The Graham County Board of Commissioners and its members (collectively, the “Board of Commissioners”) appeal the issuance of a writ of mandamus requiring the Board of Commissioners to pay an employee of the Graham County Board of Elections (the “GCBOE”). The Board of Commissioners also appeals an award of attorney’s fees to the GCBOE. For the following reasons, we affirm the issuance of the writ of mandamus and reverse the award of attorney’s fees.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
A county board of commissioners is responsible fоr funding the local county board of elections. In Graham County, the Board of Commissioners issues paychecks directly to GCBOE employees. At a September 2009 meeting, the Board of Commissioners voted to eliminate one of the GCBOE’s two full-time employee positions from the budget. It determined the GCBOE should operate with one full-time employee (the director of elections) and one part-time employee. Despite the amended budget, the GCBOE eventually hired two part-time employees, one оf whom was Angela Orr. The Graham County finance officer informed the director of elections that the GCBOE could hire only one part-time employee. Subsequently, the Board of Commissioners refused to pay Ms. Orr for her work with the GCBOE. Budget projections indicate there were sufficient funds in the GCBOE’s budget to pay both part-time employees for the remainder of the budget year.
The GCBOE filed a petition for a writ of mandamus seeking to compel the Board of Commissioners to pay Ms. Orr her salary and for any benefits owed to her as a result of her employment. The Graham County Superior Court issued the writ and ordered the Board of Commissioners to pay $5035.50 in attorney’s fees.
The Board of Commissioners promptly remitted payment to Ms. Orr and counsel for the GCBOE. After issuing payment, the Board of Commissioners gave timely notice of appeal. The GCBOE filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as moot, which the trial court denied.
II. Analysis
A. Mootness
At the outset, this appeal presents a question of mootness because the Board of Commissioners immediately paid Ms. Orr in compliance with the writ of mandamus. In North Carolina,
the exclusion of moot questions from determination is not based on a lack of jurisdiction but rather represents a form of judicial restraint.
Whenever, during the course of litigation it develops that the relief sought has been granted or that the questions originally in controversy between the parties are no longer at issue, the case should be dismissed, for courts will not entertain orproceed with a cause merely to determine abstract рropositions of law.
Unlike the question of jurisdiction, the issue of mootness is not determined solely by examining facts in existence at the commencement of the action. If the issues before a court or administrative body become moot at any time during the course of the proceedings, the usual response should be to dismiss the action.
In re Peoples,
When a party satisfies a judgment and then appeals the ruling giving rise to that judgment, it appears the question of mootness is
largely an issue of waiver.
See People Unlimited, Consulting, Inc. v. B & A Indus., LLC,
No. COA02-815,
Voluntary payment or performance of a judgment is generally held to be no bar to an appeal, or writ of error for its reversal, unless such payment was made by way of compromise and agreement to settle the controversy, or unless the payment or performance оf the judgment was under peculiar circumstances which amounted to a confession of its correctness.
Id.
(quoting
Miller,
In
Weatherman,
the appellant argued it was error for the trial court to tax expert-witness costs.
Id.
at 139,
never, by his actions, confessed the correctness of the order allowing the witness fees. Instead, he was appealing directly to this Court, and the respondents were aware of this. The petition for writ of certiorari was not so unreasonably delayed as to indicate an intentional abandonment of his appeal. In fact, it was filed soon after the original ninety day period for docketing in this Court had expired.
Id.
The appellee has the burden of demonstrating abandonment or waiver,
id.
at 141,
B. The Allocation of Power to and Between Counties, Local Boards of Elections, and the State Board of Elections
The Board of Commissioners argues our courts lack jurisdiction to hear this case. Several of the Board of Commissioners’ jurisdictional arguments hinge on whether the GCBOE is a separate legal entity from Graham
All North Carolina government entities are subunits of the state government. “[C]ounties are both state agencies and local governments . ...” A. Fleming Bell, II, An Overview of Local Government, at 3, in County and Municipal Government in North Carolina (David M. Lawrence ed., 2007), available at http://www.sogpubs.unc.edu/cmg/cmg01.pdf. “In North Carolina, local governments are creatures of legislative benevolence — not constitutiоnal mandate.” C. Tyler Mulligan, Toward a Comprehensive Program for Regulating Vacant or Abandoned Dwellings in North Carolina: The General Police Power, Minimum Housing Standards, and Vacant Property Registration, 32 Campbell L. Rev. 1, 12 (2009). The North Carolina Constitution provides that the “General Assembly . . . may give such powers and duties to counties, cities and towns, and other governmental subdivisions as it may deem advisable.” N.C. Const, art. VII, § 1. Thus, counties and “other governmental subdivisions,” such as the GCBOE, depend on the General Assembly for their legal existencе and powers. The General Assembly has the constitutional authority to structure the legal relationships between those entities.
Chapter 153A provides for the counties’ powers and governance structure. See, e.g., N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-10 (2009) (providing that “North Carolina has 100 counties” and naming them). “The inhabitants of each county are a body politic and corporate” with the power to, among other things, “sue and be sued.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-11 (2009). Counties also “have and may exercise in conformity with the laws of this State county powers, rights, duties, funсtions, privileges, and immunities of every name and nature.” Id. The county board of commissioners exercises these powers. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-12 (2009).
Chapter 163, Article 4 establishes the state and county boards of elections. Section 163-30 states that, “[i]n every county of the State[,] there shall be a county board of elections, to consist of three persons.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-30 (2009). The State Board of Elections appoints and may remove the members of the county boards of elections. See' id. (addressing appointment); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-22(c) (2009) (addressing appointment and removal). County boards of elections have the power to “exercise all powers granted to such boards in . . . Chapter [163].” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-33 (2009). Section 163-33 provides numerous specific duties and powers related to administering elections, hiring employees, and investigating election law violations. See id. In addition to the duties set forth in section 163-33, county boards of elections must “perform such other duties as may be prescribed by . . . Chapter [163], by directives promulgated pursuant to [sectiоn] 163-132.4, or by the rules, orders, and directives of the State Board of Elections.” Id. The executive director of the State Board of Elections is authorized to promulgate directives concerning the duties of the county boards of elections. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-132.4 (2009).
Section 163-33 does not explicitly state county boards of elections have the power to “sue and be sued” or that they are bodies politic and corporate. However, section 163-25 explicitly authorizes the State Board of Elections tо “assist any county or municipal board of elections in any matter in which litigation is contemplated or has been initiated.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-25 (2009) (emphasis added). Section 163-25 also states that “[t]he Attorney General shall provide the State Board of Elections with legal assistance in execution of its authority under this section or, in his discretion, recommend that private counsel be employed.” Id.
County boards of elections have the power “[t]o appoint and remove the board’s clerk, assistant clerks, and other emplоyees.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-33(10). Each county board of elections selects a
director of elections who is then appointed by the State Board of Elections.
See
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-35(b) (2009) (stating that the executive director of
Although the county boards of elections are largely under the control of the State Board of Elections, they are funded by the counties: “The respective boards of county commissioners shall appropriate reasonable and adequate funds necessary for the legal functions of the county board of elections, including reasonable and just compensation of the director of elections.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-37 (2009). Section 163-32 provides that, “[i]n all counties[,] the board of elections shall pay its clerk, assistant clerks, and other employees such compensation as it shall fix within budget appropriations.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-32 (2009). However, section 153A-92 states, “[T]he board of commissioners shall fix or approve the schedule of pay, expense allowances, and other compensation of all county officеrs and employees, whether elected or appointed, and may adopt position classification plans.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-92 (2009). Counties are required to pay members of the local board of elections $25 per meeting and reimburse certain expenses. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-32 (2009). The local board of county commissioners “may pay the chairman and members of the county board of elections compensation in addition to the per meeting and expense allowance.” Id.
In sum, the county boards of elections and county commissioners enjoy — or in this case, do not enjoy — a reciprocal, interwoven relationship.
C. The GCBOE’s Standing, Legal Existence, and Power to Sne
The Board of Commissioners offers several reasons why our courts lack subject matter jurisdiction over this case. While these arguments were not presented in the trial court below, a defect in subject matter jurisdiction may be asserted for the first time on appeal.
In re Green,
The Board of Commissioners presents three closely-related arguments: (1) our courts lack subject mаtter jurisdiction because the GCBOE is not a “legal entity”; (2) because the GCBOE is not a legal entity, it lacks standing; and (3) the GCBOE cannot bring suit because the General Assembly has not explicitly vested it with the power to sue and be sued.
“Standing refers to whether a party has a sufficient stake in an otherwise justiciable controversy such that he or she may properly seek adjudication of the matter.”
Beachcomber Props., L.L.C. v. Station One, Inc.,
“In this state, a legal proceeding must be prosecuted by a legal person, whether it be a natural person,
sui juris,
or a group of individuals or other entity having the capacity to sue and be sued, such as a corporation, partnership, unincorporated association, or governmental body or agency.”
In re Coleman,
The appellate division and the General Statutes frequently employ the language “sue and be sued” to refer to an entity’s ability to bring an action in court or have an action brought against it.
E.g.,
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-11;
Tucker v. Eatough,
In order to establish the GCBOE does not have the power to sue and be sued, the Board of Commissioners calls our attention to the word “expressly” in the following passage by our Supreme Court:
Even a state department, like the insane asylum; or the board of education; or the state prison — is so essentially a part of the state, notwithstanding these departments are created by statute, that they have no power to sue and have immunity from liability to suit, except when the statute creating them expressly grants permission that they may “sue and be sued.”
Nelson v. Atl. Coast Line R. Co. Relief Dept.,
The relationship established between the State Board of Elections, county boards of elections, and counties suggests county boards of elections are not integrated subcomponents of the counties. The members of the county boards of election are appointed and can be removed by the State Board of Elections. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-30 (addressing appointment); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-22(c) (addressing removal);
see also supra
Section II.A. And the county boards of elections are required to comply with directives from the State Board of Elections. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-33. It is true, as the Board of Commissioners points out, that the county boards of elections are dependent on the counties for their funding.
Supra
Section II.A (discussing various statutes related to funding and compensation). However, we believe the State Board of Elections’ dominion over the local boards’ conduct weighs more heavily than their reliance on the counties for funding. Finally, we note that our
Supreme Court and this Court have heard numerous cases in which a county board of elections has been a party to the litigation.
E.g., Democratic Party of Guilford Cnty. v. Guilford Cnty. Bd. of Elections,
We hold that county boards of elections have the power to sue and be sued and that they are distinct legal entities from the counties in which they are located. We also hold the GCBOE has standing. 1
D. The Issuance of the Writ
We now turn to whether the trial court correctly issued the writ of mandamus.
Mandamus lies when the following elements are present: First, the party seeking relief must demonstrate a clear legal right to the act requested. Second, the defendant must have a legal duty to perform the act requested. Moreover, the duty must be clear and not reasonably debatable. Third, performance of the duty-bound act must be ministerial in nature and not involve the exercise of discretion. Nevertheless, a court may issue a writ of mandamus to a public official compelling the official to make a discretionary decision, as long as the court does not require a particular result. Fourth, the defendant must have “neglécted or refused to perform” the act requested, and the time for performance of the act must have expired. Mandamus may not be used to reprimаnd an official, to redress a past wrong, or to prevent a future legal injury. Finally, the court may only issue a writ of mandamus in the absence of an alternative, legally adequate remedy. When appeal is the proper remedy, mandamus does not lie.
In re T.H.T.,
The Board of Commissioners argues (1) that it — and not the GCBOE — is responsible for determining the number of GCBOE employees and (2) that the Board of Commissioners’ duty to do so is discretionary — not ministerial — in nature. The Board of Commissioners also contends that, assuming arguendo it is duty-bound to pay GCBOE еmployees if payment can be made without exceeding the GCBOE’s budget, mandamus cannot lie because this duty is not sufficiently “clear” based on the applicable statutory framework.
At first glance, section 153A-92, which states that boards of county commissioners shall “fix or approve the schedule of pay” for all county employees, indicates the Board of Commissioners has the discretion to determine the number and pay of all GCBOE employees. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 153A-92. Although no statute states that county boards оf elections employees other than the director of elections are “county employees,” if the director of elections is a county employee, it follows that all other county board of elections employees are county employees as well.
See
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-35(c) (describing the director of elections as a “county employee”). However, section 163-32 states that the county boards of elections shall pay their employees “such compensation аs it shall fix within budget appropriations.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-32. And subsection 163-33(10) gives county boards of elections the power to “appoint and remove the board’s clerk, assistant clerks, and other employees.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-33(10). These statutes all address the same subject matter, but sections 163-32 and -33 do so more specifically; therefore, they control.
See Fowler v. Valencourt,
We conclude that, so long as a county board of elections remains within the budget allocated by the local board of county commissioners, the county board of elections has the sole authority to hire and fire elections employees. 2 This authority provides the clear legal right required for mandamus. Here, it is uncontested that there were sufficient funds in the budget to pay Ms. Orr. Consequently, the Board of Commissioners was duty-bound to disburse funds to pay Ms. Orr. This duty is purely ministerial — there is no discretion involved.
The Board of Commissioners next argues it is entitled to sovereign immunity, and therefore, mandamus cannot lie. “[A] motion to dismiss based on sovereign immunity presents a question of personal jurisdiction rather than subject matter jurisdiction . . . .”
Data Gen. Corp. v. Cnty. of Durham,
The Board of Commissioners argues the prоceedings below violated the Law of the Land Clause of the North Carolina Constitution, which states that “[n]o person shall be taken, imprisoned, or dis-seized of his freehold, liberties, or privileges, or outlawed, or exiled, or in any manner deprived of his life, liberty, or property, but by the law of the land.” N.C. Const, art. I, § 19. We decline to address this argument because it was not presented to the trial court below.
See State v. Creason,
We also reject the Board of Commissioners’ argument that mandamus is precluded because there is an alternative remedy in the form of an action for wages by Ms. Orr. The GCBOE has an interest in ensuring prompt compliance with the General Statutes independent of Ms. Orr’s interest. The interference with the GCBOE’s internal management hinders its ability to administer elections, and the GCBOE must be able to remedy this promptly without relying on another litigant.
We hold that our courts have subject matter jurisdiction ovеr this lawsuit and that the trial court correctly issued the writ of mandamus.
E. Attorney’s Fees
The trial court ordered the Board of Commissioners to pay the GCBOE’s legal expenses in connection with this matter from the general fund of Graham County and not the amount already budgeted for the GCBOE. “[T]he general rule in North Carolina is that a party may not recover its attorney’s fees unless authorized by statute.”
Martin Architectural Prods., Inc. v. Meridian Const. Co.,
III. Conclusion
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
. The Board of Commissioners does not challenge the GCBOE’s standing on any other grounds. Our review indicates there is no defect in standing that has not been asserted by the Board of Commissioners on appeal.
. County boards of commissioners are, of course, free to fix the overall budget for the county board of elections as long as that budget provides “reasonable and adequate funds necessary for the legal functions of the county board of elections.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-37.
