The Honorable Michael Lamoureux State Representative 105 Sky Ridge Road Russellville, Arkansas 72802
Dear Representative Lamoureux:
I am writing in response to your request for my opinion on the following question:
Can the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration negotiate contract language with vendors dealing with the area of sovereign immunity for the State of Arkansas?
RESPONSE
As posed, your question appears to be whether the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration ("DFA") has the authority by contract to limit the state's sovereign immunity from suit pursuant to Ark. Const. art.The doctrine of state-court sovereign immunity is set forth at Ark. Const. art.
By statute, the General Assembly has delegated to the Arkansas State Claims Commission its constitutional duty to pay all the state's just debts. See A.C.A. §
[T]he Claims Commission is an arm of the General Assembly and the General Assembly has total control over the determination of, and subsequent funding for, payment of the "just debts and obligations of the state" — all other avenues of redress through legal proceedings being barred by the sovereign immunity provision of the Arkansas Constitution. . . .
Id. at 458.
In Hanley v. Arkansas State Claims Commission,
More recently, in Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes, and Lerach, LLP etal. v. State,
*Page 4Sovereign immunity is jurisdictional immunity from suit. State Office of Child Support Enforcem't v. Mitchell,
330 Ark. 338 ,954 S.W.2d 907 (1997). This defense arises from Article5 , §20 , of the Arkansas Constitution, which provides: "The State of Arkansas shall never be made a defendant in any of her courts." This court has consistently interpreted this constitutional provision as a general prohibition against awards of money damages in lawsuits against the state and its institutions. See, e.g., Cross v. Arkansas Livestock Poultry Comm'n,328 Ark. 255 ,943 S.W.2d 230 (1997); Fireman's Ins. Co.,301 Ark. 451 ,784 S.W.2d 771 . The doctrine of sovereign immunity is rigid and may only be waived in limited circumstances. Mitchell,330 Ark. 338 ,954 S.W.2d 907 . This court has recognized only two ways in which a claim of sovereign immunity may be surmounted: (1) where the state is the moving party seeking specific relief; and (2) where an act of the legislature has created a specific waiver of immunity. Id.
(Emphasis added.) Accord Arkansas Public Defender Commission v.Burnett,
The Court stated in Solomon v. Valco, Inc.,
Even when the state allows suit, as when the Highway Department condemns property without first making provisions for compensation, seeArkansas State Highway Commission v. Flake,
Notwithstanding the few exceptions to what the supreme court has termed generally "rigid" restrictions on waiver mentioned above, it appears doubtful that any agency of the state is authorized to enter into a contract whereby it effectively abrogates sovereign immunity in a manner that appears to flout the express provisions of Article 5, § 20. I do not believe that a state agency is authorized to contract around a constitutional mandate.
To this conclusion, I would simply add that a contractual commitment by the state to indemnify a vendor against liability incurred by the vendor against a third party — which, if disputed, would properly be resolved before the Claims Commission — might further raise issues under Article 12, § 12 and/or Article 16, § 13 for the reasons discussed above. Only a finder of fact could determine whether this were the case. In the absence of direct judicial clarification, I can opine only that it appears highly questionable that a state agency can by contract accede to defend a lawsuit for money damages against it in court, whether the contract be one for indemnification for the liquidated claims of third parties against the vendor or whether it be for another alleged violation by the state of another provision of the contract with the vendor.
Assistant Attorney General Jack Druff prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL, Attorney General
*Page 1Among these circumstances might be what seems the court's distaste that the state advocated a proposed settlement that both the trial court and, in retrospect, the Supreme Court itself felt would have ill served the class members' interests. The court further seemed nettled that the state appeared to ratify the substance of this proposed settlement even after the trial court had rejected it, only to withdraw that ratification later.
