STATE of Oklahoma ex rel., OKLAHOMA FIREFIGHTERS PENSION AND RETIREMENT SYSTEM, Plaintiff/Appellant v. CITY OF SPENCER, Oklahoma, and Nicole Mukes, City Manager of the City of Spencer in her official capacity, and Ronald Cummings, an individual, Defendants/Appellees.
No. 104,863.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Sept. 29, 2009.
Rehearing Denied June 21, 2010.
2009 OK 73 | 237 P.3d 125
Ted Pool, Raymond A. Vincent, Pool Blankenship & Vincent, Oklahoma City, OK, for Appellee.1
OPALA, J.
¶1 The issue presented is whether the Court of Civil Appeals (COCA) erred when it affirmed the trial court‘s summary adjudication that denied the Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System‘s request that the City of Spencer be ordered to terminate the employment of its recently-hired fire chief who was simultaneously declared to be ineligible for membership in the pension system. We answer in the affirmative.
I.
ANATOMY OF THE LITIGATION
¶2 Nicole Mukes, in her capacity as City Manager for the City of Spencer, hired Ronald Cummings to serve as the City‘s fire chief. Mukes, the City of Spencer, and Cummings may be referenced individually but are collectively to be known as “City” or defendants. Cummings, who was forty-nine (49) years old at the time, sought admission to the Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System (System). Because of his age and lack of previous creditable service to the System, it determined Cummings was not then nor could he now become eligible for retirement at the age of sixty-five (65) as required by the terms of
II.
THE COURT‘S DISPOSITION OF THE ISSUES PRESSED ON CERTIORARI
¶3 During the pendency of certiorari, circumstances pertinent to the case scenario changed. The City gave notice that Cummings was no longer employed by the City of
A.
Today‘s Cause Is Not Mooted Because Cummings Is No Longer Employed As Fire Chief By the City of Spencer
¶4 We inquire first into the question of alleged mootness, i.e.—whether today‘s cause was mooted when the City gave notice that Cummings is no longer in its employ. Mootness is a state or condition which prevents the appellate court from rendering relief.10 Where, as here, after an appeal has been commenced, conditions arise which preclude an appellate decision from affording any effective relief, the appeal will be dismissed for mootness.11 A viable con
¶5 Although the City was silent about the circumstances that effectuated the change in Cummings’ employment as fire chief, we note that voluntary cessation of challenged conduct does not deprive a tribunal of its power to conduct appellate review.16 Moreover, the initial issue presented today—dealing with the enforcement or violation of a statute—clearly presents an important question of public interest. All aspects of the firefighter‘s pension and his participation in the retirement system, including eligibility
B.
The District Court Possessed Authority to Order the City to Terminate Cummings’ Employment as Fire Chief
¶6 We turn now to the initial issue pressed on certiorari—whether COCA erred when it affirmed the trial court‘s ruling that the latter “did not abuse its discretion” in denying the System its requested relief of
COCA‘s Opinion and the System‘s Certiorari Arguments
¶7 COCA ruled the trial court (1) properly declared the City‘s employment of Cummings as fire chief to be in violation of the maximum-age requirement in a fire department, as provided by the terms of
¶8 Lastly, although at nisi prius the City‘s response and counter-motion was bottomed on invidious age discrimination and its consequent legal position should it be ordered to terminate Cummings,23 the trial judge found Cummings’ age was not a public-safety factor and refused to order his employment‘s termination. Because neither the City nor Cummings appealed from the district court‘s decision, and the System merely responded to this argument below, COCA correctly ruled that this issue was not preserved for review.24 COCA‘s conclusion draws added strength from the City‘s and Cummings’ failure to seek certiorari review of COCA‘s refusal to consider age discrimination as an issue on appeal. COCA‘s position meets with our approval. Age discrimination will hence not be addressed by today‘s opinion.
¶9 COCA‘s ruling, according to the System, poses a challenge to its authority to enforce the governing statutes. It urges (1) COCA erred in concluding there is no statutory authority on which to bottom the System‘s request to require the City to terminate Cummings’ employment and (2) the district court has the authority to grant the relief sought under the authority of the Declaratory Judgments Act,
The Court‘s Analysis
¶10 We disagree with COCA‘s ruling. The System‘s interest is not satisfied by the nisi prius declaration that Cummings was ineligible for System membership. Neither does the district court lack the authority to grant the relief requested by the System.
¶11 The System is a corporate body and instrumentality of the state.26 Its Board is responsible for the policies and rules for the administration of the System and for the transaction of its business in accordance with state law.27 Its fiduciary duties are not limited to shielding the financial assets of the
¶12 The fundamental rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to legislative intent.30 That intent is first divined from the language of a statute.31 If a statute is plain and unambiguous, it will not be subjected to judicial construction, but will receive the effect its language dictates.32 Only where the intent cannot be ascertained from a statute‘s text, as when ambiguity or conflict (with other statutes) is shown to exist, may rules of statutory construction be invoked.33
¶13 COCA‘s view—that there exists no express statutory remedy upon which the System may rely for relief—is incorrect. Its analogy—that contrasts the provision of an express remedy in the
¶14 There exists neither ambiguity nor conflict here. The System has full statutory authority to bring in the district court actions for declaratory relief to enforce the provisions of applicable state law under its administration. This authority is bottomed on the terms of
¶15 Declaratory relief is by nature remedial.39 Oklahoma‘s Declaratory
¶16 The trial court ruled the City hired Cummings in violation of the maximum-age restrictions for employment in a fire department prescribed by the terms of
III.
SUMMARY
¶17 We hold the Court of Civil Appeals erred when it affirmed the trial judge‘s summary judgment. The Firefighters Pension and Retirement System‘s request for an order that the City of Spencer terminate the employment of an individual who was not statutorily qualified to serve as fire chief based on the terms of
¶18 The Court of Civil Appeals’ opinion is vacated and the trial judge‘s decision is reversed in part. The cause stands remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with today‘s pronouncement.
¶19 EDMONDSON, C.J., TAYLOR, V.C.J., HARGRAVE, OPALA, KAUGER and REIF, J., concur.
¶20 COLBERT, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
¶21 WATT and WINCHESTER, JJ., dissent.
¶22 KAUGER, J., with whom REIF, J., joins, concurring
¶23 Whether a person who is over 45 years of age may waive retirement benefits in order to qualify for service as a volunteer firefighter is a question neither preserved for review nor reached by today‘s opinion.
