ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES and John M. Selig, Individually and in his official capacity as Director of the Department of Human Services, Appellants v. FORT SMITH SCHOOL DISTRICT; Greenwood School District; and Van Buren School District, Appellees
No. CV-14-666
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
February 26, 2015
2015 Ark. 81
Thompson and Llewellyn, P.A., by: James M. Llewellyn, Jr., and William P. Thompson, Fort Smith, for appellees.
ROBIN F. WYNNE, Associate Justice
This is an interlocutory appeal from the Pulaski County Circuit Court‘s denial of a motion to dismiss on sovereign-immunity grounds filed by appellants, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) and its director, John Selig. Under
This case involves a DHS rule requiring all licensed child-care centers to carry general-liability insurance. The rule was implemented pursuant to Act 778 of 2009, codified
(a) The purpose of this section is to enhance safe and responsible passenger transportation of children in child care by requiring appropriate liability insurance and driver training.
(b) The Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education of the Department of Human Services is directed, in collaboration with the State Insurance Department, to develop and promulgate rules requiring sufficient and appropriate minimum levels of general liability insurance coverage for licensed child care centers and licensed and registered child care family homes, including coverage for transportation services when applicable.
(c) The division shall promulgate rules requiring all drivers of vehicles transporting children on behalf of licensed child care centers and licensed and registered child care family homes to complete a comprehensive program of driver safety training.
(Emphasis added.) Based on this statute, DHS amended its licensing requirements to include certain minimum general-liability-insurance coverage for all child-care centers. Appellees, the plaintiffs below, are three school districts that each operate child-care centers licensed by DHS. The school districts filed a complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit Court on February 19, 2014, against Mike Beebe, individually and in his official capacity as governor of the State of Arkansas;1 John M. Selig, individually and in his official capacity as director of DHS; and DHS. The school districts sought declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as costs and attorney‘s fees, alleging that DHS‘s requirement that they purchase general-liability insurance conflicted with their tort immunity under
- A declaration that Act 778 of 2009 does not require a school district that operates a child care center or a pre-K program to purchase or maintain general liability insurance;
- A declaration that Act 778 of 2009 in no way supersedes, repeals or overrules in any respect the application of the tort immunity statute for school districts found in
A.C.A. § 21-9-301 even where they, as here, may operate a child care center or a pre-K program; - A declaration that school district child care is not a child care facility subject to supervision of DHS within the meaning of
A.C.A. [§] 20-78-202(2) ; - A declaration that the proposed rules and regulations promulgated by DHS pursuant to Act 778 of 2009 have not been published in accordance with the Act and applicable law and are, therefore, of no force and effect;
- A declaration that there has been no consideration by the Legislature on the impact of Act 778 of 2009 on adequacy funding.
- A preliminary injunction after notice and a hearing prohibiting the State, DHS, and any of their officials, officers, agents, servants or employees from
seeking to impose any rule, regulation, or other mandate upon the Plaintiffs that would require the Districts to purchase general liability insurance involuntarily, said preliminary injunction to be made permanent upon a final hearing on the merits; and - That Plaintiffs be awarded all other just and proper relief to which they may be entitled, including reimbursement of their costs and attorneys fees to the extent permitted by Arkansas law.
In response, on March 13, 2014, DHS and John Selig filed a motion to dismiss and accompanying brief, arguing that the school districts’ claims against DHS and Selig in his official capacity were barred by sovereign immunity, that the claims against Selig in his individual capacity were barred by statutory immunity under
On June 5, 2014, the circuit court held a hearing on appellants’ motion to dismiss and on the school districts’ motion for preliminary injunction. The hearing included argument by appellants’ counsel that the school districts’ claims were barred by sovereign and statutory immunity. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court denied both the motion for preliminary injunction and the motion to dismiss. An order was entered on June 12, 2014, and, as to the motion to dismiss, the court stated only that “Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is DENIED.”3 This appeal followed.4
I. Standard of Review
In reviewing the circuit judge‘s decision on a motion to dismiss, this court has said,
[W]e treat the facts alleged in the complaint as true and view them in the light most favorable to the party who filed the complaint. In testing the sufficiency of the complaint on a motion to dismiss, all reasonable inferences must be resolved in favor of the complaint, and the plead-
ings are to be liberally construed. However, our rules require fact pleading, and a complaint must state facts, not mere conclusions, in order to entitle the pleader to relief.
Arkansas Dep‘t of Envtl. Quality v. Oil Producers of Ark., 2009 Ark. 297, at 5, 318 S.W.3d 570, 572-73 (internal citations omitted) (quoting Ark. Tech Univ. v. Link, 341 Ark. 495, 501, 17 S.W.3d 809, 812 (2000)). Our standard of review for the denial of a motion to dismiss is whether the circuit judge abused his or her discretion. Id. (citing S. Coll. of Naturopathy v. State ex rel. Beebe, 360 Ark. 543, 203 S.W.3d 111 (2005)).
II. Sovereign Immunity — DHS and Selig in His Official Capacity
A suit against a public official in his or her official capacity is essentially a suit against that official‘s agency. Smith v. Daniel, 2014 Ark. 519, at 6, 452 S.W.3d 575. We have held that official-capacity suits generally represent a way of pleading a cause of action against the entity of which the officer is an agent. Id. Thus, DHS and John Selig, in his official capacity, are essentially the same defendant for purposes of our sovereign-immunity analysis.
Appellants contend that the school districts’ claims are barred by sovereign and statutory immunity. The defense of sovereign immunity originates from the
This court has recognized three ways in which a claim of sovereign immunity may be waived: (1) where the State is the moving party seeking specific relief; (2) where an act of the legislature has created a specific waiver of sovereign immunity; and (3) where the state agency is acting illegally or if a state-agency officer refuses to do a purely ministerial action required by statute. Ark. Dep‘t of Cmty. Corr. v. City of Pine Bluff, 2013 Ark. 36, 425 S.W.3d 731. A statutory waiver of sovereign immunity may be express or implied. Id.
Here, we need not decide whether a judgment for the school districts would operate to control the action of the State because the General Assembly has expressly waived sovereign immunity in suits for declaratory judgment regarding the validity or applicability of agency rules in
(a) The validity or applicability of a rule may be determined in an action for declaratory judgment if it is alleged that the rule, or its threatened application, injures or threatens to injure the plaintiff in his person, business, or property.
(b) The action may be brought in the circuit court of any county in which the plaintiff resides or does business or in Pulaski County Circuit Court.
(c) The agency shall be made defendant in that action.
(d) A declaratory judgment may be rendered whether or not the plaintiff has requested the agency to pass upon the validity or applicability of the rule in question.
This statute clearly applies in the present case to allow the school districts to challenge DHS‘s rule requiring all licensed child-care centers to maintain general liability insurance.5 In fact, appellants specifically conceded at the hearing that the circuit court had jurisdiction over DHS under the above statute contained in the Administrative Procedure Act. Because of the express statutory waiver of sovereign immunity when a declaratory judgment is sought regarding the validity or applicability of an agency rule, we affirm the denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss on sovereign-immunity grounds as to the declaratory relief sought against DHS and John Selig, in his official capacity as director of DHS.
The injunctive relief requested by the school districts seeks to bar application of the rule requiring the plaintiff school districts to purchase general-liability insurance. While appellants contend that the school districts’ request for injunctive relief is an impermissible attempt to control the action of the State, we disagree. Where, as here, there is a permitted challenge to a rule under the declaratory-judgment statute, a request for injunctive relief is simply a means to enforce the judgment, should the circuit court determine that the rule is invalid or inapplicable. Furthermore, we have recognized that where an action seeks to prevent an officer of the State from acting unlawfully, the office does not shield him, and the action is treated as one against the officer and not a suit against the State. Fed. Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Call, Commissioner of Labor, 221 Ark. 537, 254 S.W.2d 319 (1953) (action seeking to enjoin the defendants, the Commissioner of Labor and the Administrator of the Employment Security Division, from proceeding under an allegedly void administrative ruling was held not a suit against the State); see also Hickenbottom v. McCain, Commissioner of Labor, 207 Ark. 485, 181 S.W.2d 226 (1944). Therefore, we affirm the denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss on sovereign-immunity grounds as to the injunctive relief sought against DHS and John Selig, in his official capacity as director of DHS.
Finally, appellants are correct that, by seeking to recover monetary damages in the form of costs and attorney‘s fees, the school districts seek to subject the State to liability. Therefore, looking only at the pleadings, we hold that the request for reimbursement of costs and attorney‘s fees is barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity and reverse and dismiss on that narrow claim.6
III. John Selig, in His Individual Capacity
Next, we address the school districts’ suit against John Selig individual-
Officers and employees of the State of Arkansas are immune from liability and from suit, except to the extent that they may be covered by liability insurance, for damages for acts or omissions, other than malicious acts or omissions, occurring within the course and scope of their employment.
Under
It is true that in law malice is not necessarily personal hate. It is rather an intent and disposition to do a wrongful act greatly injurious to another. Malice is also defined as “the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse, with an intent to inflict an injury or under circumstances that the law will imply an evil intent. . . . A conscious violation of the law . . . which operates to the prejudice of another person. A condition of the mind showing a heart . . . fatally bent on mischief.”
Arkansas Dep‘t of Envtl. Quality v. Al-Madhoun, 374 Ark. 28, 35, 285 S.W.3d 654, 660 (2008) (citations omitted).
Here, the school districts did not allege any malicious acts or omissions by John Selig, nor did they allege that he acted outside the scope of his employment. Therefore, to the extent that the school districts allege that John Selig is liable in his individual capacity, we reverse and dismiss.
IV. Conclusion
Only the issue of sovereign immunity is properly before this court pursuant to
Affirmed in part; reversed and dismissed in part; dismissed in part.
Baker, J., concurs.
Hannah, C.J., and Danielson, J., dissent.
Paul E. Danielson, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent and would dismiss the instant case due to the failure of the circuit court‘s order to expressly rule on the issue of sovereign immunity as required by this court‘s case law.
Ordinarily, an appeal may not be taken from an order denying a motion to dismiss. See Univ. of Ark. for Med. Scis. v. Adams, 354 Ark. 21, 117 S.W.3d 588 (2003). However,
While such an interlocutory appeal is permissible under this court‘s rules, this
A review of the instant record reveals that the doctrines of sovereign immunity and statutory immunity were raised in short by ADHS in its motion to dismiss, in addition to its claim that the School Districts’ complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.2 The School Districts addressed the issue in their response, and ADHS very briefly addressed the immunity issue at the hearing before the circuit court.3 After doing so, counsel for ADHS immediately began to address the merits of the School Districts’ claims, after which counsel for the districts responded only to ADHS‘s arguments on the merits and urged the circuit court that the districts had alleged sufficient facts to avoid an order dismissing the case. The circuit court then ruled as follows: “Well, I think it‘s close. But I‘m going to deny the Motion at this point, and we‘ll go forward with it.” It then took up the School Districts’ request for a preliminary injunction.
Notably, the circuit court‘s order lacks any reference at all to ADHS‘s contentions of sovereign and statutory immunity. In its order, after reciting its consideration of the “motions, responses, and replies filed by the parties, together with the testimony
- Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is DENIED.
- Plaintiffs have failed to establish that denial of a preliminary injunction will result in irreparable harm to the applicant.
- Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits.
- Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction is DENIED.
Not only did the circuit court‘s order lack an express ruling on the issue of immunity as required by this court in Alpha Marketing, its order failed to acknowledge the issue at all.4 Moreover, this court has been quite clear that it will not presume a ruling from the circuit court‘s silence, as we have held that we will not review a matter on which the circuit court has not ruled, ”and a ruling should not be presumed.” Alpha Mktg., 2012 Ark. 23, at 7, 386 S.W.3d at 404 (emphasis in original).
Whether an order is appealable is a jurisdictional issue that this court has a duty to raise, even if the parties do not. See Ford Motor Co. v. Harper, 353 Ark. 328, 107 S.W.3d 168 (2003). Where no final or otherwise appealable order is entered, this court lacks jurisdiction to hear the appeal. See id. Because the circuit court “did not pass judgment” or expressly rule on ADHS‘s claim that the relief sought by the School Districts was barred by sovereign and statutory immunity, we lack an appealable order. Alpha Mktg., 2012 Ark. 23, at 6, 386 S.W.3d at 404. Without such, this court lacks jurisdiction to hear the instant appeal, and the appeal should be dismissed without prejudice. Accordingly, I dissent.
Hannah, C.J., joins.
