The Fraternal Order of Police/Metropolitan Police Department Labor Committee (“FOP”) obtained an arbitral award in favor of several of its members, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”). MPD appealed the award to the District of Columbia Public Employee Relations Board (“PERB” or “the Board”), and the Board entered an order affirming the award. FOP then filed a motion in Superior Court to confirm the arbitration award under the D.C. Uniform Arbitration Act. D.C.Code §§ 16-4301 (2001), et seq. The Superior Court granted FOP’s motion. We reverse. We hold that the Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act (“CMPA”), D.C.Code §§ 1-601.01, et seq. (2001 & 2009 Supp.), preempts FOP’s motion to confirm the award under the Arbitration Act. Second, even if the CMPA does not have such preemptive effect, we hold that FOP had no right to proceed under the Arbitration Act because FOP failed to exhaust its remedies before the Board before seeking relief in Superior Court.
Before turning to the merits, we must resolve two threshold issues. First, there is a question of appellate jurisdiction. After the Superior Court granted FOP’s motion to confirm the award, MPD filed a motion for reconsideration. Contrary to FOP’s argument, we hold that the motion tolled MPD’s time for noting its appeal of the order confirming the award. Second, we must address MPD’s argument that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over it because FOP initiated its action without serving the Mayor of the District of Columbia or the Attorney General for the District of Columbia. We reject MPD’s personal jurisdiction argument.
I.
On December 12, 2003, MPD Officer Pablo Figueroa, along with four other offi *69 cers, and on behalf of all similarly situated employees, brought a grievance against MPD, complaining that MPD assigned him the duty of Detective Sergeant without providing him an associated $595.00 per year, as allegedly required by law. The Chief of Police denied the grievance on December 29, 2003, and the dispute went to arbitration pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement between MPD and appellee, FOP. On June 28, 2004, the arbitrator ruled for FOP.
MPD then filed an Arbitration Review Request with the Board, seeking review of the arbitrator’s award. On September 30, 2005, the Board denied the request and entered an order affirming the award. Although FOP asserts that MPD failed to comply -with the terms of the award, FOP did not — as it could have, see 6-B DCMR § 560.1 — petition the Board to enforce its order affirming the award. Nor did FOP file a complaint with the Board alleging that MPD’s failure to honor the award constituted an unfair labor practice. See D.C.Code § 1-605.02(3) (2001); 6-B DCMR §§ 520.1, et seq.
Instead, on April 21, 2006, FOP filed in Superior Court a motion to confirm the award as a judgment under the District of Columbia Uniform Arbitration Act, D.C.Code §§ 16-4301, et seq. In the caption of its motion, FOP listed “Fraternal Order of Police, Metropolitan Police Department Labor Committee” as the “Plaintiff,” and “District of Columbia/Metropolitan Police Department” as the “Defendant.”
According to the affidavit of service, FOP caused service of its motion to confirm the award to be made on MPD at “MPD Headquarters, 300 Indiana Avenue (Fourth Floor), NW, Washington, DC 2000[1].” The process server left a copy of the summons, complaint (meaning, presumably, FOP’s motion to confirm), and the initial order in the case with one Linda Tolson; the affidavit averred that Ms. Tol-son “works with the defendant.” MPD has never disputed that its headquarters are located at the address stated in the affidavit.
The District’s Attorney General responded to FOP’s motion and, on MPD’s behalf, moved to dismiss. (For ease of reference, we will refer to the Attorney General’s position as MPD’s position.) MPD argued first that FOP failed to comply with Super. Ct. Civ. R. 4(j)(l), which prescribes the method for service “upon the District of Columbia, an officer or agency thereof, or upon other government entities subject to suit.” Raising no objection to its capacity to be sued in its own name (more on this later), MPD argued that to “serve a District agency, a plaintiff must serve: (1) the Mayor; (2) the Attorney General; and (3) the agency.” MPD did not question FOP’s service of the agency, ie., itself, and did not contest that Ms. Tolson was authorized to accept service on MPD’s behalf. Rather, MPD argued that service was ineffective, and thus personal jurisdiction was lacking, because FOP failed to serve the Mayor and the Attorney General. Second, MPD argued that FOP could not invoke the Arbitration Act because FOP “fail[ed] to exhaust its administrative remedies” and because “the CMPA places the authority to enforce PERB’s orders exclusively with the PERB.”
Judge Mary Terrell denied MPD’s motion to dismiss and, on February 26, 2008, granted FOP’s motion to confirm. On March 13, 2008, MPD sought reconsideration of the order granting FOP’s motion to confirm. On October 31, 2008, Judge Natalia Combs Greene orally denied MPD’s motion for reconsideration, reasoning that the motion was untimely and that she could not “get behind Judge Terrell’s reasoning on the other issues.” On December *70 1, 2008, MPD filed a notice of appeal, seeking review of the Superior Court’s order granting FOP’s motion to confirm the arbitration award and the Superior Court’s order denying MPD’s motion for reconsideration.
On February 6, 2009, MPD filed in this court a motion for summary reversal, largely repeating the arguments that it made in its pleadings before the Superior Court. With respect to its “personal jurisdiction” argument, MPD asserted: “FOP did not effect service of process on the District of Columbia. FOP served neither the Mayor nor the Attorney General nor their designees, but instead served Linda Tolson, described as a person who ‘works with the defendant’ — i e., MPD.” In response, FOP argued that it did not have to serve the District because it filed its motion against MPD, not the District; FOP also argued that it properly served MPD by delivering a copy of the summons and motion to confirm to Ms. Tolson, an agent of MPD. In reply, MPD complained for the first time that the affidavit of service did not sufficiently establish that Ms. Tolson had authority to accept service on behalf of MPD. MPD did not contest, and never has contested, that Ms. Tolson in fact possessed such authority.
We denied the motion for summary reversal because summary treatment is reserved for cases where “the trial court’s ruling rests on a narrow and clear-cut issue of law,”
Oliver T. Carr Mgmt., Inc. v. National Delicatessen, Inc.,
II.
We first must decide whether we have jurisdiction to review the Superior Court’s order granting FOP’s motion to confirm the award. The timely filing of a notice of appeal is a jurisdictional requirement.
Patterson v. Sharek,
The Superior Court entered the order granting FOP’s motion to confirm the award on February 26, 2008, and served the order electronically on the parties on the next day. As explained above, to toll the time for noting an appeal, MPD had ten days from the date that the order was *71 entered to file a motion for reconsideration. Under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 6(a), we exclude from the count February 26 — the day the order was entered. Ten days from February 27, excluding weekends, id., takes us to March 11, two days before MPD filed the motion for reconsideration.
MPD is saved, however, by Super. Ct. Civ. R. 6(e), which adds three days to the count “[w]henever a party must ... act within a prescribed period after service and service is made,” as it was in this case, “under Rule 5(b)(2)(B), (C), or (D).” We recognize that on its face, Rule 6(e) applies only where a party must act “within a prescribed period after
service ”
(emphasis added), whereas to toll the time for noting an appeal a motion for reconsideration must be filed ten days from the date that judgment is “entered.”
Nichols,
FOP argued in the trial court that “the advent of electronic filing” changes things. The argument is not without some appeal.
Wallace’s
gloss on the “literal” text of the rules was driven by the concern that “[i]t would not be reasonable to require that when a case is taken under advisement the parties must on every day thereafter check the records of court to find if action has been taken.”
Having said that, we believe that it is better to follow
Wallace
in this case than to create a rule under which the applicability of Rule 6(e) turns on whether service is made electronically or by ordinary mail. To begin, failing to extend
Wallace
to cases where service is made electronically would undermine
Wallace’s
bright-line rule under which the time for noting an appeal is “precisely ascertainable” — Rule 6(e) applies if judgment was entered outside the presence of the parties.
*72 To sum up: MPD’s motion for reconsideration tolled its time for noting an appeal of the order granting FOP’s motion to confirm. And because MPD timely appealed the denial of the motion for reconsideration, we have jurisdiction to review the Superior Court’s order granting FOP’s motion to confirm.
III.
A.
We turn next to MPD’s “personal jurisdiction” argument. “As one would reasonably infer from the fact that the Rules list separately the defenses of lack of personal jurisdiction and insufficiency of service of process, these two defenses, while often related, are not identical.”
Santos v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
In this case, although MPD couches its argument in terms of personal jurisdiction, MPD’s actual objection is to the manner in which FOP effected service. Thus, we do not understand MPD to be arguing that it lacks “minimum contacts” with the District, such that the “maintenance of [FOP’s] suit” in the District would “offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
Holder v. Haarmann & Reimer Corp.,
MPD cannot show that the Superi- or Court abused its “sound discretion,”
National Paralegal Inst., Inc.,
Importantly (and surprisingly), MPD has made no serious effort to persuade us otherwise. In response to our order directing briefing on the issue whether FOP had to serve the District, MPD dropped a footnote in its merits brief, writing that it “disagreed with [the] premise” of our question. As MPD saw things, FOP had no right to maintain an action in Superior Court to enforce the award because FOP had to petition PERB for relief first. “Moreover,” MPD wrote, ours was a “purely hypothetical question” because, echoing the argument that it made for the first time in its reply brief on the summary reversal motion, even if FOP could proceed against MPD, FOP failed to effect service properly on MPD.
Perceiving no reason why Rule 4(j)(l) should apply — and MPD electing not to debate the point — -we proceed to analyze the service issue under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 4(J)(2), which governs service upon “governmental organizations subject to suit,” other than the District and the United States. And that is where MPD’s argument fails. Rule 4(j)(2) does not require service upon either the Mayor of the District of Columbia or upon the Attorney General. Rather, that rule says that service may be effected by, among other methods, “delivering a copy of the summons, complaint and initial order” to the “chief executive officer” of the entity being sued. MPD does not claim that only its chief executive — whom MPD calls the Chief of Police — can accept service on MPD’s behalf. Instead, MPD claims that FOP’s service affidavit does not meet the requirements of Super. Ct. Civ. R. 4 (l )(1) (the rule setting forth what an affidavit of service must contain to prove proper service) because the affidavit states merely that Linda Tolson, the person who accepted service at MPD headquarters, “works with” MPD.
Again, the trouble for MPD is that its argument comes too late. If MPD had voiced its concern with Ms. Tolson in Superior Court, it might have prevailed.
See, e.g., Leichtman v. Koons,
B.
Now a few words about an issue that MPD alludes to only in
passing
— ie., whether MPD may be sued in its name. “Cases in this jurisdiction have consistently found that bodies within the District of Columbia government are not suable as separate entities.”
Simmons v. District of Columbia Armory Bd.,
As stated above, in Superior Court, MPD did not seek dismissal on the ground that it is not suable in its name. (MPD suggests briefly that its suability argument was implicit in its “personal jurisdiction” argument, but that is not good enough. “Judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs.”
United States v. Dunkel,
Although MPD does not dwell on the topic, if — as MPD represented in its briefing on its summary reversal motion — its capacity to be sued in its name implicates our, or the Superior Court’s, subject matter jurisdiction, we cannot glide over the issue.
See Rolinski v. Lewis,
We note initially that MPD’s argument that, by questioning its capacity to be sued, MPD “basically” was raising an objection to the court’s subject matter jurisdiction appears to be a newfangled position for the District’s lawyers. In the past, Corporation Counsel, the predecessor of the Attorney General, has argued that naming a “nonsuable” entity as a defendant subjects a suit to dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted,
see Akins v. District of Columbia,
Like the District’s lawyers previously, we believe that the issue whether MPD can be sued in its name does not go to subject matter jurisdiction. “Subject matter jurisdiction concerns the court’s authority to adjudicate the type of controversy presented by the case under consideration.”
Davis & Assocs. v. Williams,
Whether courts can award relief against MPD as a named respondent to FOP’s motion is a separate matter, but it is important to understand why. For explanation, we look, as we did in our frequently cited case on the topic,
see Braxton v. National Capital Hous. Auth.,
MPD’s objection to its capacity to be sued in its name therefore does not implicate our or the Superior Court’s subject matter jurisdiction, which in turn means that we are not obligated to decide the issue. In our view, an objection to a District agency’s capacity to be sued in its name should be brought in a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. This is because the argument in such a case is that even if all the allegations in a
*76
complaint seeking relief against a District agency such as MPD are accepted as true, that complaint is legally insufficient because it seeks relief that, on the facts alleged, is unavailable.
See Murray v. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage,
Finally, our conclusion remains the same even if one thinks of the nonsua-ble-entity defense as being an argument that MPD enjoys sovereign immunity from suit. (One could read
Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction Fin. Corp.,
IV.
Whether a prevailing party in a CMPA-sanctioned arbitration may enforce an award under the Arbitration Act is an important question of first impression in this court, and one that has divided the judges of the Superior Court. Compare, e.g., Fraternal Order of Police, Metropolitan Police Dep’t Labor Committee v. District of Columbia/Metropolitan Police Dep’t, No. 2006 CA 3077 B (D.C.Super.Ct. Feb. 26, 2008) (Terrell, J.) (decision on review in this case, granting FOP’s motion to confirm award), with Department of Corrections Fraternal Order v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Corrections, No. 2007 CA 6533 (D.C.Super.Ct. Sept. 16, 2008) (Motley, J.) (dismissing for lack of jurisdiction motion to confirm award that was previously affirmed by PERB), appeal dismissed as moot, No. 08-CV-1244 (D.C. Dec. 22, 2009). We now hold that the Superior Court erred in granting FOP’s motion to confirm the award under the Arbitration Act because FOP’s exclusive avenue for relief is provided by the CMPA. Even if the CMPA does not preclude FOP’s suit, the Superior Court erred because FOP failed to exhaust its adminis *77 trative remedies prior to seeking relief in Superior Court.
A.
At the outset, we note that the Board has submitted a brief in this case, which raises the question of how much deference, if any, the Board’s analysis merits. Ordinarily, “we defer to the Board’s interpretation of the CMPA unless the interpretation is unreasonable in light of the prevailing law or inconsistent with the statute or is plainly erroneous.”
Fraternal Order of Police v. District of Columbia Pub. Employee Relations Bd.,
B.
We now turn to the question whether the CMPA precludes FOP from obtaining relief under the Arbitration Act. We often have recognized that the CMPA provides the exclusive remedy for many (though not all) grievances suffered by District government employees,
see, e.g., Baker v. District of Columbia,
Thompson
well illustrates the CMPA’s broad preemptive sweep. In that case, Patricia Thompson, a District government employee, won a common law tort action in Superior Court against the District and her supervisor.
Thompson
emphasized that when the D.C. Council enacted the CMPA, it legislated against the backdrop of a personnel system that was “ ‘disarray5 and ‘chaos5 the CMPA was spurred by “an ‘inefficient hodge-podge system that ignored the rudimentary merit rules’ and ‘awkwardly meshed5 the District personnel apparatus with the federal personnel system.”
Thompson,
We also explained that the CMPA’s text reflected its broad purposes and likewise evidenced the Council’s intent to preclude employees from bringing common law actions such as Thompson’s. Thus, we noted that the CMPA created for District employees “comprehensive rights to notice, hearing, appeal, and judicial review of performance ratings and adverse personnel actions under CMPA and under any CMPA-endorsed union contract.”
Thompson,
Thompson
drew upon the Supreme Court’s analysis in
United States v. Fausto,
As in
Thompson
(and similarly to
Faus-to
), the text of the CMPA, as informed by
*79
the purposes it seeks to achieve and the history of which that Act was borne, shows that the CMPA precludes FOP from obtaining relief under the Arbitration Act. As a result, a party in FOP’s shoes must seek relief before PERB under the CMPA, not in the courts under the Arbitration Act. As in
Thompson
and
Fausto,
there is no provision on point so stating, but that does not end our analysis.
See Thompson,
The first textual clue supporting our holding comes from D.C.Code § 1-605.02(16), which states that the Board has the power to “[sjeek appropriate judicial process to enforce its orders and otherwise carry out its authority.” Specifically, under the CMPA, “[i]n cases of contumacy by any party or other delay or impediment of any character, the Board may seek any and all such judicial process or relief as it deems necessary to enforce and otherwise carry out its powers, duties and authority.” Id. The CMPA has no parallel provision that entrusts parties appearing before it with comparable enforcement authority or that otherwise evidences an intent to give these parties a role in the implementation of Board orders generally, or arbitration awards arising out of the CMPA specifically.
To the contrary, the portions of the CMPA that are directed to parties shepherd those parties to PERB, not the courts. Consider, for instance, our second textual clue, D.C.Code § 1-605.02(6), which states that the Board has the power to decide “appeals from arbitration awards pursuant to a grievance procedure” and that PERB review is “the exclusive method for reviewing the decision of an arbitrator concerning a matter properly subject to the jurisdiction of the Board, notwithstanding provisions of §§ 16-4301 to 16-4319,” that is, the provisions of the Arbitration Act. Id. The exclusivity provision of § 1-605.02(6), of course, is not dispositive of the issue before us because that provision concerns appeal, not enforcement. Fairly read, however, this section does suggest that the Council intended the Board, not the courts, to be the forum for proceedings after an award has been entered. Moreover, relief for MPD’s alleged failure to abide by the Board’s order affirming the award was available to FOP under 6-B DCMR § 560.1, which states that “[i]f any [party] fails to comply with the Board’s decision within the time period specified in [6-B DCMR § 559.1] [ie., within 30 days after the Board issues its Decision and Order, unless otherwise specified], the prevailing party may petition the Board to enforce the order.”
Furthermore, the provision of the CMPA giving the Board the powers to “[d]ecide whether unfair labor practices have been committed and [to] issue an appropriate remedial order,” D.C.Code § 1-605.02(3), takes care of the argument that the CMPA is not comprehensive because an arbitral award is not in itself a Board “order” capable of enforcement under § 1-605.02(16).
See also
6-B DCMR §§ 520.1,
et seq.
(describing procedures applicable to unfair labor practice eases). The Board notes that it “repeatedly” has held that “ ‘when a party simply refuses or fails to implement an award or negotiated agreement where no dispute exists over its terms, such conduct constitutes a failure to bargain in good faith and, thereby, an unfair labor practice under the CMPA.’” (Board’s brief at 7-8, quoting
Internation
*80
al Bhd. of Police Officers, Local 446, Nat'l Ass'n of Gov’t Employees v. District of Columbia,
47 D.C.Reg. 7184, 7187, Slip Op. No. 622, PERB Case No. 99-U-30 (2000)). Although this court apparently has not decided this issue, the Board’s position is consistent with federal law.
See American Fed’n of Gov’t Employees, AFL-CIO, Local 446 v. Nicholson,
As for policy grounds and the extent to which preclusion serves the purposes of the CMPA, the case for preemption is stronger in this case than in
Thompson. Thompson
held that the CMPA precluded an employee’s common law remedies even though the employee never sought or availed herself of relief under the CMPA. In contrast, the award that FOP seeks to confirm under the Arbitration Act is the product of comprehensive CMPA-estab-lished grievance and collective bargaining procedures.
See Thompson,
Finally, it is no answer to argue, as FOP implicitly did by attempting to bypass PERB, that the Arbitration Act enables FOP to protect its interests more efficiently or effectively than the CMPA. To begin, FOP has not suggested, much less shown, that its remedies under the CMPA are inadequate or that the Board does not do enough to protect FOP. Moreover, “ ‘it is the comprehensiveness of the statutory scheme involved, not the ‘adequacy’ of specific remedies thereunder, that counsels judicial abstention.’ ”
Fornaro v. James,
C.
Even if the CMPA does not preclude FOP’s attempt to confirm the award under the Arbitration Act, the order granting FOP’s motion to confirm the award must be reversed because FOP failed to exhaust its administrative remedies before coming to Superior Court. As described above, at least two administrative remedies were available to FOP to protest MPD’s alleged “contumacy,” D.C.Code § 1-605.02(16), with respect to the award. First, FOP could have petitioned the Board to enforce its order affirming the award. D.C.Code § 1-605.02(16); 6-B DCMR § 560.1. Second, FOP could have challenged MPD’s alleged resistance by filing an unfair labor practice complaint. D.C.Code § 1-605.02(3); 6-B DCMR §§ 520.1,
et seq.
FOP’s failure to avail itself of either remedy is an independent reason that its action fails.
See Newman,
*81
Exhaustion “applies where a claim is cognizable in the first instance by an administrative agency alone; judicial interference is withheld until the administrative process has run its course.”
Davis & Assocs.,
The exhaustion requirement involved in this case is judge-made and applies “whenever administrative remedies are available.”
Washington Gas Light Co.,
The policies behind the exhaustion doctrine are fully applicable in this case. Requiring FOP to air its issues before the Board would help to create a record with respect to how (if at all) MPD skirted its obligations under the award. Exhaustion also would permit the Board — which enjoys greater familiarity with both sides to and the history of the dispute than the courts — to decide how best to “apply its expertise and exercise its discretion,”
see Washington Gas Light Co.,
Perhaps most importantly, failing to require exhaustion risks encouraging unnecessary litigation. For a prime example of potential inefficiencies, one need look no farther than Department of Corrections Fraternal Order v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Corrections, No. 2007 CA 6533 (D.C.Super.Ct. Sept. 16, 2008) (Motley, J.). In that case, as in this one, a prevailing party in a CMPA-sanctioned arbitration moved to confirm in Superior Court an award that was affirmed by the Board. While the motion to confirm was pending, PERB filed its own enforcement action before a different Superior Court judge. The judge hearing the original motion to confirm dismissed that motion, and given the pendency of the PERB enforcement proceeding, we dismissed the subsequent appeal as moot. See No. 08-CV-1244 (D.C. Dec. 22, 2009) (unpublished order). Holding that FOP has an independent right to proceed under the Arbitration Act would risk opening the door to similar duplicative litigation. This is precisely the sort of result that the exhaustion requirement is designed to avoid.
FOP does not dispute that it could have gone to PERB, but argues that it did not have to. We disagree. To be sure, as FOP argues, the doctrine of ex
*82
haustion is “simply a rule of judicial administration rather than a jurisdictional requirement.”
Burton v. District of Columbia,
But this is not such a case. To the contrary, there is every reason to believe that the “prescribed proceedings” would provide FOP “full redress.”
Newman,
Nor are we persuaded by FOP’s argument that exhaustion should not be required because “FOP’s Motion is merely a
procedural
filing, not a substantive one.” To begin, the distinction between procedure and substance is a bit artificial and elusive, and is not of much help in analyzing the exhaustion issue.
See Shady Grove Orthopedic Assocs. v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
— U.S. -,
Finally, FOP’s reliance on
District of Columbia Dep’t of Corrections v. Teamsters Union Local No. 246,
y.
The Superior Court’s order granting FOP’s motion to confirm the award is reversed, and the ease is remanded with instructions to dismiss FOP’s motion. FOP, of course, is free to pursue its remedies before PERB.
So ordered.
