State Ex Rel. Lohn v. Medina County Board of Commissioners ( 2009 )


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  • [Cite as State ex rel. Lohn v. Medina Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    124 Ohio St. 3d 241
    , 2009-Ohio-
    6851.]
    THE STATE EX REL. LOHN v. MEDINA COUNTY
    BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS ET AL.
    [Cite as State ex rel. Lohn v. Medina Cty. Bd. of Commrs.,
    
    124 Ohio St. 3d 241
    , 2009-Ohio-6851.]
    Mandamus to enforce funding request by judge — Writ granted in part and
    denied in part.
    (No. 2009-0892 ─ Submitted December 21, 2009 ─ Decided
    December 24, 2009.)
    IN MANDAMUS.
    __________________
    Per Curiam.
    {¶ 1} This is an original action by a judge for a writ of mandamus to
    compel a county board of commissioners and its individual commissioners to
    appropriate reasonable and necessary funding for the probate and juvenile courts
    as reflected in the courts’ funding order for 2009. Because the board and county
    commissioners established that the judge abused his discretion by ordering
    unreasonable and unnecessary funding in part, we grant a writ of mandamus for
    only $12,800 of the additional funding ordered.           We deny the writ for the
    remaining additional $64,429.91 of the funding order.
    Facts
    {¶ 2} Relator, Judge John J. Lohn, is the judge of the Medina County
    Court of Common Pleas, Probate and Juvenile Divisions. Judge Lohn’s budget
    includes the Medina County Juvenile Detention Center, which provides a secure
    facility to house youths who are awaiting disposition by the juvenile court or are
    placed there as part of a dispositional order.
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 3} In October 2008, the American Correctional Association
    Commission of Accreditation for Corrections (“ACA”), a nongovernmental
    professional association, audited the detention center and determined that it was
    not in compliance with the standard that compensation and benefit levels for all
    facility personnel be comparable to those for similar occupational groups in the
    state or region.   The ACA concluded that the compensation for corrections
    officers at the juvenile detention center, who had a starting pay rate of $11.50 per
    hour, was substantially less than that of corrections officers at the county jail, who
    worked only 300 yards away and earned $17.40 per hour. The ACA is paid by
    the county to ensure that the county maintains the highest standards in the
    juvenile-corrections field. It was later determined that corrections officers at the
    jail actually earned a starting salary of $16.17 per hour instead of the $17.40 per
    hour mentioned in the ACA’s report.           In addition, the corrections officers
    employed at the county jail are represented by a union under a collective-
    bargaining agreement, while the corrections officers at the juvenile detention
    center are not.
    {¶ 4} The detention center is staffed with 23 full-time corrections
    officers and two part-time officers. The average turnover for these corrections
    officers has been about 50 percent per year. Six corrections officers left their
    employment with the detention center in 2009. According to Judge Lohn, the
    lack of adequate salaries has already affected security at the detention center
    because highly trained persons left, reducing the level of experienced personnel.
    At the beginning of 2009, however, the Medina County sheriff reduced his staff
    by 18 employees, including ten full-time corrections officers and one part-time
    corrections officer. The unions representing the sheriff’s employees, including
    the corrections officers employed at the county jail, later voted to rescind a
    previously negotiated 3 percent salary increase to avert the layoff of additional
    employees.
    2
    January Term, 2009
    {¶ 5} For 2008, respondent Medina County Board of Commissioners
    appropriated $1,012,551 for detention center salaries and $33,000 for detention
    center equipment.
    {¶ 6} In November 2008, Judge Lohn submitted his proposed 2009
    budget for the probate and juvenile courts, including the detention center, to
    respondent Medina County Board of Commissioners.              Judge Lohn’s budget
    request included $1,102,294.91 for detention center salaries as well as a request
    for $23,800 for the detention center’s equipment, including an upgrade to an
    existing computer system.
    {¶ 7} The requested salaries included a 2.5 percent cost-of-living
    adjustment for all county employees that Judge Lohn believed had been
    authorized by county officials, with an additional $1 per hour increase in the
    salaries of corrections officers at the juvenile detention center as part of a three-
    to-five-year plan to make the salaries of those corrections officers comparable to
    the salaries of the corrections officers at the jail. In preparing the budget request,
    the superintendent of the detention center also compared the salaries there with
    those of comparable detention centers throughout the state and determined that
    some detention centers paid their corrections officers more than the amount being
    paid to detention center corrections officers in Medina County and some paid less.
    {¶ 8} In December 2008, a $33,000 surplus in the 2008 line item for
    employees of the juvenile detention center was used to give them a 2.5 percent
    raise. This raise, however, had not been considered in calculating the budget
    request, which had been made in November. Although at times referred to as a
    raise, the court’s distribution of the surplus could be more appropriately viewed as
    a year-end bonus. Judge Lohn admitted that the raise given to detention center
    employees in December 2008 would offset the $1 per hour raise he requested and
    subsequently ordered for detention center corrections officers.           The court
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    administrator testified that the December 2008 payment would be part of the $1
    per hour increase ordered by the judge.
    {¶ 9} Judge Lohn’s $23,800 request for the detention center’s equipment
    included $11,000 for a new computer server and a battery backup, $1,000 for a
    new dryer, $1,500 to replace a security camera, $950 for a multimedia projector,
    $850 for a presentation cart, $2,500 to replace two computers, $3,500 to replace
    five radios, $1,000 to replace chairs, and $1,500 to purchase tables, cabinets, and
    shelving.
    {¶ 10} The server and battery backup were necessary because the current
    server and backup were outdated and the server was short on memory for the
    center’s needs. The superintendent testified that the new, high-capacity dryer was
    requested because of the large volume of laundry, that a day-night camera was
    requested to increase security outside the detention center at night, that the
    projector and cart were requested for in-house training, that new computers were
    requested as part of the network administrator’s maintenance program, that the
    radios were being replaced to make them compatible with other county public
    safety agencies, that the new chairs would replace those that were broken, and
    that the tables, chairs, and shelving would be for a dual-purpose room to train
    staff and tutor youths.
    {¶ 11} Because of the anticipated declines in general-fund revenues in
    2009, on January 7, 2009, the board of commissioners sent letters to each of the
    elected county officials and requested that they review their budgets to look for
    possible reductions and in particular to minimize personnel costs and refrain from
    raising salaries.
    {¶ 12} On January 9, 2009, Judge Lohn issued a funding order for the
    probate and juvenile courts and the detention center.      As he had previously
    requested, Judge Lohn ordered $1,102,294.91 for detention center salaries and
    $23,800 for detention center equipment. The board subsequently appropriated
    4
    January Term, 2009
    $1,037,865 for detention center salaries and $11,000 for detention center
    equipment.    The board’s appropriation included the 2.5 percent increase in
    salaries from the 2008 appropriation that Judge Lohn had requested and ordered,
    but did not include the additional $1 per hour for the corrections officers at the
    detention center. Judge Lohn appeared at a budget hearing before the board to
    explain his budget needs, but the board refused to appropriate the additional
    money ordered by the court, i.e., the additional $64,429.91 to cover the additional
    $1 per hour for corrections officers and the additional $12,800 for detention
    center equipment.
    {¶ 13} According to the county administrator, the board did not fund the
    amounts ordered by Judge Lohn because it could not afford to do so, given the
    current economic crisis, and because the requested funding would have been
    inconsistent with decreases of 10 percent in the budgets of most county officials
    and agencies. Nevertheless, both the county administrator and the county finance
    director admitted that the projected surplus was about $4,000,000 in the general
    fund at the end of the year, and that the board could have made the appropriation
    ordered by Judge Lohn.
    {¶ 14} For the $23,800 ordered for the detention center equipment, the
    county administrator claimed that the board focused on affordability, and the
    administrator had no opinion about the reasonableness of the amount requested.
    The county finance director mentioned that Judge Lohn might use money from
    the court computerization fund for one of his equipment requests, but he did not
    know whether the judge could legally use the fund to pay for computers at the
    juvenile detention center. The finance director’s opinion that Judge Lohn’s salary
    request for detention center employees was unreasonable was based solely on the
    county’s financial situation.
    {¶ 15} On May 15, 2009, Judge Lohn filed this action for a writ of
    mandamus to compel respondents, the board and its commissioners, to
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    appropriate the amounts ordered. After respondents filed an answer, the matter
    was submitted to mediation and ultimately returned to the regular docket. We
    granted an alternative writ, and the parties submitted evidence and briefs.
    {¶ 16} This cause is now before the court for our consideration of the
    merits.
    Legal Analysis
    Mandamus: General Standards for Funding Orders
    {¶ 17} Judge Lohn requests a writ of mandamus to compel the board and
    its commissioners to obey his funding order for the juvenile detention center for
    2009. In resolving this claim, we follow the general standards set forth in State ex
    rel. Maloney v. Sherlock, 
    100 Ohio St. 3d 77
    , 2003-Ohio-5058, 
    796 N.E.2d 897
    , ¶
    25-26:
    {¶ 18} “ ‘It is well settled that mandamus is an appropriate vehicle for
    enforcing a court’s funding order.’ State ex rel. Donaldson v. Alfred (1993), 
    66 Ohio St. 3d 327
    , 329, 
    612 N.E.2d 717
    . Common pleas courts and their divisions
    have inherent power to order funding that is reasonable and necessary to the
    courts’ administration of their business. State ex rel. Morley v. Lordi (1995), 
    72 Ohio St. 3d 510
    , 511, 
    651 N.E.2d 937
    (probate court); State ex rel. Lake Cty. Bd.
    of Commrs. v. Hoose (1991), 
    58 Ohio St. 3d 220
    , 221, 
    569 N.E.2d 1046
    (juvenile
    court). ‘In turn, the board of county commissioners is obligated to appropriate the
    requested funds, unless the board can establish that the court abused its discretion
    by requesting unreasonable and unnecessary funding.’ State ex rel. Wilke v.
    Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (2000), 
    90 Ohio St. 3d 55
    , 60, 
    734 N.E.2d 811
    ;
    State ex rel. Avellone v. Lake Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (1989), 
    45 Ohio St. 3d 58
    , 61,
    
    543 N.E.2d 478
    .
    {¶ 19} “In effect, the courts’ funding orders are presumed reasonable, and
    the board must rebut the presumption in order to justify its noncompliance with
    these orders. State ex rel. Weaver v. Lake Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (1991), 
    62 Ohio 6
                                   January Term, 2009
    St.3d 204, 205, 
    580 N.E.2d 1090
    . ‘This presumption emanates from the
    separation-of-powers doctrine because courts must be free from excessive control
    by other governmental branches to ensure their independence and autonomy.’
    
    Wilke, 90 Ohio St. 3d at 60-61
    , 
    734 N.E.2d 811
    .”
    {¶ 20} With these standards in mind, we next address the merits of Judge
    Lohn’s mandamus claim.
    Reasonableness of Funding Order
    {¶ 21} In their attempt to rebut the presumed reasonableness of Judge
    Lohn’s funding order for the juvenile detention center for 2009, the board and
    commissioners assert that he abused his discretion in requesting amounts for
    detention center salaries and equipment that exceeded by $77,229.91 the sums
    appropriated by the board. Absent an abuse of discretion by Judge Lohn, “the
    Board of County Commissioners is obligated to appropriate annually such sum of
    money as will meet all the administrative expenses of such court which the judge
    thereof deems necessary, including such salaries of court appointees as the judge
    shall fix and determine.” (Emphasis added.) State ex rel. Ray v. South (1964),
    
    176 Ohio St. 241
    , 27 O.O.2d 133, 
    198 N.E.2d 919
    , paragraph two of the syllabus.
    {¶ 22} The reasonableness of Judge Lohn’s funding request must be
    determined only from a consideration of the courts’ administrative needs, and the
    board and commissioners cannot substitute their judgment for that of the judge.
    State ex rel. Hague v. Ashtabula Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    123 Ohio St. 3d 489
    , 2009-
    Ohio-6140, 
    918 N.E.2d 151
    , ¶ 17; see also State ex rel. Moorehead v. Reed
    (1964), 
    177 Ohio St. 4
    , 5, 28 O.O.2d 409, 
    201 N.E.2d 594
    ; State ex rel. Foster v.
    Wittenberg (1968), 
    16 Ohio St. 2d 89
    , 45 O.O.2d 442, 
    242 N.E.2d 884
    , paragraph
    three of the syllabus.
    {¶ 23} Judge Lohn, in his capacity as juvenile court judge, was required to
    include in his written request for an appropriation to the board of commissioners
    “such sum each year as will provide for the maintenance and operation of the
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    detention facility.” R.C. 2151.10. Judge Lohn also appoints the superintendent of
    the detention center and fixes the compensation of the superintendent and other
    necessary employees, e.g., corrections officers. R.C. 2151.70.
    Salary Increase
    {¶ 24} The board and commissioners initially assert that Judge Lohn’s
    January 9 funding order increasing corrections officers’ salaries by $1 per hour
    was unreasonable and unnecessary. We agree. That request is unreasonable and
    unnecessary because (1) Judge Lohn’s order was premised upon a factually and
    legally inaccurate comparison between corrections officers employed at the
    juvenile detention center and corrections officers employed at the county jail by
    the sheriff, (2) Judge Lohn’s order did not account for the December 2008 raise
    given to detention center employees, including the corrections officers, and (3)
    the county’s fiscal situation did not support the order.
    {¶ 25} As to the first reason, Judge Lohn’s order was premised on the
    ACA audit report, which was based on an admittedly inaccurate starting salary
    figure for corrections officers employed at the county jail.       Moreover, the
    comparison with county jail corrections officers was inapt because these officers,
    unlike the officers employed at the juvenile detention center, are represented by a
    union under a collective-bargaining agreement. For example, in State ex rel.
    Weaver v. Lake Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (1991), 
    62 Ohio St. 3d 204
    , 206, 
    580 N.E.2d 1090
    , we rejected the county commissioners’ contention that just because salaries
    of corrections officers in the sheriff’s department had decreased, juvenile court
    corrections officers’ salaries should be likewise decreased: “We, however, are
    unable to conclude just from a salary decrease in the sheriff’s department,
    particularly one that resulted from labor negotiations and mediation, that the
    juvenile court employees are not now entitled to salary levels comparable to those
    that the sheriff’s department employees previously employed.” In fact, the higher
    salaries for county jail corrections officers arguably cannot cause any of the
    8
    January Term, 2009
    claimed turnover of detention center corrections officers when at the beginning of
    2009, the sheriff had to reduce his staff by 18 employees, including ten full-time
    corrections officer and one part-time corrections officer, and he also closed two
    pods at the jail. That is, there is no incentive for detention center corrections
    officers to leave their employment to join the sheriff’s department if there are no
    jobs available there. In addition, the unions representing sheriff’s employees,
    including corrections officers, voted to rescind a negotiated 3 percent salary
    increase for 2009 to avoid the layoff of more employees.
    {¶ 26} Second, Judge Lohn conceded in his deposition that the raise or
    bonus given to detention center employees in December 2008 out of the surplus
    left from the 2008 appropriation for salaries should offset the $1 per hour salary
    increase he requested and ordered for detention center corrections officers in
    2009. In fact, Judge Lohn did not even know about the year-end bonus until June
    2009, when he heard about it at a mediation conference.
    {¶ 27} Finally, when these factors are considered together with the
    county’s declining financial situation, we conclude that the salary-increase portion
    of Judge Lohn’s funding order is unreasonable and unnecessary. See State ex rel.
    Britt v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (1985), 
    18 Ohio St. 3d 1
    , 3-4, 18 OBR 1,
    
    480 N.E.2d 77
    (although claims of governmental hardship are not determinative,
    they are a relevant factor in determining whether a court abused its discretion in
    determining its budget request). The requested salary increase here distinguishes
    this case from our recent decision in Hague, in which the board of
    commissioners’ reduction in funding left the judge in that case with “the dilemma
    of closing either the detention center or the clerk’s offices of the probate and
    juvenile courts.” 
    123 Ohio St. 3d 489
    , 2009-Ohio-6140, 
    918 N.E.2d 151
    , at ¶ 26.
    No such dire consequence arises from the board’s denial of Judge Lohn’s salary
    increase here.
    Equipment
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 28} For the detention center equipment, Judge Lohn did not abuse his
    discretion in requesting and ordering $23,800. The county administrator testified
    that he had no opinion about the reasonableness of the amount requested. And
    although the county finance director testified that he believed that Judge Lohn
    could have used money in a court computerization fund for these expenses, he did
    not know whether Judge Lohn could legally do so, and he did not specify the
    amount of money available in the fund.         See R.C. 2151.541 and 2153.081
    (authorizing juvenile court judge to assess fees to generate additional funds to
    computerize the court and to make available computerized legal-research
    services). The court administrator testified that she did not believe that there was
    much money in the fund, because it had been used to purchase scanning
    equipment.    In any event, much of the requested sum for detention center
    equipment was not even for computer equipment.
    {¶ 29} The board and commissioners’ “reliance on evidence that other
    county departments did not complain about their reduced funding does not mean
    that [the judge’s] funding orders were unreasonable.” Hague, 
    123 Ohio St. 3d 489
    , 2009-Ohio-6140, 
    918 N.E.2d 151
    , ¶ 25. That is, this evidence does not bear
    upon the dispositive inquiry concerning Judge Lohn’s administrative needs for the
    juvenile detention center. 
    Id. at ¶
    17; State ex rel. Milligan v. Freeman (1972), 
    31 Ohio St. 2d 13
    , 18, 60 O.O.2d 7, 
    285 N.E.2d 352
    .
    {¶ 30} Finally, the board and commissioners claim that the requested
    additional funds for equipment are unnecessary because as of October 28, 2009,
    Judge Lohn still had sufficient money available. We rejected a similar claim in
    Hague, at ¶ 34, by reiterating that “[o]ur precedent requires evaluation of the
    propriety of the court’s funding request as of the time the judge makes it.” See
    also State ex rel. Maloney v. Sherlock, 
    100 Ohio St. 3d 77
    , 2003-Ohio-5058, 
    796 N.E.2d 897
    , ¶ 46.      Because the board and commissioners had a duty to
    appropriate the requested funds for the equipment to Judge Lohn when he issued
    10
    January Term, 2009
    his funding order in January 2009, “their duty to do so has not dissipated with the
    passage of time.” Hague at ¶ 34.
    {¶ 31} Therefore, the board and commissioners have failed to rebut the
    presumption that Judge Lohn’s budget order for equipment for the juvenile
    detention center was reasonable and necessary.
    Conclusion
    {¶ 32} The evidence establishes that Judge Lohn abused his discretion by
    ordering the board of commissioners to appropriate the requested additional
    $64,429.91 to cover the $1 per hour increase in salaries because it was based on a
    legally and factually flawed comparison and the deficiency had been offset by a
    year-end bonus.       The board and commissioners’ appropriation of a smaller
    amount for salaries than that ordered was thus appropriately based on an analysis
    of the needs of the juvenile detention center rather than an arbitrary
    determination. Cf. Hague, 
    123 Ohio St. 3d 489
    , 2009-Ohio-6140, 
    918 N.E.2d 151
    , ¶ 36, citing Maloney, 
    100 Ohio St. 3d 77
    , 2003-Ohio-5058, 
    796 N.E.2d 897
    ,
    ¶ 44. We thus deny the writ of mandamus for these funds.
    {¶ 33} Nevertheless, for the additional $12,800 for equipment for the
    juvenile detention center, we grant a writ of mandamus to compel the board and
    commissioners to appropriate these additional funds ordered by Judge Lohn for
    2009. The board and commissioners failed to rebut the presumed reasonableness
    of this additional amount.
    {¶ 34} Therefore, we grant a writ of mandamus to compel the Medina
    County Board of Commissioners to appropriate only an additional $12,800 for
    2009. We deny the writ insofar as it requested an additional $64,429.91 for salary
    increases for 2009.
    Writ granted in part
    and denied in part.
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    MOYER, C.J., and LUNDBERG STRATTON, O’CONNOR, and O’DONNELL, JJ.,
    concur.
    LANZINGER and CUPP, JJ., concur in judgment only.
    PFEIFER, J., not participating.
    _____________________
    Ron O’Brien, Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney, and Nick A. Soulas
    Jr. and Patrick J. Piccininni, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, special counsel for
    relator.
    William D. Mason, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Charles
    E. Hannan, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, special counsel for respondents.
    _____________________
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2009-0892

Judges: Moyer, Stratton, O'Connor, O'Donnell, Lanzinger, Cupp, Pfeifer

Filed Date: 12/24/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024