Clyde H. FREEMAN, Charlie Agee, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. CITY OF MOBILE, ALA., a municipal corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 97-6047.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
Oct. 25, 1999.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama (No. 93-0555-AH-M), Alex T. Howard, Jr., Judge.
PER CURIAM:
In this case, several dozen police officers (“Appellants“) seek overtime compensation from the City of Mobile, Alabama (“City“) pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act,
QUESTION ONE: DOES THE MOBILE COUNTY PERSONNEL BOARD HAVE THE POWER TO REPEAL OR OTHERWISE AMEND OR SUPPLANT LOCAL ACTS PASSED BY THE ALABAMA STATE LEGISLATURE SUCH AS 1969 ALA. LOCAL ACTS 856?
If the answer to the first question was “yes,” we asked the Alabama Supreme Court to answer a second, subsidiary question:
QUESTION TWO: IF THE MOBILE COUNTY PERSONNEL BOARD HAS THE POWER TO REPEAL ACT 856, DID THE BOARD IN FACT REPEAL ACT 856 BY IMPLICATION WHEN IT ENACTED RULE 3.1(c)?
On September 10, 1999, the Alabama Supreme Court issued its opinion on the two questions.1 The Alabama Supreme Court answered the first question as follows:
“It is settled law that the Legislature may not constitutionally delegate its powers, whether the general power to make law or the powers encompassed within that general power....” Included within the Legislature‘s general power is ” ‘the power to make, alter, amend and repeal laws.’ ” Thus, although the Legislature can delegate the power to make rules and regulations for the “purpose of carrying [the law] into practical effect and operation ... and to secure an effective execution of the same,” it cannot delegate the power to repeal, amend, or otherwise supplant an act of the Legislature. While the Legislature can certainly establish standards and authorize the Personnel Board to adopt rules within those standards, “[i]t is an entirely different thing for the Legislature to ... authorize the creature to supersede the enactments of the creator.”
Moreover, even if the Legislature could validly delegate the power to repeal, amend, or otherwise supplant an act of the Legislature, the Legislature has not attempted to do so in this case. Section IX(c) of Act 470 specifically provides that the rules adopted by the Personnel Board “may include any provisions relating to the Classified Service, not inconsistent with the laws of the state, which may be necessary or appropriate to give effect to the provisions and purposes of this Act.” (Emphasis added.) The Personnel Board cannot adopt any rule contrary to Act 470 because Act 470 is the act
from which the Personnel Board derives its authority. Thus, the Legislature could not—and it has not attempted to—authorize the Personnel Board to repeal, amend, or otherwise supplant an act of the Alabama Legislature.
Freeman v. City of Mobile, No. 1971847, slip op. at 4-6 (Ala. Sept. 10, 1999) (citations omitted; alterations in original). Because it answered “no” to the first question, the Alabama Supreme Court did not answer the second, supplementary question. Id. at 2 & n. 1.
In light of the Alabama Supreme Court‘s answer to the first certified question, we VACATE the district court‘s grant of summary judgment to the City on the state law contract question. In accordance with our previous opinion and with the Alabama Supreme Court‘s answer, we REMAND to the district court to consider the FLSA no-docking claims and the state law contract claims.
