The Department of Industry, Labor and Human Relations issued a make-whole order for lost pay in favor of James Ruder against Richland School District, his employer. The order results from the district's refusal to substitute paid leave Ruder accumulated with the district for unpaid leave he took under the Wisconsin Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), sec. 103.10, Stats. The department also ordered the district to pay Ruder $3,075.00 for attorney's fees and costs under the fee-shifting provision in the FMLA, sec. 103.10(12)(d), Stats. The circuit court affirmed the department's order, and the district appeals. We affirm that part of the judgment which affirms the department's judgment.
The circuit court refused to remand to the department to award Ruder attorney's fees incurred in the ch. 227, Stats., review or to make such an award itself. Ruder cross-appeals from that order. We reverse the order by which the court refused to award a fee to Ruder for his circuit court representation. We direct the circuit court to determine and award to Ruder reasonable attorney's fees for his representation in the circuit court and on this appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
The provisions in the FMLA pertinent to the district's appeal are contained in sec. 103.10(5), Stats.:
*271 (a) This section does not entitle an employe to receive wages or salary while taking family leave or medical leave.
(b) An employe may substitute, for portions of family leave or medical leave, paid or unpaid leave of any other type provided by the employer.
The facts are stipulated. Ruder had accumulated eighteen days of reimbursable leave with the district. When he learned that his family would shortly receive placement of their newly-adopted son, he requested a five-day leave to help his family adjust. The FMLA provides that an employe may take family leave on account of placement of a child with the employe for adoption.
In addition to leave under the FMLA, Ruder asked to substitute five of his eighteen days of accumulated reimbursable leave for unpaid leave under the FMLA.
The district granted Ruder five days leave but refused to allow the substitution. Thus, the district granted him unpaid leave. He took the unpaid leave and complained to the department which ordered reimbursement and awarded attorney's fees and costs to him.
II. PARTIES' CONTENTIONS
We summarize the district's contentions as follows:
(1) Ruder is not entitled to reimbursable or paid leave for adoption purposes under the collective bargaining agreement. He has nothing to substitute for adoption leave under the FMLA.
(2) The FMLA plainly provides in sec. 103.10(5)(a), Stats., that an employe has no right to wages or salary while taking family leave. For that reason, Ruder has no right under the FMLA to paid leave for adoption purposes, even if he is entitled to reimbursable leave under the agreement.
(3) For the department to hold otherwise is inconsistent with its own administrative rules.
(4) The department's holding disregards the duty to harmonize the FMLA with the agreement negotiated under the Municipal Employment Relations Act, sec. 111.70, Stats.
(5) The administrative law judge abused his discretion by failing to state whether he relied on a document regarding legislative intent submitted after the facts were stipulated.
(7) The administrative law judge awarded attorney's fees in the absence of evidence that Ruder incurred actual attorney's fees and failed to supply a supporting rationale for the award.
In his cross-appeal, Ruder contends that the circuit court erred when it held that his request for attorney's fees for his circuit court representation was untimely. He asserts that the court should have remanded to the department to award such fees or the court itself should have made the award.
III. DISTRICT'S APPEAL
A. Standard of Review
The district sought judicial review under sec. 227.52, Stats., our Administrative Procedure Act, and the circuit court affirmed the department. When an appeal is taken to the court of appeals from such a circuit court order, we review the department's decision, even though we affirm or reverse the court order. MPI Wisconsin Machining Div. v. DILHR,
If we conclude that the FMLA is unambiguous, we apply the ordinary meaning of its words to the established facts. The words of an unambiguous statute disclose the legislature's intention when adopting it. Because the meaning of sec. 103.10(5), Stats., is plain, we do not use the rules of statutory construction, legislative history or other extrinsic sources as aids to find the legislature's intent. Those aids are used to resolve an established ambiguity, not to create it. Sturgis v. Town of Neenah Bd. of Canvassers,
B. District's Contentions
1. Right to Substitute Leave
We turn to the district's first contention: that because the collective bargaining agreement fails to provide adoption leave, Ruder has nothing to substitute for
The district reads sec. 103.10(5)(b), Stats., to do nothing more than allow an employe to substitute for leave under the FMLA leave provided by the employer when and only when the employe is already entitled to leave for that purpose. That reading is unreasonable. It makes superfluous the substitution language in subsection (5)(b). The employe who is already entitled to adoption leave under the collective bargaining agreement would have no reason to utilize family leave under the FMLA for adoption purposes. We can rarely disregard words in a statute as superfluous.
2. Right to Paid Leave
We reject the district's second contention: that because sec. 103.10(5)(a), Stats., unambiguously pro
The district asserts that absurd consequences follow from our reading of sec. 103.10(5)(a) and (b), Stats. If possible, we should accept a reading that avoids an absurdity. Sturgis v. Town of Neenah Bd. of Canvassers,
The district argues that poor public policy results from our reading of the FMLA. However, we must accept the legislature's chosen policy. The courts cannot insist on another policy. That would violate a bedrock constitutional principle: the separation of powers between the legislature and the courts. If, as is argued, the statute undermines employer incentives to provide leaves to employes, that is a matter for legislative consideration. If, as is argued, the statutory message is that employers should not provide paid leave unless prepared to have it used for unintended and unnegotiated purposes, that, too, is a matter for the legislature or for negotiation.
3. Decisional Consistency with Administrative Policy and Rules
The district's third contention is that when the district's dispute arose with Ruder the department's decision was inconsistent with its officially stated policy, within the meaning of sec. 227.57(8), Stats.,
We are told that when the dispute arose with Ruder, the department had prepared a draft of what is now Wis. Adm. Code sec. Ind 86.03(1) which proposed that an employe entitled to family leave under the FMLA could substitute other paid or unpaid leave from the employer for which the employe "is eligible so long as the employe has met all requirements entitling that employe to that leave." In its fined form, sec. Ind 86.03(1) provides that "an employe entitled to family or medical leave under the act may substitute, for any leave requested under the act, etny other paid or unpaid leave which has accrued to the employe."
The district does not explain how in Ruder's case the depeirtment's application of the FMLA conflicts with either the draft or final rule promulgated as Wis. Adm. Code sec. Ind 86.03(1). The conflict is not appeirent to us. The district has stipulated that when Ruder made his request, he "had accumulated eighteen (18) days of reimbursable leave." Consequently, he was "eligible" for paid leave under the proposed rule. Accumulated leave is "accrued" leave under sec. Ind 86.03(1).
Moreover, if provisions in the FMLA, sec. 103.10(5)(a) and (b), Stats., conflict with the department's rule (and we do not agree that a conflict exists), the statutory provisions must prevail. As we have said, sec. 103.10(5), Stats., is unambiguous. Wisconsin Adm. Code sec. Ind 86.03(1), in draft or final form, cannot affect our application of it. "No agency may promulgate a rule which conflicts with state law." Section 227.10(2), Stats. An administrative rule "can have no force against the plain language of the statute. The rule-making power does not extend beyond the power to carry into effect the
4. Harmonizing FMLA with Labor Agreement
The district asserts that we must harmonize sec. 103.10, Stats., with the collective bargaining agreement which the district negotiated under the Municipal Employment Relations Act, sec. 111.70, Stats. That assertion incompletely states the law. Both the agreement and sec. 111.70 pertain to conditions of employment. ”[C]ollective bargaining agreements and statutes also governing conditions of employment must be harmonized whenever possible. When an irreconcilable conflict exists . . . the collective bargaining agreement should not be interpreted to authorize a violation of law." Glendale Professional Policemen's Ass'n v. City of Glendale,
The collective bargaining agreement covering Ruder can be harmonized with the FMLA. The agreement provides reimbursable leave for district employes. Section 103.10(5)(b), Stats., expands the circumstances under which that leave can be used. The agreement does not expressly prohibit such expansion. For that reason, it does not directly conflict with subsection (5)(b). We would be loath to interpret the agreement otherwise, since perhaps that would mean the agreement authorizes a violation of law. Glendale,
The district contends that the administrative law judge abused his discretion since it cannot be determined from the record whether and to what extent he relied on a legislative committee document (Ruder submitted the document to the judge with his brief) which was issued long after the FMLA was passed.
We determine from the record whether an abuse of discretion has occurred. The record is silent on this point. All we have is the brief Ruder submitted to the administrative law judge and the district's response which asserts that administrative notice of the document was "wholly inappropriate." The district could have moved to strike and received a definitive ruling by the administrative law judge regarding the document's use. The record contains no such motion. We cannot find an abuse of discretion on this record.
6. Due Process
The district contends that sec. 103.10(5), Stats., subsections (a) and (b) contradict each other if subsection (b) authorizes employes to use any paid leave regardless of eligibility while taking family leave under the FMLA. The district concludes that the contradiction makes the statute impossible to understand and it therefore violates due process. But subsection (b) does not contradict subsection (a). The right to substitute "paid or unpaid leave" simply creates an exception to subsection (a). Put another way, the statute allows the employe to convert unpaid leave to paid leave by reason of the substitution.
7. Department's Award of Attorney's Fees
Section 103.10(12)(d), Stats., provides in part:
If the department finds that an employer violated sub. (11) (a) or (b), it may order the employer to take action to remedy the violation, including . . . paying reasonable actual attorney fees to the complainant.
The term "actual attorney fees" in sec. 103.10(12)(d), Stats., does not require that a successful complainant personally incur legal expense. In Martineau v. State Conservation Comm'n,
In light of Martineau and Esch, we conclude that "actual attorney fees” in sec. 103.10(12)(d), Stats., refers to how a fee award is computed. The term does not preclude an award when the successful complainant is represented by counsel furnished at no personal expense.
Courts may award attorney's fees to a party represented by an organization without charge. Shands v. Castrovinci,
The district asserts that because the administrative law judge failed to explain why he awarded attorney's fees, he abused his discretion. We disagree. He explained why he made the award. He did so by expressly relying on the briefs, and we may look to the briefs for his reasons. An adequate rationale exists for a discretionary decision when the decision maker relies on reasons supplied by counsel on the record. See Hagenkord v. State,
Ruder's brief relied on Watkins v. LIRC,
C. Conclusion As to District's Appeal
Having found no merit to the district's appeal from the judgment affirming the department's order, we affirm the judgment.
IV. RUDER'S CROSS-APPEAL
After the circuit court released its opinion favorable to him and before the order affirming the department was entered, Ruder asked the court to remand to the department to determine and award him attorney's fees for representation in that court. The court refused on grounds that those determinations should be made by
We recognize that the FMLA, sec. 103.10(12)(d), Stats., provides that the "department. . . may order the employer" to pay attorney's fees. However, a statute authorizing fee-shifting at one level of litigation does not prevent an award at a higher level. Sheely v. DHSS,
We reject the district's argument that because Ruder was not a "necessary party," he is not entitled to attorney's fees incurred for representation before the circuit court. We assume the argument is based on sec. 165.25(1), Stats., which provides in substance that the Department of Justice may appear for and represent a state agency in civil matters.
Whether Ruder was a "necessary party" to the ch. 227 review before the circuit court is irrelevant. He had a statutory right to participate in the review. Section 227.53(l)(d), Stats. More to the point, he had an important interest in protecting the department's make-whole
We conclude that Ruder, as the complainant in a Family-Medical Leave matter, may recover attorney's fees for successful representation in the circuit court on review of the department's order and the circuit court should determine and award the fee.
However, the circuit court ruled that Ruder's failure to timely request an award and failure earlier to present evidence on his fees "preclude[d]" the court from determining the fee issues. We conclude that the court erred.
Ruder's right to an award of attorney's fees for representation in this ch. 227 review is a court-created right. Having created the right and in the absence of legislation, the court may establish time limits for requesting an award and proving an evidentiary basis for it. See Jacobson v. Avestruz,
The limit on the request to the circuit court and proving a basis for it is a reasonable time after the court enters a final order or judgment on the merits favorable
Our ruling applies the reasoning and holding in ACLU v. Thompson,
Our ruling is also consistent with federal precedent. Under federal law, a postjudgment motion for attorney's fees under a fee-shifting statute is untimely if the delay is undue and prejudicial. Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Authority,
Ruder's request was timely under our ruling.
Ruder has requested that we award him reasonable attorney's fees on his appeal. We do so. Palfrey v. DHSS,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed; order denying attorney's fees reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Notes
In a letter to the author, Professor Walter B. Raushenbush of the University of Wisconsin Law School explains why chapters 101 through 108, Stats., refer to "employe" when many well-meaning lawyers and judges refer to "employee":
My father, Paul A. Raushenbush, drafted most of the original legislation [for ch. 108] in 1930-31, and most of the amendments through the mid-1960's. He was director of Wisconsin's Unemployment Compensation Department (under the then Industrial Commission) from roughly 1934 to 1967.1 well remember being aware that he strongly favored the spelling with "e" — "employe." And I recall asking him why, when "employee" was surely the more common spelling. His answer was that the statutes must avoid confusion between worker and employer. Since "e” and "r" are right next to each other on the typewriter keyboard, there's a real risk that "employer" might be typed "employee," and vice-versa. The confusion which this might cause could best be avoided, he said, by using "employe."
We use "employe" in this opinion to honor Paul Raushenbush for his meticulous drafting.
This contention pertains only to leave, not to paid leave. The district's second contention covers paid leave.
We can sometimes ignore words when we conclude that the legislature "dropped [a] stitch." Scharping v. Johnson,
Whether the employe substitutes paid leave for unpaid leave is not part of the sick leave example.
Section 227.57(8), Stats., provides:
The court shall reverse or remand the case to the agency if it finds that the agency's exercise of discretion is outside the range of discretion delegated to the agency by law; is inconsistent with an agency rule, an officially stated agency policy or a prior agency practice, if deviation therefrom is not explained to the satisfaction of the court by the agency; or is otherwise in violation of a constitutional or statutory provision; but the court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency on an issue of discretion.
To the extent the district challenges the award on grounds that the affidavits merely set forth hours of legal work and an hourly rate, we find no merit in it. The record discloses no demand by the district for other evidence to support the facts described in the affidavit or for the right to cross-examine the affiant or present evidence in opposition to the award.
Ruder requested fees 41 days after the court's decision.
