or demotion." See Boudreau, 213 P.3d at 395. Following her August 29, 2007 dismissal, the appellant brought a claim, asserting that the defendants/respondents "wrongfully terminated her employment when she was not provided with notice and a hearing as provided for in the Personnel Manual." See id. at 396. The district court granted summary judgment, holding that, "while portions of [the appellant's] employment may have been governed by the employment handbook, the Idaho Legislature determined that the means by which a city clerk is removed is to be exclusively governed by the terms of I.C. § 50-206." See id. The Idaho Supreme Court agreed, concluding:
See id. at 397.
ITD argues that Boudreau does not support Lowe's cause because "Lowe did not attempt to contract for additional procedural rights" but, instead, "Lowe acknowledged the at-will nature of her employment as Director and expressly waived any right to now argue that she had an expectation of continued employment." See Defs.' Opp., p. 18 (Docket No. 28); see also Defs.' Resp. to Req. for Add'l Briefing, p. 20 (Docket No. 50). While not taking issue with ITD's factual distinction from Boudreau, the Court disagrees with ITD's application of Boudreau to Lowe's circumstance here.
The take-away from Boudreau is that Idaho Code prevails over a conflicting contract, manual, or, even letter. Therefore, regardless of what the December 14, 2006 letter said with respect to the nature of Lowe's employ as ITD's Director, section 40-503 nonetheless controls. So long as section 40-503 provides a property interest in the ITD Director's continued employment, statements to the contrary via any employment agreement like the December 14, 2006 correspondence do not apply to marginalize the Legislature's mandate.
This Decision represents a rather exhaustive explanation of the Court's ruling upon the pending cross motions for partial summary judgment. But it also important to describe, albeit more briefly, what is not decided here. The Court has not decided the parameters of the property interest held by the ITD Director in the context of the due process rights that must attend to any decision made by the ITD Board seeking to terminate the Director. Accordingly, the Court also makes no decision as to whether Lowe's rights in that regard have been violated.
However, at a minimum, the Court necessarily concludes in reaching the conclusion described above, that the ITD Board is required to act upon a legitimate record in making its decision as to whether or not Lowe's performance as the ITD Director justifies the termination of her employment based upon any one or more of the four specified reasons for removal set out in section 40-503. The corollary is that Lowe is entitled to challenge the process by which the decision to terminate her was made, to support her claim that the decision to relieve her of her command was made for reasons not allowed by the statute.
Depending upon what the Court decides are the protections to which Lowe is entitled, ITD will be entitled, in turn, to argue that such protections (even though contested) were provided to Lowe. Indeed, from the record now developed by the parties, it appears to the Court that ITD will be able to argue that, at a minimum, Lowe was
Those issues will surely be the subject of further briefing and argument from the parties. The Court will hold a status conference and scheduling conference with the parties in the next several weeks to set a time frame for those matters, and the other remaining claims in this lawsuit.
Based upon the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that: (1) Lowe's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Docket No. 100) is GRANTED;
See Humphrey's Executor, 295 U.S. at 622, 55 S.Ct. 869 (quoting Shurtleff, 189 U.S. at 316, 23 S.Ct. 535).