Cink v. Grant County, OK , 635 F. App'x 470 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                 FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        Tenth Circuit
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                      November 27, 2015
    _________________________________
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    TWILLADEAN CINK,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.                                                        No. 15-6030
    (D.C. No. 5:13-CV-01069-C)
    GRANT COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, a                                 (W.D. Okla.)
    political subdivision which is sued in the
    name of the Board of County
    Commissioners for Grant County,
    Oklahoma,
    Defendant - Appellee,
    and
    SCOTT STERLING, individually,
    Defendant.
    _________________________________
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
    _________________________________
    Before TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge, HOLMES and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    Plaintiff Twilladean Cink appeals from a grant of summary judgment in favor
    of defendant Grant County, Oklahoma, on her claims under the Age Discrimination
    *
    After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
    unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist in the determination of
    this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
    ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is not binding
    precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral
    estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with
    Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, and the Americans with
    Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12213.1 The district court concluded
    that Grant County was not her employer and therefore was not subject to liability
    under either statute. We hold that the district court applied the wrong analysis and
    reached the wrong conclusion regarding the County’s status as Ms. Cink’s employer.
    We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Ms. Cink worked as a jailer/dispatcher at the Grant County Sheriff’s Office for
    over thirty years. In June 2013, a few months after returning to work from a medical
    leave of absence, she was terminated by the newly elected Sheriff, Scott Sterling.
    Following exhaustion of administrative remedies, she brought this action alleging,
    inter alia, that her termination was the result of age and disability discrimination, as
    well as retaliation for activities protected under the ADEA and ADA. Grant County,
    the defendant on these claims,2 moved for summary judgment on various grounds.
    The first of these, and the sole ground relied on by the district court in granting the
    motion, was that Ms. Cink’s employer for purposes of the ADEA and ADA was the
    Grant County Sheriff’s Office, not Grant County itself.
    1
    The district court’s concomitant election not to exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction over Ms. Cink’s remaining state-law claims resulted in a final disposition
    of the action for purposes of appeal. See generally Amazon, Inc. v. Dirt Camp, Inc.,
    
    273 F.3d 1271
    , 1274-75 (10th Cir. 2001).
    2
    Grant County is “a body corporate and politic and as such [is] empowered
    . . . [t]o sue and be sued.” Okla. Stat. tit. 19, § 1. As the caption of this case reflects,
    “[i]n all suits or proceedings by or against a county, the name in which a county shall
    sue or be sued shall be, ‘Board of County Commissioners of the County.’” 
    Id. § 4.
                                                 2
    The district court resolved that question by applying the “joint employer” and
    “single employer” tests adopted by this court for determining employer status when
    multiple employer-entities may be involved. See Bristol v. Bd. of Cty. Commr’s,
    
    312 F.3d 1213
    , 1218 (10th Cir. 2002) (en banc). While these tests frame the analysis
    differently, the district court correctly observed that both look to the control the
    alleged employer-entities exercised over conditions of employment—in either a
    separate-but-joint or effectively-unitary manner, see 
    id. at 1218
    (summarizing
    joint-employer test), 1220 (summarizing single-employer test). The district court
    acknowledged that Grant County was responsible for funding the Sheriff’s Office
    payroll, but emphasized that the Sheriff was responsible for hiring, training, and
    supervising staff and, indeed, made the decision to terminate Ms. Cink. The district
    court concluded that Grant County did not meet either test, because it exercised no
    supervisory control over Ms. Cink individually or over labor relations in the Sheriff’s
    Office generally.
    The district court did not, however, address Ms. Cink’s distinct argument,
    under Owens v. Rush, 
    636 F.2d 283
    (10th Cir. 1980), that Grant County was her
    employer under basic agency principles, because the Sheriff is a Grant County officer
    and the Sheriff’s Office merely a subordinate department of Grant County. We note
    in this regard that a different judge of the same district court relied on Owens (and
    distinguished Bristol) to reach just such a conclusion in an ADEA/Title VII action
    brought against Grant County by another Grant County Sheriff’s staff member.
    See Payne v. Grant Cty., Okla., No. CIV-14-362-M, 
    2015 WL 4925782
    , *2-*3
    3
    (W.D. Okla. Aug. 18, 2015).3 As explained below, we conclude that Owens provides
    the proper analysis here.
    II. THE HOLDINGS OF BRISTOL AND OWENS
    In Bristol, a confinement officer working for the Sheriff of Clear Creek
    County, Colorado, brought suit against the Sheriff (in his official capacity) and the
    Clear Creek Board of County Commissioners for alleged disability discrimination,
    asserting that both the Sheriff and the Board qualified as her employers for purposes
    of the ADA.4 “Under the Colorado constitution, the County Sheriff is a distinct
    position, separate from the Board of County Commissioners.” 
    Bristol, 312 F.3d at 1219
    (citing constitutional provisions separately prescribing the election of county
    commissioners and the election of sheriffs and other county officers). Thus, the
    circumstances in Bristol were suited to the joint-employer and single-employer tests,
    which “are designed for situations where there is more than one alleged employer.”
    
    Id. at 1218;
    see also 
    id. at 1218
    n.5 (noting that “[i]n various factual contexts, other
    tests have been followed by the courts, such as the agency test, the alter ego test, and
    the instrumentality test,” but “[b]ecause the joint-employer test and single-employer
    test are most applicable to the present factual context, we will limit our analysis to
    3
    Ms. Cink properly brought the Payne decision to this court’s attention
    through a notification pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 28(j).
    4
    We refer at various points to employer status under the ADA, ADEA, and
    Title VII. There are no material differences in these statutes for our purposes. All
    refer broadly to a “person” (specified, or judicially interpreted, to include political
    subdivisions) “engaged in an industry affecting commerce who has [a requisite
    number of] employees.” 29 U.S.C. § 630(b) (ADA); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b) (Title VII)
    42 U.S.C. § 12111(5)(A) (ADEA).
    4
    these two tests”). Relying heavily on the fact that the Sheriff, and not the Board,
    exercised control over labor relations in the Sheriff’s Office, this court held that the
    Board could not be deemed the employer under the ADA. See 
    id. at 1219-20.
    In Owens, a Sheriff’s deputy brought suit under Title VII against the Sheriff of
    Wabaunsee County, Kansas, the Wabaunsee County Board of Commissioners, and
    Wabaunsee County itself. Focusing on the Sheriff as the only potential employer, the
    district court dismissed the suit because the Sheriff’s department did not have the
    fifteen employees required for application of Title VII. This court reversed, making
    two points relevant to the present action—viz., a Sheriff may be an agent of the
    County for Title VII purposes, and in assessing whether such an agency relationship
    exists the court should not conflate the County with the County Board:
    The district court concluded that the Sheriff should not be
    considered an agent of the county for purposes of hiring and firing Sheriff
    department employees because the Board of County Commissioners had
    little, if any, control over the Sheriff in such matters. Absent a “nexus”
    between the Board and the improper conduct, the court felt it unwise to
    impose Title VII liability on the County.
    The analysis employed by the district court apparently considers
    Wabaunsee County and the Board of County Commissioners as the same
    entity. In this lies the error. It is true that the County acts by and through
    the Board. However, the “Board” is not the “County.” The County is a
    political subdivision encompassing and representing all citizens within its
    boundaries. The Board acts on behalf of the County—as its agent.
    Similarly, the Sheriff is an agent of the County. Like the Board
    members, he is elected by the body politic and acts on its behalf in
    enforcing the state’s laws. The Sheriff is an agent of the County for all
    purposes under his control and jurisdiction. He is an agent of the County
    whether or not he would be considered an agent of the Board of County
    Commissioners under traditional agency principles.
    5
    
    Owens, 636 F.2d at 286
    (footnotes omitted). Significantly, this agency relationship
    sufficed to show that the County was the employer of Sheriff staff without need to
    resort to principles for treating distinct entities as one (as was later done in Bristol):
    “The sheriff and the county in this case are more analogous to a department and the
    corporation it operates within than to separate corporate entities.” 
    Id. at 286
    n.2.
    Finally, we added that “[a] fair interpretation of Title VII confirms our conclusion
    that the Sheriff should be considered an agent of the County,” explaining that
    “[w]hatever the reason for excluding employers with fewer than fifteen employees
    from Title VII coverage, it should not be construed to exempt a political subdivision
    with many employees from Title VII proscriptions on grounds that the immediate
    employing agent has fewer than fifteen employees.” 
    Id. at 287.
    The same point
    applies equally to the ADA and ADEA, with their exclusions for employers with
    fewer than fifteen and twenty employees, respectively, see 42 U.S.C. § 12111(5)(A);
    29 U.S.C. § 630(b).
    To sum up: Bristol held that the Sheriff was a distinct entity from the County
    Board of Commissioners and, consequently, the Board could not be deemed an
    employer of Sheriff’s staff absent satisfaction of one of the tests for imputing
    employer status between separate entities; Owens held that the Sheriff was not a
    distinct entity from—but rather an agent of—the County and, consequently, the
    County was properly deemed the employer of Sheriff’s staff under traditional agency
    principles. In its appellate brief, Grant County refers dismissively to Owens as
    “outdated,” Aplee. Response Br. at 26, raising the suggestion that the en banc Bristol
    6
    decision superseded Owens and its agency analysis. We turn to the relationship
    between Bristol and Owens next.
    III. VITALITY AND REACH OF OWENS AFTER BRISTOL
    Bristol did not abrogate Owens. As a general matter, Bristol did not hold that
    the joint-employer and single-employer tests it relied on displaced all other principles
    relating to the analysis of employer status under federal employment-discrimination
    statutes. Rather, it noted that the applicability of the tests it applied was a function of
    the circumstances it confronted—involving multiple separate entities as alleged
    potential employers—and that different principles could properly govern in other
    circumstances. See 
    Bristol, 312 F.3d at 1218
    & n.5.
    More specifically, Bristol explicitly acknowledged Owens and distinguished,
    rather than disavowed, its agency-based holding. See 
    Bristol, 312 F.3d at 1220-21
    .
    Bristol held that Owens’ agency analysis applies when the employee-numerosity
    requirement is implicated (i.e., when disregarding the agency relationship between
    Sheriff and County would leave the court without subject matter jurisdiction to
    remedy prohibited discrimination):
    Owens did conclude that a Kansas Sheriff was an agent of the County, but
    for the sole purpose of satisfying the fifteen-employee jurisdictional
    requirement of Title VII. No such jurisdictional question is at issue in the
    present case, because the Sheriff of Clear Creek had more than fifteen
    employees. Because we are presently faced with a case where the
    jurisdictional requirement is indisputably met, Owens is not implicated.
    
    Bristol, 312 F.3d at 1220-21
    (citation omitted). Here, as in Owens, the federal
    employment-discrimination claims would, if asserted separately against the Sheriff’s
    7
    department, fail the jurisdictional numerosity requirement. To fall within the ADA
    or ADEA, an employer must have fifteen or twenty employees, respectively, “for
    each working day in each of 20 or more calendar weeks in the current or preceding
    calendar year.” 42 U.S.C § 12111(5)(A); 29 U.S.C. § 630(b).5 An interrogatory
    answer from Grant County indicates that the Sheriff’s department had no more than
    twelve employees in any given week during the relevant period. See Aplt. App. at
    675-78.
    Of course, to hold that Owens’ agency principle remains available to attribute
    employer status to a County under the federal employment-discrimination statutes is
    not to hold that the principle necessarily applies under the circumstances of any
    particular case. We must still determine whether the Grant County Sheriff should be
    treated as an agent of Grant County.
    IV. SHERIFF AS AGENT OF GRANT COUNTY (SHERIFF’S OFFICE
    AS SUBORDINATE DEPARTMENT OF GRANT COUNTY)
    Under Oklahoma law, the County is a body politic and corporate, Okla. Const.
    Art. XVII, § 1, encompassing several offices including the office of an elected
    Sheriff, 
    id. § 2;
    Okla. Stat. tit. 19, § 131(A), who acts on the County’s behalf by
    5
    We note there has been some question whether the numerosity requirement in
    the ADEA applies to government employers. When the ADEA was amended to
    clarify that it covered political subdivisions, the sentence added to § 630(b) to make
    that point did not refer back to the numerosity requirement. A number of circuits
    have now confirmed, based on legislative history showing a general intent to treat
    government and private employers the same, that the numerosity requirement applies
    to political subdivisions. See, e.g., Palmer v. Ark. Council on Econ. Educ., 
    154 F.3d 892
    , 896 (8th Cir. 1998); EEOC v. Monclova Twp., 
    920 F.2d 360
    , 363 (6th Cir.
    1990); Kelly v. Wauconda Park Dist., 
    801 F.2d 269
    , 273 (7th Cir. 1986). We adopt
    that view here.
    8
    enforcing the state’s laws within its boundaries, see Okla. Stat. tit. 19, § 516(A).
    The same basic points under Kansas law were enough for this court to hold in Owens
    that the Sheriff was an agent of the County and the Sheriff’s staff were perforce
    County employees. See 
    Owens, 636 F.2d at 286
    . In addition, the Oklahoma County
    Budget Act defines the Sheriff as a County officer, Okla. Stat. tit. 19, § 1404(8), and
    the Sheriff’s Office as a constituent department of the County, see 
    id. tit. 19,
    § 1404(7), (11). The state Governmental Tort Claims Act (GTCA) likewise
    recognizes County officers and their staffs as County employees, 
    id. tit. 51,
    §§ 152(7)(a)(1), (11)(c), who are thereby insulated from tort liability (borne instead
    by the County through respondeat superior) for acts within the scope of their
    employment, see 
    id. tit. 51,
    § 152.1.
    Reflecting the above legal provisions in more concrete practical terms, the
    Grant County “Employee Personnel Policy Handbook” defines employees of the
    County “as those deputies and employees employed by or serving at the pleasure of
    the elected [county] officials,” Aplt. App. at 249, and directs County officials to
    instruct each new hire to “report to the County Clerk’s Office for enrollment as a
    county employee,” 
    id. at 250.
    And Grant County does not dispute that it paid Ms.
    Cink’s wages, see Okla. Stat. tit. 19, § 153 (providing for County payment of salaries
    of county officers and their deputies and clerks), and enrolled her in its retirement
    plan, see 
    id. tit. 19
    § 957 (providing for County employee retirement plan for officers
    and employees). To be sure, Grant County points out that it is the Sheriff, and not
    the County Board, who oversees Sheriff’s staff and was responsible for the prohibited
    9
    conduct alleged here. But this was also true in Owens, where “[t]he district court
    concluded that the Sheriff should not be considered an agent of the county for
    purposes of hiring and firing Sheriff department employees because the Board of
    County Commissioners had little, if any, control over the Sheriff in such matters.”
    
    Owens, 636 F.2d at 286
    . We deemed the point immaterial to the County’s liability as
    employer under the federal employment-discrimination statutes: “[I]t is
    inappropriate to condition the County’s liability on whether the allegedly improper
    act was committed by the Board or the Sheriff when both are agents of the same
    political entity—the County.” 
    Owens, 636 F.2d at 286
    .
    Grant County has not cited any authority, statutory or case law, that undercuts
    application of Owens’ agency principle here. We have, however, discovered a
    decision of the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals that appears facially inconsistent
    with such a result. In Bryson v. Oklahoma County ex rel. Oklahoma County
    Detention Center, 
    261 P.3d 627
    (Okla. Civ. App. 2011), the County was sued,
    pursuant to the GTCA, under a respondeat superior theory for an alleged assault
    committed by a Sheriff’s deputy. The state trial court dismissed the claim on the
    basis that the deputy had not acted within the scope of his employment. After
    rejecting this rationale for dismissal, the court of appeals affirmed on the alternative
    basis that the deputy was not a County employee: “[I]t is apparent from the record
    that [the deputy] was employed by the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office.
    Therefore, . . . the County was not [the deputy’s] employer.” 
    Id. at 632.
    But the
    unstated premise of the court of appeals’ truncated syllogism, i.e., that employment
    10
    in the County Sheriff’s Office precluded—rather than reflected—employment by the
    County, rested on little analysis and no precedent from the state supreme court (or
    additional authority from the court of appeals). And in any event, Bryson’s holding
    does nothing more than underscore the Sheriff’s direct supervisory responsibility for
    Sheriff’ staff, which may be significant for purposes of respondeat superior liability
    under state tort law but, as we have seen, is not the focus of our analysis of the
    County’s liability for purposes of the federal employment-discrimination statutes
    under Owens.
    The notion of “employer” in the federal statutes is not limited to employment
    per se, but also explicitly incorporates agency. Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 
    524 U.S. 742
    , 754 (1998) (referring to definition in Title VII6). Thus, “Congress has
    directed federal courts to interpret [these statutes] based on agency principles,” and
    for that we must “rely on the general common law of agency, rather than on the law
    of any particular State.” 
    Id. at 754-55
    (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (characterizing “[t]he resulting federal rule[s]” as “statutory interpretation pursuant
    to congressional direction”). The rule of Owens constitutes just such an agency
    principle and, per Ellerth, is not constrained by narrow state-law pronouncements
    regarding the scope of the strict employer-employee relationship. Consequently, the
    state court of appeals’ summary holding about the lack of such a relationship between
    the County and the Sheriff’s staff in Bryson, which involved a distinct state law
    6
    The definitions of employer in the ADEA and ADA also refer to agents.
    See 29 U.S.C. § 630(b); 42 U.S.C. § 12111(5)(A).
    11
    context and turned on considerations lacking material import here, does not cause us
    to question our resolution of this case under Owens.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above we conclude that, for purposes of the ADEA and
    ADA, Grant County qualifies as statutory “employer” of Grant County Sheriff staff,
    including Ms. Cink. The entry of summary judgment for Grant County therefore
    cannot stand on the legal basis invoked by the district court. And, because dismissal
    of the supplemental state-law claims was predicated on the failure of these federal
    claims, that disposition likewise cannot stand on its stated rationale. Of course, our
    holding here does not mean Ms. Cink must ultimately prevail. Grant County remains
    entitled to assert other defenses, at trial or indeed on summary judgment, to her
    federal and state claims.
    The judgment of the district court is reversed and remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this order and judgment.
    Entered for the Court
    Jerome A. Holmes
    Circuit Judge
    12