This action is before this Court upon a petition in which certain employees of the Department of Human Services of West Virginia
By order dated July 25, 1984, this Court directed the respondents to show cause why relief in mandamus should not be awarded against them. In September 1984, we refused a motion to dismiss the Civil Service Commission from this action. Subsequently, pursuant to an agreement of the parties, this Court dismissed all of the issues in this action, except for the issue of whether the petitioners are entitled to retroactive pay for work performed “out of classification” during the period in question.
For the reasons stated below, we hold that the petitioners are entitled to retroactive pay.
I
The Department of Human Services, a division of state government, employs approximately 2,400 persons. Most of those employees, including the petitioners, are covered by this State’s civil service system.
As reflected in the record, employment with the Department of Human Services has been divided into several classifications for civil service purposes. Those classifications include Economic Service Worker I, II and III. The duties of Economic Service Workers include providing assistance to persons applying for benefits under such programs as Aid to Families with Dependent Children. Among the three classifications, Economic Service Worker Ill’s receive the highest salary.
The petitioners, classified as Economic Service Worker I or II, filed with the Department of Human Services grievances which alleged that they had been working “out of classification,” i.e., that the petitioners had been performing the duties of an Economic Service Worker III. The petitioners asserted that they were entitled to be classified as Economic Service Worker III, with the appropriate salary and retroactive pay.
As a result of the filing of numerous grievances, the Civil Service Commission in September 1983 ordered its Classification Division to study the Department of Human Services concerning the validity of the Department’s employment classifications.
Accordingly, on June 1, 1984 (and effective July 1,1984), the Civil Service Commission modified certain classifications of the Department of Human Services. That modification or “reclassification” included, inter alia, the elimination of the Economic Service Worker III classification
The validity and fairness of the June 1, 1984, reclassification by the Civil Service Commission was challenged in this action. As indicated above, however, the parties have resolved their differences, except for the issue of retroactive pay.
The Civil Service Commission denied the petitioners retroactive pay
Contending that the denial of retroactive pay was improper, the petitioners assert that the Civil Service Commission ignored “the obvious reality that the lower classified employees in ESW I and II were receiving less pay than the higher classified employees in the classification ESW III, even though by the admission of all involved, they were performing the same work....”
II
This Court, in the syllabus of Guine v. Civil Service Commission,
The record in this action clearly demonstrates that prior to the June 1, 1984, reclassification of the Department of Human Services there was no distinction in reality among the duties performed by Economic Service Workers I, II and III. Some of those duties, however, were more difficult than others. For example, the processing by Economic Service Workers of the applications of claimants for Aid to Families
The Civil Service Commission specifically determined that the duties of the petitioners, prior to the reclassification, included the more difficult matters. As the Commission determined with respect to petitioners Bias, Moyers, Vincent and Watson: “This Commission determines that Doris Bias, ... April Moyers, Rose Ann Vincent and Randa J. Watson perform the full range of economic service tasks including taking applications and determining eligibility for Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), food stamps, medical assistance and other economic services.”
Although prior to the reclassification there was no significant distinction made in the Department of Human Services in the duties performed by Economic Service Workers I, II and III, the differences in difficulty of work served as a basis before and after the reclassification for the Civil Service Commission’s classifications of Economic Service Workers.
In Yolo County Department of Social Services v. Municipal Court,
In a subsequent California case, the Court of Appeal, in Theroux v. State,
For the above reasons, this Court is of the opinion that the petitioners are entitled to retroactive pay for the period during which Economic Service Workers I, II and III of the Department of Human Services performed the same duties. Specifically, we hold that where employees of the Department of Human Services of West Virginia were classified for purposes of
The decisions of the respondent Civil Service Commission denying retroactive pay to the petitioners are hereby reversed, and this action is remanded to that Commission for a determination of the amount of retroactive pay to which each petitioner is entitled.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
Notes
. The West Virginia Department of Human Services was formerly known as the West Virginia "department of welfare.” W. Va.Code, 9-2-la [1983],
. Nearly all of the many petitioners in this action were classified as Economic Service Worker I or II, and they sought the Economic Service Worker III position, with appropriate salary and retroactive pay. However, this Court has carefully examined the exhibits and finds that a few of the petitioners do not meet that description. Patricia Weaver, for example, was classified as a Case Aide II, and she sought a Social Service Worker II classification. See petitioners' exhibit E-3. Upon remand of this action, the status of such petitioners should, in light of the principles of this opinion, be re-examined by the respondents.
. The respondents have indicated that by amendment to the Civil Service Commission reclassification of the Department of Human Services, the classification Economic Service Worker III was reinstated. That amendment, however, is not relevant to the disposition of this action.
. The Civil Service Commission recognized the legitimacy of the grievances of the following petitioners but denied retroactive pay: April Moyers, Doris Bias, Randa J. Watson, Rose Ann Vincent, Roberta Sue Boggs, Darlene Butcher, Betty Gill, Brenda Gilbert, Emma Crites, Kenda Weaver, Constance Dana, Aliene Baker, Helen Floyd and Victoria Wilson. See petitioners’ exhibits F-l through F-10.
The record is unclear as to the status of the remaining petitioners in terms of the retroactive pay issue. Upon remand, the respondents should, in light of the principles of this opinion, review the circumstances of the following petitioners in terms of possible claims for retroactive pay: Gail Fry, Elizabeth Kennedy, Patricia Weaver, Linda Seals, Rose Truex, Darlene Cre-means and Pat Keffer. See n. 2, supra.
.The petitioners have raised the issue of whether their status, prior to the reclassification, constituted a "demotion” in terms of their classification as Economic Service Workers I or II compared to the work they actually performed. We thus review the action of the Civil Service Commission concerning those petitioners pursuant to W.Va.Code, 29-6-15 [1977]. Although the petitioners initially sought relief in the forms of mandamus and judicial review, this action is now solely a matter of judicial review, inasmuch as the parties have resolved the mandamus aspects of this action.
. See also State Trial Attorneys’ Association v. State, 63 Cal.App.3d 298,
