Melinda Myers v. Iowa Board of Regents ( 2022 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 20-2020
    ___________________________
    Melinda Myers; Barbara Stanerson; John Eivins; Liv Kelly-Sellnau; Christopher
    Taylor; Shuna Tosa, on Behalf of Themselves and Others Similarly Situated
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    Iowa Board of Regents
    Defendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Iowa - Eastern
    ____________
    Submitted: September 22, 2021
    Filed: April 5, 2022
    ____________
    Before SHEPHERD, WOLLMAN, and KOBES, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    KOBES, Circuit Judge.
    Employees of the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics sued the Iowa
    Board of Regents for alleged violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act’s overtime
    pay provisions. The district court denied the Board’s motion to dismiss, concluding
    that the Board constructively waived sovereign immunity from private enforcement
    of the FLSA. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
    I.
    The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics (“UIHC”) are state medical
    facilities operated and managed by the Iowa Board of Regents. Plaintiffs, current
    and former employees of the UIHC system, allege that UIHC violated the FLSA by
    paying overtime wages late. Although they get overtime pay each month, Plaintiffs
    claim their overtime wages are not paid with the regular wages earned during a
    particular pay period. Instead, overtime is paid at least one month later.
    Plaintiffs sued the Board in Iowa state court, initially alleging only state law
    claims. The Board removed the case to federal court after Plaintiffs amended their
    complaint to include the FLSA claim. The Board filed a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to
    dismiss, arguing that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the FLSA
    claim because the Board has state sovereign immunity and has not consented to
    private suits under the FLSA. The district court denied the motion, concluding that
    the University of Iowa’s policies, in the context of Iowa’s wage payment statutes,
    are a constructive waiver of sovereign immunity under Iowa law. The Board
    appeals.
    II.
    We generally lack appellate jurisdiction to review the denial of a motion to
    dismiss because it is not a final decision of the district court. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    However, the collateral order doctrine permits interlocutory appeal of a district
    court’s denial of sovereign immunity. Fant v. City of Ferguson, 
    913 F.3d 757
    , 759
    (8th Cir. 2019). “The key to our jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal addressing
    sovereign immunity is whether the immunity is an ‘immunity from suit rather than
    a mere defense to liability.’” Argonaut Great Cent. Ins. Co. v. Audrain Cnty. Joint
    Comm’ns, 
    781 F.3d 925
    , 929 (8th Cir. 2015) (quoting Mitchell v. Forsyth, 
    472 U.S. 511
    , 526 (1985)). Because the Board’s motion was based on sovereign immunity,
    Lloyd v. State, 
    251 N.W.2d 551
    , 555 (Iowa 1977) (“The immunity of the State is
    from suit rather than from liability.”), we have jurisdiction to review the denial of
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    sovereign immunity and do so de novo. Prescott v. Little Six, Inc., 
    387 F.3d 753
    ,
    756 (8th Cir. 2004), abrogated on other grounds by Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 236 (2009).
    III.
    A.
    The Tenth Amendment prohibits Congress from using its Article I authority
    to “subject nonconsenting States to private suits for damages in state courts.” Alden
    v. Maine, 
    527 U.S. 706
    , 712 (1999). As a state entity, the Board of Regents is
    immune from private suits under the FLSA unless Iowa has consented to private
    enforcement of the law. The State can consent to suit by expressly or constructively
    waiving immunity.
    In Anthony v. State, the Iowa Supreme Court held that the State expressly
    waived its immunity from suits seeking to enforce FLSA overtime provisions. 
    632 N.W.2d 897
    , 902 (Iowa 2001). The court found that several sections of the Iowa
    Wage Payment Collection Law, 
    Iowa Code § 91
    (A), and its implementing
    regulations incorporated FLSA wage and overtime pay standards. 
    Id.
     at 901–02.
    Specifically, the court construed § 91A.2(7)’s definition of wages, “compensation
    owed by an employer,” as incorporating the FLSA definition of wages. Id. at 901.
    “Although the impetus for state wage policy involving FLSA overtime pay is the
    mandate of the federal legislation,” the court reasoned that Iowa “acceded to that
    mandate in a manner that establishes the resulting overtime remuneration as
    compensation owed by an employer.” Id. The wage law also provides a private
    cause of action to recover unpaid overtime wages from employers, including the
    State and its agencies. Id. at 902 & n.2 (citing § 91A.8). Further, Iowa Code
    § 19A.9(2) requires the director of the department of personnel to adopt rules
    providing pay plans for state employees. Id. at 901–02. Those rules similarly
    include or adopt FLSA definitions of overtime, overtime covered employees, and
    overtime eligible job classes. Id. at 902 (citing Iowa Admin. Code R. 581-1.1; Iowa
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    Admin. Code rule 581-4.11(2)). Because “the statutory scheme for deriving pay
    plans ha[d] been implemented in a manner that includes FLSA overtime
    remuneration as compensation owed by an employer,” the court concluded that the
    Iowa statute “provide[s] an express consent to sue in the Iowa courts for purposes of
    recovering any compensation thus owed.” Id. at 902.
    The logic of Anthony goes like this: in § 91A.8, the state legislature consented
    to private suits to recover unpaid wages owed by state employers. Section 91A also
    defines “wages” in a manner that the Iowa Supreme Court saw as encompassing
    FLSA overtime pay. Separately, the legislature required the director of personnel to
    create pay plans for state employees. And the resulting plans guaranteed FLSA
    overtime pay. So, because the State promised FLSA overtime to its employees, and
    the statutory consent to recover “wages” broadly includes unpaid FLSA overtime
    pay, the legislature’s consent to private suit in § 91A.8 also operates to provide
    express consent to private enforcement of the FLSA itself.
    Anthony is not dispositive. Iowa Code § 8A.413(1), which replaced
    § 19A.9(2), specifically excludes “employees of the state board of regents” from the
    classifications and pay plans that the director is required to establish for the rest of
    the state workforce. This means that the administrative rules and pay plans
    providing for FLSA overtime do not apply to the Board. The Board is only required
    to “adopt rules not inconsistent with the objectives of this subchapter” for its
    employees.1 § 8A.412(5). Rather than adopt formal pay plans, the Board has
    executed pay plans for the UIHC employees through collective bargaining. Though
    prior versions did address overtime, the current collective bargaining agreement
    does not include an overtime section or a provision incorporating FLSA overtime
    standards.
    1
    The “general purpose” of subchapter 8A.4 is to “establish for the state of
    Iowa a system of human resource administration based on merit principles and
    scientific methods to govern” employment decisions. § 8A.411(1).
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    Based on this, the district court concluded that the State had not expressly
    waived the Board of Regents’ sovereign immunity. We agree. The Iowa Supreme
    Court’s reasoning in Anthony relied on the administrative rules implementing FLSA
    overtime standards in response to the legislature’s directive to provide pay plans for
    state employees. In the Iowa Supreme Court’s view, this regulatory guarantee of
    FLSA overtime wages combined with a private cause of action to recover unpaid
    wages from state employers amounted to express waiver of immunity from suits
    under the FLSA itself. But § 8A.413 breaks the chain of consent by exempting the
    Board from those administrative pay plans. In other words, FLSA overtime isn’t
    guaranteed for Board of Regents employees. And because its own pay agreements
    don’t separately provide FLSA overtime standards, the Board hasn’t consented to
    private accountability to those standards. Because neither the legislature nor the
    Board has guaranteed FLSA overtime standards to Board employees, unlike in
    Anthony, the Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law’s private cause of action cannot
    work as an express consent to suits under the FLSA itself.
    B.
    Next, we ask whether the Board implicitly consented to suit. Unlike the
    federal courts’ rejection of implied waiver, Iowa courts retain the doctrine of
    constructive waiver of sovereign immunity. Compare Coll. Sav. Bank v. Fla.
    Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd., 
    527 U.S. 666
    , 680–82 (1999) (federal
    rejection of constructive waiver), with Lee v. Polk Cnty. Clerk of Ct., 
    815 N.W.2d 731
    , 741–42 (Iowa 2012) (applying constructive waiver doctrine). Constructive
    waiver is a separate and distinct theory of waiver “based on the public policy that it
    would be abhorrent to permit the State to enter into contracts with no corresponding
    obligation to perform its promises under the contract.” Lee, 815 N.W.2d at 741.
    When the State enters into a contract or otherwise voluntarily assumes legal
    consequences, courts may find the government constructively waived its immunity
    from suit. See, e.g., State v. Dvorak, 
    261 N.W.2d 486
    , 488–89 (Iowa 1978); Kersten
    Co., Inc. v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    207 N.W.2d 117
    , 122 (Iowa 1973). “[P]rovisions
    contained in state employee handbooks can support constructive waiver of sovereign
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    immunity,” even when the provisions don’t create an enforceable contract. Lee, 815
    N.W.2d at 742.
    Plaintiffs argue that UIHC’s policies create the legal consequence of
    accountability to the FLSA. In support they point to several employment materials,
    including the University Operations Manual, Employee Manual, Employee
    Handbook, and Human Resources website, that reference or incorporate FLSA
    overtime standards. The University HR website goes so far as to state that
    “[e]mployees working in excess of 40 hours per week are required to be paid
    overtime premium pay, unless they qualify for exemption from the FLSA
    requirement.” Plaintiffs argue that this shows that the Board has voluntarily
    accepted the legal consequences of the FLSA. The district court reasoned that
    “regardless of whether UIHC’s policies and agreements establish enforceable
    provisions of a contract, the Board can be presumed to have entered into these
    employment agreements and drafted its employee policies with knowledge of the
    condition of Iowa law defining payments made under them as ‘wages’ subject to the
    IWPCL.” Myers v. Iowa Bd. of Regents, 
    458 F. Supp. 3d 1075
    , 1083 (S.D. Iowa
    2020) (citation omitted). It then concluded that the Board constructively waived
    sovereign immunity because the “agreements and policies, placed in context of the
    IWPCL statutory scheme, reflect[] that [the Board] has ‘acceded to that mandate of
    the FLSA in a manner that establishes the resulting overtime remuneration as
    compensation owed by an employer.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Anthony, 
    632 N.W.2d at 901
    )
    (cleaned up). In other words, because the Board was aware of the statutory scheme
    described in Anthony, the UIHC policies guaranteeing overtime show the Board
    accepted the legal consequences of the FLSA overtime provisions such that it
    constructively waived its immunity to suits under the FLSA.
    But the district court’s reasoning assumes that UIHC’s policies and
    agreements are attributable to the Board. However, it did not make a specific finding
    on that issue—that the Board authorized, adopted, or otherwise approved the policies
    and agreements. The University of Iowa system is subordinate to the Board of
    Regents. Though the University of Iowa system may benefit from the Board’s
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    immunity at times, the University lacks independent authority to abrogate it. Cf.
    City of McGregor v. Janett, 
    546 N.W.2d 616
    , 620 (Iowa 1996) (citation omitted)
    (“This court has long held that acts by individual members of a public body, even
    when concurred in by the majority, cannot bind the municipality unless officially
    sanctioned in accordance with the statute.”). This is especially true in constructive
    waiver, which centers on voluntary acceptance of legal consequences. Unless UIHC
    has the authority to bind the Board to an agreement, it cannot accept legal
    consequences on the Board’s behalf. Only the Board’s conduct can constructively
    waive its immunity.2
    Because the district court did not address this issue, and it affects our subject
    matter jurisdiction, we remand for the district court to consider in the first instance
    whether the legal consequences of UIHC’s policies and agreements can be imputed
    to the Board. Cf. Alexis Bailly Vineyard, Inc. v. Harrington, 
    931 F.3d 774
    , 780 (8th
    Cir. 2019) (“Although the issue was briefed before the district court, the district court
    did not reach it and it is our practice to remand such claims ‘[w]hen it would be
    beneficial for the district court to consider an . . . argument in the first instance.’”).
    IV.
    We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    ______________________________
    2
    Presumably the conduct of a superior state entity, like the legislature, could
    also constructively waive the Board’s immunity.
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