Todd SCHWANKE, Respondent, v. MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATION, Appellant.
No. A12-2062.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Aug. 6, 2014.
851 N.W.2d 591
Lori Swanson, Attorney General, Jacob Campion, Assistant Attorney General, Saint Paul, MN, for appellant.
Margaret A. Luger-Nikolai, Nicole M. Blissenbach, David M. Aron, Saint Paul, MN, for amicus curiae Education Minnesota.
Susan L. Naughton, Saint Paul, MN, for amici curiae League of Minnesota Cities, Association of Minnesota Counties, Minnesota Inter-County Association, Minnesota Sheriffs’ Association, and Minnesota School Boards Association.
OPINION
STRAS, Justice.
Respondent Todd Schwanke, a sergeant in the Steele County Sheriff‘s Office, challenges his 2011 performance evaluation for accuracy and completeness under the
I.
In 2012, the Chief Deputy of the Steele County Sheriff‘s Office evaluated Schwanke‘s performance during 2011 and gave him a generally negative review. The Chief Deputy used a written form listing standardized criteria on which to evaluate officers like Schwanke. The form asked the reviewer to rate the officer‘s performance on 23 different criteria. If the reviewer could not rate the employee with respect to a particular criterion—either because the criterion did not apply, or because the reviewer lacked sufficient information to give a rating—the reviewer could indicate that he or she would not provide a rating. The form also contained a space for explanatory comments by the reviewer on each of the 23 criteria. The Chief Deputy evaluated Schwanke on most of the criteria and commented on all but one of the ratings.
Schwanke disagreed with parts of the evaluation and wrote a letter to Steele County describing the grounds for his disagreement. In the letter, Schwanke specifically disputed the Chief Deputy‘s comments and ratings on several criteria and
Schwanke filed an appeal of the Sheriff‘s decision with the Minnesota Department of Administration (“Department“) by submitting a statement explaining why he disagreed with portions of the performance evaluation. The statement addressed some criteria that his initial letter to the County had not. Schwanke also submitted additional documentary evidence with his statement. The Department “d[id] not accept” Schwanke‘s appeal, explaining that a challenge under the
II.
The legal issues in this case arise out of the Department‘s decision to summarily dismiss Schwanke‘s appeal. The Department defends its decision on three grounds. First, the Department asserts that Schwanke‘s performance evaluation contained only subjective judgments and opinions that are not subject to challenge under the Data Practices Act. Second, the Department argues that it properly dismissed Schwanke‘s appeal, at least in part, because the appeal raised new challenges and relied on new evidence that did not appear in Schwanke‘s letter to the County. Third, the Department claims that it has broad statutory authority to dismiss an administrative appeal brought under the Data Practices Act. Each of these legal arguments presents a question of statutory interpretation that we review de novo. See, e.g., Larson v. State, 790 N.W.2d 700, 703 (Minn.2010).
A.
The Department‘s first argument is that the subjective judgments and opinions in Schwanke‘s performance evaluation cannot be challenged under the Data Practices Act. Under the Data Practices Act, “[a]n individual subject of the data may contest the accuracy or completeness of public or private data.”
The Department does not dispute that the information contained within Schwanke‘s performance evaluation is “data.” “Data” are “[f]acts that can be analyzed or used in an effort to gain knowledge or make decisions” or, more broadly, are “information.” The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 462 (5th ed.2011); see also Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 576-77 (1976) (defining “data” as “material serving as a basis for discussion, inference, or determination of policy” or “detailed
The Department also does not dispute that the County, as a political subdivision of the State of Minnesota, qualifies as a “government entity,” which is defined by the Data Practices Act as “a state agency, statewide system, or political subdivision.”
Accordingly, the Department does not claim that the data in this case is exempt from regulation under the Data Practices Act. Rather, the Department argues that Schwanke‘s performance evaluation contains only subjective judgments and opinions that are not subject to challenge for “accuracy or completeness” because it is impossible to show that subjective judgments or opinions are inaccurate1 or incomplete. We disagree with the Department‘s categorical approach.2
The Department‘s position treats all subjective opinions and judgments the same way, even if those opinions and judgments rest on statements of fact that are objectively verifiable, and thus falsifiable—that is, “capable of being proved false,” Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 820 (1976). A straightforward example will reveal the flaw in the Department‘s approach. Suppose that a supervisor completes a performance evaluation of a city employee that reads, “the employee‘s refusal to participate in a team-building exercise at a staff retreat shows that he is not a team player.” Suppose further that the employee actually did participate in the team-building exercise. It was a different employee who refused to participate, and the supervisor simply confused the two employees. The statement that the employee “is not a team player” is a subjective assessment that, standing alone, is not objectively verifiable. But the stated basis for the subjective assessment—that the employee refused to participate in the team-building exercise—is a verifiable, falsifiable statement of fact. Accordingly, the employee can challenge the accuracy of the statement that his “refusal to participate in a team-building exercise at a staff retreat shows that he is not a team player” because the subjective statement about not being a team player rests on a factual assertion that does not “[c]onform[] to fact.” The American Heritage
The same is true for Schwanke‘s performance evaluation. Schwanke alleges in his appeal that some of the data in his performance evaluation rest on facts that he can show to be false. For example, Schwanke‘s performance evaluation states that Schwanke was “asked” to create a sergeants’ FTO program, a type of field training program, but Schwanke claims that he “was never asked to put together a sergeants’ FTO program.” Whether Schwanke was asked by a supervisor to create a field training program is a fact that is capable of being proven true or false. Thus, some of Schwanke‘s challenges to his performance evaluation contest the accuracy or completeness of falsifiable statements. Those challenges, which contest the “accuracy or completeness of public or private data,” are within the purview of
Yet mere dissatisfaction with a subjective judgment or opinion cannot support a challenge under the Data Practices Act. To the extent that some of Schwanke‘s challenges to his performance evaluation reflect his dissatisfaction with the evaluation, rather than specifically contest facts that are incomplete or inaccurate, those challenges would be subject to dismissal in a contested-case proceeding. At this stage of the proceeding, however, because Schwanke‘s appeal contests statements that could be proven false, we disagree with the Department‘s position that Schwanke‘s appeal categorically falls outside the scope of
B.
The Department‘s second argument is that dismissal was appropriate because Schwanke‘s appeal raised new challenges and relied on new evidence that he did not first present to the County for its consideration. The Department essentially seeks a rule that would procedurally bar an individual from raising new issues or presenting new evidence in an appeal brought under the Data Practices Act. The Department‘s argument raises two distinct questions: what issues a party may bring in an appeal and what evidence a party may use to support its argument on those issues. We consider each question separately.
1.
In his appeal, Schwanke challenges three items on his performance evaluation—specifically, the Chief Deputy‘s responses to questions 6, 21, and 23—that he did not contest in his letter to the County. The Department is correct that the Data Practices Act does not permit Schwanke to challenge those items for the first time on appeal.
The scope of appellate review is defined by
The Data Practices Act does not define the term “determination,” but it does identify what a “determination” includes. Upon receiving a challenge, the responsible authority must take one of two actions: “correct the data” or “notify the individual that the authority believes the data to be correct.”
As relevant here, the Sheriff‘s determination was limited to the data in the performance evaluation that Schwanke had contested in his letter to the County. Those data did not include items 6, 21, and 23, because Schwanke did not contest those items in the letter. Thus, because the “responsible authority” did not make a “determination” on items 6, 21, and 23, Schwanke had no “determination” from which to appeal on those items.
2.
In contrast to the Data Practices Act‘s treatment of new issues, neither the Data Practices Act nor the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“) confines Schwanke‘s appeal to only the evidence that he previously presented to the County. The Data Practices Act itself is silent on what evidence is admissible in an appeal from the determination of a responsible authority. See
C.
The Department‘s third argument is that the APA and the Data Practices Act separately vest the Department with the authority to dismiss any appeals that fall outside the scope of the Data Practices Act. Once again, we disagree with the Department‘s position.
1.
First, the Department argues that the APA assigns it the role of ultimate “decision-maker” in contested-case proceedings, and that the power to decide the appeal must necessarily include the power to dismiss the appeal. The Department is correct that the APA vests it with the ultimate authority to decide Schwanke‘s appeal. See
The procedural requirements of the APA are mandatory: the APA states that a decision “shall not be made” by an agency until the ALJ has made its recommendation.
2.
Second, the Department argues that the Data Practices Act vests it with the authority to dismiss an appeal. Specifically, the Department relies on the following language from
The determination of the responsible authority may be appealed pursuant to the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act relating to contested cases. Upon receipt of an appeal by an individual, the commissioner shall, before issuing the order and notice of a contested case hearing required by [the APA], try to resolve the dispute through education, conference, conciliation, or persuasion. If the parties consent, the commissioner may refer the matter to mediation. Following these efforts, the commissioner shall dismiss the appeal or issue the order and notice of hearing.
According to the Department, the final sentence in the provision “expressly allows [it] to dismiss appeals without a contested case hearing.”
Read in isolation, the final sentence in
In this case, the sentence relied upon by the Department appears in a paragraph that simultaneously grants a right to a contested-case proceeding and requires the Department (acting through the Commissioner of Administration) to temporarily delay the proceeding in an attempt to resolve the dispute informally. See
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals and remand to the Department for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.4
Affirmed.
