CAROLYN S. FAIN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. WAYNE COUNTY AUDITOR’S OFFICE, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 03-1720
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED JANUARY 22, 2004—DECIDED OCTOBER 27, 2004
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 00 C 385—Larry J. McKinney, Chief Judge.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Carolyn Fain worked at the Wayne County Auditor’s Office from 1990 until June, 1999. She did not work for most of the time period from January 1, 1999, through June 18, 1999, using personal leave, vacation, sick leave, and FMLA-qualified leave. On June 18, 1999, her position was terminated, and the circumstances surrounding that termination form the basis for this cause of action. Fain asserts that her termination violated the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA),
On appeal, Fain purports to challenge the grant of summary judgment on both the ADA and the FMLA claims. In the brief on appeal, however, Fain presents only the statutory and regulatory language from the FMLA, and her argument relates solely to that statute. The ADA
The FMLA generally applies only to employers with 50 or more employees, but the statute treats public agencies differently. The FMLA specifies that public agencies are “employers” under the statute regardless of the number of employees.
Fain worked for the Auditor’s Office, which was located in the County building along with many other departments of the County government. Although the Auditor employed only 12 employees, the County employed significantly more than the 50-employee threshold for FMLA employee eligibility within that County building. Accordingly, this appeal turns on whether the Auditor should be considered independent from the County.
We are not without guidance on that question. The regulations to the FMLA provide that:
A state or a political subdivision of the state constitutes a single public agency, and, therefore, a single employer for purposes of determining employee eligibility. For example, a state is a single employer; a county is a single employer; a city or town is a single employer. Where there is any question about whether a public entity is a public agency, as distinguished from a part of another public agency, the U.S. Bureau of the Census’ “Census of Governments” will be determinative, except for new entities formed since the most recent publication of the “Census.” For new entities, the criteria used by the Bureau of Census will be used to determine whether an entity is a public agency or a
part of another agency, including existence as an organized entity, governmental character, and substantial autonomy of the entity.
As support for that position, they rely on the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Rollins v. Wilson County Government, 154 F.3d 626 (6th Cir. 1998). In Rollins, the court interpreted
The parties now raise the same dispute in this court, with Fain arguing that the Census is controlling because the status of the Auditor’s Office is contested. That suggestion has its advantages, not the least of which is that it lends certainty to the issue and minimizes the need for extensive arguments in individual cases. Moreover, it is not difficult to imagine the potential for abuse by leaving the matter entirely to states. A state could then prevent its employees from taking advantage of FMLA protections by decreeing that each County department was a distinct public agency. But we do not have before us any evidence of such manipulation, and the Rollins approach has the benefit of giving meaning to all of the words of the regulations. As Rollins noted, if the Census were to control in all instances, the regulations could have said that much more clearly. Id. At a minimum, state law would retain relevance insofar as it informs the application of the three factors to new entities or to established entities for which post-Census changes would alter their status under the Census criteria. Ultimately, we need not definitively resolve the issue for this circuit, because even under the Rollins approach, a question remains in this case and therefore the Census controls.
A more comprehensive look at Rollins is illustrative. In that case, Linda Rollins worked for the Wilson County School System for eight months, and the Wilson County Finance Department for approximately four months. Id. at 627. Her eligibility for FMLA leave depended on whether those two entities could be considered the same public agency under the FMLA. The court in Rollins appeared to assume that the Finance Department was part of the County, and instead examined only whether the School System was also a part of the County as opposed to a distinct public agency. In determining that the School System was a distinct agency not part of the County, the Rollins court relied on Tennessee state law which differentiated the two in terms of origins, functions,
Those differences were apparent in Rollins’ circumstances of employment as well. Rollins worked for both the School System and the County Finance Department as a payroll clerk, yet each job entailed different working hours, pay, supervisors, and offices. Rollins, 154 F.3d at 628. At the School System, she received paychecks issued by the Wilson County Board of Education, whereas the Wilson County Government issued her paycheck when she worked at the Finance Department. Id. When Rollins left the School System to work for the County Finance Department, she had to fill out new insurance forms, tax forms, and employment eligibility forms. Id. Furthermore, the defendants in Rollins offered affidavit evidence that the two entities “have separate accounting books and methods, separate payrolls, separate management with related policies and procedures, separate insurance policies, separate workers’ compensation policies, own separate real property, and are controlled by a separate group of government officials.” Rollins, 967 F. Supp. at 997. The district court noted that the only connection between the Wilson County School System and the County Government was the allocation of county funds for operating the schools. Id. Accordingly, the courts held that under Tennessee law, there was no question that the School System was a distinct governmental entity from the County.
No similar differences are identifiable in the present case between the Auditor’s Office and the County. The defendant contends that the Auditor’s Office is distinct because it was a constitutional rather than a statutory creation. See
There are numerous problems with that argument, not the least of which is that the defendant equates the determination of vicarious liability to the statutory determination of whether a department is an independent governmental agency or part of a governmental agency, yet provides no support for that argument. There is no support in the statutory language for equating the two. Instead, the statute references the Census, and where the Census is inapplicable, it requires courts to apply the same criteria used by the Census in identifying distinct public agencies. Those criteria are: existence as an organized entity, governmental character, and substantial autonomy of the entity, and the Census provides significant detail on the types of factors that can establish each of those criteria. See U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Census of Governments, Vol. 1, Number 1, Government Organization (2002) (“Census”) at 10-12. The defendant has made no attempt to indicate whether state law mandates a finding that the Auditor’s Office is an organized entity which has governmental character and substantial autonomy. In fact, the defendant has not identified any state authority addressing the status of the Auditor’s Office, and certainly nothing definitively resolving the matter so as to forestall reliance on the Census. The analogy to the Sheriff’s Office relies essentially on their common constitutional origin, but that cannot resolve all three of the above factors, and the two offices are obviously very different in their functioning. More fundamentally, no state law definitively establishes that the Auditor’s Office, or even the Sheriff’s Office for that matter, is a separate government. Caselaw holding that the County is not vicariously liable for the actions of an individual in the Sheriff’s Office falls well short of “definitively establishing” that the Auditor’s Office is a government agency rather than part of the County.
That is borne out by examination of the functions and operation of the Auditor’s Office, which further reveals at least a “question” as to whether it is a part of the County. Unlike the School System in Rollins, which was physically separate from the County, maintained a separate payroll, and was under the authority of the school board that had no connections to the County, the Auditor’s Office in the present case has far more ties to the County government. The Auditor’s office is located in the County building along with other County departments. Moreover, in contrast to the situation in Rollins, Fain’s paycheck is issued by the County government, not by the Auditor’s Office, and the Auditor in this case relied on the County personnel department to handle the administration of Fain’s leave. Furthermore, the duties of the Auditor’s Office are closely tied to County government. Even the defendant acknowledges that the Auditor provides services to the county, county executive, and county fiscal body. One of the primary functions of the Auditor’s Office is to act in a secretarial capacity for the County. See
Therefore, the duties of the Auditor’s Office relate directly to the functioning and governance of the County, in contrast to Rollins which involved education, a field that the state supreme court had recognized as “essentially a state, rather than a county or municipal, function.” City of Harriman v. Roane County, 553 S.W.2d 904, 908 (Tenn. 1977), cited in Rollins, 154 F.3d at 630. That distinction is in fact evident in the Census itself. The Census of Governments recognized that of the 15,014 public school systems in the United States in 2002, only 1,508 are classified as agencies of other governments, whereas the remaining 13,506 are independently included in the count of governments. Census at 9. The Census therefore recognized that school systems predominantly are not part of the county, but are independent. The Rollins court merely recognized that given the characteristics of its school system and the state law, the school system in that case fell within the majority rather than the exception. No similar trend exists in the Census for auditor’s offices. In fact, although the Census lists a number of entities that should be considered independent rather than agencies of other governments, it does not include auditor’s offices among them. That does not mean that an auditor’s office will necessarily be a part of another governmental agency, but here there is nothing in either state law or the facts that would establish that the Auditor’s Office is a separate public agency rather than a part of the County.
Because state law does not definitively resolve the issue, even under the defendant’s interpretation of the regulation we must turn to the Census. All parties agree that the Census supports Fain’s position, and therefore the district court improperly granted summary judgment to the defendant on the FMLA issue.
The decision of the district court granting summary judgment to the defendant on the FMLA claim is REVERSED, and the case REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—10-27-04
