MEMORANDUM OPINION, AND ORDERS DISMISSING CLAIMS BARRED BY THE ELEVENTH AMENDMENT
Plaintiff Joyce Van Pilsum brings suit against defendants Iowa State University of Science and Technology (I.S.U.); the State of Iowa; the Iowa State Board of Regents; and Barbara Mack, Martin C. Jischke, and Frank Brown, all officials at I.S.U. After this court’s ruling on defendants’ motion for summary judgment, plaintiff has two remaining claims: (1) an age discrimination claim brought under both the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., and Iowa Code 601A (now Chapter 216); and (2) a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim for violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
This court, as a court of limited jurisdiction, has a duty to assure itself that it has subject matter jurisdiction in each case.
Sanders v. Clemco Indus.,
Discussion
Before examining plaintiffs claims individually, the court must first decide whether defendants Iowa State Board of Regents and I.S.U. share in the State of Iowa’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. The overwhelming majority of courts that have considered the question of whether state universities share in their respective state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity have found that they do.
See Sherman v. Curators of Univ. of Mo.,
(1) local law and decisions defining the status and nature of the agency involved in its relation to the sovereign; (2) most importantly, whether the payment of the judgment will have to be made out of the state treasury; (3) whether the agency has the funds or the power to satisfy the judgment; (4) whether the agency is performing a governmental or proprietary function; (5) whether it has been separately incorporated; (6) the degree of autonomy over its operations; (7) whether it has the power to sue and be sued and to enter into contracts; (8) whether its property is immune from state taxation; and (9) whether the sovereign has immunized itself from responsibility for the agency’s operations.
Sherman,
Availability of Non-state Funds
Plaintiff relies heavily on the fact that less than forty percent of I.S.U.’s annual operating budget originates directly from state appropriations. 1 According to plaintiff, these budget figures demonstrate that I.S.U. has ample non-state funds with which to pay any judgment in this case. The fact that I.S.U. generates a substantial amount of income from such things as athletic events, bookstores, and residence halls, and receives money from grants and donations, however, is not dispositive. All state-supported uni-versifies generate income from similar sources and yet, in the vast majority of reported appellate decisions, they have been found to share in their respective, state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. 2
A similar argument was made in
Kashani v. Purdue Univ.,
After reviewing the extensive legislative and executive control over I.S.U.’s finances, I *938 find and conclude that any judgment against 1.5. U. would likewise interfere with the fiscal autonomy of the State of Iowa. I.S.U. is governed by the State Board of Regents (“Board”). Iowa Code § 262.7. The Board is made up of nine members who are appointed by the governor, subject to confirmation by the senate, for six-year terms, and Board members may be removed by the governor, with approval of the senate, for malfeasance in office. Iowa Code §§ 262.2, 262.4. Expenses of the Board and Board employees are paid by the State of Iowa. Iowa Code § 262.29. The number and location of Board meetings is controlled by state law. Iowa Code §§ 262.8, 262.9(18). The Board is responsible for hiring the president and other executive officers of I.S.U. Iowa Code § 262.9(2). The Board directs the expenditure of all state appropriations made to 1.5. U., “and any other moneys belonging thereto * * Iowa Code § 262.9(8). The Board may purchase and sell real estate belonging to I.S.U. only with the approval of the executive council, which consists of the governor, secretary of state, auditor of state, treasurer of state, and secretary of agriculture. Iowa Code § 262.9(6).
The legislature and executive carefully review I.S.U.’s finances in determining the amount of its appropriations. I.S.U. is required by law to provide an office for a state budget analyst who acts as a liaison between 1.5. U. and the state department of management in preparation and execution of the budget. Iowa Code § 8.29.
All financial and statistical data and information prepared or accumulated by the budget analysts shall be made available to the governor and the general assembly for their needs in budgeting and appropriation legislation.
Id. I.S.U. is required to report the receipt of all federal funds and other non-appropriated funds that supplement or replace state appropriations. Iowa Code § 8.44. The state auditor is required to audit I.S.U.’s books at least quarterly, and is required to review the investment practices of the Board. Iowa Code § 11.2. Under Iowa Code § 262.26, the Board is required to
report to the governor and the legislature such facts, observations, and conclusions respecting [I.S.U.] as in the judgment of the board should be considered by the legislature. Such report shall contain an itemized account of the receipts and expenditures of the board, and also the reports made to the board by the executive officers of the several institutions or a summary thereof, and shall submit budgets for biennial appropriations deemed necessary and proper to be made for the support of the several institutions * * *.
I.S.U. is required to file a monthly abstract of all receipts and disbursements with the state director of revenue and finance. Iowa Code § 421.31(6)(d). Any judgment in this case would thus have to be reported to the State of Iowa.
While I.S.U. receives income from sources other than the State of Iowa, direct appropriations from the state and state-authorized tuition is by far the largest segment of the budget. The following passage from Purdue Univ. aptly describes I.S.U.’s situation:
If a judgment were awarded against Purdue, the state treasury would not write out a check to Kashani. But in view of the fact that Purdue is by design dependent on state appropriations, which are evidently carefully geared through close oversight to meet the changing financial needs of the university, it is apparent that the payment would directly affect the state treasury. Indiana has not created an entity with a separate financial basis; it has created one that is dependent upon and functionally integrated with the state treasury.
Purdue Univ.,
Other Sherman Factors
To the extent they are relevant, the remaining factors identified in
Sherman
also point to I.S.U. and the Board sharing in Iowa’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. I.S.U. is a land grant university. In accepting the federal grant, the State of Iowa “assumes the duties, obligations, and responsibilities” imposed by all acts of Congress relating to the grant. Iowa Code § 266.1. Under Iowa case law, I.S.U. is entitled to sovereign immunity for suits brought in state court, and its actions are considered “agency action” under the Iowa Administrative Procedure Act, Iowa Code chapter 17A (IAPA).
See Genetzky v. Iowa State Univ.,
The Iowa State Board of Regents (Board) is a state agency under Iowa Code chapter 262. The Board oversees the University of Northern Iowa (UNI) and its employees are those of the Board for the purposes of this case.
Iowa Code § 266.5, which authorizes the Board to organize an extension service at I.S.U., is captioned “State Agency.” Providing education is clearly a governmental function.
See State v. Trucke,
The State of Iowa exercises a significant amount of influence over the operations of the Board and I.S.U. As discussed above, all Board members are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Senate for six-year terms. The Board in turn selects the executive officers of I.S.U. and acts as the governing body of I.S.U. This power to appoint the members of the Board greatly diminishes the independence of both the Board and the executive officers of I.S.U., as does I.S.U.’s dependency on state appropriations. Perhaps most importantly, the powers and duties of the Board are expressly enumerated in Iowa Code § 262.9, which, of course, can be amended or repealed at any time.
After weighing all the factors identified in Sherman, I conclude that the Board and 1.5. U. share in the State of Iowa’s Eleventh Amendment immunity.
Applying the Eleventh Amendment [3-5] It is well established that, absent a waiver, a suit against a State or one of its agencies or departments brought in federal court is proscribed by the Eleventh Amend
*940
ment regardless of the nature of the relief sought.
5
Pennhurst State School & Hosp. v. Halderman,
Orders
IT IS ORDERED that plaintiffs claims under Iowa Code chapter 216 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against defendants State of Iowa, Iowa State Board of Regents, and I.S.U. are DISMISSED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that to the extent plaintiffs claims under Iowa Code chapter 216 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 are brought against defendants Mack, Jischke, and Brown in their official capacities, plaintiff is limited to seeking prospective, injunctive relief.
Notes
. For the 1992-93 fiscal year, the breakdown of I.S.U.’s budget is as follows:
A) 37.5% from direct appropriations from the state;
B) 13.1% from tuition;
C) 20.7% from federal appropriations, grants, and contracts;
D) 2.0% from reimbursed indirect costs;
E) 1.6% from sales and services;
F) 25.0% from donated funds, endowment income, and auxiliary activities (residence halls, athletic events, university bookstore, etc.).
. An exception is
Kovats v. Rutgers, The State Univ.,
. Furthermore, as both parties agree, the State of Iowa has a duty to defend and indemnify I.S.U. employees from judgments obtained against them for actions taken within the scope of their employment, with some exceptions. Iowa Code § 669.21 provides:
The state shall defend any employee, and shall indemnify and hold harmless an employee against any claim as defined in section 669.2, subsection 3, paragraph “b”, including claims arising under the Constitution, statutes or rules of the United States or of any state. The duty to indemnify and hold harmless shall *939 not apply and the state shall be entitled to restitution from an employee if, in an action commenced by the state against the employee, it is determined that the conduct of the employee upon which a tort claim or demand was based constituted a willful and wanton act or malfeasance in office.
See also Iowa Code § 669.22 (42 U.S.C. § 1983 actions brought in federal court). (While defendants argue, and plaintiff apparently agrees, that the definition of "employee” in section 669.2(4) includes "any state agency,” it is clear to the court that the definition covers only employees of state agencies.)
Plaintiff's first claim is brought against I.S.U. and its employees "jointly and severally." As a practical matter, therefore, indemnification of an I.S.U. employee will constitute an indemnification of I.S.U.
. Even assuming a judgment in this case would have
no
effect on the state treasury, the inquiry would not end here. The
Kovats
court emphasized that "[t]he issue of whether payment is made from the state treasury * * * although important, is not dispositive. * * * If the state structures an entity in such a way that the other relevant criteria indicate it to be an arm of the state, then immunity may be retained even where damage awards are funded by the state at the state's discretion.”
Kovats,
. Congress can abrogate a state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity under its section 5 power to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment if it makes its intention "unmistakably clear.”
See Atascadero State Hosp. v. Scanlon,
