Schneider v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Commrs. , 2013 Ohio 1900 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as Schneider v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    2013-Ohio-1900
    .]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    No. 98936
    WILLIAM D. SCHNEIDER, ET AL.
    PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS
    vs.
    CUYAHOGA COUNTY BOARD OF
    COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, ET AL.
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES
    JUDGMENT:
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Civil Appeal from the
    Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Case No. CV-717610
    BEFORE: Stewart, A.J., Rocco, J., and Keough, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED:                        May 9, 2013
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS
    Avery S. Friedman
    Avery Friedman & Associates
    701 The City Club Building
    850 Euclid Avenue
    Cleveland, OH 44114
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
    Timothy J. McGinty
    Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
    BY: Dale F. Pelsozy
    Assistant County Prosecutor
    The Justice Center
    1200 Ontario Street, 8th Floor
    Cleveland, OH 44113
    MELODY J. STEWART, A.J.:
    {¶1} For a one-year period running from January 2009 to January 2010, the
    Cuyahoga County Board of Commissioners offered to its employees a countywide early
    retirement incentive plan (“plan”), but specifically excluded employees of the sanitary
    engineering division from participating in the plan. The union representing the sanitary
    engineering employees brought a taxpayer action against the county alleging that the
    sanitary engineers were unlawfully excluded from the early retirement plan. In State ex
    rel. Teamsters Local Union No. 436 v. Bd. of Cty. Commr., 
    132 Ohio St.3d 47
    ,
    
    2012-Ohio-1861
    , 
    969 N.E.2d 224
    , the Ohio Supreme Court held that the union lacked
    standing to bring a taxpayer action because it sought a remedy solely for its own benefit
    and that it failed to exhaust its administrative remedies by taking no further action after
    the county administrator denied its grievance. At the same time Teamsters Local Union
    No. 436 was pending, a group of sanitary engineers led by plaintiff William Schneider
    asked the court to enjoin the commissioners from implementing the early retirement plan.
    The commissioners sought dismissal of the complaint because the plaintiffs failed to
    exhaust their administrative remedies by appealing from an adverse ruling on arbitration
    as allowed by law. The court stayed the matter pending the resolution of Teamsters
    Local Union No. 436, and upon the issuance of that opinion with its holding relating to
    the exhaustion of administration remedies, dismissed the complaint.
    {¶2} We review a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss a complaint to determine
    whether it sets forth any facts establishing a viable claim for relief. LeRoy v. Allen,
    Yurasek & Merklin, 
    114 Ohio St.3d 323
    , 
    2007-Ohio-3608
    , 
    872 N.E.2d 254
    , ¶ 14. We do
    so by accepting as true all material allegations of the complaint and making all reasonable
    inferences in favor of the nonmoving party. Fahnbulleh v. Strahan, 
    73 Ohio St.3d 666
    ,
    667, 
    1995-Ohio-295
    , 
    653 N.E.2d 1186
    .
    {¶3} Plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleged that the 13 plaintiffs were county
    employees and worked in the Sanitary Engineers Division. They alleged that only an
    “employing unit” could offer an early retirement plan and that the entire county
    constituted an employing unit as defined by R.C. 145.297(A)(1). They further alleged
    that before adopting the plan, the county obtained an opinion from the prosecuting
    attorney that it would be impermissible for the county to “discriminate” in the
    implementation of the plan that was made available to some, but not all departments and
    divisions with the county. The employees alleged that the county implemented a plan
    that excluded only the sanitary engineers, notwithstanding the prosecuting attorney’s legal
    opinion. The employees alleged that they attempted to enroll in the plan but were not
    allowed to participate. They also alleged that had they not been “turned away,” they
    would have been eligible to participate in the plan. They asked the court to declare the
    plan a violation of R.C. 145.297(C), and sought a restoration of their rights under the plan
    along with monetary damages.
    {¶4} The procedural basis for dismissal was that the employees failed to exhaust
    their administrative remedies by appealing from an adverse decision rendered by the
    former county administrator on their grievance. R.C. 145.297(B) requires that “[e]very
    retirement incentive plan shall include provisions for the timely and impartial resolution
    of grievances and disputes arising under the plan.” In Teamsters Local Union No. 436,
    the Supreme Court noted that “Sanitary Engineering Division employees were required to
    file a grievance with the administrator and to file an R.C. 2506.01 administrative appeal
    from the administrator’s decision, in order to exhaust their administrative remedies.” Id.
    at ¶ 21.
    {¶5} A failure to exhaust administrative remedies is an affirmative defense to an
    action. See Jones v. Chagrin Falls, 
    77 Ohio St.3d 456
    , 462, 
    1997-Ohio-253
    , 
    674 N.E.2d 1388
    . Because affirmative defenses typically require reference to materials outside the
    complaint, they are not amenable to disposition by means of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to
    dismiss and better suited to disposition by summary judgment. State ex rel. Freeman v.
    Morris, 
    62 Ohio St.3d 107
    , 109, 
    579 N.E.2d 702
     (1991).
    {¶6} Using these standards of review, we must conclude that dismissal of the
    complaint was improper. The complaint made no allegations of any kind from which the
    court could find that the employees failed to exhaust their administrative remedies. The
    only facts going to administrative remedies were offered in the county’s motion to
    dismiss. That motion relied on facts that were beyond the four corners of the complaint
    — the motion to dismiss contained exhibits memorializing the adoption of the plan; the
    Ohio Public Employees Retirement System’s (“OPERS”) approval of the plan; a letter
    from the employees asking for reconsideration of their exclusion from the plan; a letter
    from the former county administrator addressed to Schneider that denied the grievance;
    and a deposition transcript of an OPERS supervisor who approved the county’s early
    retirement incentive plan and who gave his opinion that the sanitary engineers were
    lawfully excluded from participating in the plan. None of this evidence should have
    been considered for purposes of the motion to dismiss because it required review beyond
    the four corners of the complaint and the court did not convert the motion to dismiss into
    a motion for summary judgment.
    {¶7} Nevertheless, a court can take judicial notice of appropriate matters when
    ruling on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss without converting it to a motion for
    summary judgment.        State ex rel. Scott v. Cleveland, 
    112 Ohio St.3d 324
    ,
    
    2006-Ohio-6573
    , 
    859 N.E.2d 923
    , ¶ 26. For example, the courts may take judicial notice
    of judgments rendered by other courts, when considering a motion to dismiss for failure
    to state a claim without having to convert it to a motion for summary judgment. State ex
    rel. Neff v. Corrigan, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 12
    , 15-16, 
    1996-Ohio-231
    , 
    661 N.E.2d 170
    .
    {¶8} In its recitation of the facts in Teamsters Local Union No. 436, the Supreme
    Court stated:
    A few days before passage of the resolution [approving the early retirement
    incentive plan], some employees of the Sanitary Engineering Division, none
    of whom were union members, and none of whom are parties to this appeal,
    had filed a grievance on behalf of all Sanitary Engineering Division
    employees regarding eligibility for the retirement plan. The county
    administrator, James McCafferty, held a hearing on the grievance on
    January 9, 2009. Approximately 15 Sanitary Engineering Division
    employees, at least four of whom were union members, attended the hearing
    and were given an opportunity to be heard. On January 20, 2009, the
    administrator issued a decision, determining that the Sanitary Engineering
    Division employees were not permitted to participate in the retirement plan.
    The administrator mailed the decision to each employee who had attended
    the hearing, including the four identified union members, Kevin Lesh, Jerry
    Tharp, Richard Dryer, and Thomas Spracale. None of the employees
    attempted to appeal the administrator’s decision.
    Id. at ¶ 4.
    {¶9} It appears that the non-union employees who filed the grievance referred to in
    Teamsters Local Union No. 436 are plaintiffs in this appeal. The letter issued by the
    former county administrator was addressed to William Schneider, the named plaintiff in
    this case. And without question, plaintiff Kevin Lesh is the same person named in
    Teamsters Local Union No. 436 as one of the union members-sanitary engineers who
    attended the grievance hearing but failed to exhaust available administrative remedies.
    As the Supreme Court stated in its opinion, none of these employees, whether union or
    non-union, sought further review after receiving an adverse decision on their grievance.
    The court could properly take judicial notice of these facts, especially when the
    employees in this appeal make no argument that the court erred by considering factual
    matter beyond the four corners of the complaint before dismissing the action.
    {¶10} The danger in dismissing a complaint under Civ.R. 12(B)(6) on grounds that
    a party has failed to exhaust administrative remedies is that a party who allegedly failed to
    exhaust administrative remedies is entitled to show that further administrative appeals
    would have been in vain. See Nemazee v. Mt. Sinai Med. Ctr., 
    56 Ohio St.3d 109
    ,
    114-115, 
    564 N.E.2d 477
     (1990). The employees claim that unlike the union plaintiffs in
    Teamsters Local Union No. 436, they could have mustered evidence to prove why further
    administrative appeals would have been unavailing.
    {¶11} The decision in Teamsters Local Union No. 436 is more emphatic on the
    issue of whether the union in that case exhausted its administrative remedies than
    suggested by the employees:
    Neither the decision below nor the appellees explain why it would have
    been impossible to obtain relief through an administrative appeal, apart
    from merely stating that the Sanitary Engineering Division employees were
    excluded from participating in the ERIP. As noted above, the board’s ERIP
    made the grievance process available to the employees, and
    union-represented employees were given an opportunity to be heard during
    the grievance hearing. Nothing would have prevented the union from
    attacking the validity of the ERIP in an administrative appeal.
    Id. at ¶ 24.
    {¶12} Although this language suggests that the Supreme Court thought it unlikely
    that both the union members and the other employees would be able to prove that an
    administrative appeal would have been a vain act, the fact remains that they were not
    offered the opportunity to do so. Importantly, Teamsters Local Union No. 436 was a
    case that went to trial before the court. See State ex rel. Teamsters Local Union No. 436
    v. Cuyahoga Cty. Commrs., 8th Dist. No. 94703, 
    2011-Ohio-820
    , ¶ 6.            This case,
    however, was terminated by a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss, made before the
    employees had the chance to offer any evidence to show why they did not pursue an
    administrative appeal from the county administrator’s decision upholding the terms of the
    early retirement plan. And it bears noting that the employees were not required to
    “anticipate and attempt to plead around defenses.” United States v. N. Trust Co., 
    372 F.3d 886
    , 888 (7th Cir.2004).         Any attempt to resolve the issue of exhaustion of
    administrative remedies solely on the basis of the complaint was premature.
    {¶13} The complaint set forth a viable claim for relief. To resolve the issue of
    exhaustion of administrative remedies, the court had to go beyond the four corners of the
    complaint.      By doing so, it did not allow the employees to show why further
    administrative appeals would have been in vain. We therefore sustain the assignment of
    error.
    {¶14} This cause is reversed and remanded to the trial court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    It is ordered that appellants recover from appellees their costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the Cuyahoga
    County Court of Common Pleas to carry this judgment into execution.              A    certified
    copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of
    Appellate Procedure.
    MELODY J. STEWART, ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE
    KENNETH A. ROCCO, J., and
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J., CONCUR
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 98936

Citation Numbers: 2013 Ohio 1900

Judges: Stewart

Filed Date: 5/9/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014