Donlon v. Montgomery Co. Public Schools , 460 Md. 62 ( 2018 )


Menu:
  • Brian Donlon v. Montgomery County Public Schools, No. 68, September Term 2017,
    Opinion by Harrell, J.
    STATE WHISTLE BLOWER PROTECTION ACT – COUNTY SCHOOL
    BOARDS AND TEACHERS – NOT STATE EMPLOYEES NOR UNITS OF THE
    EXECUTIVE BRANCH FOR PURPOSES OF THE WHISTLEBLOWER
    PROTECTION ACT
    The Court of Appeals held that a county board of education is not an entity of the State or
    a unit of the Executive Branch of State government for purposes of the Maryland State
    Whistleblower Protection Law, Md. Code (1993, 2015 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.), §§ 5–301–
    314 (the “WBL”) of the State Personnel and Pensions Article. Consequently, its teachers
    are not protected by the WBL. County school boards have both State and local
    characteristics, and the appropriate designation of a county board (be it State versus local)
    depends on the context of the board’s particular authority or function under the judicial
    microscope. Moreover, the plain language and legislative intent of the WBL extends no
    protection to county public school employees or teachers. This conclusion is supported by
    the recent enactment of the Public School Employee Whistleblower Protection Act (the
    “PSEWPA”), Md. Code (2017, 2018 Repl. Vol.), §§ 6-901–906 of the Education Article
    (“Educ.”) (effective 1 October 2017), which extends expressly whistleblower protection to
    “any individual who is employed by a public school employer or an individual of
    equivalent status in Baltimore City.” The PSEWPA excludes, however, state employees
    from its umbrella of protection. The Maryland Legislature was of the view that the
    PSEWPA was needed because the WBL did not extend whistleblower protection to public
    school teachers.
    JUDICIAL ESTOPPEL – ELEMENTS – APPLICABILITY
    The Court of Appeals explained again that the three-part test for judicial estoppel outlined
    by the intermediate appellate court in Mont. Cnty Pub. Sch. v. Donlon, 
    233 Md. App. 646
    ,
    651–52, 
    168 A.3d 1012
    , 1015 (2017), is appropriate given the Court’s recent use of the
    same three-part test in Bank of New York Mellon v. Georg, 
    456 Md. 616
    , 
    175 A.3d 720
    (2017), and, in Blentlinger, LLC v. Cleanwater Linganore, Inc., 
    456 Md. 272
    , 
    173 A.3d 549
    (2017). The Court held unnecessary addressing further judicial estoppel when the first
    prerequisite that must exist for its application was not satisfied in the case. The contention
    that an entity is immune from suit on the grounds of sovereign immunity resulting from its
    State stature is not inconsistent with the assertion that county boards are neither units of
    the Executive Branch of our State government, nor entities of the State, for purposes of the
    WBL.
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County
    Case No. 409897
    Argued: May 2, 2018
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 68
    SEPTEMBER TERM, 2017
    BRIAN DONLON
    v.
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY PUBLIC
    SCHOOLS
    Barbera, C.J.,
    Greene
    Adkins
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.,
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)
    JJ.
    Opinion by Harrell, J.
    Filed: July 12, 2018
    2018-07-12
    08:41-04:00
    This is how it is today: The teachers are afraid of the principals. The
    principals are afraid of the superintendents. The superintendents are afraid
    of the board of education. The board is afraid of the parents. The parents
    are afraid of the children. The children are afraid of nothing!
    —Milton Berle (1908-2002)
    (TV and Motion Picture Icon)
    Although Uncle Miltie’s thesis is debatable, the quotation recognizes a chain-of-
    command structure popular in American public education systems. The present case has
    something to do with a part of that structure in Maryland.
    We confront here the question of whether a teacher in the Montgomery County
    Public School (“MCPS”) system (or any such system likely) is protected by the Maryland
    State Whistleblower Protection Law, Md. Code (1993, 2015 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.), §§
    5–301–314 (the “WBL”) of the State Personnel and Pensions Article (“SPP”). Petitioner,
    Brian Donlon, contends that teachers employed by the county school board are embraced
    within the WBL because the county school board is a unit of the Executive Branch of State
    government.1 Further, Donlon argues that Respondent, MCPS, should be estopped from
    1
    Donlon’s contention that the county school board is a unit of the Executive Branch
    of State government is determinative of whether the county school board is an entity of the
    State. Reduced to a syllogism, from his assumption that the county board is a State entity,
    Donlon asserts that the local board must be a unit of the Executive branch because it is not
    part of the Judicial or Legislative branches. Thus, an affirmative answer to that question
    leads inexorably to the conclusion that a county school teacher is a State Executive branch
    employee.
    contending that it is not a State agency because MCPS has asserted frequently in other
    contexts State agency status.
    In its defense, MCPS finds comfort in Chesapeake Charter, Inc. v. Anne Arundel
    County Board of Education, 
    358 Md. 129
    , 
    747 A.2d 625
    (2000), for its view that it and its
    employees are not a part of the Executive Branch of State government for purposes of the
    WBL. As regards judicial estoppel, MCPS observes that there is nothing in Maryland law
    preventing an entity from contending in litigation that it is, in one context, a State agency,
    but a local county governmental entity for other purposes, as long as the contexts are
    dissimilar substantively and each supports independently the respective assertions.
    Facts and Proceedings
    Because the question we confront is a purely legal one, we shall provide only such
    factual background as needed to supply important context.
    In 2012, Donlon, a teacher at Rockville’s Richard Montgomery High School
    (“RMHS”) in the MCPS system, discovered what he believed was an inflation by RMHS
    staff and administration of its Advanced Placement (“AP”) course statistics. Donlon
    accused RMHS of “awarding students credit on their report cards and transcripts when
    the[] [relevant] classes were in fact [Middle Years Program] classes and did not meet the
    criteria set by the College Board for AP credit.” Donlon reported ultimately RMHS’s
    alleged inflation of AP statistics to the County Superintendent. The Superintendent
    discounted Donlon’s contentions.
    Donlon contacted a journalist at The Washington Post, informing him of RMHS’s
    “wrongdoing.” The journalist interviewed members of the MCPS administration regarding
    2
    Donlon’s claim. As a consequence, Donlon contends that members of RMHS’ faculty
    supervisors retaliated against him,2 in violation of the WBL, for his revelations to the print
    media. Donlon filed with the Maryland Department of Budget and Management (“DBM”)
    a WBL complaint against MCPS.3 Donlon requested “compensatory damages, punitive
    damages, costs and attorney’s fees, and equitable relief.” Mont. Cnty Pub. Sch. v. Donlon,
    
    233 Md. App. 646
    , 651–52, 
    168 A.3d 1012
    , 1015 (2017), cert. granted, 
    456 Md. 522
    , 
    175 A.3d 150
    (2017).
    2
    Donlon contends that after his disclosure, the RMHS administration “shunned”
    him.
    Donlon further alleged that [Kim] Lansell[,the chair of Donlon’s
    department,] and Josh Neuman–Sunshine, the assistant principal, falsely
    accused him of not preparing a substitute teacher properly. . . .
    Donlon alleged the school retaliated against him for speaking to the
    newspaper about the story when in the fall semester he was assigned no AP
    courses. In June 2013, Donlon was assigned to teach AP Psychology, a
    course that he had requested not to teach because he believed that he did not
    have the requisite background to teach it. The next year, in June 2014, MCPS
    reassigned Donlon as a floating teacher. Later in October 2014, Donlon
    inquired of [Lansell] why he was teaching a large class without a
    paraeducator, and Lansell responded very rudely to him.
    On October 24, 2014, Damon Monteleone ([RMHS’s] new principal), and
    Lansell called Donlon to a meeting to speak to him about how he had been
    absent from work 42 times during the 2012–13 school year. Donlon
    responded that most of those absences were due to union meetings, teacher
    trainings, and the like.
    Mont. Cnty Pub. Sch. v. Donlon, 
    233 Md. App. 646
    , 651–52, 
    168 A.3d 1012
    , 1015 (2017),
    cert. granted, 
    456 Md. 522
    , 
    175 A.3d 150
    (2017).
    3
    The DBM is the agency responsible for overseeing the WBL. White v. Register of
    Wills of A. A. Cnty., 
    217 Md. App. 187
    , 193, 
    90 A.3d 1213
    , 1216 (2014); see also SPP §§
    5-303, 309; COMAR 17.04.08.01.
    3
    The Office of the Statewide Equal Employment Opportunity Coordinator
    (“OSEEOC”), as the designee of the Secretary of the DBM, conducted a review of
    Donlon’s whistleblower complaint.4 The DBM concluded that Donlon’s complaint
    does not meet the jurisdictional requirements of the Maryland Whistleblower
    Law. In accordance with SPP § 5–301, the [WBL] applies to employees and
    State employees who are applicants for [a] position in the Executive Branch
    of State government . . . . MCPS [ ] is not an Executive Branch agency of
    State government, and therefore [Donlon’s] complaint is not subject to
    investigation by this office. Accordingly, [Donlon’s] complaint is dismissed.
    Donlon appealed the DBM’s ruling to the Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings
    (“OAH”). After a hearing, an OAH Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) affirmed the
    DBM’s decision, holding that
    there was no jurisdiction to hear the whistleblower claim because Donlon
    was not an employee of the Executive Branch of State government. The ALJ
    noted that the State government’s [E]xecutive branch contains 19 principal
    departments, each of which contain subordinate units, and that MCPS is not
    among them. The ALJ also observed that the State Board establishes policies
    and guidelines throughout the State, but that it is the county boards of
    education that employ principals and teachers. The ALJ found that Donlon
    submitted no evidence that he was an employee of the executive branch and
    that there was no employer/employee relationship between Donlon and the
    executive branch. Accordingly, the ALJ concluded that Donlon was not an
    executive branch employee, that he could not bring a whistleblower
    complaint pursuant to the WBL, and that DBM and the OAH did not have
    jurisdiction to hear the case.
    
    Donlon, 233 Md. App. at 655
    , 168 A.3d at 1017.
    Donlon filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Montgomery
    County. The circuit court, in reversing the ALJ, expressed disagreement with MCPS’s
    4
    The DBM secretary may name a designee to investigate the merits of any WBL
    complaint. See SPP § 5-309 (b)-(d).
    4
    argument that it may assert its status as a State entity under certain circumstances, but
    maintain that it is a local agency in other situations:
    THE COURT: Just so I’m clear. So [MCPS] thinks it is okay to wrap itself
    within the protection of the [Eleventh] Amendment to avoid getting sued in
    federal court but when you come into the coordinate Brach [sic] and [S]tate
    courts [and] say no, no, no, no. We’re not [S]tate agencies for the purposes
    of [SPP] 5-301.
    *              *           *
    THE COURT: [MCPS]’s argument is frivolous, to be blunt.
    *              *           *
    [THE COURT:] It is deeply troubling to me that [MCPS] wants to be
    shielded when it is good for them and not part of the State when it’s not good
    for them.
    MCPS appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. As pertinent to the certiorari
    questions for which we granted the petition in this case (discussed infra), our appellate
    colleagues – in reliance on Chesapeake Charter, 
    358 Md. 129
    , 
    747 A.2d 625
    – held “that
    public school teachers employed by county boards of education are not employees of the
    Executive Branch of State government.” 
    Donlon, 233 Md. App. at 665
    , 168 A.3d at 1023.5
    The court concluded also that
    in light of the “substantial weight” we accord DBM’s view, see White [v.
    Register of Wills of Anne Arundel County], 217 Md. App. [187], 193, 
    90 A.3d 1213
    , [1216 (2014)] and the fact that nothing in the statutory text of SPP §
    5–301 supports Donlon’s argument, we conclude that, as a matter of statutory
    construction, the WBL does not apply to public school teachers employed by
    county boards of education because they are not employees of the executive
    branch.
    5
    The intermediate appellate court, by concluding that public school teachers are not
    a part of the Executive branch, held (implicitly) that county boards of education are not
    units of the State Executive branch.
    5
    
    Donlon, 233 Md. App. at 666
    –67, 168 A.3d at 1024. The court echoed that “an entity may
    qualify as a State agency for some purposes, while being classified as a local agency for
    other purposes.” See Wash. Suburban Sanitary Comm’n v. Phillips, 
    413 Md. 606
    , 632, 
    994 A.2d 411
    , 427 (2010). Therefore, in the context of Donlon’s argument that MCPS should
    be estopped from disclaiming its State agency stature in the present case, the court held
    that the
    applicability of the WBL to MCPS, and MCPS’s assertion of sovereign
    immunity [] are both quintessential issues of law, not of fact. It doesn’t matter
    whether a party takes an inconsistent position compared to one taken in
    previous litigation. Legal arguments are not judicially estopped. . . . [Thus,]
    [t]he county boards were simply asserting legal arguments available to them.
    . . . [and] MCPS is not judicially estopped from arguing that it is not a State
    agency for purposes of the WBL.
    
    Donlon, 233 Md. App. at 675
    –76, 168 A.3d at 1029–30.
    We granted Donlon’s petition for a writ of certiorari, Donlon v. Mont. Cnty. Pub.
    Sch., 
    456 Md. 522
    , 
    175 A.3d 150
    (2017), to consider the following questions:
    I.   What is the relationship of county school employees to the State in the
    context of Maryland whistleblower protection laws?
    II.   What distinctions [, if any,] matter in Maryland’s application of the doctrine
    of judicial estoppel?
    Standard of Review
    We explained in Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Shea, 
    415 Md. 1
    , 14–15, 
    997 A.2d 768
    ,
    775–76 (2010) (quoting Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Delawter, 
    403 Md. 243
    , 256–57, 
    941 A.2d 1067
    , 1076 (2008)), that
    [a] court’s role in reviewing an administrative agency adjudicatory decision
    is narrow; it is limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in the
    6
    record as a whole to support the agency’s findings and conclusions, and to
    determine if the administrative decision is premised upon an erroneous
    conclusion of law.
    In applying the substantial evidence test, a reviewing court decides whether
    a reasoning mind reasonably could have reached the factual conclusion the
    agency reached. A reviewing court should defer to the agency’s fact-finding
    and drawing of inferences if they are supported by the record. A reviewing
    court must review the agency’s decision in the light most favorable to it; . . .
    the agency’s decision is prima facie correct and presumed valid, and . . . it is
    the agency’s province to resolve conflicting evidence and to draw inferences
    from that evidence.
    Despite some unfortunate language that has crept into a few of our opinions,
    a court’s task on review is not to substitute its judgment for the expertise of
    those persons who constitute the administrative agency. Even with regard to
    some legal issues, a degree of deference should often be accorded the
    position of the administrative agency. Thus, an administrative agency’s
    interpretation and application of the statute which the agency administers
    should ordinarily be given considerable weight by reviewing courts.
    Furthermore, the expertise of the agency in its own field should be respected.
    See also Md. Code (1984, 2014 Repl. Vol.), § 10-222 of the State Government Article
    (“SG”).6
    6
    SG § 10-222 explains that a court, upon judicial review of an administrative agency’s
    decision, may decide to:
    (1) remand the case for further proceedings;
    (2) affirm the final decision; or
    (3) reverse or modify the decision if any substantial right of the petitioner may have
    been prejudiced because a finding, conclusion, or decision:
    (i) is unconstitutional;
    (ii) exceeds the statutory authority or jurisdiction of the final decision maker;
    (iii) results from an unlawful procedure;
    (iv) is affected by any other error of law;
    (v) is unsupported by competent, material, and substantial evidence in light
    of the entire record as submitted; or
    (vi) is arbitrary and capricious.
    7
    The questions for which we granted Donlon’s petition focus on whether county
    boards of education are units of the State Executive branch. These questions are purely
    questions of law. It is, thus, our “prerogative to determine whether [the] agency’s
    conclusions of law are correct.” Bd. of Liquor License Comm’rs for Balt. City v. Kougl,
    
    451 Md. 507
    , 513, 
    154 A.3d 640
    , 644 (2017) (quoting Adventist Health Care, Inc. v. Md.
    Health Care Comm’n, 
    392 Md. 103
    , 120–21, 
    896 A.2d 320
    , 331 (2006)).
    In 
    Phillips, 413 Md. at 618-19
    , 994 A.2d at 419 (quoting Lockshin v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274-78, 
    987 A.2d 18
    , 28-29 (2010) (internal citations omitted)), we iterated the
    canons guiding us in the process of divining legislative intent:
    The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and
    effectuate the real and actual intent of the Legislature. A court’s primary
    goal in interpreting statutory language is to discern the legislative purpose,
    the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by the statutory
    provision under scrutiny.
    To ascertain the intent of the General Assembly, we begin with the
    normal, plain meaning of the language of the statute. If the language of the
    statute is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent
    purpose, our inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the
    statute as written, without resort to other rules of construction. We neither
    add nor delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain
    and unambiguous language of the statute, and we do not construe a statute
    with “forced or subtle interpretations” that limit or extend its application.
    We, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we
    confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s plain language to the isolated
    section alone. Rather, the plain language must be viewed within the context
    of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the purpose, aim, or
    policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute. We presume that the
    Legislature intends its enactments to operate together as a consistent and
    harmonious body of law, and, thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the
    parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent with the statute’s object
    and scope.
    Where the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than
    one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and unambiguous
    when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when read as part of a
    8
    larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the ambiguity by searching for
    legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or
    other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process. In
    resolving ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it
    relates to other laws, its general purpose, and the relative rationality and legal
    effect of various competing constructions.
    In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation,
    not one that is absurd, illogical, or incompatible with common sense.
    In addition, we presume that the Legislature is
    to have had, and acted with respect to, full knowledge and information as to
    prior and existing law and legislation on the subject of the statute and the
    policy of the prior law. Absent a clear indication to the contrary, a statute, if
    reasonably possible, is to be read so that no word, clause, sentence, or phrase
    is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless, or nugatory.
    Bd. of Ed. of Garrett Cnty. v. Lendo, 
    295 Md. 55
    , 63, 
    453 A.2d 1185
    , 1189 (1982).
    Analysis
    I.   County Boards of Education and the State Executive Branch.
    Donlon grounds his contentions on what he believes to be well-established
    Maryland law holding that county boards of education are State agencies across-the-board.
    As this goes, county boards of education must be units of the State Executive branch
    because clearly they are not units of the Judicial or Legislative branches. The Maryland
    State Board of Education (“MSBE”), a county board’s canonical State agency overseer,7
    exercises considerable administrative influence, control, and oversight over county boards.
    Thus, to the extent the Court of Special Appeals relied on the holding of Chesapeake
    Charter to reject Donlon’s view, it did so based on an inappropriately expansive reading
    At the head of the Maryland State Department of Education (“MSDE”) is the
    7
    MSBE. Educ. § 2-102(a). Throughout this opinion we will refer interchangeably to the
    MSDE and MSBE, unless the context indicates otherwise.
    9
    of that opinion. To that end, Donlon points to Beka Indus., Inc. v. Worcester County Bd.
    of Educ., 
    419 Md. 194
    , 217, 
    18 A.3d 890
    , 904 (2011), which explained that Chesapeake
    Charter’s holding was “a narrow one.”
    Donlon urges upon us that the frequency of Maryland cases holding county school
    boards to be agents of the State should compel us to read the WBL to extend protection to
    public school teachers. Donlon insists, at the very least, that the WBL is ambiguous as to
    its coverage in this regard. Thus, recourse to the canon of statutory interpretation of in pari
    materia is necessary to pierce the enigma, by harmonizing the WBL with the Public School
    Employee Whistleblower Protection Act (the “PSEWPA”), Md. Code (2017, 2018 Repl.
    Vol.), §§ 6-901–906 of the Education Article (“Educ.”) (effective 1 October 2017), which
    extends expressly whistleblower protection to “any individual who is employed by a public
    school employer or an individual of equivalent status in Baltimore City.”
    MCPS, in response, directs our attention to Phillips, contending that “an entity may
    qualify as a state agency for some purposes while being classified as a local agency for
    other 
    purposes.” 413 Md. at 632
    , 994 A.2d at 427. MCPS concedes that this Court has
    stated frequently that county boards of education are State agencies. These occasions,
    however, are characterized by MCPS as either dictum or occur in the limited context of
    asserting Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity defenses. As MCPS’s argument goes,
    although a county school board may invoke its State-delegated sovereign function in
    appropriate circumstances, some operations are local predominately in structure and/or
    character, such that it is impossible to classify the board for all purposes as a State entity.
    See Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 137-40
    , 747 A.2d at 629-31.
    10
    Furthermore, MCPS marshals as authorities the PSEWPA, Chesapeake Charter,
    and published opinions of the MSBE and the Maryland Attorney General’s Office
    confirming the view that public school employees, like Donlon, are not extended WBL
    protection. The PSEWPA excludes State employees from its definition of “public school
    employee.” See Educ. § 6-901 (b)(2) (“Public school employee” does not include a State
    employee.). Thus, if we were to hold county school boards to be State agents, then by
    PSEWPA definition, they are not protected “Public School Employees.”
    MCPS notes that, at the same time Donlon invokes the canon of in pari materia and
    implores this Court to meld the WBL with the PSEWPA, he offers no legal analysis for
    how the Court can blend harmoniously the two statutes to extend WBL coverage to public
    school teachers. MCPS contends as inapt applying in pari materia to two statutes that
    render relief to alternative classifications of employees through different enforcement
    mechanisms.
    It is accurate to observe that we have referred to county boards of education as State
    entities in a variety of contexts, but none are consequential to the present case. Those
    expressions appeared only in dictum, for one thing. Even in those instances, it is obscure
    sometimes as to why those conclusory statements were made. See State v. Bd. of Educ. of
    Mont. Cnty., 
    346 Md. 633
    , 635 n. 1, 
    697 A.2d 1334
    , 1335 n. 1 (1997) (stating in dictum,
    in the context of an “intra-governmental dispute between a principal department of the
    State government and a [assumed] State agency, the Board of Education of Montgomery
    County” that “[t]he various county boards of education are State agencies.”); Bd. v. Sec’y
    of Pers., 
    317 Md. 34
    , 44 n. 5, 
    562 A.2d 700
    , 705 n. 5 (1989) (explaining in dictum, in the
    11
    context of whether the Prince George’s County Board of Education had a right to challenge
    the audit procedures for education records, that it “is settled that county boards of education
    are State agencies”); Bd. of Educ. v. Prince George’s Cnty. Educators’ Ass’n, 
    309 Md. 85
    ,
    95 n. 3, 
    522 A.2d 931
    , 936 n. 3 (1987) (addressing a challenge to whether the statutory
    grounds for vacating an arbitration award are applicable, the Court stated in dictum that
    “[c]ounty boards of education are, of course, state agencies and not agencies of the county
    governments.”); Mont. Cnty. Ed. Ass’n v. Bd. of Educ., 
    311 Md. 303
    , 317, 
    534 A.2d 980
    ,
    987 (1987) (recognizing county boards of education as State agencies, in the course of
    contextualizing the issue of whether “the employees’ designated representatives may
    require a public school employer to negotiate, and thus possibly to arbitrate, the issues of
    the school calendar and job reclassification.”); McCarthy v. Bd. of Educ. of A.A. Co., 
    280 Md. 634
    , 639–50, 
    374 A.2d 1135
    , 1138–43 (1977) (mentioning that the Anne Arundel
    County Board of Education is a State Agency, in reaching its ultimate conclusions on
    preemption, and the county council could not legislate in the field and place additional
    duties upon the county board); Bd. of Ed. v. Mont. Cnty., 
    237 Md. 191
    , 197, 
    205 A.2d 202
    ,
    205 (1964) (determining, in the context of whether the Montgomery County Board of
    Education was entitled to the surplus of collected school tax levies, that the board is neither
    a branch of the county government nor an agency under its control). Until Chesapeake
    Charter, we were not presented with a question conducive to the premise whether county
    boards are, in fact, State agencies or units of the Executive branch of government, apart
    from questions of sovereign immunity.
    12
    Whether a county board of education is a State agency has arisen in recent times in
    the context of Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity challenges. See Lee–Thomas v.
    Prince George’s Cnty. Pub. Sch., 
    666 F.3d 244
    , 248 n. 5 (4th Cir. 2012) (concluding that
    county boards of education are arms of the State entitled to Eleventh Amendment
    immunity; moreover, the court accepted arguments made by the county board that federal
    and state courts concluded that Maryland boards of education are State agencies for
    Eleventh Amendment immunity purposes.); Jones v. Fred. Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    689 F. Supp. 535
    (D. Md. 1988) (concluding that the Frederick County Board of Education is an agent
    of the State of Maryland entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity); 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 210
    , 18 A.3d at 900 (“affirm[ing] that a county board of education, is ‘a State agency
    entitled to governmental immunity’” when assessing whether a county board of education
    is subject to a statutory waiver of immunity); Bd. of Educ. of Balt. Cnty. v. Zimmer-Rubert,
    
    409 Md. 200
    , 205, 
    973 A.2d 233
    , 236 (2009) (there was no contention between the parties
    that the Baltimore County Board of Education was a State agency for purposes of whether
    a provision in the Maryland Code’s Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article waives the
    board’s Eleventh Amendment immunity); Norville v. Bd. of Educ., 
    160 Md. App. 12
    , 35–
    62, 
    862 A.2d 477
    , 489–507 (2004) (Anne Arundel Board of Education is an arm of the
    State for purposes of Eleventh Amendment immunity); see also Bd. of Trs. of Howard
    Cnty. Coll. v. John K. Ruff, Inc., 
    278 Md. 580
    , 588, 
    366 A.2d 360
    , 365 (1976) (a community
    college, funded partially by local funds, is an agency of the State for purposes of sovereign
    immunity).
    13
    To understand whether the powers and functions of the local boards of education
    support distinguishing their status as State or local entities, we begin with some perspective
    as to the MSBE’s role. The MSBE exercises broad dominion and control over the
    administration of the public-school system in Maryland. We explained in Bd. of Educ. of
    Prince George’s Cnty. v. Waeldner, 
    298 Md. 354
    , 359–61, 
    470 A.2d 332
    , 335 (1984), that,
    [u]nder [Educ.] § 2–205(g)(2) . . . , the State Board is directed to “exercise
    general control and supervision over the public schools and educational
    interests of this State.” [Educ. §] 2–205(b) empowers the State Board to
    “[d]etermine the elementary and secondary educational policies of this
    State”; § 2–205(c) directs the State Board to “adopt bylaws, rules, and
    regulations for the administration of the public schools.” [Educ. §] 2–205(e)
    provides that the State Board “shall explain the true intent and meaning of
    the provisions of . . . [the Education Article] . . . within its jurisdiction”; the
    same subsection mandates that the State Board “shall decide all controversies
    and disputes under these provisions” and further states that “[t]he decision of
    the Board is final.”
    The totality of these provisions has been described as a visitatorial
    power of such comprehensive character as to invest the State Board with the
    last word on any matter concerning educational policy or the administration
    of the system of public education. The broad sweep of the State Board’s
    visitatorial power has been consistently recognized and applied since the
    principle was first enunciated in 1879 in Wiley v. School Comm’rs, 
    51 Md. 401
    . The power of visitation vested in the State Board is one of general
    control and supervision; it authorizes the State Board to superintend the
    activities of the local boards of education to keep them within the legitimate
    sphere of their operations, and whenever a controversy or dispute arises
    involving the educational policy or proper adminsitration [sic] of the public
    school system of the State . . . .
    (internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted). Moreover, “the [MSBE’s]
    power authorizes it to correct all abuses of authority and to nullify all irregular
    proceedings” of county boards. 
    Waeldner, 298 Md. at 361
    , 470 A.2d at 335. This implies
    that MSBE acts as the administrative entity of last resort, see Chesapeake Charter, 
    358 14 Md. at 139
    , 747 A.2d at 631, rather than the first step to be climbed on the ladder to
    administrative relief.
    Maryland Code (1984, 2014 Repl. Vol.) § 8-201 of the State Government (“SG”)
    Article lists 19 principal departments of the Executive branch of State government. As the
    Court of Special Appeals noted, county boards of education are not enumerated in SG § 8-
    201.8 Nevertheless, county school boards exist by virtue of the acts of the General
    Assembly and have been categorized as State agencies, but also recognized as possessing
    a hybrid nature. See 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 212
    , 18 A.3d at 901 (referring to county boards of
    education as hybrid in nature); Clauss v. Bd. of Ed. of Anne Arundel County, 
    181 Md. 513
    ,
    520, 
    30 A.2d 779
    , 782 (1943) (“it is not necessary for the purposes of the present case to
    determine whether in all cases the Board of Education of Anne Arundel County is an
    agency of that County. It may, for some purposes, be an agency of the State.”); Dean v.
    Bd. of Educ. of Cecil County, 
    71 Md. App. 92
    , 98, 
    523 A.2d 1059
    (1987) (County boards
    of education in Maryland seem to have a “peculiar hybrid nature,” with attributes of both
    State and county government). Entities “may qualify as a State agency for some purposes,
    while being classified as a local agency for other purposes.” Phillips, 413 Md. at 
    632, 994 A.2d at 427
    . County boards of education defy “simple and definitive categorization as
    8
    MSDE is unlisted, additionally, among the SG § 8-201 Executive branch
    departments. Educ. § 2-101 does, however, call-out the MSDE as a “principal department
    of the State Government.” Cf. Maryland State Dept. of Educ. v. Shoop, 
    119 Md. App. 181
    ,
    200, 
    704 A.2d 499
    , 508 (1998) (MSDE, “acting in its executive capacity, [] conducted an
    informal grievance conference regarding the one-day suspension based on what it believed
    were two discrete and isolated policy transgressions.” (emphasis added)).
    15
    either a ‘State’ or ‘local’ agency or instrumentality for any and all purposes.” 
    Phillips, 413 Md. at 630
    , 994 A.2d at 426.9
    We elaborated in Chesapeake Charter on the hybrid nature of county school boards
    of education. In Chesapeake Charter, we were charged with determining “whether [the
    Anne Arundel County Board of Education] is subject to the General Procurement Law[10]
    and, as a result, [Maryland State Board of Contract Appeals] [(]MSBCA[)] has any
    jurisdiction in this matter, hinges on whether a county school board is ‘a unit’ within the
    meaning of that law.” Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 134
    , 747 A.2d at 628.
    We explained that
    although the county boards are generally regarded as State agencies because
    they are part of the State public education system, are subject to extensive
    supervision and control by the State Board of Education, and exercise a State
    function, from a budgetary and structural perspective, they are local in
    character. They are not divisions of or units within the State Department of
    9
    Phillips cited, in support of this assertion,
    See, e.g., Rucker v. Harford C[]nty, 
    316 Md. 275
    , 289–90, 
    558 A.2d 399
    , 406
    (1989) (noting that, although the Court found sheriffs to be State officials
    under Maryland law, “for some purposes and in some contexts,” a sheriff
    may be treated as a local government employee); Clea v. Balt[.], 
    312 Md. 662
    , 670 n. 5, 
    541 A.2d 1303
    , 1306 n. 5 (1988) (“We are aware, of course,
    that the General Assembly’s designation of the Baltimore City Police
    Department as a state agency would not be controlling for all purposes.”);
    Washington Suburban Sanitary Comm’n v. C.I. Mitchell & Best C[nty]., 
    303 Md. 544
    , 561, 
    495 A.2d 30
    , 38 (1985) (stating that WSSC “is a state agency
    which is out of the mainstream,” but holding nevertheless that WSSC “is not
    a state agency within the meaning of Art. 81, § 215,” a statute authorizing
    individuals to file claims against State agencies to collect refunds for money
    “erroneously or mistakenly paid” to the agency, because WSSC’s budget “is
    not included in the state budget submitted by the Governor and approved by
    the General Assembly”).
    413 Md. at 
    630, 994 A.2d at 426
    .
    10
    The General Procurement Law is codified in the Maryland Code as Division II
    (titles 11 through 17) of the State Finance and Procurement Article (“S.F.P.”).
    16
    Education. They are subject to the county, not the State, budget process and
    must justify their budget requests to the county government. Most of their
    operational funding comes from the county, not the State, government.
    When these factors are taken into account, it is clear that the general
    characterization of county boards of education as State agencies does not
    require a finding that they are entities “in the Executive Branch of the State
    government” for purposes of S.F.P. § 
    11–101(x). 358 Md. at 139
    –40, 747 A.2d at 630–31. In noting that county school boards owe their
    existence to the Legislature, we observed that
    [i]n 13 counties, the members of the board are elected by the voters of the
    county ([Educ.] § 3–114); in Baltimore City, the members of the board, other
    than a student member, are appointed jointly by the Governor and the Mayor
    of Baltimore ([Educ.] § 3–108.1); in the other counties, the members are
    appointed by the Governor from among the residents of the county ([Educ.]
    § 3–108). The county school systems are funded in part by the State and in
    part by the counties. Hornbeck v. Somerset C[nty]. Bd. of Educ., 
    295 Md. 597
    , 
    458 A.2d 758
    (1983). Although in terms of their composition,
    jurisdiction, funding, and focus, they clearly have a local flavor, the county
    school boards have consistently been regarded as State, rather than county,
    agencies.
    Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 135
    –36, 747 A.2d at 628–29 (emphasis added). We
    continued that
    [c]ounty school boards are considered generally to be State agencies because
    (1) the public school system in Maryland is a comprehensive Statewide
    system, created by the General Assembly in conformance with the mandate
    in Article VIII, § 1 of the Maryland Constitution to establish throughout the
    State a thorough and efficient system of free public schools, (2) the county
    boards were created by the General Assembly as an integral part of that State
    system, (3) their mission is therefore to carry out a State, not a county,
    function, and (4) they are subject to extensive supervision by the State Board
    of Education in virtually every aspect of their operations that affects
    educational policy or the administration of the public schools in the county.
    Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 136-37
    , 747 A.2d at 629. The Court made clear, however,
    “[a]lthough legally State agencies for those reasons, they are not normally regarded, for
    17
    structural or budgetary purposes, as units within the Executive Branch of the State
    government.” (emphasis added). The General Assembly struck a careful balance when
    crafting the local and State roles to be exercised by county boards.11 Notably, the county
    boards of education retain unique autonomy aspects, irrespective of the MSBE’s authority:
    The county school board is the head of the county department and is
    responsible for administering, in the county, the supervening State policy
    determined by the State Board of Education, in accordance with State
    Board’s directives. See [Educ.] § 4–108. There is, as well, a county
    superintendent, who is the executive officer of the county board and, in
    essence, the chief executive officer of the county department. Finally, there
    are the teachers, principals, and other professional, administrative, clerical,
    security, transportation, and maintenance staff hired by the county school
    board to work in or service the schools in the county. Unlike the situation at
    the State level, the county superintendent and the employees of the county
    department of education are appointed and their salaries are set by the county
    school board upon recommendation of the county superintendent, [Educ.] §
    4-103(a), in accordance with a personnel system established by the county
    board.
    Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 138
    –39, 747 A.2d at 630. We concluded in the context
    of Chesapeake Charter that the county board’s school bus contracts were not subject to the
    General Procurement Law because the board did not fall within the purview of the statute.
    11
    Chesapeake Charter explained that
    the State government structure for primary and secondary education is the
    State Department of Education, created by [Educ.] § 2–101 “as a principal
    department of the State government.” The Department consists of (1) the
    [MSBE], which is the head of the Department ([Educ.] § 2–102) and is vested
    with ultimate supervisory authority for determining educational policy in
    Maryland and administering the public school system, (2) the State
    Superintendent of Schools, who is a member of the Governor’s Executive
    Council ([Educ.] § 2–303(d)) and serves, in essence, as the chief executive
    officer of the Department, and (3) the other professional, administrative, and
    clerical employees employed by the Department, who are State government
    employees for budgetary and personnel 
    purposes. 358 Md. at 137
    , 747 A.2d at 629.
    18
    Chesapeake Charter, 358 Md. at 
    139, 747 A.2d at 631
    -32. Indeed, county boards, “from
    a budgetary and structural perspective, [] are local in character. They are not divisions of
    or units within” the State government.” Chesapeake Charter, 358 Md. at 
    139, 747 A.2d at 631
    (emphasis added).
    The holding of Chesapeake Charter may be “narrow,” when examined through a
    particular lens. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 217
    , 18 A.3d at 904. The Court, in Chesapeake Charter,
    signaled, however, a change-in-course and affirmed intrinsically a statement made in
    
    Clauss, 181 Md. at 520
    , 30 A.2d at 782 (“County boards may, for some purposes, be an
    agency of the State,” and local for others), a principle refined later (albeit addressing a so-
    called bi-county agency, the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission) in Phillips, 413
    Md. at 
    632, 994 A.2d at 427
    , that “an entity may qualify as a State agency for some
    purposes, while being classified as a local agency for other purposes.” See O & B Inc. v.
    Md.–Nat’l Cap. P. & P., 
    279 Md. 459
    , 462, 
    369 A.2d 553
    (1977) (“There is no single test
    for determining whether a governmental body is an agency of the state for purposes of
    sovereign immunity. Rather it is necessary to examine the relationship between the state
    and the governmental entity to determine its status as either a state agency or a county or
    municipal agency.” (emphasis added)).
    Donlon contends that Beka cabined properly Chesapeake Charter by explaining that
    Chesapeake Charter represented an anomalous departure from the overwhelming support
    in our jurisprudence holding county boards of education as State agencies. We do not
    believe that Beka restricted Chesapeake Charter to the extent that Donlon suggests.
    19
    In Beka, one question12 (ostensibly relevant here) was whether a county board of
    education retained its right to sovereign immunity asserted in defense to a breach of
    contract action under SG § 12-201.13 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 209
    , 18 A.3d at 900. Beka asserted
    that “in the context of [a breach of contract for the construction of a public school], the
    [County] Board is a ‘unit’ of the State pursuant to SG § 12–201, and this statute waives
    [the County Board’s] right to the defense of sovereign immunity in contract actions.” 
    Id. We disagreed,
    opining that if county boards of education can assert sovereign immunity,
    then they are subject also to a statutory waiver of that immunity. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 210
    , 18
    A.3d at 900.
    In recognizing this distinction, the Court discussed Chesapeake Charter, stating
    that a local school board is not a “unit” of State Government for purposes of
    the General Procurement Law because the “procurement of supplies and
    services by the county boards of education” in contrast to school
    construction, has never been subject to the general authority of the Board of
    Public Works, or the Department of General Services
    
    Beka, 419 Md. at 213
    , 18 A.3d at 902. Chesapeake Charter drew this distinction for
    purposes of the General Procurement Law. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 214
    , 18 A.3d at 903. It did
    not foreclose, in Beka, a different analysis and holding regarding the Worcester County
    12
    We granted certiorari in Beka to consider six questions.
    13
    SG § 12-201 provides that, in general,
    the State, its officers, and its units may not raise the defense of sovereign
    immunity in a contract action, in a court of the State, based on a written
    contract that an official or employee executed for the State or 1 of its units
    while the official or employee was acting within the scope of the authority
    of the official or employee.
    20
    Board of Education as a State “unit” for purposes of our application of the SG §12-201
    sovereign immunity waiver. 
    Id. Beka reiterated
    that, for purposes of Eleventh Amendment/sovereign immunity
    analysis, local boards of education are entities of State government. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 210
    ,
    18 A.3d at 900; see also 
    Lee–Thomas, 666 F.3d at 248
    n.5; 
    Zimmer-Rubert, 409 Md. at 205
    , 973 A.2d at 236; Norville v. Board of 
    Education, 160 Md. App. at 35
    –62, 862 A.2d
    at 489–507. In doing so, Beka noted that Chesapeake Charter did not involve an issue of
    sovereign immunity. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 216
    , 18 A.3d at 904 (“Consequently, sovereign
    immunity was not an issue in [Chesapeake Charter].”). On the other hand, sovereign
    immunity was preeminent to Beka’s conclusion that the county board was a State unit. 
    Id. Beka distinguished
    further Chesapeake Charter based on the differing statutes at issue. In
    the context of a sovereign immunity analysis, we held that the local budgetary character of
    county boards of education “appears insufficient to overcome the overwhelming support
    in our case law for the notion that county boards of education are” State agencies. 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 217
    , 18 A.3d at 904.
    For present purposes, sovereign immunity is extraneous to the purpose and
    legislative history of the WBL. The contention here is whether the county board of
    education is a State agency subject to the WBL. Accord Chesapeake Charter, 
    358 Md. 129
    ,
    
    747 A.2d 625
    . The WBL protects “all employees and State employees who are applicants
    for positions in the Executive Branch of State government, including a unit with an
    21
    independent personnel system,” SPP § 5-301,14 from reprisal if the employee discloses
    information protected under SPP § 5-305.15 The WBL was proposed initially in 1980 as
    House Bill (H.B.) 616. The preamble to H.B. 616 states, in pertinent part:
    [t]he General Assembly finds that the interests of the citizens of Maryland
    demand a government which operates in accordance with the law and in
    avoidance of mismanagement, monetary waste, abuse of authority, and
    danger to public health and safety. In furtherance of these goals, it is essential
    that classified State employees be free to disclose impropriety in exercise of
    their constitutional right of free speech.
    (emphasis added). The prefatory statement of H.B. 616 notes that its purpose “is to prohibit
    any State appointing authority[16] from using a personnel action as a retaliatory measure
    against an employee or applicant for State employment who has made a disclosure of
    illegality or impropriety.” (emphasis added).
    14
    There is no dispute over the meaning of SPP § 5-301. Thus, we agree with and
    reiterate the holding of the Court of Special Appeals:
    [w]e construe [SPP § 5-301] to mean that a unit may still be within the
    Executive Branch of State government (for purposes of the WBL) if it has an
    independent personnel system; rather than to mean that if a unit has an
    independent personnel system, that, in and of itself, is evidence that the unit
    is a State agency.
    
    Donlon, 233 Md. App. at 656
    n.7, 168 A.3d at 1018 
    n.7.
    15
    SPP § 5-305 provides that a supervisor, appointing authority, or the head of a
    principal unit may not take or refuse to take any personnel action as a reprisal against an
    employee who:
    (1) discloses information that the employee reasonably believes evidences:
    (i) an abuse of authority, gross mismanagement, or gross waste of
    money;
    (ii) a substantial and specific danger to public health or safety; or
    (iii) a violation of law; or
    (2) following a disclosure under item (1) of this section seeks a remedy
    provided under this subtitle or any other law or policy governing the
    employee’s unit.
    16
    I.e., the Department of Transportation. See Md. Code (1992, 2015 Repl. Vol.), §
    2-103.4 of the Transportation Article (Transp.))
    22
    Local members of a county board are either: elected by the registered voters of their
    county, Educ. § 3-114;17 appointed by the governor, Educ. § 3-108; or, selected by a
    specific procedure in Baltimore City, Harford County, or Caroline County, 
    Id. Thus, county
    boards are responsive to the citizens of their specific counties. Additionally, county
    school system teachers are not employed by the State. Rather, county boards hire their
    public school teachers. See Educ. § 4-103 (“each county board shall: (1) Appoint all
    principals, teachers, and other certificated and non-certificated personnel; and (2) Set their
    salaries.”). In turn, the county board is charged also with overseeing all disciplinary actions
    of, and direct appeals from inter alia, public school teachers. Educ. § 6-202.
    We elaborated specifically, in Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 138
    –39, 747 A.2d
    at 630, on the local flavor of a county board of education’s budgeting process. The blend
    of State, local, and independent characteristics of a county board extends beyond local
    budgetary concerns.18 Personnel matters are inherently local at their inception. “This
    17
    Educ. § 3-114 (b)-(f) explains that the Boards of Education of Baltimore City,
    Baltimore County, Caroline County, Harford County, and Prince George’s County contain
    certain members who are elected and others who are appointed. See also Fiscal and Policy
    Note for H.B. 160 (2017) for a descriptive list of all Maryland county boards of education
    and their respective means of member selection.
    18
    As MABE’s amicus curiae brief in this matter notes correctly:
    [t]he Legislature has recognized and acknowledged the unique character of
    Local Boards in a number of statutory provisions and when the Legislature
    intended to provide Local Boards with the attributes of the State, it has done
    so explicitly and expressly, as illustrated by the following examples:
    • Local Boards are [] given the power to “bring condemnation
    proceedings to acquire land under Title 12 of the Real Property
    Article.” [Educ.] § 4-119.
    • Although there is a Maryland Public Ethics Law applicable to State
    employees, the Legislature established separate provisions governing
    “the conflict of interest standards, financial disclosure requirements,
    23
    becomes evident when we examine the place of county school boards in the structure and
    governance of public education in Maryland.”19 Chesapeake Charter, 358 Md. at 
    137, 747 A.2d at 629
    .
    The authority of [MSBE], codified in part in [Educ.] § 2–205, has been
    described as “a visitatorial power of the most comprehensive character,” one
    that is “in its nature, summary and exclusive. It includes (1) determining the
    primary and secondary educational policies of the State, (2) explaining the
    true intent and meaning, causing to be carried out, and deciding all
    controversies and disputes arising under the provisions of the Education
    Article that are within its jurisdiction, (3) adopting by-laws, having the force
    of law, for the administration of the public schools, (4) through the State
    Superintendent of Schools, exercising general control and supervision over
    the public schools and educational interests of the State, (5) preparing the
    annual State public school budget, including appropriations for State aid to
    the counties for current expenses, student transportation, and public school
    and lobbying regulations” of Local Boards and their employees. Md.
    Code, General Provisions Article, § 5-815.
    • The Maryland Public Information Act defines an “official custodian”
    as an “officer or employee of the State or of a political subdivision[,]”
    and further [] defines “political subdivision” as including a “school
    district.” Md. Code, General Provisions Article, § 4-101(f) and (i)(4)
    (emphasis added).
    • The Maryland Tort Claims Act, Md. Code, [SG], §1-101, et seq., does
    not apply to Local Boards. Local Boards are required to “carry
    comprehensive liability insurance to protect the board and its agents
    and employees,” Md. Code, Education Article, §4-105(a)(1), and
    Local Boards and their employees are provided [with] their own
    immunity statute in Md. Code, Courts and Judicial Proceedings
    Article, § 5-518.
    • The [E]lections [L]aw contains a separate subtitle applicable to the
    election of members to an elected Local Board. Md. Code, Election
    Law Article, § 8-801, et seq.
    • Section 10-301, et seq. of the State Government Article, concern[ing]
    protection of information by government agencies, . . . in § 10-301(a),
    defines “unit” and[, in] subsection (b) . . . includ[es], inter alia, a
    “county board of education.”
    19
    Educ. §§ 6-101-122 governs personnel matters in a county public educational
    system.
    24
    construction, and, (6) specifying the information each county board is
    required to record and the form in which it is to be recorded.
    Chesapeake 
    Charter, 358 Md. at 138
    , 747 A.2d at 630. As to personnel matters and
    discipline, the Legislature delegated antecedent authority to county boards distinct from
    MSBE. County boards possess, in conjunction with the authority enumerated above,
    additional exclusive responsibilities over personnel matters.20
    For example, as it relates to the present question, county boards of education: (1)
    control educational matters effecting their counties, Educ. § 4-101; (2) carry out the
    provisions of the Education Article and the bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies of the
    MSBE while retraining the initial discretion over all local matters, Educ. § 4-108; (3)
    subject to Educ. § 6-203, the county superintendent shall decide21 all controversies and
    disputes that involve the county board’s rules and regulations and those involving the
    20
    In Bernstein v. Bd. of Ed. of Prince George’s Cnty., 
    245 Md. 464
    , 470-72, 
    226 A.2d 243
    , 247-48 (1967), we explained that
    [a] county board of education such as the appellee is an administrative agency
    but it is not a State agency authorized by law to make rules or adjudicate
    cases. No decisions of this Court support the appellants’ contention [to] the
    contrary. Cases such as Coddington v. Helbig, 
    195 Md. 330
    , 
    73 A.2d 454
           (1950); Hanna v. Board of Educ. of Wicomico County, 
    200 Md. 49
    , 
    87 A.2d 846
    (1952); Board of Educ. of Montgomery County v. Montgomery County,
    
    237 Md. 191
    , 
    205 A.2d 202
    (1964) and Dixon v. Carroll County Bd. of Educ.,
    
    241 Md. 700
    , 
    217 A.2d 364
    (1966), deal with the statutory powers of county
    boards of education vis-a-vis the County Commissioners or the general
    powers of such boards as administrative agencies. A board is not a State
    agency under the Act merely because, under its statutory authorization, it
    has administrative powers in the county to which its jurisdiction is limited.
    (emphasis added).
    21
    Decisions by the county superintendent “may be appealed to the county board if
    taken in writing within 30 days after the decision of the county superintendent. The
    decision may be further appealed to the MSBE if taken in writing within 30 days after the
    decision of the county board.” Educ. § 4-205.
    25
    proper administration of the county school system, Educ. § 4-205; and, (4) may suspend or
    dismiss a teacher, principal, supervisor, assistant superintendent, or other professional
    assistant, Educ. § 6-202.
    If disciplined, a teacher, principal, supervisor, assistant superintendent, or other
    professional assistant, may request a hearing before the county board within 10-days of
    receiving notice of the charges against the individual. Educ. § 6-202.22 (emphasis added).
    The individual may appeal from the decision of the county board to the MSBE only after a
    decision is rendered by the county board. 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    A county board of
    education possesses administrative decision-making capacity, but unlike the MSBE, it is
    not a State agency authorized by law to make rules or adjudicate cases. Bernstein v. Bd. of
    Ed. of Prince George’s Cnty., 
    245 Md. 464
    , 472, 
    226 A.2d 243
    , 248 (1967) (A county
    school board is not a State agency merely because, under its statutory authorization, it has
    limited administrative powers).23
    22
    Chapter 13 (S.B. 639, H.B. 1758) of the 2018 Session Laws (effective 1 October
    2018) amended Educ. § 6-202 “authorizing certain public school personnel to request
    arbitration under certain circumstances; specifying the procedures for arbitration . . . [and]
    providing that an arbitrator’s decision and award is final and binding on the parties, subject
    to review by a circuit court.”
    23
    This list is not exhaustive. Although it is true that we have referred often in our
    cases to the MSBE’s power as being comprehensive in character, it is not without limit.
    MSBE is authorized to
    superintend the activities of the local boards of education to keep them
    within the legitimate sphere of their operations, and whenever a controversy
    or dispute arises involving the educational policy or proper administration of
    the public school system of the State, the State Board’s visitorial power
    authorizes it to correct all abuses of authority and to nullify all irregular
    proceedings. But the State Board’s visitatorial power . . . cannot be exercised
    fraudulently, in bad faith, or in breach of trust; neither can it be asserted to
    finally decide purely legal questions or exercised in contravention of statute.
    26
    All regulations effecting educational matters are found within the Education Article,
    unless otherwise indicated in the statute. The WBL is located in the State Personnel and
    Pensions Article. It is bereft of any cross-references to statutes containing delegated
    authority to a local entity. The county boards’ dominion over local personnel matters
    contrasts sharply with the jurisdictional control of the MSBE, which controls statewide
    educational matters. See 
    Bernstein, 245 Md. at 470-72
    , 226 A.2d at 247-48. Much of
    MSBE’s power is carried-out via civil subdivisions of government subject to varying
    degrees of delegation, e.g., local boards administer State functions within its county, but
    oversee domestic affairs relatively autonomously from the State. Compare Educ. § 4-108,
    with Educ. § 6-202.
    Zeitschel v. Bd. of Ed. of Carroll County, 
    274 Md. 69
    , 81, 
    332 A.2d 906
    , 912–13 (1975).
    27
    The WBL, being a remedial statute,24 is to be read broadly in favor of claimants,
    where possible.25 The WBL is not expansive enough, however, to cover under its umbrella
    county boards and their school teachers, a view shared by the MSBE.26 Sovereign
    immunity claims aside, we have held that county boards of education are not State
    agencies. Chesapeake Charter, 
    358 Md. 129
    , 
    747 A.2d 625
    (General Procurement Law);
    Bernstein, 
    245 Md. 464
    , 
    226 A.2d 243
    (county board of education is not a State agency
    24
    As explained in Washington Suburban Sanitary Comm’n v. Lafarge N. Am., Inc.,
    
    443 Md. 265
    , 282 n.18, 
    116 A.3d 493
    , 503 n.18 (2015):
    “‘Under Maryland law, statutes are remedial in nature if they are designed to
    correct existing law, to redress existing grievances and to introduce
    regulations conducive to the public good.’” Langston v. Riffe, 
    359 Md. 396
    ,
    409, 
    754 A.2d 389
    , 396 (2000) (quoting Weathersby v. Kentucky Fried
    Chicken Nat'l Management C[nty]., 
    86 Md. App. 533
    , 550, 
    587 A.2d 569
    ,
    577 (1991)); accord State v. Barnes, 
    273 Md. 195
    , 208, 
    328 A.2d 737
    , 745
    (1974). Also described as remedial are “statutes intended to correct defects,
    mistakes and omissions in the civil institutions and the administration of the
    state.” 3 Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer, Sutherland Statutory
    Construction § 60:2 (7th ed.) (citing 
    Langston, 359 Md. at 396
    , 754 A.2d at
    389).
    The WBL provides a remedy for retaliatory reprisals taken against an employee in response
    to the employee’s disclosure of information the employee reasonable believes to be “an
    abuse of authority, gross mismanagement, or gross waste of money, a substantial and
    specific danger to public health or safety, or a violation of law.” SPP § 5-305 (1)(i)-(iii).
    25
    
    Lafarge, 443 Md. at 283
    , 116 A.3d at 503 (citing Employees’ Ret. Sys. of City of
    Balt. v. Dorsey, 
    430 Md. 100
    , 113, 
    59 A.3d 990
    , 997 (2013)).
    26
    Decisions by the MSBE, as an administrative body created specifically by statute
    to manage the public education system, are afforded great deference. Balt. Cty. Bd. of Sch.
    Com’rs v. City Neighbors Charter Sch., 
    400 Md. 324
    , 343, 
    929 A.2d 113
    , 124 (2007). We
    find notable, in our analysis, a decision by the MSBE. In Casto v. Wash. Cnty Bd. of Ed.,
    Case No. 99-8 (MSBE, 23 February 1999), the MSBE considered a challenge by a county
    school teacher alleging that her employment was terminated by the county public school
    in violation of the WBL. The MSBE held as moot the teacher’s complaint because the
    WBL applies to employees within the Executive Branch of State Government and is not
    applicable to an employee of a local school system[. Thus, Casto’s] “Whistleblower” claim
    has no merit. See SPP § 5-301 et seq. Based on our reading of the MSBE’s amicus brief
    here, the MSBE’s views have not changed in this regard since the 1999 Casto case.
    28
    subject to the State Administrative Procedure Act); Clauss, 
    181 Md. 513
    , 520, 
    30 A.2d 779
    , 782 (1943) (State Workmen’s Compensation Act); Bd. of Educ. of Cecil Cnty., to Use
    of Int’l Bus. Machines Corp. v. Lange, 
    182 Md. 132
    , 137, 
    32 A.2d 693
    , 695 (1943)
    (performance bonds to State agencies).
    Also of persuasive force are opinions from the Maryland Attorney General’s Office
    regarding the status of a county board of education as a local entity. Although we are not
    bound by an Attorney General’s opinion, “when the meaning of legislative language is not
    entirely clear, such legal interpretation [by the Attorney General] should be given great
    consideration in determining the legislative intention.” State v. Crescent Cities Jaycees,
    
    330 Md. 460
    , 470, 
    624 A.2d 955
    , 960 (1993); Read Drug & Chem. Cnty. v. Claypoole, 
    165 Md. 250
    , 257, 
    166 A. 742
    , 745 (1933). We presume the Legislature is aware of the
    Attorney General’s statutory interpretation and, in the absence of enacting a change to the
    statutory language subsequent to the issuance of such an opinion, to acquiesce in the
    Attorney General’s construction. 
    Claypoole, 165 Md. at 257
    –58, 166 A. at 742.
    The Attorney General’s Office demonstrated, over a long period of time, awareness
    of the complexity in actualizing a rigid or fixed local versus State classification for county
    boards of education.     Indeed, former Maryland Attorney General Stephen H. Sachs
    explained that
    [a]lthough, in dicta, the Court of Appeals referred to county boards of
    education as State agencies in Ruff[, 
    278 Md. 580
    , 
    366 A.2d 360
    ] and
    referred to the Board of Education of Anne Arundel County as a State agency
    in McCarthy, [
    280 Md. 634
    , 639–50, 
    374 A.2d 1135
    , 1138–43] we believe
    that the Court did not intend such designation to apply unvaryingly to county
    boards of education in all contexts. Rather . . . it is apparent that the Court of
    Appeals recognizes that the appropriate designation of a county board of
    29
    education depends on the context of the board authority or function in
    question. For some limited purposes the board of education might be
    designated as a State agency, while for other purposes it will be designated
    as a local agency.
    65 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 356, n. 3 (1980) (emphasis added). General Sachs’ opinion
    continued that “the [c]ounty [b]oard is not ‘an executive agency of the State government’
    for purposes of the Maryland Public Ethics Law. Having so concluded, we believe that the
    members of the County Board may be viewed as ‘local officials.’” Id.; see also 65 Md. Op.
    Atty. Gen. 385 (1980) (opining, in the context of whether local boards of education are
    considered State employees for purposes of obtaining payment of attorney’s fees and costs,
    that “the members of a local board of education are ‘local officers’ and, notwithstanding
    their exercise of sovereignty, not ‘State officers’ within the meaning of” the statute
    authorizing an award of attorney’s fees.); 59 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 644 (1974) (State
    Procurement of Architectural and Engineering Services Act); 58 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 343
    (1973) (State Financial Disclosure Act); 53 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 183 (1968) (Article XVII,
    § 3 of the Maryland Constitution); 47 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 201 (1962) (recordation tax).
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that a county board of education is not an
    entity of the State (or, more specifically, a unit of the Executive Branch of State
    government) for purposes of the WBL.27
    27
    We note further support for this conclusion found in an advice letter (addressing
    the applicability of the Maryland Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (the
    “Act”) to county school boards) from the Opinions and Advice Division of the Maryland
    Office of the Attorney General stating:
    At the time it was enacted by the Legislature, the 2008 Act was codified as
    [S.F.P.] § 3-414 in a subtitle of the State Finance & Procurement Article that
    applied to “all units of the Executive Branch of State government including
    30
    It seems prudent to address whether WBL protection may extend otherwise to public
    school teachers. The WBL is located in the State Personnel and Pensions Article and
    renounces applicability to public school teachers. SPP §5-307 lists three categories of
    employees entitled to whistleblower protection: (1) Employees in State Personnel
    Management System, (2) Employees of the University System of Maryland, and (3)
    Employees of Morgan State University. A county school teacher does not fall within any
    of these categories. In the 38 years since the WBL was enacted originally in 1980, no effort
    has been made by the Legislature to extend WBL protection to employees outside of these
    categories. Moreover, former Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, Jr. opined that
    the legislative intent behind the WBL was to extend protection only to executive branch
    employees. 77 Md. Op. Atty. Gen. 147 (1992). We agree with General Curran’s view. The
    plain language and legislative intent of the WBL extends no protection to county public
    school employees or teachers.
    public institutions of higher education other than Morgan State University,
    the University System of Maryland, and St. Mary’s College of Maryland.
    [S.F.P.] § 3-401(b) (2006 Repl. Vol.). The “Executive Branch” of State
    government consists of 19 principal departments, each of which includes a
    number of subordinate units. Annotated Code of Maryland, SG[] §§ 8-201,
    8-202. Local school systems such as MCPS are not included among those
    principal departments or their subordinate units. Accordingly, they are not
    units of the Executive Branch. Thus, under the language of the statute, the
    2008 Act does not apply to MCPS.
    Advice Letter to Senator Jamie Raskin and Delegate Alfred Carr, Jr., (3 November 2008)
    (emphasis added and citations omitted).
    31
    Perhaps the sharpest blade cutting against Donlon’s claim is the Legislature’s
    passage of the PSEWPA. At the outset, we highlight the pinnacle events as they relate to
    the progress of this case and enactment of the PSEWPA:
    • 27 January 2015:
    o DBM rejects Donlon’s claim that MCPS retaliated against
    him in contravention of the WBL.
    • 1 September 2015:
    o ALJ affirms the DBM.
    • 26 April 2016:
    o The circuit court reverses the ALJ’s decision.
    • 24 May 2016:
    o MCPS appeals the circuit court’s judgment to the Court of
    Special Appeals.
    • 9 February 2017:
    o PSEWPA (H.B. 1145; there was no cross-filed Senate bill)
    was read, for the first time, before the House Committee on
    Ways and Means.
    • 20 March 2017:
    o PSEWPA was read, for the first time, before the Senate
    Committee on Finance
    • 25 May 2017 :
    o Governor Lawrence Hogan signs the PSEWPA into law.
    • 30 August 2017:
    o The Court of Special Appeals reverses the circuit court’s
    ruling and finds no WBL law protection for Donlon.
    • 1 October 2017:
    o PSEWPA goes into effect, without any provision for
    retrospective application to Donlon’s case specifically or
    generally.
    Donlon urges upon us the canon of statutory interpretation that calls upon a
    reviewing court to “interpret statutory provisions that are in pari materia (in other words,
    dealing with the same subject matter) consistently with each other,” if possible. 
    Phillips, 413 Md. at 623
    , 994 A.2d at 421. The underlying goal of in pari materia is to construe
    two common schemed statutes harmoniously to give full effect to each enactment.
    32
    Gargliano v. State, 
    334 Md. 428
    , 436, 
    639 A.2d 675
    , 679 (1994). Statutes “do not need
    to have been enacted at the same time, or necessarily refer to each other to be construed in
    pari materia.” See Farmers & Merchants Nat’l Bank v. Schlossberg, 
    306 Md. 48
    , 56, 
    507 A.2d 172
    , 176 (1986).
    Donlon would have us read concertedly the WBL and PSEWPA to give, what he
    believes, full effect to the WBL, by extending WBL protection to public school teachers.
    We do not believe the two statutes can be read harmoniously. To accept Donlon’s urging
    would render nugatory portions of the PSEWPA.
    The WBL and PSEWPA accord whistleblower protection to different classes of
    employees. Pointedly, the PSEWPA applies only to public school employees who are
    individuals “employed by a public school employer,”28 and excludes specifically State
    employees from the definition of “Public School Employees.” Compare Educ. § 6-901(b),
    (c), with SPP § 5-301, and SPP § 5-307.
    Moreover, the remedial mechanisms of the statutes are not comparable. The WBL
    explains that a complainant may appeal to the OAH only after receiving a final decision
    from the DBM. SPP § 5-310. Furthermore, as MCPS notes correctly,
    [u]nder the WBL, an employee in the State Personnel Management System
    must elect to either file a complaint with the Secretary of the State[,] DBM[,]
    or [] file a grievance under Title 12 of the SPP. [SPP]§ 5-307(a). Likewise,
    employees of the University System of Maryland and employees of Morgan
    State University must elect to either file a complaint with the Secretary of the
    State DBM or, alternatively, file a grievance under Titles 13 and 14,
    respectively,” of the Education Article. [SPP] § 5-307(b), (c).
    28
    The PSWEPA defines “Public school employer” as a county board of education
    or the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners. Educ. § 6-901(c).
    33
    The PSEWPA requires a public school employee to “exhaust any administrative
    remedies before instituting a civil action under this section.” Educ. § 6-904(a). These
    administrative enforcement schemes, which (in Donlon’s view) would have conclusively
    one method of enforcement applicable to State employees, and two methods applicable to
    public school employees, cannot be read harmoniously.
    “The General Assembly is presumed to have intended that all its enactments operate
    together as a consistent and harmonious body of law, statutes will be interpreted, whenever
    reasonably possible, to avoid repeal by implication.” Farmers & Merchants Nat. Bank of
    Hagerstown v. Schlossberg, 
    306 Md. 48
    , 61, 
    507 A.2d 172
    , 178 (1986). Providing relief
    to public school teachers through the WBL on the determination that they are State
    employees would run counter to the stated purpose of the PSEWPA.29
    “Courts are inhibited, however, in their exercise of judgment as to how to effectuate
    the will of the Legislature.” 
    Lafarge, 443 Md. at 284
    , 116 A.3d at 504. Fortunately for us
    here, the will of the Legislature was illuminated during testimony before the Maryland
    General Assembly regarding the proposed PSEWPA.
    Delegate Jimmy Tarlau (D., District 47A, Prince George’s County), a sponsor of
    H.B. 1145 (2017), which became the PSEWPA, testified before the House Committee on
    29
    The fiscal and policy note to H.B. 1145 (2017) states that the proposed PSEWPA
    aims to prohibit
    a public school employer from taking, or refusing to take, any personnel
    action as reprisal against a public school employee because the employee
    discloses or threatens to disclose unlawful behavior; provides information or
    testifies for an investigation of unlawful behavior; or objects to or refuses to
    participate in unlawful behavior.
    34
    Ways and Means stating that he “had assumed there was whistleblower protection for
    [public school employees] but found out there is no such protection. The [PSEWPA]
    would seem to address that issue.”
    Angela Wolf, a Montgomery County public school teacher, testifying before the
    same Committee in support of the PSEWPA, informed the legislators of a case that sounds
    remarkably like Donlon’s, stating:
    most recently, a high school teacher at one of the wealthiest schools, in a
    nationally ranked county here in Maryland, reported deceptive practices. The
    school was awarding students credit for classes being advanced placement
    when the curriculum taught in no way met the AP criteria set forth by the
    College Board. Not having protection, the teacher was retaliated against. But
    again, who is damaged most by this deceptive practice? Students. . . . [The
    PSEWPA gives public school teachers] a defense tool . . . to expose waste,
    fraud, and abuse.
    Notably also, John R. Woolums, Esq., a representative from MABE,30 testified in
    opposition to H.B. 1145 stating:
    why [] single out a public school employees for a standalone whistleblower
    protection act? The questions that flow from that focuses on the fact that this
    law does and does not track the [WBL], which has what we view to be tighter
    and more well-defined terms and procedures relative to reporting to the
    Attorney General’s Office in certain instances and a number of other
    instances. [] That leads to questions about why wouldn’t the inclination be to
    add school employees or other public employees in the State to the [WBL] to
    broaden the scope of that existing statute.
    (emphasis added). Mr. Woolums maintained that the PSEWPA was unnecessary because
    the General Assembly need only amend the WBL to add public school employees to its
    30
    While MABE opposed initially the PSEWBA, it, nevertheless, submitted an
    amicus curiae brief here supporting MCPS’s contention that county boards of education,
    and by extension public school teachers, are not covered by the WBL.
    35
    coverage. Implicit in this view, the WBL did not extend protection to public school
    teachers in its un-amended form.
    Delegate Tarlau, in response to Mr. Woolums’ testimony, noted that the proposed
    PSEWPA is “modeled after the [Maryland State Whistleblower Act for Healthcare
    Employees] . . . [The PSEWPA] covers people who are also not covered by the [Collective
    Bargaining Agreement rules].” Before the Senate Committee on Finance, Delegate Tarlau
    testified that the proposed PSEWPA “gives protection for public school employees.
    Maryland has also a State whistleblower law for all State employees but not public school
    employees.” Mr. Woolums withdrew his opposition to the proposed PSEWPA before
    testimony was taken before the Senate Committee on Finance. Moreover, the fiscal and
    policy note to H.B. 1145 states that the current status of Maryland law “affords licensed or
    certified health care employees and State employees similar whistleblower protections.”
    (emphasis added). The note makes no mention of any existing whistleblower protection
    laws applicable to public school teachers or employees. Additionally, the Legislature, in
    enacting the PSEWPA, made no effort to express an intention that retrospective effect be
    extended to Donlon or his claim.31
    31
    Neither Donlon’s petition for certiorari nor his briefs posed any question (or
    argument) regarding whether his present claims of retaliation could be brought under the
    PSEWPA by amendment of his papers filed in the present action or anew in an as-yet
    unfiled action regarding the alleged retaliation. Consequently, MCPS had no opportunity
    to research or respond appropriately to such a contention.
    In Kopp v. Schrader, No. 72, Sept. Term 2017, ___ Md. ___, ___ A.2d___ (21 June
    2018), we explained that
    [t]his Court, in several cases, [] distinguished between the raising of a new
    issue, which ordinarily is not allowed, and the raising of an additional
    argument, even by the Court, in support or opposition to an issue that was
    36
    Thus, the rhetorical question bandied about at oral argument, why was the PSEWPA
    necessary if the WBL covered county public school employees, can be answered with
    confidence. The Legislature was of the view that the PSEWPA was needed because the
    WBL did not extend whistleblower protection to public school teachers.
    II.   Does Judicial Estoppel Have Any Role In This Case? (Spoiler – No.)
    Donlon maintains that MCPS should be estopped from arguing that it is not a State
    agency because “MCPS regularly insists that it is a state agency that can assert sovereign
    immunity to defend against a teacher suing it for violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983.” Thus,
    MCPS cannot disclaim that position now merely out of convenience. Moreover, Donlon
    urges that the Court of Special Appeals erred in applying a rigid set of elements to
    determine whether judicial estoppel should apply. Notably, that court deviated from the
    Supreme Court’s explanation that the judicial “estoppel doctrine is equitable and thus
    cannot be reduced to a precise formula or test.” Zedner v. United States, 
    547 U.S. 489
    ,
    504, 
    126 S. Ct. 1976
    , 1987 (2006). MCPS ripostes that Donlon’s argument is counter-
    raised, which is allowed. See Crown Oil v. Glen, 
    320 Md. 546
    , 560–61, 
    578 A.2d 1184
    [, 1990] (1990); Medical Waste v. Maryland Waste, 
    327 Md. 596
    ,
    604–05, 612 A.2d 241[,245] (1992); O’Leary v. Shipley, 
    313 Md. 189
    , 196,
    
    545 A.2d 17
    [, 20] (1988).
    For the reasons explained above, the Court will not wade further into this thicket
    regarding unraised, un-briefed, and scantily mentioned questions regarding statutes of
    limitation or retrospective application of a new law to litigation pending on the effective
    date of the law, in the face of a legislative record that is devoid of legislative intent that the
    PSEWPA be given retrospective effect (and especially where the Legislature was made
    aware apparently during the pendency of H.B. 1145 of Donlon’s claims).
    37
    factual, given the differing contextual natures surrounding county boards’ assertions of
    either State or local stature.
    The ALJ concluded that the “OAH does not have jurisdiction to hear the merits of
    [Donlon’s] WBL claim . . . [because Donlon] is not an employee of the Executive Branch
    of State Government, and therefore, cannot bring a claim pursuant to the [WBL].” The
    ALJ, in response to the parties’ arguments relating to judicial estoppel, noted that once the
    OAH determined that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the case, “all other issues raised by the
    parties with respect to this matter are moot.” On review of the ALJ’s decision, the circuit
    court submitted that if it “concluded[,] for purposes of the [SPP] article[, Donlon] a [S]tate
    employee, [it does not] have to get to the question of estoppel. . . .” The circuit court
    concluded that Donlon was a State employee, and found ultimately extraneous the need to
    determine whether judicial estoppel was applicable.
    Judicial estoppel is a common law doctrine and not a matter of federal or State
    constitutional law. See generally Kramer v. Globe Brewing Co., 
    175 Md. 461
    , 469, 
    2 A.2d 634
    , 637 (1938)).32 Donlon’s reliance on United States Supreme Court cases is, therefore,
    32
    Kramer discussed eloquently the purpose of the judicial estoppel:
    If parties in Court were permitted to assume inconsistent positions in the trial
    of their causes, the usefulness of courts of justice would in most cases be
    paralyzed; the coercive process of the law, available only between those who
    consented to its exercise, could be set at naught by all. But the rights of all
    men, honest and dishonest, are in the keeping of the courts, and consistency
    of proceeding is therefore required of all those who come or are brought
    before them. It may accordingly be laid down as a broad proposition that one
    who, without mistake induced by the opposite party, has taken a particular
    position deliberately in the course of litigation, must act consistently with it;
    one cannot play fast and loose.
    
    175 Md. 461
    , 469, 
    2 A.2d 634
    , 637 (1938).
    38
    unpersuasive. Maryland cases on judicial estoppel become paramount. We utilized quite
    recently the same three-part test, outlined by the intermediate appellate court in Donlon, in
    Bank of New York Mellon v. Georg, 
    456 Md. 616
    , 
    175 A.3d 720
    (2017), and, in Blentlinger,
    LLC v. Cleanwater Linganore, Inc., 
    456 Md. 272
    , 
    173 A.3d 549
    (2017). We do so here as
    well.   Before judicial estoppel will be used to foreclose a party’s argument, three
    circumstances must exist:
    (1) one of the parties takes a [ ] position that is inconsistent with a position it
    took in previous litigation, (2) the previous inconsistent position was
    accepted by a court, and (3) the party who is maintaining the inconsistent
    positions must have intentionally misled the court in order to gain an unfair
    advantage.[33]
    33
    While we will not discuss at length the third element of the test, we correct an
    argument made by Donlon. He asserts, in his reply brief, that he
    does not concede that a required element of judicial estoppel is an “intent to
    mislead the court,” because such an element is not in-line with the purposes
    of judicial estoppel as set out by this Court, it is not consistently followed by
    this Court, and it is not acknowledged in practice by this Court. In light of
    the fact that this Court has not addressed this element directly, coupled with
    the recently expanded scope of the first element–which falls in greater
    alignment with the viewpoint of other courts, including the Supreme Court–
    the third element of judicial estoppel should require only that a party “derive
    an unfair advantage or impose an unfair detriment on the opposing party if
    not estopped.” New Hampshire v. Maine, 
    532 U.S. 742
    , 743 (2001).
    Donlon cites no reported Maryland case adopting this reasoning. To the contrary, we have
    addressed the third element in both 
    Georg, 456 Md. at 664
    , 175 A.3d at 747 (“there is no
    evidence in the record to support a conclusion that Respondents maintained inconsistent
    positions to intentionally mislead either Judge Alexander or Judge Glass to gain an unfair
    advantage . . . The record simply does not contain any evidence of an intent to mislead
    Judge Glass in the current litigation, whether to gain an unfair advantage or otherwise”),
    and 
    Blentlinger, 456 Md. at 298
    , 173 A.3d at 564 (“there is no evidence whatsoever in the
    record that the County intentionally misled the court to gain an unfair advantage.”). We
    find no evidence in the record before us that MCPS misled this Court, or any lower tribunal,
    to gain an unfair advantage in these proceedings.
    39
    
    Georg, 456 Md. at 625
    , 175 A.3d at 724–25 (quoting Dashiell v. Meeks, 
    396 Md. 149
    , 170,
    
    913 A.2d 10
    , 22 (2006) (citation omitted); 
    Blentlinger, 456 Md. at 297
    , 173 A.3d at 563.
    Judicial estoppel is “a principle that precludes a party from taking a position in a subsequent
    action inconsistent with a position taken by him or her in a previous action.” 
    Dashiell, 396 Md. at 170
    , 913 A.2d at 22. The doctrine is necessary and deployed “to protect the integrity
    of the judicial system from one party who is attempting to gain an unfair advantage over
    another party by manipulating the court system.” 
    Dashiell, 396 Md. at 171
    , 913 A.2d at 23.
    Contrary to Donlon’s contention that “ambiguity exists as to whether judicial
    estoppel applied to inconsistent legal as well as factual positions,” we explained in Georg
    that the inconsistency may be either factual or legal; “i.e., the application of judicial
    estoppel is not limited to situations where a party takes inconsistent factual positions only.”
    
    Georg, 456 Md. at 654
    , 175 A.3d at 742; see also Dynacorp Ltd. v. Aramtel Ltd., 208 Md.
    App. 403, 472, 
    56 A.3d 631
    , 672 (2012), cert. denied, 
    430 Md. 645
    , 
    62 A.3d 731
    (2013)
    (the court stated that judicial estoppel applies when a party takes an “inconsistent
    position—either legal or factual—in an earlier litigation[.]” (citation omitted)).
    In light of our recent elaboration in Georg and Blentlinger on judicial estoppel, it is
    unnecessary to peel away further the layers of the doctrine’s onion when the first
    prerequisite that must exist for its application is not satisfied here. Donlon argues that “the
    position that MCPS is an agency or arm of the State for Eleventh Amendment sovereign
    immunity is in direct contrast with the position MCPS takes in the case at bar.” Donlon is
    incorrect. As 
    explained supra
    , the contention that an entity is immune from suit on the
    grounds of sovereign immunity resulting from its State stature is not inconsistent with the
    40
    assertion that county boards are neither units of the Executive Branch of our State
    government, nor entities of the State, for purposes of the WBL.34 These are quintessential
    questions of law. County school boards have both State and local characteristics, and the
    appropriate designation of a county board (be it State versus local) depends on the context
    of the board’s particular authority or function under the microscope. See 
    Beka, 419 Md. at 212
    , 18 A.3d at 901 (county boards of education are hybrid in nature); 
    Clauss, 181 Md. at 520
    , 30 A.2d at 782 (“it is not necessary for the purposes of the present case to determine
    whether in all cases the Board of Education of Anne Arundel County is an agency of that
    County. It may, for some purposes, be an agency of the State.”); Dean, 
    71 Md. App. 92
    ,
    
    523 A.2d 1059
    (1987) (County boards of education have a “peculiar hybrid nature.”).
    Estopping MCPS from claiming its local status for present purposes could have
    untoward future implications in imagined and unimaginable other litigation contexts. We
    share the concerns iterated by MCPS:
    [A] ruling that MCPS is estopped from arguing that it is not a State agency
    would have perverse consequences for Maryland’s county boards of
    education. The majority of, if not all, local boards of education have asserted
    Eleventh Amendment immunity at one time or another. If having done so
    estops them from disclaiming State agency status, then they would [not] be
    able to assert their predominantly local character in any other litigation.
    (quotation marks committed). Judicial estoppel is necessary “to protect the integrity of the
    judicial system.” 
    Dashiell, 396 Md. at 171
    , 913 A.2d at 23. We do not feel snookered by
    MCPS in this case. The integrity of the judicial system remains intact.
    34
    Each county board of education in Maryland is a “body politic and corporate”
    which may “sue and be sued,” Educ. § 3-104, reflecting further that county boards of
    education are discrete legal entities from the State for many purposes.
    41
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS
    TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
    42
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 68-17

Citation Numbers: 188 A.3d 949, 460 Md. 62

Judges: Harrell

Filed Date: 7/12/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (47)

Dashiell v. Meeks , 396 Md. 149 ( 2006 )

State v. Crescent Cities Jaycees Foundation, Inc. , 330 Md. 460 ( 1993 )

Board of Educ., Garrett Co. v. Lendo , 295 Md. 55 ( 1982 )

Board of Educ. of PG Co. v. Waeldner , 298 Md. 354 ( 1984 )

Zeitschel v. Board of Education , 274 Md. 69 ( 1975 )

Montgomery County Education Ass'n v. Board of Education , 311 Md. 303 ( 1987 )

Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission v. C.I. Mitchell & ... , 303 Md. 544 ( 1985 )

Bernstein v. Board of Education , 245 Md. 464 ( 1967 )

Board of Education v. Montgomery County , 237 Md. 191 ( 1964 )

Hanna v. Bd. of Ed. of Wicomico Co. , 200 Md. 49 ( 1952 )

Board of Education v. Lange , 182 Md. 132 ( 1943 )

Kramer v. Globe Brewing Co. , 175 Md. 461 ( 1938 )

Clauss v. Board of Education , 181 Md. 513 ( 1943 )

Drug Chem. Co. v. Claypoole , 165 Md. 250 ( 1933 )

Beka Industries, Inc. v. Worcester County Board of Education , 419 Md. 194 ( 2011 )

BOARD OF ED. OF BALTIMORE CTY. v. Zimmer-Rubert , 409 Md. 200 ( 2009 )

Gargliano v. State , 334 Md. 428 ( 1994 )

Lockshin v. Semsker , 412 Md. 257 ( 2010 )

Coddington v. Helbig , 195 Md. 330 ( 1950 )

State v. Board of Education , 346 Md. 633 ( 1997 )

View All Authorities »