Appellants herein filed their complaint, seeking a declaratory judgment, an injunction, damages, and other equitable relief, and joined as defendants the University of Wyoming and William D. Carlson, individually and as President of the University of Wyoming, and all the members of the board of trustees, individually and as trustees. Appellants appeal from an order sustaining a motion to dismiss filed on behalf of all. the defendants. We have by order allowed the filing of a brief and argument by the Wyoming Education Association as amicus curiae.
Appellants sought a declaration of their rights, status and relations in their employment and to guarantee to them the right to organize, to negotiate, to bargain with respect to wages, rates of pay, and conditions of employment, to have the Retail Clerks Local 187 AFL-CIO act as their bargaining agent and to represent them, the right to have payroll deductions made and paid by the university to the union, the right of the board of trustees to enter into a collective bargaining agreement, and to restrain and enjoin defendants and their employees from refusing to recognize or bargain with their selected representative or denying these individuals the right to be members of the union as a condition of their employment, and sought a declaration that the Retail Clerks Union has the right to represent these individual plaintiffs and be their exclusive representative.
Although the motion to dismiss raises several grounds, we must first consider the asserted ground “that the Court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter because of the Doctrine of Sovereign Immunity which precludes any action against the State of Wyoming, the University of Wyoming, the Board of Trustees of the University of Wyoming, and governing officials of said University. Further, that there has been no consent by the State of Wyoming to submit itself to suit.” This
*886
raises the threshold question, of which disposal must be made before we can proceed further into this inquiry. The legislature has made a declaration that a suit against the trustees of the university is a suit against the State (§ 1-1018, W.S. 1957), and it was held in Williams v. Eaton, 10 Cir.,
The question of the immunity of the president and the board of trustees individually is not as clear, as there are cases under different factual situations which seem to permit declaratory judgment actions against such officers. This question requires examination as it should be evident that, unless carefully applied, to allow suits against officials in their individual capacity would result in the complete destruction of sovereign immunity.
The Supreme Court of the United States has announced a simple and workable rule which we deem a most reliable guideline in a determination of this matter when it said:
“As to what is deemed a suit against a state, the early suggestion that the inhibition might be confined to those in which the state was a party to the record [citations] has long since been abandoned, and it is now established that the question is to be determined not by the mere names of the titular parties but by the essential nature and effect of the proceeding, as it appears from the entire record [citations].” In re State of New York,256 U.S. 490 , 500,41 S.Ct. 588 , 590,65 L.Ed. 1057 .
Also see Anderson v. Argraves,
“ * * * While a suit against state officials, and, in particular, the Director of the Department of Public Works and Buildings, is not necessarily a suit against the state, the constitutional inhibition cannot be evaded by making an action nominally one against the servants or agents of the state when the real claim is against the state itself, and it is the party vitally interested. * * * ”
The board of trustees is entrusted with very general powers (§ 21-353, W.S.1957, 1973 Cum.Supp.) including the right to “elect * * * employees” for the conduct and management of the university with a general delegation of powers as follows :
“ * * * ■ and finally to exercise any and all other functions properly belonging to such a board and necessary to the prosperity of the university in all its departments.”
In the operation of this institution the board of trustees has occasion to employ these individual plaintiffs and others similarly situate. Any agreement or contracts made by the board of trustees would obligate and be a charge upon the State funds appropriated for the operation of the university and any agreement with the plaintiffs as to the rate of pay would impose liability upon the State for the amounts thereof, and any judgment herein in the terms sought by the appellants would control the operation of that institution in this area by its commands to the president and these trustees as individuals and would effectively achieve by indirection what is strictly forbidden directly. These words from Harrision, supra,
“In 59 C.J. 308, 309, it is stated that a suit is against the state wherein a state officer or agency is, or will be, required to use state property or funds in order to afford the relief demanded, or which seeks to compel officers or agents to do acts which will impose contractual liability on the state. * * * ”
Thus we must conclude that insofar as this action was directed to these parties individually, it is in fact an action against the State and the motion was properly sustained as to them. Because of the view that the court was without jurisdiction we cannot engage in any comments upon the proposition urged by appellants as they would be advisory in character, Brimmer v. Thomson, Wyo.,
Appellants contend that insofar as the damage action is concerned the functions here involved are proprietary and ministerial and not governmental and that therefore immunity is not a defense, and cite in support thereof Town of Douglas v. York, Wyo.,
Appellants, in reliance upon the policy statement appearing in § 27-239, W.S.1957, c.1967, which recognizes the right of labor to bargain collectively with employers of labor, would seek to avoid the application of the immunity doctrine and assert this section as authorizing the University of Wyoming to collectively bargain with the appellants, and categorically state that the appellees are “employers of labor.” This contention was once before suggested to the court in State ex rel. Fire Fighters Local Number 946, I. A. F. F. v. City of Laramie, Wyo.,
It has been held generally that statutes governing labor relations between employers and employees are construed only to apply to private industry, Wichita Public Schools Employees Union, Local No. 513 v. Smith,
Appellants also use their claim for nominal damages as the vehicle of jurisdiction, and further advise the court that they are interested largely in the determination of what they deem substantive questions which are posed in their brief. This reliance is upon Smith v. Losee, 10 Cir.,
*889 Many questions are urged with much fervor and logic and we are importuned to express opinions thereon. These are, however, matters which should more properly be submitted to our legislative body.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Notes
. For similar holdings that a suit against the board of trustees of a State university is a suit against the State, see Thacker v. Board of Trustees of Ohio State University,
. Municipal colorations, unlike the State, have no sovereignty but are creatures of the State. This dual nature is discussed in Prosser, Law of Torts, p. &77, et seq. (4th Ed.). See further 56 Am.Jur.2d Municipal Corporations, § 16, p. 81, § 199, p. 254, et seq., and § 200, pp. 258-259.
. The Indiana statute also contains the term “employers of labor,” § 40-502, Burns Ind.Stat. Annot. (1965 Repl.), I.C.1971, 22-6-1-2.
