Case Title: McClary v. Jenkins

Citation: 

Docket Number: 191132

State: virginia

Court: Virginia Supreme Court

Date: 2020-10-22T00:00:00Z

Document:
PRESENT:  All the Justices 
 
MICHAEL V. McCLARY, ET AL. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    OPINION BY 
v.  Record No. 191132 
 
 
 
         JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN 
 
 
 
 
 
 
           
  
  October 22, 2020 
SCOTT H. JENKINS, ET AL. 
 
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CULPEPER COUNTY 
Paul M. Peatross, Jr., Judge Designate 
In this appeal, we consider whether the circuit court erred in dismissing a suit by local 
taxpayers for declaratory and injunctive relief, filed against a sheriff and a locality concerning 
the sheriff’s cooperation agreement with the federal government, regarding the enforcement of 
federal immigration laws. 
BACKGROUND 
On April 24, 2018, the sheriff of Culpeper County, Scott H. Jenkins (Sheriff Jenkins), 
entered into an agreement with the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), 
a component of the Department of Homeland Security, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1357(g) (the 
287(g) Agreement1).  The 287(g) Agreement authorizes Sheriff Jenkins, and his officers, to 
interrogate any person they detain about the person’s right to be or remain in the United States, 
to serve warrants for immigration violations, to administer oaths and take evidence to complete 
alien processing, to prepare charging documents, to issue immigration detainers, and to detain 
and transport arrested aliens who are subject to removal to an ICE-approved detention facility.  
The 287(g) Agreement also provides that those officers in the Culpeper County Sheriff’s Office 
 
1 These agreements are often called “287(g)” agreements because Section 287(g) of the 
Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, codified at 8 U.S.C. 
§ 1357, as amended, authorizes such agreements.  See Illegal Immigration Reform and 
Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996); see also 
Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135 (2002). 
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participating in the operation of the 287(g) Agreement “will exercise their immigration-related 
authorities only during the course of their normal duties.” 
On November 28, 2018, having learned that Sheriff Jenkins entered into the 287(g) 
Agreement with ICE to enforce federal immigration law, Michael V. McClary (McClary) and 
Christina Stockton (Stockton), as residents and taxpayers of Culpeper County, filed a complaint 
in the Circuit Court of Culpeper County against Sheriff Jenkins and the Board of Supervisors of 
Culpeper County (the Board), seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. 
McClary and Stockton seek to have the courts prohibit the alleged use of local tax 
revenue to enforce federal immigration law and assert that use of local funds for that purpose is 
unlawful.  They state, in their complaint, that the Board “appropriates certain funds” from its 
general fund to the sheriff’s office.  No specific appropriation regarding the 287(g) Agreement is 
alleged, but they assert that the Board had knowledge of Sheriff Jenkins’ intention to enter into 
the 287(g) Agreement, and the Board “[did] not restrict[] Sheriff Jenkins’ use of any previous, 
current, or future appropriations to prevent him from using local tax revenue to pay for salaries, 
costs, and expenses related to the unlawful 287(g) Agreement.” 
In their complaint, McClary and Stockton seek declaratory judgments against Sheriff 
Jenkins and the Board.  Regarding Sheriff Jenkins, they request that the circuit court declare that 
the Sheriff’s entry into the 287(g) Agreement and his use of local funds from Culpeper County in 
relation to the 287(g) Agreement are unconstitutional, unlawful, ultra vires, and void ab initio.  
Regarding the Board, McClary and Stockton ask the circuit court to declare the Board’s 
“appropriation of funds, including local tax revenue,” to Sheriff Jenkins, without any condition 
prohibiting those funds being used for enforcement of federal immigration law, to likewise be 
unconstitutional, unlawful, ultra vires, and void ab initio.  Further, they request that the circuit 
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court enter preliminary and permanent injunctions preventing Sheriff Jenkins from acting 
pursuant to the 287(g) Agreement and enjoining the Board from appropriating funds to his office 
without attaching conditions prohibiting the use of such funds for expenses related to the 287(g) 
Agreement. 
Sheriff Jenkins and the Board both filed demurrers.  In his demurrer, Sheriff Jenkins 
argues three reasons as to why McClary and Stockton’s complaint should be dismissed:  
(1) federal law preempts state law regarding immigration, (2) McClary and Stockton lack 
standing to bring the suit, and (3) McClary and Stockton cannot show that Sheriff Jenkins acted 
outside the scope of his duty and authority.  The Board argues in its demurrer that McClary and 
Stockton lack standing because they failed to identify any specific expenditures or costs, relating 
to the 287(g) Agreement, allegedly paid by the Board.  The Board also asserts that Sheriff 
Jenkins had authority, under federal and state law, to enter into the 287(g) Agreement. 
McClary and Stockton filed pleadings in response to the demurrers.  In the conclusions of 
both pleadings in response, McClary and Stockton request that the circuit court deny the 
demurrers, but ask that if the circuit court grants the demurrers, they be given leave to “file an 
amended complaint . . . to address any infirmities the [c]ourt identifies.” 
On July 8, 2019, the circuit court entered a final order sustaining Sheriff Jenkins’ and the 
Board’s demurrers, without granting McClary and Stockton leave to amend.  In a letter opinion, 
the circuit court explained that it was sustaining Sheriff Jenkins’ demurrer because McClary and 
Stockton could not demonstrate that the Sheriff acted outside the scope of his duty and authority 
in entering into the 287(g) Agreement and taking action under the same.  The circuit court relied 
on Code §§ 15.2-1609, 15.2-1730.1, and 19.2-81.6, stating that Virginia law authorized Sheriff 
Jenkins to enter into the 287(g) Agreement.  The circuit court also mentioned that federal law 
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expressly authorizes such agreements and cited recent Virginia Attorney General opinions as 
further support for its ruling.  The circuit court stated that because it had found Sheriff Jenkins 
acted lawfully, any appropriation by the Board to Sheriff Jenkins was likewise lawful. 
McClary and Stockton appeal. 
ANALYSIS 
As a threshold issue, we will address McClary and Stockton’s standing to maintain the 
action they filed.  “[A]n action filed by a party who lacks standing is a legal nullity.”  Kocher v. 
Campbell, 282 Va. 113, 119 (2011).  As such, “[s]tanding to maintain an action is a preliminary 
jurisdictional issue having no relation to the substantive merits of an action.”  Andrews v. 
American Health & Life Ins. Co., 236 Va. 221, 226 (1988).  Thus, we must analyze whether 
McClary and Stockton have standing before considering the merits of their appeal. 
McClary and Stockton argue that they have standing to maintain their suit against Sheriff 
Jenkins and the Board because their complaint alleged facts sufficient to establish local taxpayer 
standing.  They assert that there are no special pleading requirements for local taxpayer suits and 
that, like any plaintiff’s complaint, their complaint only has to be made with “sufficient 
definiteness.” 
McClary and Stockton recognize that local taxpayer suits must make “allegations of 
[local] government costs or expenditures connected to” the challenged government action.  
Lafferty v. School Bd., 293 Va. 354, 363 (2017).  They contend that their complaint satisfies this 
“minimal requirement.”  McClary and Stockton assert that their complaint sufficiently “explains 
how the Board collects their taxes and voluntarily appropriates that local tax money to Sheriff 
Jenkins with knowledge that he will use it to enforce federal civil immigration law.”  They argue 
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that they do not need to allege specific local costs or expenditures to establish standing and 
contend that such a requirement would be too “hyper-specific” of a standard.  We disagree. 
Jurisdictional issues are questions of law, which we review de novo.  Westlake Legal 
Grp. v. Flynn, 293 Va. 344, 349 (2017). 
Standing requires that a party must show “a personal stake in the outcome of the 
controversy.”  Goldman v. Landsidle, 262 Va. 364, 371 (2001); Cupp v. Board of Supervisors, 
227 Va. 580, 589 (1984) (citation omitted) (“The essence of the standing inquiry is whether the 
parties seeking to invoke the court’s jurisdiction have ‘alleged such a personal stake in the 
outcome of the controversy . . . .’”).  Typically, to establish standing a plaintiff must allege a 
particularized injury that is separate from the public at large.  See e.g., Friends of the 
Rappahannock v. Caroline Cty. Bd. of Supervisors, 286 Va. 38, 48 (2013).  However, we have 
recognized the existence of local taxpayer standing to challenge expenditures by local 
governments, even when no such injury is alleged.  See Lafferty, 293 Va. at 363; Burk v. Porter, 
222 Va. 795, 797 (1981); Gordon v. Board of Supervisors, 207 Va. 827, 831 (1967). 
We have previously explained that local taxpayer standing in actions against the local 
government is permissible because it is “‘premised on the peculiar relationship of the taxpayer to 
the local government that makes the taxpayer’s interest in the application of municipal revenues 
direct and immediate,’ giving local taxpayers a personal stake in the outcome of the 
controversy.”  Lafferty, 293 Va. at 363 (quoting Goldman, 262 Va. at 372).  Thus, local 
taxpayers have the common law right “to challenge the legality of expenditures by local 
governments.” 2  Id. 
 
2 For the purposes of our analysis, we assume without deciding that it is possible for a 
taxpayer to maintain an action against a sheriff based solely upon local taxpayer standing.  
However, sheriffs are constitutional officers and “[t]heir offices and powers exist independent 
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A local taxpayer’s standing is directly tied to the expenditures of the local government.  
Id. at 363-64.  Consequently, there must be a connection between a local taxpayer’s complaint 
and government expenditures for the local taxpayer to have standing to sue.  Id. 
We have previously held that local taxpayers have standing to bring suit seeking an 
accounting and reimbursement where members of a county’s board of supervisors allegedly 
financed an unauthorized cross-country trip from Virginia to California.  Burk, 222 Va. at 796-
97.  There, the plaintiff-taxpayer identified the illegal expenditures as withdrawals of county 
funds to pay for expenses related to the trip.  Id. at 797.  We have also previously decided that 
local taxpayers have standing to bring suit to prevent their county’s board of supervisors from 
lending money ($20,000) to the county’s airport authority for preliminary costs related to the 
construction of an airport.  Gordon, 207 Va. at 828, 831.  In more than one instance, we have 
also ruled that local taxpayers have standing to challenge the legality regarding a locality’s 
issuance of bonds.  See Armstrong v. Henrico Cty., 212 Va. 66, 76 (1971) (holding that taxpayers 
had standing to challenge an agreement regarding issuance of bonds to finance certain sanitary 
district expenditures); Appalachian Elec. Power Co. v. Town of Galax, 173 Va. 329, 333 (1939) 
(finding that local taxpayers had standing to prevent the issuance of bonds to finance the 
construction of an electric generating plant). 
 
When a taxpayer challenges a policy, the complaint must do more than identify a policy 
that the plaintiff disagrees with.  Lafferty, 293 Va. at 364-65.  The complaint must contain 
“allegations of costs or expenditures connected to the policies implemented” for there to be local 
taxpayer standing.  Id. 
 
from the local government and they do not derive their existence or their power from it.”  Roop 
v. Whitt, 289 Va. 274, 280 (2015).  Constitutional officers are not agents of nor are they 
subordinate to the local government. 
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Notably, in Lafferty, a case with striking similarities to the one at hand, we held that 
plaintiffs did not have local taxpayer standing to challenge a policy where they did not identify 
specific expenditures related to the policy.  Id. at 363-65.  In that case, a student and his parents 
sought a declaratory injunction against the school board for “unlawful expansion of its non-
discrimination and student code of conduct policies.”  Id. at 358.  However, the student and his 
parents failed to identify any costs or expenditures related to the policies complained of; the only 
financial costs mentioned by plaintiffs were the costs of defending the Board in court, which we 
ruled were insufficient.  Id. at 363.  There, we ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing because 
they merely “[took] a position and then challeng[ed] the government to dispute it.”  Id. at 365. 
Here, the question is whether McClary and Stockton’s allegations that the Board 
appropriated funds to the Sheriff generally, and that some of those funds contributed in some 
nonspecific and undifferentiated amount in assisting the Sheriff in his execution of the 287(g) 
Agreement, are sufficient to establish local taxpayer standing.  We find they are not. 
The core of a local taxpayer suit is an expenditure appropriated by the local government 
connected to an objectionable act or policy.  As discussed above, local taxpayers have an interest 
in the application of their revenue and have the common law right to challenge expenditures.  
McClary and Stockton have not identified, with sufficient specificity, any additional 
expenditures, costs, or appropriations by the local government that would give rise to local 
taxpayer standing in this instance.  McClary and Stockton do not point to a discrete event, 
appropriation or withdrawal, or expenditure of funds, as the plaintiffs did in Burk.  There are no 
allegations regarding a certain dollar amount or specifics concerning the appropriation of local 
tax revenues, which were present in Gordon.  Also, there are no bonds at issue, resulting in 
ongoing financial obligations, like in Armstrong and Appalachian Electric Power. 
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Unlike the plaintiffs in Lafferty, McClary and Stockton do mention costs and 
expenditures related to the 287(g) Agreement, but only in broad strokes, without identifying any 
discrete appropriation or payment by the local government in support of the policy or actions 
they seek to prohibit.  McClary and Stockton argue that they pointed to costs and expenditures 
with “sufficient definiteness” to survive demurrer, but we find that they did not. 
While Virginia does have minimal requirements for pleading claims in a complaint, 
McClary and Stockton merely identified a policy they disagree with and stated that any 
expenditures related to that policy were unlawful.  We conclude that such vague, speculative, 
and conclusory allegations of a connection between the expenditure of local funds and the policy 
or action the taxpayer seeks to prohibit do not meet the requirements to establish local taxpayer 
standing.  Therefore, McClary and Stockton lack standing to initiate this proceeding and we 
affirm the circuit court’s dismissal under the right-result-different-reason doctrine. 3  See e.g., 
Haynes v. Haggerty, 291 Va. 301, 305 (2016). 
CONCLUSION 
For the reasons stated, McClary and Stockton lack standing to file this action.  
Accordingly, we will affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of the action, without prejudice to any 
future action on such a claim if brought by a plaintiff with standing. 
Affirmed. 
 
3 Given our ruling regarding standing, the action filed by McClary and Stockton is a legal 
nullity, and the appellants’ assignment of error concerning the circuit court’s failure to grant 
them leave to amend that action is moot.