On a petition for judicial review of agency action, the district court ruled on the merits of a case in which the agency had refused to give a declaratory ruling. Because the court’s jurisdiction was limited to determining whether the agency erred in refusing to issue a declaratory ruling, we reverse.
Tammie J. Campbell and Monica White filed a petition for declaratory ruling with respondent Iowa Beer and Liquor Control Department requesting that the department declare one of its rules invalid on its face and as applied to them, alleging several grounds. Approximately three days later the department dismissed the petition upon a finding that the case was not appro
Petitioners filed a timely petition for judicial review. They alleged that the department’s dismissal was unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and contrary to law. They asked that the department’s action be reversed and that the court find the challenged rule to be invalid.
In ruling upon the petition for judicial review, the district court did not address the correctness of the department’s refusal to issue a declaratory ruling. Instead the court made findings sustaining the validity of the rule. Based on its holding that the rule was valid, the court affirmed the department’s dismissal of the petition. Petitioners appealed, challenging only the merits of the district court decision. In so doing they are deemed to have abandoned their challenge to the department’s dismissal of their petition for declaratory ruling.
See Hubby v. State,
As in the present case, the agency in Stohr had refused to issue a declaratory ruling in response to a petition asking for one. The petitioner sought judicial review of the agency’s dismissal of its petition, alleging that the refusal was an error of law or an unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious action. In the judicial review proceeding the district court stated its intention to decide the issues raised in the declaratory ruling petition. Upon interlocutory review, this court held that the district court’s authority was limited to deciding the issue of the correctness of the agency’s refusal to issue a ruling. Id. at 290.
It is true that in
Stohr
the jurisdictional issue was raised by the agency in district court. Here the issue was raised by this court on its own motion. This distinction, however, does not affect our duty to decide the issue. We recently reiterated that “[ejvery court has inherent power to determine whether it has jurisdiction of the controversy before it. Jurisdiction of the proceeding cannot be conferred by waiver or consent, and courts have a duty to refuse on their own motion to decide controversies that are not properly before them.”
City of Des Moines v. Des Moines Police Bargaining Unit Association,
As recognized in
Stohr,
the district court exercises only appellate jurisdiction in reviewing agency action under the Iowa Administrative Procedure Act.
When the department dismissed their petition for declaratory ruling, petitioners had two possible avenues for seeking relief. They could challenge the agency action, as they did, by petitioning for judicial review, and they could bring an original action for declaratory or other appropriate relief in district court.
1
If they
This is not a ease like
Salsbury Laboratories v. Iowa Department of Environmental Quality,
We reverse this ease without prejudice to petitioners’ right to seek the same relief through an original action in district court.
REVERSED.
Notes
. We assume without deciding that the department was correct in agreeing in its answer in the judicial review proceeding that petitioners had exhausted their administrative remedy by seeking the declaratory ruling.
