Southwestern Community Action Council, Inc. v. City of Huntington Human Relations Com'n

Decision Date30 June 1988
Docket NumberNo. CC976,CC976
Citation179 W.Va. 573,371 S.E.2d 70
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
Parties, 47 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. (BNA) 1227 SOUTHWESTERN COMMUNITY ACTION COUNCIL, INC. v. CITY OF HUNTINGTON HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION, Elaine Baker, Chairperson; Joyce Morris, Hazel Bond, and Patricia McBrown.

Syllabus by the Court

1. An "agency" within the meaning of the State Administrative Procedures Act, W.Va.Code, 29A-1 et seq., refers to state, not local agencies, and does not include a local human relations commission established by a local government entity pursuant to municipal ordinance.

2. A local government entity has no authority to confer jurisdiction on a circuit court.

J. Grant McGuire, Huntington, for appellee.

Nancy Matthews, Herbert Henderson, Huntington, for appellants.

NEELY, Justice:

The Circuit Court of Lincoln County, on its own motion, has certified to us the following question:

"Whether or not a final order issued by the Huntington Human Relations Commission is reviewable by the Circuit Court of Lincoln County in accordance with the West Virginia Human Rights Act, the Huntington Human Relations Ordinance, and the West Virginia Administrative Procedures Act?" 1

We conclude that a decision by a local human relations commission is not subject to judicial review under the APA and, therefore, the Circuit Court of Lincoln County has no authority to review the Commission's final order.

The parties to this proceeding stipulate the following facts. The Huntington Human Relations Commission (Commission) is a local human relations commission created by city ordinance in 1977 under authority granted by State law. 2 The Southwestern Community Action Council, Inc. (Southwestern), is a nonprofit organization that does business in Cabell, Mason, Lincoln, and Wayne counties. The complainants filed age-discrimination complaints with the Commission following the termination of their employment as bookkeepers at Southwestern. After conducting evidentiary hearings, the Commission entered a final order dated 4 October 1985, finding that Southwestern had unlawfully discriminated against the complainants on the basis of age. It ordered reinstatement with back pay and full restoration of benefits, attorneys' fees, and $10,000 for emotional and mental suffering.

Southwestern then petitioned the Circuit Court of Lincoln County for appellate review invoking the judicial review provision of the APA, W.Va.Code, 29A-5-4 [1964], (see text, supra note 1), which provides for review by the circuit court of any county in which petitioner does business. In its petition to the circuit court, Southwestern noted that the ordinance that created the Commission in 1977 stated the APA was applicable to its proceedings.

The Commission moved to dismiss Southwestern's appeal because the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. The Commission argued that a local human relations commission created under authority of W.Va.Code, 5-11-12 [1967], is not an "agency," as defined by the APA and thus Southwestern had improperly invoked the APA's judicial review provision. The Commission pointed out that Southwestern could seek and, in fact, had sought judicial review by writ of certiorari in the Circuit Court of Cabell County under W.Va.Code, 53-3-1 [1923] and W.Va.Code, 53-3-2 [1923]. 3 The circuit court denied the Commission's motion to dismiss Southwestern's appeal and certified the above quoted question to us.

The inquiry is whether the Commission is an "agency" covered by the APA. The APA defines "agency" as "any state board, commission, department, office or officer authorized by law to make rules or adjudicate contested cases, except those in the legislative or judicial branches[.]" (Emphasis supplied).

It is clear from this definition and from a reading of the act as a whole, that the APA was designed to regulate the administrative proceedings of state, not local, agencies. 4 When the legislature originally enacted the APA in 1964, it defined "agency" in virtually the same language as employed by the drafters of the 1961 version of the Model State Administrative Procedure Act. 5

Courts that have considered the question in states with similar statutory language have uniformly concluded that the APA applies only to state, not local governmental entities. 6 In Benson v. Fort Dodge Police Pension Bd. of Trustees, 312 N.W.2d 548 (Iowa 1981), the Supreme Court of Iowa concluded that a local pension board was not an "agency," subject to that state's administrative procedure act, and thus judicial review of the board's action was not available under the Iowa APA. In deciding that the local pension board was not a board "of the state," the Iowa court stated:

In the sense that the pension board is established under state law, it is a creature of the state. See § 411.2. However, it has limited geographical jurisdiction, its members are locally selected, and it makes its own rules. § 411.5. The funds which it administers are derived from member contributions and city appropriations. §§ 411.1(15), 411.8, and 411.11. Pensions are a liability of the city. § 411.12.

Although the board is a creature of state law, it thus functions in a specific local geographical area and is locally administered and controlled. We believe its function determines its character as a local agency despite its origin in state law. Therefore we hold that it is not a board of the state subject to the IAPA.

312 N.W.2d at 550.

The same logic applies here because the Commission functions as a local agency created by city ordinance, even though the authority to create the agency is granted by state law.

Southwestern argues that the APA should still apply to the Commission because the ordinance creating the Commission so specifies. A local government is certainly free to decide that the procedure of a local board or commission it creates will be governed by the APA. However, the city has no power to confer jurisdiction on a circuit court.

As noted previously, the Circuit Court of Cabell County has jurisdiction to review the decision of the commission by writ of certiorari. Had the state legislature stated that the provisions of the APA apply to the activities of the local human relations commissions, the Circuit Court of Lincoln County would have appellate jurisdiction to review the commission's decision in this case. The city itself, however, has no authority to affect the jurisdiction of the circuit courts, either directly, or indirectly by applying the provisions of the APA to a commission created by it. 7

Southwestern proposes that our decision in Huntington Human Relations Commission v. Realco, Inc., 175 W.Va. 24, 330 S.E.2d 682 (1985) should affect our ruling here.

In Realco, the question before us was whether a local human rights commission has the power to issue subpoenas. We held that the legislature intended to authorize local government subdivisions to give their local human rights commissions the power to seek subpoenas from the appropriate circuit court.

The power to subpoena may, by a proper ordinance and in conformity with the State Administrative Procedures Act, W.Va.Code, 29A-1 et seq., be delegated by a local governmental entity to a Human Relations Commission, organized under W.Va.Code, 5-11-12 [1967]. The Commission must, of course, acquire all subpoenas from the appropriate circuit court under W.Va.Code, 8-12-2(c) [1969].

330 S.E.2d at 684.

This latter provision empowers cities to require the production of evidence and specifies that the city may seek a subpoena from the circuit court of the county in which the city is located. The City of Huntington delegated to its Human Relations Commission this power that had been clearly granted the city by the state legislature.

The question of whether a city can delegate its subpoena...

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  • Lipscomb v. Tucker County Com'n, 23122
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • July 11, 1996
    ...29A-1 et seq., refers to state, not local agencies...." Syl. pt. 1, in part, Southwestern Community Action Council, Inc. v. Huntington Human Relations Commission, 179 W.Va. 573, 371 S.E.2d 70 (1988). To the extent that either the Tucker County Wage and Hour Review Board or the Tucker County......

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