854 So. 2d 59 | Ala. | 2003
The Alabama Department of Transportation ("ALDOT") appeals the Montgomery *61 Circuit Court's issuance of a writ of mandamus ordering the appointment of a hearing officer to hear a formal grievance filed against ALDOT by Phillip Earl Price, an ALDOT employee. ALDOT contends that the claim raised in Price's grievance has already been adjudicated through a settlement reached in federal court. We agree, and we reverse and remand.
The proposed consent decree provided for broad classwide relief, but left for subsequent trial monetary and nonmonetary claims of individual class members. Reynolds I,
In January 1994, before the scheduled fairness hearing, a group of nonblack ALDOT employees (the "Adams intervenors") moved to intervene on behalf of themselves and all ALDOT employees who were not part of the plaintiff classes. Reynolds I,
Because of objections to the proposed consent decree, the parties divided the proposed consent decree into three decrees — Consent Decree I, Consent Decree II, and Consent Decree III. Reynolds II,
Among other things, Consent Decree I required ALDOT to develop a grievance procedure for its employees. Reynolds II,
The grievance procedure was developed to address, among other things, claims by individual employees that the majority of their working time was spent performing the duties and responsibilities of a higher job classification and that they were thus entitled to reclassification and a salary increase pursuant to Consent Decree I. Reynolds II,
In late 1996, ALDOT attempted to resolve grievances filed by three other white employees. Reynolds II,
On March 3, 1998, the federal district court denied the permanent injunction, but instead issued a judgment declaring that ALDOT's implementation of the grievance resolutions for use by the three white grievants would violate Consent Decree I. Reynolds II,
In April 2001, the parties presented to the federal district court a settlement agreement for the Adams intervenor class. The settlement agreement recited that the defendants (including ALDOT) were paying $1.45 million "in settlement of . . . [a]ll of the individual grievances seeking backpay or promotions, as listed in [Exhibit] A hereto." It further provided that "all grievances seeking backpay or promotions, as listed on Exhibit A, shall be dismissed." Exhibit A to the settlement agreement is a list of the 290 pending grievances filed by members of the Adams intervenor class. Price's grievance is included on this list of grievances that have been dismissed.
After a fairness hearing and the revision of the settlement agreement, the federal district court issued an order finally approving the settlement agreement on September 26, 2001. The settlement agreement and the order did not permit members of the Adams intervenors to opt out of the settlement.
Price filed a motion in the federal district court in March 2002 to set aside the settlement. That motion was denied without prejudice by agreement of the parties, and no appeal was taken either from the approval of the settlement or from the denial of Price's motion to set aside the settlement.
Price filed the petition for the writ of mandamus in the present case in the Montgomery Circuit Court on January 15, 1998, before the settlement was reached with Price's class. Price sought a writ of mandamus directing ALDOT to appoint a *63 hearing officer to hear Price's December 1996 grievance. At the time Price filed the petition, ALDOT had been enjoined from implementing its three settlements with white grievants. The plaintiff classes were then seeking to enjoin the use of the grievance process by any nonblack employee. Shortly after Price filed this petition, the federal district court issued its declaratory judgment prohibiting use of the grievance process by nonblack employees.
ALDOT removed this case to the federal district court. The district court remanded the case, however, on the grounds (a) that Price "seeks to invoke only state-law issues" and (b) that the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit had held in Reynolds II that the grievance procedure under Consent Decree I did not "implicate federal law concerns." Thereafter, Price's grievance was settled through the court-approved settlement agreement.
As a result of the settlement of the very claims on which Price's grievance was based, ALDOT's answer to the petition argued that Price's petition was due to be dismissed on grounds of res judicata and mootness. A nonjury trial was conducted on May 20, 2002. On July 3, 2002, the Montgomery Circuit Court entered an order granting the petition and requiring ALDOT "to take any and all necessary steps to have Price's grievance proceed to and through the final step of the grievance procedure." Although recognizing that the "evidence before the Court as to the partial settlement in the Reynolds case is undisputed," the order did not address the res judicata effect of the settlement. This appeal is from the July 3, 2002, order.
A. A Prior Judgment on the Merits
We have recently held that a class-action settlement can serve as a prior judgment on the merits for res judicata purposes. Providian Nat'l Bankv. Pritchett,
Price contends that he did not receive notice of the settlement until after it was approved.2 However, this is an *64 argument to be raised, if at all, before the federal district court that approved the settlement and, if necessary, before a federal appellate court.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Moore, C.J., and Lyons, Johnstone, and Woodall, JJ., concur.