Lead Opinion
{¶ 1} In his second amended complaint, relator, Ralph E. Trussell, Sheriff of Meigs County, seeks a writ of mandamus to compel respondents, the Board of Commissioners of Meigs County and its members, individually, to fund his office for fiscal year 2003 in the full amount listed in his request for appropriations and to retroactively fund approximately $140,000 expended by the sheriffs office in fiscal year 2002 without an appropriation. He alleges that the board has a clear duty to fully fund the mandatory, statutorily imposed duties of his office (1) under the constitutional doctrine of “separation of powers”; (2) that the board has abused its discretion by failing to appropriate the amounts he requested to fund both his mandatory and nonmandatory duties; (3) that the board has a duty to fund the mandatory duties of county government, including mandated duties of his office, before funding nonmandatory duties; and (4) that the board cannot evade its duty by pleading financial hardship.
CONCLUSION
{¶ 2} Because we find that the board had no duty to appropriate all of the funds requested by the sheriff under the separation-of-powers doctrine, that no special statute requires full funding of the office of sheriff, and that the board did not abuse its abuse its discretion by appropriating a lesser amount than the sheriff requested, we deny the writ.
FACTS
{¶ 3} For 2002, the sheriff requested $738,384.50 to operate his office.
1
The
{¶ 4} For 2003, the sheriff requested a total appropriation of $867,341.50. 4 The board appropriated $537,188.71, 62 percent of the amount requested, and 17.6 percent less than was appropriated in 2002. However, the sheriff alleges that his actual operating budget is only $271,179 for 2003, “due, in part, to the * * * [board’s] encumbering $200,000 of the net appropriation for prisoner housing, medical care and meals and charging over $64,000 in 2002 expenditures to my 2003 budget.” 5
{¶ 5} The sheriff also alleges that his office is severely understaffed and ill equipped. He alleges, and the board does not dispute, that the office’s law enforcement division is understaffed by 7.5 officers—three road officers, one and one-half process servers, and three school resource/D.A.R.E. officers
6
; that the corrections division
7
is understaffed by four corrections officers, one contract physician, and one contract nurse
8
; that the court services division is understaffed by a half-time officer
9
; that the communications division is understaffed by four communications officers/dispatchers
10
; and that training expenses will exceed $15,000.
11
The appropriation for salaries, except that of the sheriff, which
{¶ 6} The sheriff further alleges, inter alia, that (1) the fleet of vehicles for the office is aged (the newest vehicles being 1998 models), 12 (2) the average mileage per vehicle is 132,023 miles, 13 (3) the vehicles lack routine maintenance and “fail to meet mileage standards for even secondary response cruisers,” 14 and (4) the sheriffs office space is too small, inadequately heated and air-conditioned, ill supplied, and dilapidated in the sense that necessary equipment has not been acquired, and outworn or damaged equipment has not been replaced or repaired. 15 The sheriff has supplied a list of necessary equipment he claims is needed, but without providing dollar amounts. 16 The board disputes these claims only by arguing that the heating system was promptly repaired when it broke down. 17
{¶ 7} Except as stated above, the board does not generally deny most of the sheriffs specific allegations. It relies, generally, on the fact that it, and not the sheriff, is the final authority as to the sheriffs budget, and states that, because of anticipated revenue loss of $384,834.06 18 in 2003, it did not abuse its discretion by applying an across-the-board budget cut to the sheriffs office, which it alleges was actually only a 10 percent budget cut because the $200,000 the sheriff requested for operation of the jail was fully funded. 19 We agree.
ANALYSIS
{¶ 8} To be entitled to a writ of mandamus, the sheriff must show a clear right to relief, that the board is under a clear duty to provide that relief, and that he has no plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
20
He first argues that the board must fund his request for the reasonable and necessary expenses of his office because the constitutional “separation-of-powers” doctrine
Separation of Powers
{¶ 9} In the context of budgetary disputes, the Supreme Court appears to have first invoked the separation-of-powers doctrine in
State ex rel. Foster v. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Commrs.
(1968),
{¶ 11} The Supreme Court has never, so far as we can determine, applied the separation-of-powers doctrine to disputes between the executive and legislative branches. We perceive at least оne reason for this: to do so would make every state and local executive-branch office the final authority for appropriating its own budget, absent an abuse of discretion, and deprive the General Assembly and local legislative authorities of their traditional appropriation powers. We do not deny that there may be a certain inequity in carving out an exception for the judicial branch of government, but we are not prepared, in light of existing authority, to extend the doctrine to the executive branch of government in the budgetary context.
{¶ 12} Nor has the sheriff directed us to any statute making him, and not the board, the final authority for appropriations to his office. The board aptly points out that R.C. Chapter 5705 makes it the appropriating authority for county offices. The board also points out that R.C. 5705.28(C)(1) requires it to appropriate the full amount only for offices that “may fix the amount of revenue they are to receive.” Thus, the general budgeting statutes recognize the judicially created and statutory exceptions to the board’s general appropriating authority. Since the sheriffs office is not one of thоse exceptions, his argument fails on this point. The board has the final authority to determine the sheriffs budget, absent an abuse of its discretion.
{¶ 13} Thus, we also deny the sheriffs assertion that the board has an affirmative duty to fully fund all mandatory duties of all county offices before funding nonmandatory duties. Absent a constitutional provision or statute requiring full funding, an appropriating authority has discretion over how to fund all budgetary requests. 26
Abuse of Discretion
{¶ 14} The sheriff also contends that the board abused its discretion by failing to fully appropriate the funds he requested to operate his office, with
{¶ 15} The Supreme Court has held that an abuse of discretion in budgetary matters means, as in other areas of law, that the action “implies an unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable attitude.”
Wilke,
supra,
. {¶ 16} Additionally, the sheriff compares budgetary records from Hocking, Jackson, Morgan, Perry, and Vinton Counties for fiscal years 2002 and 2003, which reflect a much higher funding level. However, without detailed economic and demographic details to support these comparisons, we give little credence to them.
{¶ 17} The sheriff cites two common pleas court decisions that support his arguments:
Abdalla v. Krupinski
(Aug 31, 1995), Jefferson C.P. No. 95CV242; and
Geauga Cty. Bd. of Commrs. v. Geauga Cty. Sheriff
(Nov. 14, 2002), Geauga C.P. No. 01M-001001. In each case, the court found that the board of county
{¶ 18} In Abdalla, the sheriff sought an injunction and a writ of mandamus for his requested appropriations. The court granted a permanent injunction, prohibiting the board from “denying funding to plaintiff or otherwise interfering with plaintiff in the execution of his duties as sheriff.” We accord little weight to the decision because it recites no facts to suppоrt the conclusory assertion that “[t]he budget request submitted in good faith by plaintiff to defendants represents reasonable and necessary expenditures for operation of the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department for the year 1995.” Moreover, that court misallocated the burden of proof, holding that the board “failed to prove the funds requested by Plaintiff are unreasonable and unnecessary” and that “it is the duty of defendants to levy taxes and to provide funding in amounts which will allow plaintiff to fulfill his statutory obligations as sheriff.” We do not believe either of these statements describes thе appropriate law in such cases.
{¶ 19} Geauga Cty. Bd. of Commrs. is more informative, but not persuasive. The case began when the board of county commissioners sought a declaratory judgment to compel the sheriff “to operate his office within the appropriations made for it.” The sheriff filed a counterclaim for declaratory judgment and a writ of mandamus to compel the board to appropriate requested funds. The case involved funding for fiscal years 2001, 2002, and 2003, and took over one year to resolve. In the end, the court allowed a writ of mandamus granting, in part, the sheriffs rеquested funding. The court determined for each line item whether the requested amount was reasonable and necessary. In doing so, the court apparently considered financial hardship.
{¶ 20} First, the court noted that “the high priority that is to be given components of the justice system—a primary responsibility of government, including the sheriff—can be found in the extension of these principles to other offices directly related to the administration of justice. See, for example,
Reed v. Portage Cty. Bd. of Commrs.
(1985),
{¶ 21} Then, the court found, as do we here, that no specific statute required the board to appropriate funds for the sheriff, except as stated in the general appropriating authority of R.C. Chapter 5705. Nevertheless, the court found an abuse of discretion: “Notwithstanding protestation of communication and consultation in the progressive budget process leading to thе annual appropriation, the county commissioners’ failure to account for the increased budgétary needs of the
{¶ 22} We do not adopt the court’s reasoning. Although the court of appeals in Reed did state that the board abused its discretion by not appropriating the full amount the clerk requested for operation of the auto-title department, the decision was clearly based on R.C. 2303.29(B), which required the board to appropriate “an amount sufficient for the prompt discharge of the clerk’s duties under Chapter 4505. of the Revised Codе.” There is no comparable statute involved in this case.
{¶ 23} Moreover, we do not adopt the court’s reasoning that “a process of zero budgeting, or some modification thereof, should have been employed.” Mandating the precise form of budgetary negotiations is, we believe, an unauthorized and unwise judicial incursion into the budgetary process. The issue is whether the board’s action in making across-the-board reductions was “unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable,” Wilke, supra, not whether some better approach might have been employed. We hold that across-the-board budget cutting in the face of declining revenues is not unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable per se, or under the facts of this case.
{¶ 24} Nor do we find that the board abused its discretion because it was unaware of the sheriffs claimed understaffing and for equipment needs. Those claims appear to have been reflected in the sheriffs 2003 budgetary requests. 27
{¶ 25} Likewise, we find no abuse of discretion in the board’s allocating $200,000 of the sheriffs appropriation to jail expenses and transferring “over $64,000” from his 2003 appropriation to cover 2002 expenditures for which no
{¶ 26} We believe that the board was faced with a hard choice between equally desirable allocations of funds here, given the conditions of financial hardship created by the anticipated revenue reduction of approximately $385,000. We cannot say that the choice it made was an abuse of discretion. Under the statutes, it was the board’s choice to make, and if its choice necessitated curtailment of services, the sheriffs office, like other county agencies, had to make that curtailment. 30
{¶ 27} The sheriff argues that financial hardship may not be considered when a legislative authority has a duty to provide funding requested, even if no unappropriated funds remain. 31 We find two flaws with this argument. First, as we have stated, there is no mandatory duty to provide the sheriffs requested funding. Second, the Supreme Court has stated that financial hardship may be considered, even in cases involving courts or special statutes under which an office determines its own appropriations. 32 We deem financial hardship particularly relevant when an abuse of discretion is at issue.
{¶ 28} Finally, we reject the board’s assertion that the issues presented are political questions over which this court has no jurisdiction. Our jurisdiction in mandamus is mandatory under Section 3(B)(1) of Article IV of the Ohio Constitution. Moreover, all of the cited cases, and many more, demonstrate that the courts, however reluctantly, have accepted jurisdiction in mandamus over budgetary matters. It is far too late in the day for this court to decide otherwise.
Writ denied.
Notes
. Sheriff's evidence, Tab 1, affidavit of Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell, ¶ 16.
. Board’s evidence, Tab 4.
. Trussell affidavit, ¶ 19 and 25.
. Exhibit A, attached to second amended complaint.
. Trussell affidavit, ¶ 28.
. Trussell affidavit, ¶ 37, Table A.
. The parties sеem to agree that $200,000 has been appropriated in fiscal 2003 for jail-related expenses. The sheriff also alleges that the jail was closed in October 2002 and cannot be reopened because of substandard conditions. Id., ¶ 58 and 60. Apparently, the appropriation for prisoners is to be paid, at least in part, to Noble and Washington Counties, with whom the board has contracted to house prisoners. Sheets affidavit, ¶ 15.
. Trussell affidavit, ¶ 38, Table A.
. Id., ¶ 39 and 41.
. Id., ¶40.
. No funds were appropriated for training in 2003. Board’s evidence, Tab 5.
. Trussell affidavit, Table B.
. Id., ¶46.
. Id., ¶ 47.
. Id., ¶ 51-56.
. Id., Table C.
. Sheets affidavit, ¶ 17(g).
. Board's brief, at 2.
. Id., at 13-14.
.
State ex rel. Berger v. McMonagle
(1983),
.
Pike v. Hoppel
(Nov. 13, 2000), Columbiana App. No.
.
Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Mental Retardation v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Commrs.
(1975),
.
Wilke,
supra,
. See
State ex rel. Cleveland Mun. Court v. Cleveland City Council
(1973),
. Sheriff's brief, at 12.
. See
State ex rel, Cleveland Mun, Court v. Cleveland City Council
(1973),
. Trussell affidavit, V 16 and 27.
. Id., ¶ 61-72.
. Id., V28.
. See
Slate ex rel. Concord Twp. Bd. of Trustees v. Cunningham
(Sept. 16, 1988), Lake App. No. 12-198,
. See
Foster,
supra,
.
See Durkin,
supra,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
{¶ 30} The issue we face is whether the board of county commissioners abused its discretion by failing to fully appropriate a nonjudicial officeholder’s budget request when the county faces a shortfall оn its general revenue fund. In order to answer this question, we must keep in mind that the burden of proof is on the officeholder to show both that the requested amount was “reasonable and necessary” and that the board acted arbitrarily, unreasonably, or unconscionably in rejecting the request. See
State ex rel. Veterans Serv. Office v. Pickaway Cty. Bd. of Commrs.
(1991),
{¶ 31} In addition to the reasoning in the principal opinion, I base my conclusion that the sheriff did not carry his burden of proof on the general concept that courts should rarely interject themselves into the essence of politics, i.e., the allocation of scarce resources.
{¶ 32} Under R.C. 5705.01(C) and 5705.38(A), the legislature has charged the board with the statutory duty of allocating scarce financial resources among competing county offices. In order to accomplish this difficult task, the board is vested with considerable discretion, for it must prioritize the demand for funds and allocate them so that each county office can perform its statutory duty within the limits of the resources available. R.C. 5705.38(C) and 5705.39. In order to do this, the board must obviously consider the request of each office in the context of total demand for county resources.
{¶ 33} Courts are ill suited to make an isolated decision as to what level an individual county office should be funded. Moreover, courts are not the best mechanism to determine how much money must effectively be taken from other county offices, thus potentially rendering those offices unable to perform their statutory duties, in order to give priority to one county office.
{¶ 34} Keeping in mind the sheriffs burden, I cannot say that the board acted unreasonably. Implicit in that conclusion is a finding that the sheriffs request was reasonable and necessary. Howеver, given the financial condition of the county, the board did not abuse its discretion. In this context, the board may use
{¶ 35} In the final analysis, the voters of Meigs County will decide whether they prefer the board’s priorities to those of the sheriff.
{¶ 36} Thus, I concur in denying the writ.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
{¶ 37} While I agree with the majority opinion that the board of county commissioners is the final appropriating authority for the sheriffs office and that the sheriff is not entitled to set his own levels of appropriations, I would find that the board abused its discretion by failing to provide sufficient funding in 2003 to maintain the sheriffs office at even an admittedly understaffed level, and would grant a limited writ of mandamus.
{¶ 38} The sheriff has presented historical evidence of severe underfunding of his budgetary requests for staff and equipment. While revenues available for appropriation in 2003 are expected to decline from the 2002 level by about 11.4 percent, appropriations for operation of the sheriffs office declined by about 25 percent, and appropriations for employee sаlaries, other than those of the sheriff, declined by about 32.6 percent from 2002 levels. See Table 1.
Table 1
Year 33 Total Appropriation 34 Sheriffs Appropriation Salary Appropriation
2000 $3,907,254.57 $716,239.09 $389,842.01
2001 3,814,976.30 667,483.32 420,375.89
2002 3,848,128.42 651,963.62 408,741.38
2003 3,462,294.36 35 537,188.71 262,658.50
{¶ 40} In 2003, the sheriff requested a total appropriation of $867,341.50, 38 33 percent more than he received in 2002, and 21 percent more than he had received in 2000, the year of the highest appropriation to the office for which evidence is submitted. The board appropriated $537,188.71, 62 percent of the amount requested, 17.6 percent less than in 2002, and 24 percent less than in 2000. However, the sheriff alleges that his true operating budget is only $271,179 in 2003 “due, in part, to the * * * [board’s] encumbering $200,000 of the net appropriation for prisoner housing, medical care and meals and charging over $64,000 in 2002 expenditures to my 2003 budget.” 39
{¶ 41} With regard to specific areas of the budget, as the majority opinion indicates, the sheriff alleges that his office is severely understaffed and ill equipped. The board does not substantially dispute these claims. It merely argues that, because оf anticipated revenue loss, it did not abuse its discretion by applying an across-the-board budget cut to the sheriffs office, treating the sheriffs office and other county offices alike, despite evidence of understaffing and equipment (especially vehicle) problems in the department.
{¶ 42} Regarding staffing, the evidence submitted for 2003 demonstrates that the sheriff requested $468,000 for salaries, and the board appropriated only $262,658.50, or 56.1 percent of requested funding and 64.3 percent of what was appropriated for salaries in 2002. Indeed, the difference between the 2002 and 2003 appropriations for the sheriffs employees—$146,082.88—represents 37.86 percent of the entire anticipated revenue loss in 2003 from 2002 tax revenues.
{¶ 44} I would find that, in view of the prevailing fiscal conditions in Meigs County, the board has abused its discretion with regard only to the funding of salaries for actual employees in 2003, and would order the board to provide funding only for the actuаl staff listed in the second column of Table A, attached to the Trussed affidavit, from the effective date of this decision and judgment entry for the balance of 2003. This order would apply to line item A006A02 in the 2003 appropriation report.
{¶ 45} With regard to equipment and supplies and training in the 2003 appropxiation, I would find from the undisputed evidence that the following line-item requests are reasonable and necessary and would issue a writ of mandamus ordering the board to fully fund the sheriffs requests: (1) line item A306A03 (tires), (2) line item A106A05 (gas and oil), prorated from the date this decision and judgment entry is filed until the end of the fiscаl year, and (3) line item A006A07 (training school).
{¶ 46} Regarding all other 2003 line items, I cannot determine from the evidence submitted whether the amounts requested were reasonable and necessary or that the board abused its discretion with regard to the amounts appropriated.
{¶ 47} I would make no order as to the relief requested for 2002 because the evidence does not clearly indicate the amount or nature of the expenditures.
{¶ 48} For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. Board’s evidence, tabs 2, 3, 4, and 5.
. Affidavit of County Commissioner Jim Sheets, ¶ 6; board’s evidence, Tab 1. Apparently, all available revenues were appropriated for the years in question.
. Anticipated revenue, Sheet’s affidavit, ¶ 10.
. Sheriff’s evidence, tab 1, affidavit of Sheriff Ralph E. Trussed, ¶ 16.
. Trussed affidavit, ¶ 19 and 25.
. Exhibit A, attached to second amended complaint.
. Trussed affidavit, ¶ 28.
