OPINION ON REHEARING
The Indiana State Board of Health Administrator's ("the Board") petitions for rehearing following our opinion in Indiana State Board of Health Facility Administrators v. Werner,
The Board first contends that "a closer look" at certain cases is warranted. Rehearing Pet. p. 3. We disagree. As they were cited in our opinion, we are well aware of Clendening v. Indiana Family and Soc. Servs. Admin.,
The issue before us in this case is whether the jurisdiction issue was waived by the Board's failure to timely raise it. As we explained in our opinion, the answer to this question turns on whether the failure to timely file an agency record deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction or jurisdiction over the case. 2
It is well settled that the time provisions of Indiana Code Section 4-21.5-5-13 are mandatory and a condition precedent to a trial court acquiring jurisdiction to consider a petition for judicial review. Indiana State Bd. of Educ. v. Brownsburg Cmty. School Corp.,
In an action for judicial review of an administrative determination, statutory compliance is a condition precedent to subject matter jurisdiction in the trial court. City of South Bend v. Brooksfield Farm (1981), Ind.App.,418 N.E.2d 305 . The provisions concerning time are mandatory and a condition precedent to a court acquiring jurisdiction where review is sought from an administrative determination. State v. Van Ulzen (1983), Ind.App.,456 N.E.2d 459 .
Id. More recently, however, our supreme court noted that an important principle of administrative law is that the failure to comply strictly with the jurisdictional requirements embodied in the statute providing for judicial review prevents a trial court for acquiring jurisdiction of the parties or the particular cause. Shipshewana Convenience Corp. v. Bd. of Zoning Appeals of LaGrange County,
These cases did not address whether a challenge to the trial court's jurisdiction was waived because that issue was not timely raised. . In fact, in these cases, motions to dismiss were filed.
3
For that reason, these cases are not directly on point. Nevertheless, we emphasize that our supreme court more recently specifically stated that the failure to comply with statutory requirements affects a trial court's jurisdiction over the parties and the cause and did not mention subject matter jurisdiction. See Shipshewana,
What we take from all of these cases is that the issue of whether statutory compliance goes to subject matter jurisdiction or jurisdiction over the case is not as straightforward as the Board contends. For example, in the case relied on by the Dixon court for the proposition that a trial court does not acquire subject matter jurisdiction, we stated, "In an action for judicial review of an administrative determination, compliance with statutory requirements is a condition precedent to the exercise of 'review jurisdiction' by the trial court." City of South Bend v. Brooksfield Farm,
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In Gleason, on which many cases have relied, a panel of the court cited to White v. Board of Medical Registration and Examination of Ind.,
To further confuse matters, in Ballman v. Duffecy,
More recently, in Indiana Department of Environmental Management v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
Finally, in Indiana Civil Rights Commission. v. City of Muncie,
Based on the muddied distinctions between subject matter jurisdiction and jurisdiction over the case, as lustrated by these cases, we reject the Board's attempt to oversimplify the issue. Accordingly, we rest on our discussion of the two types of jurisdiction in our original opinion. We reaffirm our conclusion that Werner's untimely motion for extension of time to file the agency record affected the trial court's jurisdiction over the case, and the Board's failure to object at the earliest opportunity waives this issue.
This conclusion remains unaffected by the Board's argument that there is no principled reason to distinguish the timely filing of an agency record from the exhaustion of administrative remedies. Initially, we point out that the board raises this issue for the first time on rehearing, and an issue raised for the first time on rehearing is waived. See Holmes v. ACandS, Inc.,
Waiver notwithstanding, the failure to exhaust administrative remedies undoubtedly affects a trial court's subject matter jurisdiction on judicial review.
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Johnson v. Celebration Fireworks, Inc.,
Depriving a trial court of subject matter jurisdiction where an agency record is untimely filed does not advance these goals. Unlike the failure to exhaust administrative remedies, the filing of an untimely record does not encourage premature litigation nor does it deny an agency of the opportunity and autonomy to correct its own error. To the extent that the late filing of an agency record deprives the trial court of an adequate record for judicial review, a timely motion to dismiss would prevent a party from having to litigate where the record was inadequate. If the untimely filing of the record hampered judicial review, the Board could have moved for dismissal. The Board did not. The Board has not established that the requirement that agency records be timely filed serves the same purposes as the exhaustion of remedies requirement.
The Board's petition for rehearing is granted. We affirm our original opinion in all respects.
Notes
. To the extent that these cases hold that a trial court loses subject matter jurisdiction "as a matter of law simply by the passage of time," Rehearing Pet. p. 3, as the Board suggests, we decline to follow them for the reasons given today and in our earlier opinion.
. "When a court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, its actions are void ab initio and may be challenged at any time." Allen v. Proksch, 832 N..2d 1080, 1095 (Ind.Ct.App.2005). On the other hand, a judgment rendered by a court that lacks jurisdiction over the case is voidable and requires a timely objection or a subsequent challenge to the lack of jurisdiction over the case is waived. Id.
. In the sub-heading of this argument, the Board argues, "Decisions of our Supreme Court found that failure to comply with the statutory mandates of AOPA deprives the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction, even where no motion to dismiss was filed." Rehearing Pet. p. 4. We note, however, that because the Department was required to come forward with evidence to establish that Dixon had received notice on a certain date and did not, the trial court did not err in denying its "motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction." Dixon,
. Indiana Code Section 4-21.5-5-4(a) specifically provides, "A person may file a petition for judicial review under this chapter only after exhausting all administrative remedies available within the agency whose action is being challenged and within any other agency authorized to exercise administrative review."
