Court Opinion

ID: 2788526
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-03-23 19:24:47.87974+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:28:46.429712
License: Public Domain

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       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

GEORGIANA ARNOLD,
                                                 No. 71445-7-1
                      Appellant,
                                                 DIVISION ONE
            v.

CITY OF SEATTLE, d/b/a HUMAN                     PUBLISHED OPINION
SERVICES DEPARTMENT,
                                                 FILED: March 23, 2015
                      Respondent.

       Becker, J. — RCW 49.48.030 provides for an award of reasonable

attorney fees in any action in which a person successfully recovers judgment for

wages or salary owed. A person may seek an award of attorney fees from the

superior court under this statute upon winning an appeal to a city civil service

commission that results in an order for back pay.

      Appellant Georgiana Arnold was employed as a manager of services

development and contracts with the Aging and Disabilities Services division of

the city of Seattle's Human Services Department. In 2010, one of Arnold's

subordinates failed to make an adequate inquiry into a whistleblower's complaint

about fraud and misappropriation of funds in a program administered by a

subcontractor. After a state audit uncovered embezzlement, Arnold's agency
No. 71445-7-1/2

conducted an internal investigation. The resulting report criticized Arnold and

two other supervisors for lapses in their supervision.

       The deputy director of the department recommended that Arnold be

terminated. Arnold, whose performance evaluations had otherwise been

excellent, hired counsel and requested a hearing. After the hearing, the director

decided against termination and chose instead to demote Arnold from her

management position with an annual salary of $85,500 to an entry-level position

with an annual salary of approximately $56,000.

      Through counsel, Arnold and her subordinate appealed to the Seattle Civil

Service Commission. A hearing examiner conducted a lengthy hearing, in which

three attorneys participated—one representing the City and one representing

each employee. The issue with respect to Arnold was whether the demotion was

for justifiable cause. The examiner concluded that demoting Arnold was not

consistent with discipline imposed in comparable cases. For example, one of the

other supervisors had received a two-week suspension but no demotion. The

examiner's written decision reversed Arnold's demotion and converted it to a two-

week suspension. The decision reinstated Arnold to her former position and

awarded back pay and related employee benefits.

      Arnold requested an award of attorney fees. The Seattle Municipal Code

provides that an appellant "may be represented at a hearing before the

Commission by a person of his/her own choosing at his/her own expense."

SMC 4.04.260(E) (emphasis added). On this ground, the examiner denied

Arnold's request for attorney fees, and the commission affirmed the examiner.
No. 71445-7-1/3

       Arnold filed suit in superior court, claiming she was entitled to an award of

attorney fees incurred for representation at the civil service hearing. The court

granted the City's motion to dismiss the case on summary judgment. Arnold

sought direct review in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court transferred her

appeal to this court.

       Arnold's claim that she is entitled to an award of attorney fees is based on

RCW 49.48.030, as construed by the Supreme Court in International Ass'n of

Fire Fighters. Local 46 v. City of Everett. 146 Wash. 2d 29, 42 P.3d 1265 (2002).

The statute provides as follows:

       In any action in which any person is successful in recovering
       judgment for wages or salary owed to him or her, reasonable
       attorney's fees, in an amount to be determined by the court, shall
       be assessed against said employer or former employer:
       PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That this section shall not apply if the
       amount of recovery is less than or equal to the amount admitted by
       the employer to be owing for said wages or salary.

       This attorney fee statute, first enacted in 1888, took its current form in

1971. It is a remedial statute construed liberally in favor of employees. Fire

Fighters, 146 Wash. 2d at 34-35. Part of a "comprehensive scheme to ensure

payment of wages," the attorney fee statute provides employees both an

incentive and a means to pursue their claims to unpaid wages or salary.

Schilling v. Radio Holdings, Inc., 136 Wash. 2d 152, 157, 961 P.2d 371 (1998).

"One of the primary purposes of remedial statutes like RCW 49.48.030 is to allow

employees to pursue claims even though the amount of recovery may be small."

Fire Fighters, 146 Wash. 2d at 50: see also Schilling, 136 Wash. 2d at 159. Public
No. 71445-7-1/4

employees are included within the fee provision. RCW 49.48.080; Mclntvre v.

State, 135 Wash. App. 594, 599, 141 P.3d 75 (2006).

       Because the statute is interpreted liberally in favor of employees, the

"action" in which the person is successful "in recovering judgment for wages or

salary owed" is not restricted to lawsuits filed in a court. So in Fire Fighters, the

Supreme Court held that a grievance arbitration proceeding was sufficiently

judicial in nature to qualify as an "action" under RCW 49.48.030.

       Because RCW 49.48.030 is a remedial statute, which must be
       construed to effectuate its purpose, we find no reason to not
       interpret "action" to include arbitration proceedings. A restrictive
       interpretation of "action" would preclude recovery of attorney fees in
       cases involving arbitration even though the employee is successful
       in recovering wages or salary owed. Thus, it would be inconsistent
       with the legislative policy in favor of payment of wages due
       employees.

Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 41.

       In Fire Fighters, the city of Everett had suspended two union members

without pay. The union, represented by counsel, argued at a two-day arbitration

hearing that the suspensions violated the collective bargaining agreement. The

arbitrator agreed and ordered the city to set aside the suspensions and to award

back pay. The city abided by the arbitrator's decision but refused to pay the

union's attorney fees. The union brought suit in superior court and obtained an

award of fees.

       The city of Everett appealed and attempted to rely, in part, on Cohn v.

Department of Corrections, 78 Wash. App. 63, 895 P.2d 857 (1995). Cohn upheld

a superior court's decision to deny an award of attorney fees requested by a

state employee whose reduction in pay was reversed by the Personnel Appeals
No. 71445-7-1/5

Board. The court observed that in chapter 41.64 RCW, the legislature intended

to create a comprehensive scheme for aggrieved employees but did not list

attorney fees as one of the "rights and benefits" available. Cohn. 78 Wash. App. at

67-69. Since the statutes governing the Board did not explicitly provide for

attorney fees, the court determined that the Board lacked authority to award

them. The central rationale of Cohn was that because the Board did not possess

express or implied authority to award attorney fees, the reviewing court likewise

lacked such authority, notwithstanding RCW 49.48.030. Cohn. 78 Wash. App. at

69-70. A related rationale was that the superior court itself did not increase the

amount of back pay owed to the employee and therefore its decision simply

affirming the Board's decision could not be a "judgment for wages or salary

owed" within the meaning of RCW 49.48.030. Cohn, 78 Wash. App. at 70-71.

       In Fire Fighters, the Supreme Court found Cohn distinguishable because it

addressed an appeal from a government agency rather than an arbitration. The

court determined that the superior court properly awarded attorney fees under

RCW 49.48.030 for the union's successful recovery of wages in the arbitration.

The award of fees was "for the arbitration proceeding and all superior and

appellate court proceedings in this matter." Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 52.

        The Supreme Court explicitly declined to address whether RCW

49.48.030 would apply to administrative or quasijudicial proceedings other than

arbitration. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 42 &n.11. Arnold's appeal presents that

question. Arnold contends that applying the statute to cover the attorney fees
No. 71445-7-1/6

she incurred in her successful appeal to the civil service commission is a proper

extension of Fire Fighters.

       The City responds that Cohn is still good law. According to the City, the

superior court's denial of an award of attorney fees to Arnold was justified by

both of the Cohn rationales: the civil service code does not include payment of

attorney fees among the remedies available to a successful appellant, and

Arnold did not obtain a "judgment" in superior court for an increased amount of

back pay.

      The City points out that this court has followed Cohn even after Fire

Fighters. For example, we followed Cohn in Trachtenberg v. Department of

Corrections. 122 Wash. App. 491, 496, 93 P.3d217. review denied. 103P.3d 801

(2004). The appellant, a state employee, became entitled to an award of back

pay as a result of his successful appeal to the state Personnel Appeals Board.

He filed suit in superior court seeking an award of attorney fees under RCW

49.48.030. The superior court dismissed the suit following Cohn, and we

affirmed, holding that RCW 49.48.030 "does not apply to state disciplinary

appeals because the Board has limited authority and a Board appeal is not an

action for a judgment for wages owed." Trachtenberg, 122 Wash. App. at 493.

Noting that Fire Fighters did not "explicitly overrule" Cohn. we concluded that

Cohn's central rationale remained intact: "attorney fees cannot be awarded under

RCW 49.48.030 for an appeal of a disciplinary action to the Board because of the

limited statutory authority granted to the Board." Trachtenberg. 122 Wash. App. at

495&n.1.
No. 71445-7-1/7

       The Cohn rationale was not followed by the next Court of Appeals case to

address the issue, Mclntyre v. State. 135 Wash. App. 594. In Mclntyre. an

employee of the Washington State Patrol was terminated upon the

recommendation of a trial board within the agency. Her appeal to superior court

under the Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 RCW, was unsuccessful,

but further appeal to the Court of Appeals resulted in reinstatement and an award

of back pay and lost benefits. The employee then brought suit in superior court

under RCW 49.48.030 to recover the attorney fees she incurred in appealing her

termination order. The superior court dismissed the suit, and the employee

appealed. The State argued, based on Cohn and Trachtenberg. that the right to

attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030 depends on whether attorney fees are

among the remedies the administrative agency is statutorily authorized to grant.

This argument did not prevail in the Court of Appeals. Mclntyre. 135 Wash. App. at

602 ("State's argument that a single statutory remedy is self-limiting is not

convincing"). The court reversed and remanded for an award of the fees

requested after focusing its analysis on Fire Fighters as well as Hanson v. City of

Tacoma. 105 Wash. 2d 864, 719 P.2d 104 (1986).

       Here, the City urges us to adhere to Cohn and Trachtenberg and hold that

when a civil service employee recovers back pay under an administrative

scheme that does not include attorney fees as a remedy, the employee may not

institute a lawsuit solely to recover attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030. That

limitation is acceptable, the City argues, because in exchange, the civil service
No. 71445-7-1/8

employee receives the right to a low cost and speedy civil service forum, a right

not available to an at-will employee who must go to court to recover wages.

      Arnold's successful effort before the commission to win reinstatement and

back pay cannot fairly be described as low cost when the hearing went on for

eight days and the City alone presented 11 witnesses. But more importantly, the

City is simply wrong in its suggestion that RCW 49.48.030 protects only "at-will"

employees. Even before Fire Fighters, the Supreme Court approved a superior

court's decision to award attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030 to a successful

civil service appellant. Hanson. 105 Wash. 2d at 872. Similarly in Mclntyre, the

employee recovered back wages through an administrative appeal that would not

have been available to an at-will employee, yet the court applied RCW

49.48.030. In short, the applicability of RCW 49.48.030 is not limited to at-will

employees either by its own text or by case law.

       Normally, we would expect to follow our own precedent in Trachtenberg.

But this court now has in Mclntyre a post-Fire Fighters decision concluding that

remedies offered by an administrative agency are not "self-limiting" and thus do

not exclude the application of RCW 49.48.030. In view of that conflict, we

conclude it is appropriate to reexamine Trachtenberg.1 which also requires

reexamining Cohn.2 Like the Mclntyre court, we conclude our focus should be on

       1There was a petition for review in Trachtenberg, but it was denied as
untimely.
       2The City has cited as supplemental authority this court's recent decision
in International Union of Police Ass'n. Local 748 v. Kitsap County. 183 Wash. App.
794, 333 P.3d 524 (2014). There, the issue of attorney fees under RCW
49.48.030 arose in connection with a union's complaint about an unfair labor
practice. This court held that notwithstanding Fire Fighters, an unfair labor
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No. 71445-7-1/9

the pertinent Supreme Court cases—Hanson and Fire Fighters—rather than on

our own.

      As discussed above, Hanson affirmed a superior court's award of attorney

fees to a city employee who had obtained an award of back pay from the

Tacoma Civil Service Board. To conclude that a superior court cannot make an

award of fees under RCW 49.48.030 in an administrative appeal unless the

agency itself is authorized to award attorney fees, the Cohn court had to

distinguish Hanson. It did so by observing that in Hanson, the superior court's

review of the administrative board's decision resulted in a wage recovery not

granted in the administrative forum. Thus, according to Cohn, the superior court

in Hanson did enter a "judgment for wages," while the superior court in Cohn did

not. Cohn. 78 Wash. App. at 70-71.

       The argument that a "judgment for wages" occurs only when at least some

portion of the wage recovery is obtained in the superior court action is no longer

viable after Fire Fighters, where the Supreme Court expressly disagreed with

Cohn's reading of Hanson. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 43. In Fire Fighters, the

court refused to limit the recovery of attorney fees to the same "action" in which

practice proceeding is not an action for a judgment for wages under
RCW 49.48.030. The opinion describes as "dispositive" Cohn's reasoning that
where an administrative agency does not have the authority to make an award of
attorney fees, the superior court similarly lacks such authority. Local 748. 183
Wash. App. at 800-01. We need not address Local 748 separately to the extent
that it represents a continuation of the Cohn approach, which we have fully
discussed above. Possibly, the result in Local 748 is sustainable on an
alternative ground if the unfair labor practice appeal can be distinguished in the
same way that Fire Fighters distinguished interest arbitrations from grievance
arbitrations. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 47.
No. 71445-7-1/10

the wages were recovered. "As discussed above, the Hanson court made it clear

that the nature of the proceeding did not affect the availability of attorney fees to

an employee who is successful in recovering wages or salary owed." Fire

Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 43.

       Discussing Fire Fighters in Trachtenberg. we said that the Supreme

Court's disagreement with Cohn's reading of Hanson was "not material to the

issues we have here." Trachtenberg. 122 Wash. App. at 495 & n.1. That was

incorrect. As discussed above, it was only by distinguishing Hanson that the

Cohn court was able to hold that an administrative scheme with limited remedies

precludes application of RCW 49.48.030. That distinction did not survive Fire

Fighters, as noted above. The "nature of the proceeding"—administrative

appeal, arbitration, or superior court action—does not control the availability of an

award of attorney fees. Fire Fighters, 146 Wash. 2d at 43.

       In Trachtenberg, we also said that an appeal to a civil service board

cannot be an "action" for a "judgment for wages" within the meaning of RCW

49.48.030:

               Moreover, an appeal to the Board is not an "action" for a
       "judgment for wages." As noted above, a civil service employee
       may administratively "appeal" a disciplinary decision and may not
       bring an independent "action" to challenge the disciplinary decision.
       Additionally, the Board may enter only an "order" and not a
       "judgment." In Fire Fighters, the Supreme Court found "no reason
       to not interpret 'action' to include arbitration proceedings." Fire
       Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 41. Arbitration proceedings are often
       substitutes for court proceedings. Administrative appeals, on the
       other hand, are not substitutes for independent court proceedings.
       Additionally, administrative agencies, like the Board, do not have
       authority to determine issues outside of their delegated functions.
       Tuerk v. Dep't of Licensing. 123 Wash. 2d 120, 125, 864 P.2d 1382
       (1994). The legislature did not give a civil service employee the

                                          10
No. 71445-7-1/11

       right to bring an independent action or suit to challenge a
       disciplinary decision and did not give the Board the authority to
       enter a judgment or award attorney fees. Because of the limitations
       placed on appeals to the Board, we conclude that the legislature
       did not intend RCW 49.48.030 to apply to disciplinary challenges
       before the Board. The Cohn court's reasoning on this issue is
       sound.

Trachtenberg. 122 Wash. App. at 496-97.

       The fact that the decision of an administrative board such as a civil service

commission is called an "order" rather than a "judgment" is an unsatisfactory

basis on which to distinguish a civil service appeal from the grievance arbitration

considered in Fire Fighters. Fire Fighters established that the meaning of the

word "action" in RCW 49.48.030 is not restricted to a proceeding in a court of

law. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 38-41. The analysis turned instead on whether

the arbitration was "an exercise of a judicial function." Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d

at 38. The court found that "action" includes arbitration proceedings. Fire

Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 41. The court similarly had no difficulty in deeming the

arbitration award equivalent to a "judgment" because it was the final

determination of the rights of the parties in the "action." Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d

at 36 n.8, quoting 49 C.J.S. Judgments § 2, at 51-52 (1997).

       The City's brief in the present case maintains that a civil service appeal is

not an "action" because it is not judicial in nature and the civil service

commission's resolution of an appeal cannot be a "judgment" because it is not

signed by a judge. The dissenters in Fire Fighters made the same argument

about arbitration, but they did not carry the day. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 52-

54. The City simply does not address the Fire Fighters majority's lengthy

                                          11
No. 71445-7-1/12

discussion of "action" and "judgment" that requires these terms to be interpreted

functionally and liberally. Fire Fighters. 146 Wash. 2d at 36-41. The same failing is

evident in Trachtenberg. Arnold's appeal demonstrates that Trachtenberg is

inconsistent with Hanson. Fire Fighters. Mclntyre. and the long line of cases

requiring that RCW 49.48.030 be given a liberal interpretation in keeping with its

remedial purpose.

       Just as the Fire Fighters court found no reason to interpret "action" as

excluding arbitration proceedings, we find no reason to interpret it as excluding

civil service appeals. Like an arbitration, such an appeal is judicial in nature.

This conclusion is supported by the Rules of Practice and Procedure for the

Seattle Civil Service Commission. Under rules 5.13 and 5.15 respectively, the

parties had the right to cross-examine witnesses and present evidence. We hold

that "action" as used in RCW 49.48.030 includes civil service appeals in which

wages or salary owed are recovered. The decision of the commission awarding

Arnold back pay was equivalent to a "judgment" as that term was interpreted in

Fire Fighters.

       The Fire Fighters court affirmed a superior court's decision to award

attorney fees in an arbitration proceeding without inquiring whether the arbitrator

had authority to award attorney fees. Similarly, we find no reason to hold that a

superior court's authority to award attorney fees incurred in an administrative

proceeding depends on whether the administrative agency had authority to

award attorney fees.

                                          12
No. 71445-7-1/13

         Following Fire Fighters, we conclude it is irrelevant that the commission

itself is not authorized to award attorney fees to an employee who recovers

wages in a successful appeal. The authority for the award of fees is found in

RCW 49.48.030. The superior court may exercise that authority in a separate

suit brought by the employee solely for the purpose of vindicating the statutory

right.

         We grant Arnold's request to remand to superior court for an award of

attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030 for the appeal to the commission and for all

superior and appellate court proceedings in this matter. See Fire Fighters, 146
Wash. 2d at 52.

         The City claims the fees incurred by Arnold were unreasonable. We take

no position on the amount of fees to which Arnold is entitled or the methodology

by which they should be calculated. Such matters are left to the superior court to

determine in further proceedings.

         Reversed.

                                                   ckW; *
WE CONCUR:

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