After serving as Lake County Surveyor for over twenty-seven years, Appellee-Plaintiff Steve W. Manich requested that county officials pay him twenty years of alleged back wages. When the request was denied Ma-nich filed a mandamus action against Defendants-Appellants Lake County, Indiana, Lake County Council, Lake County Board of Commissioners and Lake County Auditor (collectively referred to as "County"). Upon motion for partial summary judgment the trial court dеtermined Manich was entitled to back wages for a fifteen-year period along with prejudgment interest. County now appeals raising three issues for our review which we rephrase as follows:
1) Was Manich entitled to an enhanced salary under the provisions of Ind.Code § 36-2-12-15 when he failed to make a request for an enhanced salary at the time his annual budgets were submitted to the County Council?
2) Did the trial court err in determining that a fifteen year statute of limitаtions applied in this case?
3) Did the trial court err in granting Ma-nich prejudgment interest? .
Manich cross appeals arguing a twenty-year statute of limitations applies in this case and, thus, he was entitled to wages computed from 1971 through 1991.
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
The facts in this case are undisputed. Ma-nich was first elected Lake County Surveyor in 1964 and by the time of this appeal he had served continuously through 1992. At all times during his tenure Manich was registered and licensed as a professional еngineer and land surveyor. Each year for the past twenty-eight years Manich submitted to the Lake County Council a budget for the Surveyor's office which included a request for his own salary. After submitting his 1991 budget, Manich learned of a long standing statute which essentially required the County fiscal body to set a two-tiered pay seale for county surveyors, one for surveyors who are registered and one for those who are not registered. Under the statute registered surveyors arе entitled to compensation at a rate one and one-half times the base salary of non-registered surveyors.
Armed with this knowledge, Manich's 1992 budget included a request for the enhanced salary. In response, Lake County Council did not establish a two-tiered salary structure nor did it make a finding that Manich was a registered surveyor. Thereafter, Ma-nich submitted a claim to the Board of County Commissioners, through the Lake County Auditor, for twenty years of back wages. The Board denied the request and forwarded it to the Lake County Council for further action. When the Council deferred action on the request, Manich filed a mandamus action «with the trial court. After the County answered the complaint, Manich filed his motion for summary judgment. Both parties stipulated the facts and submitted trial briefs in lieu of oral argument. Thereafter, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Manich and, applying a fifteen-year statute of limitations, awаrded Manich $485,-059.16 in back wages and interest. This appeal arose in due course.
When reviewing the grant of a motion for summary judgment, we apply the same standard as the trial court, namely: whether there is no genuine issue of material
L.
One statute here in dispute is Ind. Code § 36-2-12-15 which dictates in relevant part:
(b) When fixing the compensatiоn of county officers under this title [county surveyors], the county fiscal body shall fix:
(1) compensation for the surveyor as if he is registered under IC 25-31; and
(2) compensation for the surveyor as if he is not registered under IC 25-81.
The compensation fixed under subdivision (1) [of this subsection] must be one and one-half (1%) times that fixed under subdivision (2) [of this subsection]. The county fiscal body shall then determine whether or not the surveyor is registered under IC 25-81 and shall fix his compensation in the proper amount.
(Emphаsis added.) County contends Manich was not entitled to an enhanced salary for the years 1976 through 1991 because over that period he never informed County of his status as a licensed engineer and registered land surveyor and never submitted a budget that included an enhanced salary. Thus, County concludes, any enhanced salary to which Manich would be otherwise entitled has been waived. We disagree.
Waiver is the voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a known right. Egnatz v. Medical Protective Co. (1991), Ind.App.,
In the case before us, even if we were to impute to Manich knowledge of his right to an enhanced salary, see Middleton Motors, Inc., v. Indiana Dep't of State Revenue (1978),
County insists, however, that waiver is applicable here and in support cites State ex rel. Katherine Hamilton Mеntal Health Center, Inc. v. Clay County (1985), Ind.App.,
According to County, Manich's failure in this case to demand an enhanced salary, similar to the Center's failure to demand increased funding in Katherine, requires a denial of the mandate action. We disagree because the facts here are distinguishable. As we have already pointed out, waiver is the voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a known right. Egnatz,
We also note, in Katherinе the plaintiff did not make a demand upon defendants for the increased funding at any time prior to filing its mandate action. A demand for an appropriation is a necessary prerequisite for an action in mandate. Id. at 129 citing Tippecanoe County Area Plan Comm'n v. Sheffield Developers, Inc., (1979),
IL.
County next contends that even assuming the trial court properly determined that Ma-nich was entitled to an enhanced salary, the trial court nonetheless erred in determining that the fifteen-year statute of limitations applied in this case. According to County a five-year limitation period is applicable here. Manich cross-appeals on this issue arguing that a twenty-year limitation period applies.
Manich's claim is based on Ind. Code § 84-1-2-2(6) which provides, in essence and in relevant part, that all actions based upon written contracts other than those for payment of money entered before 1982 must be commenced within twenty years after the cause of action has acerued. As Manich correctly points out, whenever governmental employees enter into performance of their duties, a valid written contract is created. City of Terre Haute v. Brown (1985), Ind.App.,
Manich's argument is flawed. He is not a governmental employee. Rather, he is an elected public official. The distinction is significant. An office, as distinguished from an employment, is a position for which the duties are continuing and are created by law instead of contract. Pike County v. State ex rel. Hardin (1984), Ind.App.,
Indiana Code § 34-1-2-2(2) dictates in relevant part: "All actions against a sheriff, or other public officer ... growing out of a liability incurred by doing an act in an official capacity, or by the omission of an оfficial duty, [shall be commenced] within five (5) years. 2 In the case before us the Lake County Council, as the county fiscal body?, has the statutory duty to fix a two-tiered salary structure for county surveyors, determine whether Manich is either registered or not registered, and then pay him accordingly. The Council failed to comply with the statutory mandate and this action ensued. In our view the council's inaction is clearly a case of public officers engaging in an оmission of an official duty. Accordingly, the five-year limitation period applies.
Citing Bell v. Metropolitan School Dis't (1983) S.D.Ind.,
We find support for our conclusion in a well settled princiрle of statutory construction. When construing a statute this court must give effect to the legislative in
In arguing their respective positions on the applicable statute of limitations both parties cite State ex rel. Carpenter v. Ralston (1914)
In Carpenter, a bondholder filed an action in mandate against the Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State and State Treasurer (collectively "State") for redemption of a state bond. The bond called for payment on January 1, 1889, but the mandamus action was not filed until 1911, some twenty-two years after thе cause accrued. In defense, the State pleaded a twenty-year and fifteen-year statute of limitations. Judgment was entered in favor of State, and Carpenter appealed arguing that state law then in existence did not give state office holders the authority to plead a statute of limitations as a defense. The court disagreed and indicated "an action for mandamus must ordinarily be brought within 15 years after the cause of action accrues." Id.,
We first observe that the statutes of limitation in effect at the time of Carpenter were essentially the same as those in effect today. Thus, County's argument that the holding in that case is not applicable here because Ind. Code §$ 34-1-2-2(2) was enacted after Carpenter was decided, lacks merit. Rather, Carpenter does not control the disposition of the instant case because the issue of which among various statutes of limitation may have been applicable was not squarely before the court. The question in that case was whether a governmental official had the authority to plead as a defense any statute of limitations. That issue of course is now well settled. The question we face today is which among the five, fifteen and twenty-year limitation periods are applicable to suits in mandate filed against county officials.
Indiana Code § 34-1-2-8 is a catchall statute providing for either a ten or fifteen-year limitation period, but only where an action is "not limited by any other statute." In that instance "the provisions of [L.C. § 34-1-2-3] shall not apply." As we have already discussed, actions against public officers growing out of a liability incurred by doing an act in an official capacity, or by omission of an official duty is controlled by the five-year limitation period set forth in I.C. § 34-1-2-2(2). Accordingly, the fifteen-year limitation period set forth in .C. § 34-1-2-8 does not apply in this case. The trial court's judgment to the contrary is erroneous and must be reversed.
III.
Finally, County argues that Manich is not entitled to prejudgment interest. According to County, the State is not subject to prejudgment interest and as a political subdivision, the County likewise is not subject to such interest.
It is true that the State, based on the principle of sovereign immunity, is not liable for interest on payments due unless it binds itself by contract or statute to рay interest. Indiana Dep't of Public Welfare v. Chair Lance Service, Inc. (1988) Ind.,
County also contends that prejudgment interest is not appropriate in this case because of a good faith dispute over Hability and the amount of damages. We disagree.
Generally, prejudgment interest is warranted if the damages are ascertainable in accordance with fixed rules of evidence and accepted standards of valuation and the interest may be determined with a simple mathematicаl computation. Dale Bland Trucking, Inc. v. Kiger (1992), Ind.App.,
For all the reasons set forth herein the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part and this cause is remanded for furthеr proceedings.
Notes
. The foregoing statutes adopted by Acts 1980, P.L. 212 are the latest in a number of amendments and recodifications of Title 17 of the Indiana Code, repealed by Acts 1982, P.L. 127, Sec. 2(a). For our purposes the relevant provisions have remained essentially the same and do not affect our decision today.
. Indiana Code § 36-2-3-2, which applies to all counties not having a consolidated city, dictates in relevant part, "The seven (7) member county council elected under this chapter is the county fiscal body. The fiscal body shall act in the name of 'The __ County Council'".
. In support of its order of mandate the trial judge entered a lengthy, well reasoned and well researched memorandum of law. Although the trial judge concluded that a fifteen-year limitation period applied in this case, contrary to the County's assertion the court's memorandum did not refer to Carpenter.
. In its memоrandum in opposition to Manich's motion for summary judgment the County argued that prior to 1981 the salary for a Lake County Surveyor was controlled by now repealed Ind.Code § 17-3-72-10. That statute provided in essence and in pertinent part that a Class 9 (Lake County) non-registered surveyor was entitled to a salary of $2,400.00. County pointed out that Manich received far in excess of that amount and thus was not entitled to any additional amounts between 1971 and 1981. The County also argued that after the passage of Ind.Code § 36-2-12-15(b) the Lake County Council was no longer directed to establish a minimum salary of $2,400.00 for non-registered surveyors. Thus, the argument continued, while the trial court has the power to mandate that the Lake County Council comply with the statute (ostensibly to set a two-tiered salary structure), the court has no authority to determine a monetary figure for each level of compensation. In essence, the County argued thаt the stipulated base salary which Manich has been paid since 1981 does not necessarily represent the amount that the Lake County Council would have set as compensation for a non-licensed surveyor. The amount may have been much lower.
While these arguments are compelling and not without considerable merit, County completely abandons them on appeal focusing instead on waiver, statute of limitations, and prejudgment interest. Therefore, the issue is waived for review. See Stewart v. Walker (1992), Ind.App.,
