Kier v. County of Hall , 30 Neb. Ct. App. 1 ( 2021 )


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    07/13/2021 08:08 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    30 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    KIER v. COUNTY OF HALL
    Cite as 
    30 Neb. App. 1
    Melissa Kier and the Fraternal Order
    of Police, Lodge #10, appellants, v.
    County of Hall, Nebraska,
    et al., appellees.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed June 22, 2021.   No. A-20-550.
    1. Administrative Law: Appeal and Error. In reviewing an administra-
    tive agency decision on a petition in error, both the district court and
    the appellate court review the decision to determine whether the agency
    acted within its jurisdiction and whether sufficient, relevant evidence
    supports the decision of the agency.
    2. Administrative Law: Evidence. The evidence is sufficient, as a matter
    of law, if an administrative tribunal could reasonably find the facts as
    it did on the basis of the testimony and exhibits contained in the record
    before it.
    3. Administrative Law: Appeal and Error. The reviewing court in an
    error proceeding is restricted to the record before the administrative
    agency and does not reweigh evidence or make independent findings
    of fact.
    4. Administrative Law: Judgments: Words and Phrases. An adminis-
    trative agency decision must not be arbitrary and capricious. Agency
    action is “arbitrary and capricious” if it is taken in disregard of the facts
    or circumstances of the case, without some basis which would lead a
    reasonable and honest person to the same conclusion.
    5. Contracts. In interpreting a contract, a court must first determine, as a
    matter of law, whether the contract is ambiguous.
    6. Contracts: Words and Phrases. A contract is ambiguous when a word,
    phrase, or provision in the contract has, or is susceptible of, at least two
    reasonable but conflicting interpretations or meanings.
    7. Contracts. When the terms of a contract are clear, a court may not
    resort to rules of construction, and the terms are to be accorded their
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    plain and ordinary meaning as an ordinary or reasonable person would
    understand them.
    8.    ____. The fact that the parties have suggested opposing meanings of a
    disputed instrument does not necessarily compel the conclusion that the
    instrument is ambiguous.
    9.    Contracts: Evidence. A contract found to be ambiguous presents a
    question of fact and permits the consideration of extrinsic evidence to
    determine the meaning of the contract.
    10.    Contracts. A contract must receive a reasonable construction and must
    be construed as a whole.
    11.    ____. If possible, effect must be given to every part of a contract.
    12.    ____. A court is not free to rewrite a contract or to speculate as to terms
    of the contract which the parties have not seen fit to include.
    13.    Contracts: Intent. A court should avoid interpreting contract provisions
    in a manner that leads to unreasonable or absurd results that are obvi-
    ously inconsistent with the parties’ intent.
    14.    Appeal and Error. An appellate court is not obligated to engage in an
    analysis that is not necessary to adjudicate the case and controversy
    before it.
    Appeal from the District Court for Hall County: John H.
    Marsh, Judge. Affirmed.
    Thomas P. McCarty and Gary L. Young, of Keating, O’Gara,
    Nedved & Peter, P.C., L.L.O., for appellants.
    Ashley H. Connell and Pamela J. Bourne, of Woods Aitken,
    L.L.P., for appellees.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge, and Arterburn and Welch, Judges.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    This case involves an employment relationship between
    the Hall County Sheriff’s Department (the Department) and
    Melissa Kier, a deputy sheriff. Kier and the Fraternal Order
    of Police, Lodge #10 (FOP #10), filed a grievance concern-
    ing the application of shift-bidding provisions in each appli-
    cable collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that governed
    the employment relationship. This dispute centers on whether
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    30 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    KIER v. COUNTY OF HALL
    Cite as 
    30 Neb. App. 1
    the Hall County Sheriff’s Department Merit Commission
    (Merit Commission) properly interpreted and applied provi-
    sions of each CBA, as well as the Merit Commission’s own
    regulations. Kier and FOP #10 appeal from the order of the
    district court for Hall County, which affirmed the decision of
    the Merit Commission. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    CBA’s
    Kier is employed as a deputy sheriff with the Department.
    FOP #10 is a “[l]abor organization” as defined in Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 48-801(7) (Cum. Supp. 2020) and is the collective bar-
    gaining representative for the Department. Rick Conrad, the
    elected sheriff of Hall County, is the personnel director for
    the Department.
    The Department and FOP #10 entered into a CBA, effec-
    tive from July 1, 2016, to June 20, 2019, which controlled the
    wages and employment conditions of deputy sheriffs employed
    by the Department. Subsequently, the Department and FOP
    #10 entered an amendment to the CBA, which added a “shift
    bidding” provision to the agreement. When the 2016-19 CBA
    expired, the Department and FOP #10 entered into a second
    agreement, with terms that were identical to the prior agree-
    ment. The second CBA was to be effective from July 1, 2019,
    to June 30, 2021.
    The shift-bidding provision of the CBA’s provided that,
    except for certain excludable positions within the Department,
    “all bargaining unit position work shifts and days off, will
    be open for bid on an annual basis” and “[e]mployees will
    be allowed to select work shifts and days off . . . based on
    seniority.” Under this provision, the Department was required
    to annually create and approve a schedule containing available
    work shifts, and FOP #10 would then conduct a bid for the
    shifts according to seniority. Following the completion of the
    bidding process, FOP #10 was to return the results of the bid to
    the Department for implementation.
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    In addition to the shift-bidding provision, the CBA’s pro-
    vided that the elected sheriff would retain certain management
    rights over the Department. Article III of each CBA stated
    that “[a]ll management rights, functions, responsibilities, and
    authority not specifically limited by the express terms of this
    Agreement are retained by the Sheriff and remain exclusively
    within the rights of the Sheriff.” The CBA’s enumerated spe-
    cific rights retained by management, including “[t]he right to
    direct and arrange work forces[,] including the right to hire,
    examine, classify, promote, train, transfer, assign, and retain
    employees[.]” The CBA’s provided that if the sheriff trans-
    fers an employee from one shift to another, at least 30 days’
    advance notice must be provided.
    Kier began working for the Department in December 2014
    as a deputy sheriff. The terms and provisions of the CBA’s
    applied to Kier’s employment. At all relevant times, there were
    three potential shifts in the Department: day shift (6 a.m. to
    4 p.m.), swing shift (2 p.m. to 12 a.m.), and night shift (8 p.m.
    to 6 a.m.).
    2018 Annual Shift Bid and
    Kier’s Performance Issues
    Kier began working the night shift in August 2018, follow-
    ing the annual shift bid. Prior to that date, she had worked
    the day shift. The record shows that after Kier began to work
    the night shift, the Department documented several incidents
    where Kier was counseled for “unacceptable or unsatisfactory
    work performance, which [had] resulted in two letters of repri-
    mand.” These incidents are summarized below.
    On August 9, 2018, Kier handled an assault investigation,
    during which she failed to interview all the victims and wit-
    nesses, submitted only one report in narrative form, and failed
    to issue any citations or referrals, contrary to the Department’s
    protocol. On August 15, the Department counseled Kier for a
    continued failure to complete and submit “workload tables”
    in a timely manner. Workload tables are the Department’s
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    payroll records and are used to track the number of hours
    worked by each deputy sheriff.
    In mid-August, Kier taught a “Basic Life Support CPR”
    class. This class is a prerequisite for deputy sheriffs hoping
    to receive certification from the Nebraska Law Enforcement
    Training Center. However, the class taught by Kier did not
    meet the proper requirements, which caused qualification
    issues for the deputies who had taken the class. On August 27,
    2018, Kier failed to turn in the Department’s monthly police
    quiz on time.
    On October 9, 2018, the Department counseled Kier for
    mistakes made on an accident investigation report. Specifically,
    Kier had listed the wrong person as the injured party. On
    October 15, Kier was again counseled for failing to submit
    documentation in a timely manner.
    On January 10, 2019, the Department counseled Kier for her
    failure to properly fill out reports on numerous occasions. On
    one occasion, Kier failed to stop a driver suspected of a weap-
    ons offense because she failed to properly turn on her police
    vehicle’s emergency lights. On January 19, the Department
    counseled Kier due to an incomplete report that contained sev-
    eral errors.
    On February 11, 2019, the Department issued Kier a formal
    letter of reprimand “due to [her] repeated errors in [her] work-
    load table.” On February 14, Kier was again counseled for
    incomplete workload tables.
    On February 20, 2019, Kier was counseled after the
    Department found several items in her work mailbox that she
    had left unaddressed for several weeks. These items included
    the following: (1) documents related to an ongoing investiga-
    tion that Kier had failed to log as evidence, although they had
    been in her possession since December 2018; (2) a citation
    from May 2018 in which Kier had failed to correct errors; (3)
    an out-of-county arrest warrant that had been in Kier’s mail-
    box for over 3 months that she had failed to serve; and (4) a
    document that Kier had failed to timely return to the Nebraska
    Department of Motor Vehicles.
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    KIER v. COUNTY OF HALL
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    On March 1, 2019, Kier received another letter of reprimand
    for her ongoing performance issues and continued failure to
    complete and submit workload tables in a timely manner. On
    March 9, Kier failed to adequately complete an accident report,
    and she failed to submit a corrected report when asked to do
    so by supervisors.
    On April 9, 2019, Conrad and other supervisors within the
    Department met with Kier to discuss her work performance
    issues. Kier acknowledged her deficiencies and explained that
    she was having “issues sleeping” and other “personal issues”
    that were affecting her job performance.
    On May 7, 2019, the Department counseled Kier regard-
    ing her unsatisfactory performance related to a missing per-
    son investigation. The record shows that Kier interviewed all
    potential suspects collectively, rather than individually, and
    that she received pertinent information regarding the location
    of the missing person but failed to act upon it.
    On May 14, 2019, Conrad and other supervisors again met
    with Kier. They notified Kier that due to her poor performance
    since starting to work the night shift in August 2018, the
    Department had decided it was necessary to transfer her to the
    day shift. Conrad explained to Kier that she would be able to
    “serve the [D]epartment more effectively,” since “[d]ayshift
    work assignments are more structured and typically have more
    supervision.” Kier did not file a grievance following the May
    2019 decision to transfer her to the day shift.
    2019 Annual Shift Bid and Rebid
    In June 2019, Kier and other deputy sheriffs working for
    the Department submitted their shift bids in accordance with
    the amended 2016-19 CBA. Kier submitted a bid for the
    swing shift. At the end of June 2019, a deputy sheriff left the
    Department, which required a rebidding of shifts.
    On June 7, 2019, Conrad sent Kier a letter regarding the
    annual shift bid, which stated that the Department had trans-
    ferred Kier to the day shift following the May 14 meeting
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    and that it had been brought to the Department’s attention that
    Kier placed a bid on the swing shift, which “would go against
    the decision made on May 14, 2019.” Conrad then requested
    that in the rebidding process, Kier “limit [her] scope to the
    available day shift positions.”
    Conrad instructed FOP #10 that, following the departure of
    the deputy sheriff, a rebid should be conducted according to
    seniority. However, he advised FOP #10 that Kier should be
    placed in a day shift slot, regardless of seniority.
    Merit Commission Decision and Appeal
    Kier and FOP #10 timely grieved Conrad’s June 7, 2019,
    letter, which limited Kier’s scope in the rebidding process
    to “available day shifts only.” Kier and FOP #10 argued that
    Conrad’s decision violated the shift-bidding provisions of the
    CBA’s because it prevented her from bidding based on her
    seniority for a swing shift or a night shift. Kier and FOP #10
    requested that all deputy sheriffs be immediately permitted to
    resubmit their shift bids based on seniority, and they further
    requested that Conrad’s letter be rescinded and removed from
    Kier’s personnel file.
    No satisfactory settlement was reached between the par-
    ties during any step of the formal grievance process. Kier and
    FOP #10 then timely filed a grievance appeal with the Merit
    Commission in accordance with the terms of the CBA’s and
    with Neb. Rev. Stat. § 23-1734 (Reissue 2012). The Merit
    Commission held a hearing on the grievance on November 14,
    2019. At the hearing, the Merit Commission received exhibits
    and listened to sworn testimony. Following the hearing, the
    parties submitted written closing arguments.
    The Merit Commission issued a written decision on
    December 4, 2019. The decision found that (1) the Merit
    Commission had jurisdiction to hear the grievance appeal pur-
    suant to § 23-1734(2) and pursuant to the grievance procedures
    set forth in the CBA’s; (2) the Department and Conrad did not
    have the authority to restrict Kier from shift bidding based
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    KIER v. COUNTY OF HALL
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    upon seniority; (3) Conrad’s letter to Kier should be removed
    from Kier’s personnel file; and (4) the Department’s employ-
    ees, including Kier, should be immediately permitted to rebid
    for their shifts.
    In addition to these findings, the Merit Commission took
    notice of article IX of the regulations of the Merit Commission,
    which stated:
    Paragraph 2 - The Sheriff may, in the Sheriff’s discre-
    tion, transfer classified personnel from one division to
    another. A transfer from one division to another shall not
    be considered as a promotion or demotion. The Sheriff
    may, at his discretion, transfer classified personnel from
    one shift to another.
    Paragraph 3 - A transfer from one shift to another shift
    shall not be considered a promotion or demotion.
    In its written decision, the Merit Commission went on
    to explain:
    Accordingly, the Sheriff of Hall County retains the right
    to transfer Deputies from one shift to another accord-
    ing to the Merit Commission regulations. The Sheriff
    and the FOP #10 on their own cannot ignore the Merit
    Commission rules and regulations in the collective bar-
    gaining process. If a different result was desired, the
    Sheriff or the FOP #10 could have requested a change in
    the Merit Com­mission rules and regulations for consider-
    ation by the Merit Commission after following the proper
    procedure for amending such rules . . . .
    Therefore, although the Merit Commission found that Conrad
    and the Department could not restrict Kier from shift bidding
    based upon seniority, it determined that Conrad’s management
    rights allowed him to transfer Kier from one shift to another
    following the completion of the bidding process.
    On December 23, 2019, Kier and FOP #10 filed a petition
    in error in the district court for Hall County, seeking review
    of the Merit Commission’s written decision. The petition in
    error alleged that the Merit Commission erred in finding that
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    Conrad had discretion to transfer deputy sheriffs from one
    shift to another. Kier and FOP #10 alleged that the Merit
    Commission had erred because it (1) had improperly taken
    judicial notice of its own regulations, (2) had improperly inter-
    preted and applied the relevant provisions in the regulations,
    (3) lacked statutory authority to adopt and apply the regula-
    tions, (4) had exceeded its statutory authority, and (5) failed to
    properly interpret or apply the provisions of the CBA’s. Kier
    and FOP #10 further alleged that the Merit Commission’s writ-
    ten decision was not supported by sufficient evidence and/or
    was arbitrary and capricious.
    The district court held a hearing on the petition in error and
    issued a written order on July 9, 2020, rejecting all of Kier
    and FOP #10’s assignments of error. The district court held
    that the Merit Commission had acted within its jurisdiction
    and statutory authority, that its written decision was supported
    by sufficient evidence, and that the decision was neither arbi-
    trary nor capricious. The district court further found that even
    without consideration of the Merit Commission’s regulations,
    the CBA’s themselves gave the sheriff the right to “direct and
    arrange workforces including the right to transfer employees.”
    For these reasons, the district court affirmed the decision of the
    Merit Commission.
    Kier and FOP #10 now appeal the order of the district court.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Kier and FOP #10 assign, restated and reordered, that the
    district court erred in (1) holding that the management rights
    provisions in the CBA’s take precedence over the shift-bidding
    provisions and (2) holding that the Merit Commission’s regula-
    tions take precedence over the shift-bidding provisions.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] In reviewing an administrative agency decision on
    a petition in error, both the district court and the appellate
    court review the decision to determine whether the agency
    acted within its jurisdiction and whether sufficient, relevant
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    evidence supports the decision of the agency. Douglas County
    v. Archie, 
    295 Neb. 674
    , 
    891 N.W.2d 93
     (2017). The evidence
    is sufficient, as a matter of law, if an administrative tribunal
    could reasonably find the facts as it did on the basis of the
    testimony and exhibits contained in the record before it. 
    Id.
    The reviewing court in an error proceeding is restricted to the
    record before the administrative agency and does not reweigh
    evidence or make independent findings of fact. 
    Id.
    [4] An administrative agency decision must not be arbitrary
    and capricious. 
    Id.
     Agency action is “arbitrary and capricious”
    if it is taken in disregard of the facts or circumstances of the
    case, without some basis which would lead a reasonable and
    honest person to the same conclusion. 
    Id.
    ANALYSIS
    Management Rights Provisions
    Kier and FOP #10 assign that the district court erred when it
    found that the management rights provisions in article III of the
    CBA’s gave Conrad the discretion to arrange workforces and
    transfer employees, notwithstanding the results of an annual
    shift bid. With respect to this issue, the district court found that
    the terms of the CBA’s “prohibit[ed] the sheriff from restrict-
    ing or preventing a deputy from shift bidding according to the
    applicable [CBA],” but that the sheriff “retain[ed] the right to
    transfer deputies from one shift to another.” Kier and FOP #10
    argue that in reaching this conclusion, the district court erred
    as a matter of law in failing to apply the plain language of the
    CBA’s to this case.
    Kier and FOP #10 argue that the Merit Commission and
    district court erred in overlooking certain portions of the
    CBA’s that they contend limit the sheriff’s management rights,
    including the right to transfer deputy sheriffs from one shift to
    another. They argue that when the CBA’s are properly read as
    a whole, the plain language of the CBA’s prohibited Conrad
    from “disregarding an employee’s chosen shift due to work
    perform­ance issues.” Brief for appellants at 24.
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    [5-9] In interpreting a contract, a court must first determine,
    as a matter of law, whether the contract is ambiguous. Bierman
    v. Benjamin, 
    305 Neb. 860
    , 
    943 N.W.2d 269
     (2020). A contract
    is ambiguous when a word, phrase, or provision in the contract
    has, or is susceptible of, at least two reasonable but conflicting
    interpretations or meanings. 
    Id.
     When the terms of a contract
    are clear, a court may not resort to rules of construction, and
    the terms are to be accorded their plain and ordinary meaning
    as an ordinary or reasonable person would understand them.
    
    Id.
     The fact that the parties have suggested opposing meanings
    of a disputed instrument does not necessarily compel the con-
    clusion that the instrument is ambiguous. 
    Id.
     A contract found
    to be ambiguous presents a question of fact and permits the
    consideration of extrinsic evidence to determine the meaning
    of the contract. 
    Id.
    [10-13] In addition, a contract must receive a reasonable
    construction and must be construed as a whole. Equestrian
    Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II, 
    308 Neb. 128
    , 
    953 N.W.2d 16
     (2021). And, if possible, effect must be given to
    every part of a contract. 
    Id.
     A court is not free to rewrite a
    contract or to speculate as to terms of the contract which the
    parties have not seen fit to include. 
    Id.
     A court should avoid
    interpreting contract provisions in a manner that leads to unrea-
    sonable or absurd results that are obviously inconsistent with
    the parties’ intent. 
    Id.
    In this case, Kier and FOP #10 do not deny that article III
    of each CBA reserved certain management rights to Conrad as
    personnel director of the Department. They acknowledge the
    provision which states that “[a]ll management rights, functions,
    responsibilities, and authority not specifically limited by the
    express terms of this Agreement are retained by the Sheriff and
    remain exclusively within the rights of the Sheriff.”
    However, Kier and FOP #10 suggest that Conrad’s manage-
    ment rights, specifically his right to transfer deputy sheriffs
    from one shift to another, were limited by other terms of the
    CBA’s. In support, Kier and FOP #10 point to portions of
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    the CBA’s that provide that during “an emergency as declared
    by the Sheriff,” the sheriff shall have discretion to establish
    shifts, hours, and duties; and also to a different provision
    related to temporary reassignment of a deputy sheriff to cover
    for vacation and sick leave. Finally, Kier and FOP #10 refer-
    ence a provision permitting two employees to trade their work
    schedules. According to Kier and FOP #10’s suggested inter-
    pretation, these three circumstances are the only ones in which
    the Department may disregard a deputy sheriff’s chosen shift
    bid and transfer them to a different shift.
    Reading the CBA’s as a whole, we do not find Kier and
    FOP #10’s argument to be persuasive. Nothing about the three
    provisions referenced above indicates that they are the sole
    circumstances under which the sheriff may transfer a deputy
    sheriff to a new shift. Nor does the language of the three
    provisions referenced by Kier and FOP #10 specifically elimi-
    nate or limit the sheriff’s right to transfer employees from
    shift to shift, which is explicitly enumerated in article III of
    the CBA’s.
    To the contrary, the CBA’s demonstrate that the parties
    specifically contemplated the sheriff’s ability to transfer a
    deputy sheriff to a new shift. Not only do the CBA’s grant the
    sheriff the right to transfer employees, the CBA’s addition-
    ally prescribe a procedure by which such a transfer must be
    effected. The CBA’s state that “[t]he Department shall not
    change the work schedule, work shift, job or assignment of
    an employee . . . without providing such employees at least
    thirty (30) days advance notice of the change of work sched-
    ule, work shift, or job.” We note that in this case, Conrad did
    provide Kier the requisite 30 days’ notice via a written letter,
    which Kier acknowledged with her signature. We further note
    that Kier never instituted grievance proceedings following this
    notice of transfer; rather, proceedings in this case were origi-
    nally focused on whether Conrad had the right to prevent Kier
    from shift bidding entirely—a question which was resolved in
    Kier and FOP #10’s favor.
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    Although Kier and FOP #10 correctly point out that some
    provisions of the CBA’s make reference to particular ­scenarios
    under which the sheriff may transfer an employee, noth-
    ing about those provisions suggests that they are the only
    circumstances under which a transfer may be made. Rather,
    they apply to special circumstances (e.g., emergencies) when
    the typical transfer procedures, including 30 days’ advance
    notice, might not be practical. We do not read the provisions
    related to emergencies, temporary reassignment, or voluntary
    shift trades to be inconsistent with the sheriff’s general right
    to transfer employees from shift to shift. Indeed, under the
    interpretation of the CBA’s advocated by Kier and FOP #10,
    the management rights provisions in article III would be effec-
    tively mooted.
    To ignore provisions of the CBA’s would be contrary to the
    purpose of the parties and contrary to Nebraska precedent.
    A contract must be construed as a whole, and effect must be
    given to every part of a contract if possible. See Equestrian
    Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II, 
    308 Neb. 128
    , 
    953 N.W.2d 16
     (2021). It would be nonsensical for this court to
    ignore a provision which grants the sheriff the right to transfer
    employees from shift to shift and instead hold that the same
    provision is without effect simply because other sections of the
    CBA’s also concern changes to employee work schedules. Both
    the Merit Commission and the district court gave every provi-
    sion in the CBA’s full effect in determining that Conrad had no
    right to interfere with the annual shift-bidding process, but also
    finding that Conrad retained all management rights that were
    not explicitly limited within the contract.
    We conclude that the district court correctly applied the plain
    language of the CBA’s to this case. Under article III of the
    CBA’s, the sheriff retains certain management rights, including
    the right to transfer deputy sheriffs from one shift to another;
    the CBA’s further prescribe a procedure by which the sheriff
    may effect such a transfer. No other provision in the CBA’s
    specifically limits this right. This argument fails.
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    Merit Commission Regulations
    Kier and FOP #10 assign that the district court erred in
    holding that the Merit Commission acted within its jurisdic-
    tion in interpreting and applying its regulations to this case
    and denying the grievance. They argue that this is error for
    three reasons: (1) the shift-bidding provisions do not violate
    a statutory directive and are therefore valid, (2) the Merit
    Commission’s regulations did not bar the Department from
    contracting with respect to the shift-bidding provisions, and (3)
    the Merit Commission’s regulations exceed the Commission’s
    statutory rulemaking authority and are, therefore, invalid.
    [14] However, because we have already determined that the
    district court was correct in its conclusion that the terms of the
    CBA’s themselves gave Conrad the right to transfer Kier from
    shift to shift, we need not consider this assignment of error. An
    appellate court is not obligated to engage in an analysis that
    is not necessary to adjudicate the case and controversy before
    it. AVG Partners I v. Genesis Health Clubs, 
    307 Neb. 47
    , 
    948 N.W.2d 212
     (2020).
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the district court did not err in affirm-
    ing the decision of the Merit Commission which ordered the
    Department to conduct an immediate shift rebid and to permit
    Kier to fully participate in the process, but which concluded
    that Conrad retained the right to transfer deputy sheriffs from
    shift to shift. We conclude that the terms of the CBA’s entered
    into by the parties gave Conrad the power to transfer his
    employees from shift to shift. For that reason, we do not reach
    the issue of whether the regulations of the Merit Commission
    likewise authorized the sheriff to make such transfers. The
    judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-20-550

Citation Numbers: 30 Neb. Ct. App. 1

Filed Date: 6/22/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/13/2021