The Board of County Commissioners of the County of Arapahoe (Board) appeals the Arapahoe County District Court’s declaratory judgment that the Board has no power to interfere with the personnel decisions of the Arapahoe County Sheriff concerning his deputies. The district court also declared that funds budgeted for the sheriff’s department by the Board were under the exclusive control of the sheriff and it enjoined the Board from interfering with the sheriff’s personnel decisions regarding deputy sheriffs. We vacate the order and remand for dismissal of the sheriff’s complaint.
The dispute between these parties arose when a deputy sheriff, Steven Toney, was disciplined and ultimately terminated from employment with the sheriff’s department for alleged violations of rules governing operation of the jail. Toney sought review of his discharge pursuant to the procedures set out in a personnel manual promulgated by the Board. The Board conducted a hearing, in which the sheriff declined to participate, and adopted a resolution stating that Toney had been wrongfully terminated and ordering that he be paid two months wages, the funds to be taken from money previously allocated to the sheriff’s personnel budget.
The sheriff filed a complaint in Arapahoe County District Court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. The complaint recited the details of the Board’s action with respect to Toney and alleged that the Board lacked the power to review personnel decisions of the sheriff concerning his deputies or to order the transfer of money previously budgeted to the sheriff’s department. The sheriff sought a declaratory judgment delineating the respective powers of the Board and the sheriff and an injunc *1108 tion restraining the Board from taking actions regarding deputy sheriffs in excess of its powers. Summary judgment was awarded in favor of the sheriff and the Board appealed.
I.
Although not urged by the Board, at oral argument we raised the question whether the plaintiffs exclusive remedy in this case was under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4). This court is free to consider the district court’s possible lack of subject matter jurisdiction notwithstanding any party’s failure to raise the issue.
Moschetti v. Liquor Licensing Authority,
C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) provides that relief may be obtained in the district court “[wjhere an inferior tribunal (whether court, board, commission, or officer) exercising judicial or quasi-judicial functions, has exceeded its jurisdiction or abused its discretion, and there is no plain, speedy and adequate remedy.” The rule also provides that in the absence of any other statutory time period, “a petition for certiorari or other writ seeking to review the acts of any inferior tribunal shall be filed in the district court not later than 30 days from the final action taken by said tribunal.” C.R.C.P. 106(b).
The Board’s action in reviewing the discharge of Deputy Toney was quasi-judicial in nature. Quasi-judicial actions “involve the determination of juridical facts on which the impact of a law upon an individual depends,”
Shoenberg Farms v. People ex rel. Swisher,
In this case the gravamen of the sheriffs complaint was that the Board had no authority to hear Toney’s grievance. This allegation by the sheriff that the Board was proceeding in excess of its jurisdiction was properly cognizable under C.R. C.P. 106(a)(4). It is well established that in the absence of another period provided by statute, a proceeding under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4) must he filed within the thirty-day period provided in C.R.C.P. 106(b),
TriState Generation & Transmission Co. v. City of Thornton,
Moreover, the sheriff here “may not seek to accomplish by a declaratory judgment what [he] can no longer accomplish directly under C.R.C.P. 106(a)(4)_”
TriState Generation & Transmission Co. v. City of Thornton,
The Board contends that, insofar as the district court adjudicated the rights of the parties concerning matters apart from the facts of Toney’s discharge, it merely rendered an advisory opinion. We agree.
The request for declaratory relief sought, in addition to a declaration that the Board had exceeded its authority in its actions regarding Toney, a ruling that the Board lacked authority to act in a variety of areas pertaining to deputy sheriffs. Given that the relief as to the actual controversy over Toney is unavailable to the sheriff, the remaining requests for a de
*1110
claratory judgment seek only an advisory opinion. This court has noted that “[determination of the scope and constitutionality of legislation in advance of its immediate adverse effect in the context of a concrete case involves too remote and abstract an inquiry for the proper exercise of the judicial function.”
Theobald v. Board of County Commissioners,
II.
The Board also contends that the district court erred in awarding to the sheriff the amount of $11,830.51 in attorney’s fees. We agree.
The district court relied upon
Wadlow v. Kanaly,
We have subsequently noted, however, that the award of attorneys’ fees in
Wadlow
was statutorily authorized under section 30-2-104, 12 C.R.S. (1977), providing that the cost of litigation in certain specified circumstances shall be paid out of the county general fund.
Tisdel v. Board of County Commissioners,
The order of the district court is vacated and the cause remanded for dismissal of this action.
Notes
. The policy manual provides that:
5. THE EMPLOYEE MAY, WITHIN TWENTY (20) BUSINESS DAYS OF RECEIPT OF THE COMMISSIONER'S DECISION, APPEAL THIS DECISION TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, WHOSE DETERMINATION THEREON SHALL BE FINAL. THE EMPLOYEE MUST REQUEST IN WRITING A HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. THE WRITTEN REQUEST FROM THE EMPLOYEE MUST EXPLAIN THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE INCIDENT INVOLVED AND WHY THE EMPLOYEE FEELS THAT HE OR SHE SHOULD NOT BE REMOVED AND IF THE EMPLOYEE WISHES THE HEARING TO BE PUBLIC OR CONFIDENTIAL. THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WILL SET A HEARING AND INFORM ALL PARTIES CONCERNED OF THE TIME, DATE AND LOCATION OF THE HEARING. PARTIES MAY CHOOSE THEIR OWN REPRESENTATION. THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WILL INFORM ALL PARTIES CONCERNED OF THE RESULTS OF THEIR REVIEW. IF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS DENIES THE REMOVAL, AND AT THE OPTION OF THE ELECTED OFFICIAL INVOLVED, (1) THE EMPLOYEE MAY RETURN TO HIS OR HER POSITION IN THE DEPARTMENT, OR (2) THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WILL EFFECT A TRANSFER TO ANOTHER DEPARTMENT. THE HEARING WILL PROCEED AS FOLLOWS:
A. THE EMPLOYEE AND/OR HIS OR HER REPRESENTATIVE WILL PRESENT A STATEMENT OF THE GRIEVANCE AND THE REMEDY SOUGHT.
B. THE IMMEDIATE SUPERVISOR, DEPARTMENT HEAD, AND COMMISSIONER IN CHARGE OF THAT DEPARTMENT AND/OR THEIR REPRESENTATIVES WILL STATE THE REASONS FOR THEIR DECISIONS.
C. THE EMPLOYEE AND/OR HIS OR HER REPRESENTATIVE WILL STATE A REBUTTAL CALLING WITNESSES AND/OR PRESENTING EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT OF HIS OR HER CASE.
D. THE IMMEDIATE SUPERVISOR, DEPARTMENT HEAD AND COMMISSIONER IN CHARGE OF THAT DEPARTMENT AND/OR *1109 THEIR REPRESENTATIVES WILL STATE THEIR REBUTTAL, CALLING WITNESSES AND/OR PRESENTING EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT OF THEIR CASE. THE MANAGEMENT WILL THEN MAKE A CLOSING STATEMENT.
E. THE EMPLOYEE AND/OR HIS OR HER REPRESENTATIVE WILL MAKE A CLOSING STATEMENT.
F. FINAL BINDING DECISION WILL BE MADE BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
. Montez v. Board of County Commissioners,
. The resolution stating the Board’s findings, conclusions, and award was adopted on December 23, 1980, and the complaint was filed on March 9, 1981.
. The relief sought included both a declaration that the Board had acted in excess of its jurisdiction with regard to the hearing of Toney’s grievance and a declaration as to the breadth of the authority of the Board to adjudicate personnel matters involving deputies. Specifically, the sheriff sought a declaration that ”[t]he Board of County Commissioners acted unlawfully and without jurisdiction in entertaining the grievance or appeal submitted by Steven R. Toney concerning the termination of his appointment and employment as deputy sheriff." Additionally, the sheriff requested a declaration that ”[t]he Board of County Commissioners acted without jurisdiction and unlawfully in directing in its resolution dated December 23, 1980 that Steven R. Toney be awarded two months back pay and that said funds be taken from the Arapahoe County Sheriff Department’s personnel services budget for the 1980 fiscal year.” The remaining relief sought involved the respective powers of the sheriff and the Board over employment matters involving deputy sheriffs.
. It is not apparent whether the declaratory judgment in
Board of County Commissioners v. Andrews,
. Although section 13-51-114, 6 C.R.S. (1973), provides that in a proceeding under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Law the court may order an award of costs as seems equitable, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether this section provides the required statutory basis for attorney's fees in a case such as this. It would be incongruous to allow an award of attorney's fees under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Law when we have held that the plaintiff has *1111 presented no justiciable controversy under that article.
