              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                               No. 12–2120

                             Filed June 6, 2014


CHRISTOPHER J. GODFREY,

      Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA; TERRY BRANSTAD, Governor of the State of Iowa,
Individually and in His Official Capacity; KIMBERLY REYNOLDS,
Lieutenant Governor of the State of Iowa, Individually and in Her Official
Capacity; JEFF BOEYINK, Chief of Staff to the Governor of the State of
Iowa, Individually and in His Official Capacity; BRENNA FINDLEY, Legal
Counsel to the Governor of the State of Iowa, Individually and in Her
Official Capacity; TIMOTHY ALBRECHT, Communications Director to
the Governor of the State of Iowa, Individually and in His Official
Capacity; and TERESA WAHLERT, Director, Iowa Workforce
Development, Individually and in Her Official Capacity,

      Appellees.


      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Robert A.

Hutchison, Judge.



      A claimant under the Iowa Tort Claims Act appeals a district court
decision dismissing some of his claims.           REVERSED AND CASE

REMANDED.



      Roxanne Barton Conlin of Roxanne Conlin & Associates, P.C.,

Des Moines, for appellant.



      George A. LaMarca, Andrew H. Doane, and Phillip J. De Koster of

LaMarca & Landry, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
                                  2

     Ryan G. Koopmans of Nyemaster Goode P.C., Des Moines, for

amicus curiae National Governors Association.
                                      3

WIGGINS, Justice.

      A plaintiff brought an action against the State of Iowa and

individual defendants. The plaintiff named the individual defendants in

their official and individual capacities.    The attorney general certified

under Iowa Code section 669.5(2)(a) (2011) that at certain times material

to the plaintiff’s allegations, the individual defendants were acting within

the scope of their employment.       Thus, certain immunities under Iowa

Code section 669.14 applied to various counts of the petition.            The

district court held the attorney general’s certification was applicable to all

of the plaintiff’s claims. Consequently, the district court dismissed those

counts alleging the individual defendants acted outside the scope of their

employment.

      On appeal, we hold the attorney general’s certification is not

applicable to plaintiff’s common law claims alleging the individual

defendants acted outside the scope of their employment. Therefore, we

remand the case back to the district court to allow the fact finder to

decide whether the individual defendants’ actions were within each

individual’s scope of employment.

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      Christopher     J.   Godfrey     is   the    workers’    compensation

commissioner.    In 2009, Governor Chet Culver appointed him to this

position for a six-year term. Godfrey’s term expires on April 30, 2015.

Prior to July 2011, Godfrey’s salary was $112,068.84.

      On December 3, 2010, Governor-elect Terry Branstad demanded

Godfrey’s resignation. Godfrey refused. After Godfrey’s refusal to resign,

Godfrey alleges he had a meeting with the chief of staff to the governor,

Jeffrey Boeyink, and the legal counsel to the governor, Brenna Findley, in

which these individuals attempted to intimidate and harass him into
                                        4

resigning by threatening to reduce his salary. Godfrey again refused to

resign. Subsequently, the Governor reduced Godfrey’s salary to $73,250.

      In response to these actions, Godfrey filed an amended petition

alleging causes of action against the State of Iowa; Terry Branstad,

Governor of the State of Iowa, individually and in his official capacity;

Kimberly Reynolds, Lieutenant Governor, individually and in her official

capacity; Jeffrey Boeyink, chief of staff to the governor, individually and

in his official capacity; Brenna Findley, legal counsel to the governor,

individually   and     in   her    official    capacity;   Timothy    Albrecht,

communications director to the governor, individually and in his official

capacity; and Teresa Wahlert, director of Iowa Workforce Development,

individually and in her official capacity.       The counts relevant to this

appeal are counts VI through XVI: procedural and substantive due

process claims against all defendants under the Iowa Constitution for

Godfrey’s   property    interest   in   his   employment;      procedural   and

substantive due process claims against all defendants under the Iowa

Constitution for Godfrey’s liberty interest in his reputation; an equal

protection claim against the State under the Iowa Constitution;

interference-with-contract-relations        claims   against   the   individual

defendants;    interference-with-prospective-business-advantage         claims

against the individual defendants; defamation claims against defendant

Reynolds, defendant Albrecht, defendant Branstad, and defendant

Boeyink; and extortion claims against defendant Findley and defendant

Boeyink.    By bringing his suit against defendants individually and in

their official capacities, Godfrey joined his claims against the individual

defendants with his claims against the defendants in their official

capacity. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.231 (allowing the joinder of multiple or

alternative claims in a single petition against a single defendant under
                                     5

certain circumstances); id. r. 1.233 (allowing the joinder of multiple

defendants in a single petition under certain circumstances).

      The Iowa attorney general provided a certification pursuant to Iowa

Code section 669.5(2)(a) certifying the individual defendants were acting

within the scope of their employment at the time of the allegations

contained in the amended petition.        The defendants then moved to

substitute the State of Iowa in place of the individual defendants for

counts VI through XVI pursuant to Iowa Code section 669.5(2)(a). The

relief asked for in the motion was to strike all references to the individual

defendants in counts VI through XVI. The individual defendants did not

ask the court to dismiss any counts of the petition.

      Godfrey resisted the motion on two grounds. First, he argued the

individual defendants were not acting within the scope of their

employment, and therefore, were not subject to substitution based on the

attorney general’s certification under section 669.5(2)(a).     Second, he

argued the substitution of the State for the named defendants in these

counts did not automatically require dismissal of those counts.

      The district court held a hearing on the motion to substitute. At

the hearing, the district court asked Godfrey’s trial counsel if Godfrey

was resisting any of the counts discussed in the partial summary

judgment motion. Counsel responded as follows:

            MS. CONLIN: I don’t think so, Your Honor.

            We also agree that claims for prejudgment interest and
      punitive damages are not proper against the State, but we
      don’t think we ever pled them against the State. And if we
      did, that was a mistake. So this depends on the Court’s
      ruling as to the individual defendants.

            In paragraph 4 –incidentally, Your Honor, paragraph 4
      of our resistance we withdraw those claims, but I don’t think
      we want to withdraw them as to the individual defendants.
                                         6
              ....

              MS. CONLIN: . . . . And so it seems to us that we can
       maintain claims for prejudgment interest and for punitive
       damages against the individual defendants insofar as they
       are still parties to this proceeding.

              And if I may say, Your Honor, in connection with our
       earlier motion, what the State says is that a state employee
       is for all times and all purposes cloaked with immunity for
       things like assault and battery. So if a state employee goes
       out at lunch, it’s a business lunch, and gets into a quarrel
       and knocks somebody down, the State says they are
       immune. And I say they are not.

              ....

             MS. CONLIN: I think the State’s position on this is
       just untenable, and a state employee is a state employee
       when he or she is acting in the scope of employment, but not
       otherwise.

       Trial counsel’s statements identify a distinction between the claims

Godfrey made against the defendants in their official capacities, i.e., in

their scope of employment where the court could properly substitute the

State, and the claims Godfrey made against the defendants in their

individual capacities. 1

       Subsequent to the hearing, the parties agreed the district court
should dismiss counts X through XV in their entirety if (1) the district

court granted the defendants’ motion to substitute the State of Iowa, (2)

the district court found against Godfrey on his claim that substitution of

       1In  oral argument, Godfrey’s counsel made the same assertion she made in the
district court. Specifically she stated:

      I wanted to address some of the issues that you’ve raised. In my
      pleading I did not bring the action under the Iowa Tort Claims Act. Did I
      file with the Iowa Tort Claims Act people? Absolutely because it seems
      as though that was a good thing to do just in case but I didn’t bring it
      that way. I brought it at common law. All six of the claims that were
      dismissed were brought at common law because I do not think that the
      Governor defamed Chris Godfrey in his scope of his employment.
                                           7

the State for the named defendants did not lead to the automatic

dismissal of those counts, and (3) the district court decided the

certification did not allow Godfrey to pursue his actions against the

individual defendants who were not acting within the scope of their

employment. 2      The district court granted the motion to substitute on

counts VI through XVI and dismissed counts X through XV as per the

parties’ agreement.

       Godfrey applied for an interlocutory appeal, asking us to review the

district court’s ruling to allow substitution and its dismissal of counts X

through XV in reliance on the attorney general’s certification.                     We

granted the application.

       II. Issues.

       The only issue on appeal is whether the attorney general’s

certification pursuant to Iowa Code section 669.5(2)(a) is applicable to

Godfrey’s common law claims alleging the individual defendants acted

outside the scope of their employment.

       III. Standard of Review.

       Godfrey argues the district court’s finding was an improper

statutory interpretation and this interpretation violated the Iowa

Constitution.     We review a district court’s statutory interpretation for

correction of errors at law.       See City of Postville v. Upper Explorerland

Reg’l Planning Comm’n, 834 N.W.2d 1, 6 (Iowa 2013).




        2Godfrey’s claims in counts X through XV included claims of interference with

contract relations, interference with prospective business advantage, and defamation.
Under Iowa Code section 669.14(4), the Iowa Tort Claims Act does not waive sovereign
immunity for these claims. Thus, if the district court properly substituted the State in
the place of the individual defendants for these claims, Godfrey could not maintain
these claims against the State.
                                    8
       IV. Immunity for State Employees Under the Iowa Tort Claims
Act.

       The doctrine of sovereign immunity originally prohibited tort suits
against the State of Iowa. Hansen v. State, 298 N.W.2d 263, 265 (Iowa

1980). Sovereign immunity also applied to governmental subdivisions.

See, e.g., Canade, Inc. v. Town of Blue Grass, 195 N.W.2d 734, 736 (Iowa

1972) (recognizing the rule of governmental immunity applied to a claim

of negligence against a municipality). This immunity was jurisdictional;

thus, the courts lacked jurisdiction over tort actions against the State or

its agencies. Lloyd v. State, 251 N.W.2d 551, 555 (Iowa 1977). In 1965,

the general assembly enacted the Iowa Tort Claims Act and thereby

waived the State’s sovereign immunity for certain tort claims against the

State. See 1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79 (codified at Iowa Code ch. 25A (1966),

current version at Iowa Code ch. 669). In 1968, the general assembly

enacted the Municipal Tort Claims Act and similarly waived a political

subdivision’s immunity for certain tort claims against a political

subdivision. See 1967 Iowa Acts ch. 405 (codified at Iowa Code ch. 613A

(1971), current version at Iowa Code ch. 670).

       However, prior to the waiver of sovereign immunity under the state

and municipal tort claims acts, an individual could maintain a cause of

action in tort against a government employee in his or her personal

capacity. See Montanick v. McMillin, 225 Iowa 442, 459, 280 N.W. 608,

617 (1938). In Montanick, a plaintiff sued a Wapello County employee for

monetary damages resulting from a car accident in which the employee

was driving a municipal vehicle. Id. at 444–46, 280 N.W. at 609–10. The

plaintiff voluntarily dismissed a cause of action against Wapello County

and proceeded only against the employee in his individual capacity. Id.

at 446, 280 N.W. at 610. We noted the employee’s liability did not relate
                                     9

to his employment, but stemmed from pure tort law.       Id. at 452, 280

N.W. at 613.

      We then identified a claim against an employee as involving

potentially two separate actions. Id. at 453, 280 N.W. at 613–14. We

recognized under the principle of respondeat superior a party could sue

both the servant and the master. Id. This was an additional remedy to

an injured party. Id. Thus, in theory an injured party could sue both

the employee and the employer, though at this time if the employer was a

governmental body, the employer was immune from suit. See id. at 453,

280 N.W. at 614. However, the exemption of governmental bodies from

liability due to sovereign immunity did not extinguish the primary

remedy that a person “who wrongfully inflicts injury upon another is

liable to the injured person for damages.” Id. at 453, 280 N.W. at 614.

We stated, “[p]ublic service should not be a shield to protect a public

servant from the consequences of his [or her] personal misconduct.” Id.

at 455, 280 N.W. at 615.      We also stated, “this general obligation to

injure no man by an act of misfeasance is neither increased nor

diminished by the fact that the negligent party is an employee of a

municipal corporation.” Id. at 458, 280 N.W. at 616. We subsequently

held “an employee of a city, county or state who commits a wrongful or

tortious act, violates a duty which he owed to the one who is injured, and

is personally liable.” Id. at 459, 280 N.W. at 617.

      We applied the same reasoning to a claim against a state employee.

Johnson v. Baker, 254 Iowa 1077, 1086–89, 120 N.W.2d 502, 507–09

(1963).   In Johnson, we cited a Drake Law Review article as properly

summarizing the law in this area. Id. at 1087–88, 120 N.W.2d at 508.

The article examined governmental immunities and came to the following

conclusion:
                                    10
             In summary, if the individual employee is engaged in a
      ministerial act he may or may not be liable for his own
      negligence. The employee can escape liability under a cloak
      of governmental immunity in such cases only if: (1) the
      activity is within the scope of the acts which he is authorized
      to perform, and (2) the negligence is a matter of nonfeasance.
      He may be held liable for his own negligence if: (1) the act
      was not within his scope of authority, or (2) for an act of
      misfeasance even if it is within his scope of authorization.

J. Robert Hard, Liability of Public Bodies, Officers, and Employees —

Governmental Immunity, 11 Drake L. Rev. 79, 106 (1962). We have never

applied sovereign immunity where state employees commit a tort when

acting outside the scope of their employment.

      After the enactment of the state and municipal tort claims acts, we

continued to apply the rule that an employee can be liable for acts

outside the scope of his or her employment.          See, e.g., Roberts v.

Timmins, 281 N.W.2d 20, 24 (Iowa 1979).          In Roberts, the plaintiff

brought a claim against several municipal employees for preventing him

“from continuing his auto repair business by shutting off his city water

supply, issuing a ‘health denunciation’ and attempting to get a local

utility to cut off his gas and electric service.” Id. at 21. The employees

subsequently filed a motion to dismiss, arguing the plaintiff’s claim failed

because he did not follow the claim procedures under the Municipal Tort

Claims Act. Id. The district court sustained the motion. Id. at 22. On

appeal, we observed a person attempting to recover damages against a

municipality or any of its officers, employees, or agents acting within the

scope of their employment must follow the procedures of the Municipal

Tort Claims Act to proceed.     Id. at 24.   Nonetheless, taking all well-

pleaded facts as true, we found the plaintiff alleged the “defendants acted

willfully, maliciously and without authorization outside the scope of their

employment”; therefore, the procedures of the Municipal Tort Claims Act
                                          11

did not govern the action. See id. Accordingly, we reversed the district

court and allowed the suit to continue until the evidence showed

otherwise. See id.

       In summary, even after the enactment of the state and municipal

tort claims acts, the victim of a tort could sue an employee in his or her

personal capacity for acts outside the scope of his or her employment. 3

       V. Certification Under Iowa Code Section 669.5(2)(a).

       Prior to the passage of section 669.5(2)(a), the State protected its

employees from the expense of defending a lawsuit by requiring the State

to defend, indemnify, and hold harmless an employee from any claim

against the employee, provided the employee performed the alleged

actions within the scope of his or her employment. 1975 Iowa Acts ch.

80, § 7 (codified at Iowa Code § 25A.21 (1977), current version at Iowa

Code § 669.21) (amending the Iowa Tort Claims Act to provide the State

would defend state employees).

       The general assembly added the certification provision in 2006 as

an amendment to the Iowa Tort Claims Act. 2006 Iowa Acts ch. 1185,

§ 107 (codified at Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a) (2008)). The language of the

certification provision is similar to the language used by Congress in the

Westfall Act.     Compare Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a) (2011), with 28 U.S.C.

§ 2679(d)(1) (2012). We also believe the general assembly’s purpose in

amending the Iowa Tort Claims Act is the same purpose Congress

intended when it passed the Westfall Act.




       3The  Iowa Code provides, “ ‘[a]cting within the scope of the employee’s office or
employment’ means acting in the employee’s line of duty as an employee of the state.”
Iowa Code § 669.2(1) (emphasis omitted). We need not decide the meaning of this
section to decide this appeal.
                                   12

      Congress enacted the Westfall Act in response to the United States

Supreme Court decision in the case of Westfall v. Erwin. See 484 U.S.

292, 108 S. Ct. 580, 98 L. Ed. 2d 619 (1988), superseded by statute,

Westfall Act, Pub. L. No. 100-694, 102 Stat. 4563, as recognized in

Gutierrez de Martinez v. Lamagno, 515 U.S. 417, 425, 115 S. Ct. 2227,

2232, 132 L. Ed. 2d 375, 384–85 (1995). In Westfall, the Supreme Court

limited a federal employee’s immunity from suit by finding immunity was

only available to the employee when the employee both acted within the

scope of his or her employment and the alleged wrongful act was

discretionary in nature. Westfall, 484 U.S. at 300, 108 S. Ct. at 585, 98

L. Ed. 2d at 628. Congress responded by expanding immunity under the

Westfall Act, finding the Westfall decision created a threat of increased

personal tort litigation against federal employees. Lamagno, 515 U.S. at

425–26, 115 S. Ct. at 2232, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 385.

      Congress enacted the Westfall Act as an act independent of the

Federal Tort Claims Act. Cf. id. at 419–20, 115 S. Ct. at 2229, 132 L. Ed.

2d at 381 (recognizing the Federal Tort Claims Act only came into play if

the Attorney General certified the defendants as acting within the scope

of their employment under the Westfall Act). As one court explained

      the purpose of the Westfall Act is to assure that the
      decisions and conduct of federal public servants in the
      course of their work will not be adversely affected by fear of
      personal liability for money damages and of the burden of
      defending damage liability claims. Congress thus wished to
      grant immunity from both liability and litigation in those
      instances in which the employee was acting within the scope
      of his or her office or employment. At the same time,
      Congress wished to leave undisturbed the rights of those
      injured by federal employees who were not acting within the
      scope of their office or employment.

Melo v. Hafer, 13 F.3d 736, 744 (3d Cir. 1994).
                                     13

      The Westfall Act sets forth the procedure for the Attorney General

to certify an employee was acting within the scope of his or her

employment. When a person or entity sues an employee of the federal

government, the employee delivers the suit papers to the Attorney

General.    28 U.S.C. § 2679(c).      The Attorney General then decides

whether to provide the certification. If the Attorney General provides a

certification and the plaintiff filed the action in state court, the action is

removed to federal court.        Id. § 2679(d)(2).     The Supreme Court

determined the Attorney General’s certification is reviewable. Lamagno,

515 U.S. at 434, 115 S. Ct. at 2236, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 390. If the court

finds the employee’s actions are not within the scope of employment, the

action proceeds as a regular tort claim.

      VI. Analysis.

      To decide this appeal, we do not need to decide whether the Iowa

attorney general’s certification is reviewable. Rather, we must address

whether the attorney general’s certification is applicable to claims

alleging individual defendants were acting outside the scope of their

employment.        Congress enacted the Westfall Act independently of the

Federal Tort Claims Act and set forth the procedure to follow when a

person or entity sues a federal employee.      Under the Westfall Act, the

Attorney General may provide his certification in any action, even those

not brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act. See id. at 419–20, 115 S.

Ct. at 2229, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 381 (affirming the Attorney General can

provide a certification in a case that originated as a regular tort case filed

in state court).

      The general assembly included a similar certification provision in

the Iowa Tort Claims Act. See Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a). However, the

first sentence of section 669.5 makes it clear the provisions of section
                                    14

669.5 only apply to suits brought under the Iowa Tort Claims Act. See

id. § 669.5(1) (“A suit shall not be permitted for a claim under this

chapter unless the attorney general has made final disposition of the

claim.” (Emphasis added.)).

      By limiting the attorney general’s certification to actions where the

plaintiff claims the employee is acting within the scope of his or her

employment, we preserve one purpose of the certification provision.

Those employees who act within the scope of their employment are

granted immunity from both liability and litigation and will not be

adversely affected by fear of personal liability for money damages and the

burden of defending damage liability claims.

      A plaintiff’s claim the state employee was not acting within the

scope of his or her employment is not a claim brought under the Iowa

Tort Claims Act. See id. § 669.2(3)(b) (defining “claim” for purposes of

the Iowa Tort Claims Act as those claims against a state employee where

the employee acts within the scope of his or her employment). Thus, we

conclude the attorney general’s certification can only apply to actions

brought under the Iowa Tort Claims Act and not those brought against

an employee acting outside the scope of employment.        Our holding in

this regard also preserves the other purpose of the certification—to leave

undisturbed the rights of those injured by state employees who were not

acting within the scope of their employment.

      Applying these principles, we recognize Godfrey has argued his

claims against the individual defendants in their individual capacities do

not derive from actions that occurred within the scope of their

employment. Thus, the attorney general’s certification does not apply to

his claims against the individual defendants in their individual

capacities.   These claims against the individual defendants in their
                                     15

individual capacities must proceed outside the Iowa Tort Claims Act until

such time the fact finder establishes that at the time of the alleged

actions, the individual defendants were acting within the scope of their

employment. Generally in a tort action, the fact finder decides whether

an act is within the employee’s scope of employment.        See Godar v.

Edwards, 588 N.W.2d 701, 706 (Iowa 1999). However, the State or an

employee may file a motion for summary judgment to resolve this issue.

See Boelman v. Grinnell Mut. Reins. Co., 826 N.W.2d 494, 501 (Iowa

2013).      (“We can resolve a matter on summary judgment if the record

reveals a conflict concerning only the legal consequences of undisputed

facts.”).

       If the court can resolve the scope of employment issue by summary

judgment, the court shall substitute the State as the defendant for the

employee.      If not, the employee will remain a defendant until the fact

finder establishes that at the time of the alleged actions the employee

was acting within the scope of his or her employment. If the fact finder

establishes the employee was acting within the scope of his or her

employment, the court shall substitute the State as the defendant for the

employee.

       Our decision today does not change the way the State has

administered claims against state employees or open the floodgates for

state employees to be sued individually and to pay the defense costs out

of their own pockets when they commit a tort in the scope of their

employment. First, it has always been the law of this State that when a

public employee acts outside the scope of his or her employment, the

employee is personally responsible for the cost of defense and any

damages he or she may have caused. See Montanick, 225 Iowa at 455–
                                    16

57, 280 N.W. at 615; see also 4 Eugene McQuillen, The Law of Municipal

Corporations § 12:269, at 400–13 (3d ed. rev. vol. 2011).

      For example, if a judge attends a board of supervisors meeting and

protests the placement of a hog lot near his or her property and in doing

so defames the hog lot owner, the public fisc should not be responsible to

defend that judge or pay damages on behalf of that judge if the hog lot

owner is successful in his suit against the judge. The reason the public

fisc is not at risk is that when the judge made the alleged defamatory

remarks, he or she was not acting within the scope of his or her

employment.

      Second, the Iowa Code requires the State to defend, indemnify and

hold harmless any employee whose tort was committed when the

employee was acting in the scope of his or her employment. Iowa Code

§ 669.21.   Moreover, we have previously held “[t]he duty to defend is

broader than the duty to indemnify.”     First Newton Nat’l Bank v. Gen.

Cas. Co. of Wis., 426 N.W.2d 618, 630 (Iowa 1988).          When a state

employee is sued and the employee contends the suit arises out of

actions performed in the employee’s scope of employment, the employee

should deliver the suit papers to the attorney general and ask the State

for indemnity under section 669.21. Section 669.21 requires the State to

indemnify the employee if the employee was acting in the scope of his or

her employment.    See Iowa Code § 669.21.      Thus, under the example

discussed earlier, if the same judge allegedly makes a defamatory

statement against an individual and a question exists as to whether he

or she made the statement in the scope of his or her employment, the

State has a duty to defend, indemnify and hold harmless the judge until
                                          17

such time as it is finally determined by a court the judge’s actions were

outside the scope of his or her employment. 4

      When there is no factual dispute as to whether the employee was

acting within the scope of his or her employment, the certification

procedure relieves the employee of personal liability by substituting the

State as the only defendant. However, when a factual dispute exists as

to whether the state employee was acting within the scope of his or her

employment, the court cannot substitute the State as the defendant until

the court determines the employee acted within the scope of his or her

employment.          Otherwise,     the   attorney    general    could   provide   a

certification when the employee was not acting within the scope of his or

her employment and put the public fisc at risk when it has never

previously been at risk.

      In summary, where a question of fact exists as to whether a state

employee’s actions were within the scope of his or her employment, the

state employee is going to be defended, indemnified and held harmless

from any damages and should not fear that his or her personal assets

will be at risk, unless it is finally determined the employee was acting

outside the scope of his or her employment. When a state employee acts

outside the scope of his or her employment, the employee should be

responsible for the attorney fees and the damages, not the public fisc.

      For these reasons we hold the attorney general’s certification under

Iowa Code section 669.5(2)(a) is not applicable to Godfrey’s claims that

the individual defendants were acting outside the scope of their

employment.       In circumstances where the employee’s actions are not

within the scope of their employment, the public fisc should not be used


      4This   would include defending the judge through any appeals.
                                    18

to pay for that employee’s defense or damages awarded a third party for

that employee’s actions.     The legislature has never authorized the

expenditure of public funds to pay for the acts of its employees when

done outside the scope of their employment. We are not going to do so

today.     Therefore, Godfrey may proceed on these claims against the

defendants individually until such time it is determined the defendants

were acting within the scope of their employment.

      VII. Conclusion and Disposition.

      We hold the Iowa Tort Claims Act only applies to torts committed

by state employees when acting within the scope of their employment.

Therefore, the certification provisions of section 669.5(2)(a) do not apply

when state employees commit a tort when acting outside the scope of

their employment.     This holding upholds the purpose of the Act by

relieving state employees of personal liability if their tort is committed

when they were acting within the scope of their employment.         At the

same time, our holding protects the public fisc by making sure the State

does not have to pay any defense costs or damages arising out of a tort

committed by state employees acting outside the scope of their

employment.

      We reverse the judgment of the district court substituting the State

in counts VI through XVI and dismissing counts X through XV in their

entirety. We remand the case back to the district court to allow the fact

finder to decide whether the individual defendants’ actions were within

the scope of their employment for these counts.

      REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.

      All justices concur except Waterman and Mansfield, JJ., who

dissent.
                                     19
                                                 #12–2120, Godfrey v. State

WATERMAN, Justice (dissenting).
      I respectfully dissent for the reasons articulated in Justice

Mansfield’s dissent, which I join. I write separately to elaborate on the

purposes behind the attorney general certification procedure and the

statutory immunities undermined by the majority today. The legislature

provided our public officials certain immunities from suit under the Iowa

Tort Claims Act (ITCA), Iowa Code ch. 669 (2011), and a straightforward,

simple certification procedure to extricate state employees from lawsuits

arising from the performance of their duties.         Iowa Code §§ 669.5(2)

(certification), 669.14 (immunities), 669.21 (defense and indemnity). The

intent of the legislature was to allow our state employees to do their jobs

without fear of the expense, distraction, and risk of personal financial

ruin caused by lawsuits.

      Certification not only spares the public official the risk of a ruinous

personal judgment, but also the costs of defending a lawsuit. As Voltaire

famously reflected, “ ‘I was never ruined but twice: once when I lost a

lawsuit, and once when I won one.’ ” Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Leo A. Daly

Co., 870 F. Supp. 925, 941 (S.D. Iowa 1994).          Until today, our public

officials sued personally for doing their jobs could quickly avoid the cost

of defending the suit upon the attorney general’s certification that they

were acting within their scope of employment.         The majority, however,

remands this case to have the scope-of-employment issue determined by

the   fact   finder,   the   jury.   Significantly,   under   the   majority’s

interpretation, a plaintiff suing any state official can sidestep the

attorney general’s certification merely by alleging the claim is brought

against the defendant in his or her “individual capacity.” By alleging that

simple phrase, the employee could be denied indemnification for ongoing
                                              20

defense costs. In effect, the majority creates an anticertification loophole

that substitutes plaintiff’s counsel for the attorney general to make the

determination whether the defendant state employee must defend the

lawsuit at his or her own expense. So now the state defendants are likely

to remain personally entangled in costly litigation all the way through

trial.

         The majority asserts it is protecting the public fisc by sparing our

state treasury the cost of defending lawsuits naming public officials in

their individual capacity. But, who decides at the threshold of a lawsuit

whether the state employee was acting within the scope of his or her

employment—the Iowa Attorney General, to whom the legislature

entrusted this determination? Or Godfrey’s attorney, based on unproven

allegations in the petition? Who is more likely to protect the public fisc?

The attorney general, who is elected by the people of Iowa and

accountable to the voters? Or a private lawyer for a claimant suing the

State and state employees, whose attorney fee is contingent on a

monetary recovery and increases with the size of the verdict or

settlement? With good reason, our legislature enacted the certification

procedure to empower the attorney general to decide the issue, with

judicial review limited to cases where the attorney general refuses

certification.       See Iowa Code § 669.5(2); see also id. § 13.2 (defining

duties of attorney general) 5.


         5As   relevant, Iowa Code section 13.2 provides:
                1. It shall be the duty of the attorney general, except as otherwise
         provided by law to:
                a. Prosecute and defend all causes in the appellate courts in
         which the state is a party or interested.
                b. Prosecute and defend in any other court or tribunal, all
         actions and proceedings, civil or criminal, in which the state may be a
                                         21

      I predict the consequences of today’s decision will be to hamper job

performance by state officials and to deter good people from public

service. Why take a government job if your personal savings could be

lost in a lawsuit?     Why give a negative job performance evaluation of

someone you supervise if he can sue you personally for defamation and

take that case all the way to trial?

      In this case, for example, the plaintiff has sued the Governor for

making “false, defamatory statements to news organizations, including

WHO-Radio and WHO-TV,” wherein the Governor “blamed Plaintiff for

rising workers’ compensation costs for Iowa businesses.” Because it is

important for public officials to communicate with the public, it has been

the law for the last fifty years that defamation claims are not available

against any public official who was acting in his or her official capacity.

The attorney general, after independently reviewing the matter, found

that the Governor was acting in his official capacity when he went on the

radio and television to make these statements. The defamation claims

were therefore dismissed, with the plaintiff being free to pursue his

constitutional and discrimination claims. However, because the plaintiff


_____________________
      party or interested, when, in the attorney general’s judgment, the interest
      of the state requires such action, or when requested to do so by the
      governor, executive council, or general assembly.
             c. Prosecute and defend all actions and proceedings brought by
      or against any state officer in the officer’s official capacity.
              d. Prosecute and defend all actions and proceedings brought by
      or against any employee of a judicial district department of correctional
      services in the performance of an assessment of risk.
               e. Give an opinion in writing, when requested, upon all questions
      of law submitted by the general assembly or by either house thereof, or
      by any state officer, elective or appointive. Questions submitted by state
      officers must be of a public nature and relate to the duties of such
      officer.
                                   22

included a bare allegation that the Governor was acting “individually and

in his official capacity,” the majority now strips the attorney general of

his authority, revives the plaintiff’s defamation claims, and puts the

Governor in the position of having to defend them.

      This will create a strong incentive for public officials to clam up

and not participate in press conferences or allow media interviews. Is

this what we want? Is it what the legislature intended? It should be

noted that the decision in this case applies to all branches of

government, including members of the general assembly.           Allowing

plaintiffs to sidestep the safeguards of the certification procedure will

have a chilling effect on the willingness of state officials to answer

questions about official actions or pending legislation. The price of the

majority opinion will be less transparency and openness in our state

government.

      The majority ignores the admonitions our court reiterated just a

few years ago on the important purposes served by immunities for public

employees:

             As recognized at common law, public officers require
      this protection [(immunity)] to shield them from undue
      interference with their duties and from potentially disabling
      threats of liability.
      Without such protection, there is the danger that fear of
      being sued will dampen the ardor of all but the most
      resolute, or the most irresponsible, public officials in the
      unflinching discharge of their duties.

Hlubek v. Pelecky, 701 N.W.2d 93, 98 (Iowa 2005) (citations omitted)

(internal quotation marks omitted); cf. Hook v. Trevino, 839 N.W.2d 434,

444 (Iowa 2013) (“We find it equally self-evident that the purpose of

section 669.24 [volunteer immunity] is to encourage people to provide

volunteer services to the state by removing the threat of personal
                                      23

liability.”).   The certification procedure and accompanying immunities

help our state officials execute their duties without being intimidated by

the threat of personal liability.      We should interpret the ITCA to

effectuate that purpose, not undermine it.        See Harden v. State, 434

N.W.2d 881, 884 (Iowa 1989) (“We seek a reasonable interpretation that

will best effect the purpose of the [ITCA] . . . .”); cf. Hlubek, 701 N.W.2d at

98 (recognizing the importance of protecting school officials from

personal liability).

       Federal courts likewise have echoed the importance of immunity

for public officials:

              The purpose of immunity is to protect “[t]he societal
       interest in providing such public officials with the maximum
       ability to deal fearlessly and impartially with the public at
       large. . . . The point of immunity for such officials is to
       forestall an atmosphere of intimidation that would conflict
       with their resolve to perform their designated functions in a
       principled fashion.”

El Dia, Inc. v. Rossello, 20 F. Supp. 2d 296, 301 (D.P.R. 1998) (quoting

Clinton v. Jones, 520 U.S. 681, 693, 117 S. Ct. 1636, 1644, 137 L. Ed. 2d

945, 960 (1997)), aff’d El Dia, Inc. v. Rossello, 165 F.3d 106, 108 (1st Cir.

1999). The Wisconsin Supreme Court elaborated on the public policies
underlying immunity for public officials:

       These considerations have been variously identified in the
       cases as follows: (1) The danger of influencing public officers
       in the performance of their functions by the threat of
       lawsuit; (2) the deterrent effect which the threat of personal
       liability might have on those who are considering entering
       public service; (3) the drain on valuable time caused by such
       actions; (4) the unfairness of subjecting officials to personal
       liability for the acts of their subordinates; and (5) the feeling
       that the ballot and removal procedures are more appropriate
       methods of dealing with misconduct in public offic[e].

Lister v. Bd. of Regents, 240 N.W.2d 610, 621 (Wis. 1976). Each of the

foregoing public policies is undermined by today’s majority decision.
                                     24

      The   district   court   correctly   upheld   the   attorney   general’s

certification in this case and dismissed the relevant claims against the

defendants personally. I would affirm.

      Mansfield, J., joins this dissent.
                                     25
                                                 #12–2120, Godfrey v. State
MANSFIELD, Justice (dissenting).

      I respectfully dissent.   The majority’s understanding of the Iowa

Tort Claims Act is not what the plaintiff argued, is contrary to the

language of the statute, and is unworkable as a practical matter. If we

consider the argument that Christopher Godfrey actually made, both

here and below, I think the district court made the right decision, and I

would affirm.

      I. The Majority’s Reading of the Iowa Tort Claims Act.

      Let me begin with the majority’s reading of the Iowa Tort Claims

Act (ITCA). According to the majority, a plaintiff who brings an action

against state employees need only add to the case caption that each

employee is being named “individually and in his [or her] official

capacity.” This small insertion then becomes a way for the plaintiff to

have all the benefits of the ITCA while avoiding its adverse consequences.

      Having used the “individual and official” language in the case

caption, the plaintiff gets the ball rolling by submitting the entire dispute

to the state appeal board, as the plaintiff did here.        See Iowa Code

§ 669.3(2)–(3) (2011) (instructing a plaintiff to file a claim with the

director of the department of management and granting state appeal

board authority over claims). Assuming the board rejects the claim or

doesn’t act, the plaintiff can go to court, as the plaintiff did here. See id.

§ 669.5(1).

      Next up is certification.      If the attorney general certifies the

defendants were state employees acting within the scope of their office or

employment, the plaintiff gets the best of both worlds.       As to any tort

claims that are allowed under the ITCA, the employees are conclusively

deemed to have acted within the scope of employment, the State is
                                     26

substituted as a defendant, and the State is bound by the employees’

actions and has to pay the bill for them. See id. §§ 669.5(2)(a), .21. On

the other hand, with respect to tort claims that are not allowed under the

ITCA because the State hasn’t waived sovereign immunity, the plaintiff

can freely argue the inconsistent position that the state employees were

not acting within the scope of their office or employment. Furthermore,

the plaintiff can take this inconsistent position without any repercussion,

because the State is irrevocably on the hook for the covered claims. See

id.

      Now, one might say that a shrewd attorney general could refuse to

make a certification, thereby keeping his or her options open. But this

won’t happen because, in that event, the defendants would file petitions

asking the court to find they were acting within the scope of their

employment. See id. § 669.5(2)(b). And assuming the court grants the

petitions, the plaintiff would again have the best of both worlds. He or

she would be able to argue the defendants were not acting within the

scope of their office or employment with respect to uncovered tort claims,

while benefiting from a prior conclusive determination that with respect

to covered tort claims they were acting within the scope of their office or

employment.

      I disagree that the ITCA establishes such a no-lose proposition for

the plaintiff, so long as the plaintiff is astute enough to include six words

in the case caption—“individually and in his [or her] official capacity.”

      While the majority’s position is a no-lose for the plaintiff, it is a

lose-lose for the defendants. Instead of getting an early determination

one way or the other that their liability will or will not be covered by the

State, state employees are left hanging until trial or summary judgment

with respect to the uncovered claims. Until the jury renders a verdict, if
                                            27

there is any issue of fact, they won’t know if they are going to have to pay

damages out of their own pockets.

       II. How the ITCA Actually Works: The Plaintiff’s Two Options.

       In my view, this is wrong. I believe the law is straightforward and

works like this: A plaintiff who believes he or she has been wronged by a

state employee acting outside the scope of employment always has the

option of bringing a stand-alone lawsuit against that employee without

going through the ITCA presuit notice procedures.                   In that event, the

burden shifts to the defendant to show he or she acted within the scope

of employment and therefore the claim or claims are covered by the ITCA.

See, e.g., Thomas v. Gavin, 838 N.W.2d 518, 519–20 (Iowa 2013); see

also Iowa Code § 669.2(3)–(4) (defining “claim” covered by the ITCA and

“employee of the state”). 6

       On the other hand, should the plaintiff choose to follow the ITCA

presuit notice procedures and then file suit based upon that notice, the

plaintiff becomes subject to the attorney general’s certification with

respect to the entire suit.

       The statute in my view compels this interpretation by making it

quite clear that certification applies to “suit[s],” not individual causes of
action. See Iowa Code § 669.5. Thus, the ITCA first requires a “claim

made under” the Act to be filed with the department of management. See

id. § 669.3(2). Once the appeal board acts on the claim, or in the event

       6In Thomas, for example, the defendants, whom the plaintiff had sued without

going through ITCA procedures, moved for summary judgment. See 838 N.W.2d at 519.
The district court granted summary judgment, finding that the defendants were
employees of the State and that the plaintiffs’ claims fell within the scope of the Act. Id.
at 520. We ultimately reversed the grant of summary judgment. Id. at 527. Similarly,
in McGill v. Fish, a state university employee filed a gross negligence claim against
several coemployees, without going through ITCA procedures. See 790 N.W.2d 113,
116 (Iowa 2010). The State brought a motion to dismiss on behalf of the coemployees
based on failure to exhaust administrative remedies, which the district court denied.
Id. We ultimately reversed the denial of the motion. Id. at 121.
                                           28

the board fails to act within six months, the plaintiff may bring a “suit”

for the “claim.” See id. § 669.5(1). This triggers the attorney general’s

certification power. See id. § 669.5(2)(a). The attorney general can then

certify that a defendant in the “suit” was a state employee acting within

the scope of the employee’s office or employment at the time of the

incident upon which the claim is based. See id. If that occurs, “the suit”

shall be deemed to be an action against the State, and the State shall be

substituted as the defendant in place of the employee. See id. Let me

quote the entire language of the subsection:

       Upon certification by the attorney general that a defendant
       in a suit was an employee of the state acting within the
       scope of the employee’s office or employment at the time of
       the incident upon which the claim is based, the suit
       commenced upon the claim shall be deemed to be an action
       against the state under the provisions of this chapter, and if
       the state is not already a defendant, the state shall be
       substituted as the defendant in place of the employee.

Id.

       In short, the certification process operates on “the suit,” not merely

part of it, as the majority concludes. See id. Certification results in the

state employee ceasing to be “a defendant,” rather than just removing

that employee from some parts of the case, as the majority would have it.

See id. 7




       7I recognize the state employee would remain a defendant to the extent any civil
rights claims are asserted against him or her under chapter 216. See Vivian v.
Madison, 601 N.W.2d 872, 878 (Iowa 1999) (“The legislature’s use of the words ‘person’
and ‘employer’ in section 216.6(1), and throughout the chapter, indicates a clear intent
to hold a ‘person’ subject to liability separately and apart from the liability imposed on
an ‘employer.’ ”).    That is because those claims are governed by a separate
administrative regime that subjects supervisory employees who commit wrongful
discrimination to personal liability. Id.
                                             29

        III. Applying Those Principles Here.

        Here, Godfrey filed a petition naming the State and six state

employees, including the Governor and Lieutenant                    Governor, as

defendants. The body of the petition alleged various acts and causes of

action, but did not indicate whether or not the defendants were acting

within the scope of their office or employment when they committed

those acts. As noted above, the caption listed each defendant followed by

the words, “Individually and in His [or Her] Official Capacity.”

        Before bringing this petition in court, Godfrey submitted it in its

entirety to the state appeal board. The amended petition actually says

this.   It recites, “On January 9, 2012, within two years of the acts of

which he complains, Plaintiff filed with the State Appeals Board a State

Tort Claims Act claims for the damages herein sought against the above-

named state DEFENDANTS and the State of IOWA.” The transcript of

the appellate oral argument also confirms that Godfrey previously

submitted everything to the state appeal board. 8

        For these reasons, I believe that the attorney general’s certification

affects the entire suit except for the civil rights claims. It results in the

state employees no longer being defendants to any tort claims, exactly as
section 669.5(2)(a) provides.       And Godfrey has not heretofore disputed

              8JUSTICE   MANSFIELD: You gave the presuit notice—
              MS. CONLIN: I did.
               JUSTICE MANSFIELD: Did you include all of the claims including
        the defamation and extortion?
              MS. CONLIN: Yes, sir, I did.
              JUSTICE MANSFIELD: So when you say you didn’t bring it under
        the Iowa Tort Claims Act, you followed the Iowa Tort Claims Act
        procedure, would that be fair.
              MS. CONLIN: I absolutely followed the Iowa Tort Claims Act
        procedure before I went to court just in case.
                                          30

that point. Instead, his position in the district court and this court was

that the attorney general’s certification was not conclusive and could be

judicially reviewed. For example, his application for interlocutory review

asserted as follows:

       Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Court grant
       interlocutory review of the District Court’s ruling and find
       that an attorney general’s certification in accordance with
       Iowa Code Chapter 669 is not conclusive as to whether the
       state defendants were acting within the scope of their
       employment for purposes of Plaintiff’s claims and that
       judicial review of such certification is necessary and proper
       in the first instance, with the matter submitted as a question
       of fact for resolution by the jury. 9

       IV. Is the Attorney General’s Certification Reviewable?

       I now turn to the question that Godfrey actually argued—i.e.,

whether the attorney general’s certification is judicially reviewable. Here
I would follow the well-reasoned opinion of the United States District

Court for the Southern District of Iowa. See Mills v. Iowa Bd. of Regents,

770 F. Supp. 2d 986 (S.D. Iowa 2011). As that opinion demonstrates,

the Iowa legislature intended to give final effect to the attorney general’s




        9Consider also the following excerpt from oral argument before this court, where

the court and Godfrey’s counsel discussed the possibility that certification might not
affect Godfrey’s individual capacity or “common law” claims:
               JUSTICE WIGGINS: Do you think that this Court could say that
       your causes of action and the last five or six counts are barred under the
       State Tort Claim Act if--say there is no review of the certification and we
       agree with Mr. LaMarca’s argument and we say there is no review, it’s
       final as to the State’s Tort Claim Act, couldn’t we also say that as to any
       common law action it would not be final after review?
              MS. CONLIN: I think that would be true, your Honor.
             JUSTICE WIGGINS: Then the burden would be on you to show it
       was outside the course of their employment in those other actions?
              MS. CONLIN: Yes, your Honor, and I wish I would have thought of
       that when I was in the district court but I did not.
                                     31

certifications under the ITCA that state employees were acting in the

scope of their employment. See id. at 994–96.

      This system in no way works unfairness on plaintiffs. As I have

already noted, a plaintiff always has the option of suing a state employee

outside the ITCA on an allegation that the employee was not acting in the

scope of state employment.     This puts the employee in the position of

having to prove to the satisfaction of an Iowa district court that the

employee was acting in the scope of state employment.         Godfrey here

chose not to exercise that option.

      On the other hand, if the plaintiff, as here, proceeds under the

ITCA, then the certification process comes into play.      Note again the

wording of section 669.5(2)(a). When the attorney general certifies that a

defendant was a state employee acting within the scope of state

employment, the suit “shall” be deemed to be an action against the State

under the provisions of this chapter.     Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a).     The

employee is removed from the case, and the State “shall” be substituted.

Id.

      This evenhanded system has benefits for the plaintiff. The plaintiff

knows once and for all that a defendant with billions of dollars in assets,

i.e., the State, will pay the bill if he or she prevails.        Following

certification, the plaintiff no longer has to worry about proving that a

particular defendant acted in the scope of employment. The system also

has benefits for the employee. The employee is removed from the lawsuit

as an individual defendant and is not subject to liability.    And it has

benefits for the State. Certain kinds of claims—e.g., some but not all of

the claims in this case—cannot be pursued.

      Under section 669.5(2)(b), as I’ve already mentioned, if the attorney

general refuses to make a certification that a state employee was acting
                                     32

within the scope of his or her employment, the defendant may “petition

the court . . . for the court to find and certify that the defendant was an

employee of the state and was acting within the scope of the defendant’s

office or employment.” Id. § 669.5(2)(b). However, there is no provision

allowing the plaintiff to petition the court for review of the attorney

general’s certification. As the Mills court pointed out, the existence of a

provision within section 669.5 allowing judicial review at the request of

the defendant only is a powerful indicator that the legislature did not

intend to allow judicial review of a certification at the plaintiff’s request.

770 F. Supp. 2d at 995–96 (“This provision makes clear that if the Iowa

legislature had intended to provide for judicial review over the Attorney

General’s certification, it certainly knew how to do so.”); see also Chiodo

v. Section 43.24 Panel, ___ N.W.2d ___, ___ (Iowa 2014) (plurality opinion)

(applying this principle).

      On first glance, that might seem unfair to the plaintiff.           The

defendant can get judicial review but the plaintiff cannot. But on a more

thorough consideration, it isn’t.      Again, if the plaintiff believes the

individual defendant was not acting in the scope of state employment,

the plaintiff can always file a garden-variety lawsuit against that

defendant in state court.      That lawsuit will go forward against the

individual defendant, unless the defendant in some way asserts the ITCA

is applicable. The defendant’s contention that the ITCA applies would

then be ruled upon by the court. See, e.g., Thomas, 838 N.W.2d at 519–

20; cf. Minor v. State, 819 N.W.2d 383, 405 (Iowa 2012) (finding that a

claim against a department of human services employee was barred for

failure to exhaust administrative remedies under the ITCA, even though

the employee was sued individually).
                                      33

      In other words, a plaintiff who believes the defendant was not

acting within the scope of his or her state employment can always get a

judicial determination of that issue. The plaintiff simply has to sue that

defendant in his or her individual capacity in state court without going

through the ITCA. Yet the news for the plaintiff gets even better. Under

our recent decision in Rivera v. Woodward Resource Center, even if the

plaintiff guesses wrong and a judge later determines the defendant was

acting within the scope of state employment, the plaintiff’s deadline for

filing a claim with the director of management under the ITCA is

extended. See 830 N.W.2d 724, 725–26 (Iowa 2013).

      So what Godfrey really wanted here was a second mechanism for

judicial review, one not provided by Iowa law. I would deny that effort. I

think section 669.5 is very clear.      If the attorney general makes the

certification, the action “shall” be deemed against the State and the State

“shall” be substituted. Iowa Code § 669.5(2)(a). A denial of certification

is reviewable at the request of the employee, but there is no provision for

review of a certification.

      V. The Federal Precedents Under the Westfall Act.

      Godfrey argues that we should follow the United States Supreme

Court’s interpretation of the Westfall Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2679(d)(1) (2012),

which is part of the federal tort claims system. He cites Walker v. State

for that proposition.        801 N.W.2d 548 (Iowa 2011).   Yet in Walker,

although we were interpreting a provision of the ITCA that had the same

wording as the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671–80, we

did not follow the Supreme Court’s interpretation.     See 801 N.W.2d at

565–66.    Instead, we followed a separate opinion written by Justice

Scalia concurring in the judgment only.       See id. (noting that “Justice

Scalia wrote separately to voice his disagreement with the analysis
                                   34

employed by the majority” and concluding “our analys[is] in our prior

discretionary function cases [is] more in line with Justice Scalia’s

analysis”).   In short, Walker was a case where we did not track the

majority views of the United States Supreme Court in interpreting Iowa’s

own tort claims act.

      In any event, what we have said is that we are guided by

interpretations of the FTCA “when the wording of the two Acts is identical

or similar.” Thomas, 838 N.W.2d at 525. In Thomas and Walker it was.

Id.; Walker, 801 N.W.2d at 565–66. Here it is not.

      The Westfall Act, unlike the ITCA, has separate language providing

that the attorney general’s certification is “conclusive” in only one

circumstance—namely removal. It reads in relevant part as follows:

             (1) Upon certification by the Attorney General that the
      defendant employee was acting within the scope of his office
      or employment at the time of the incident out of which the
      claim arose, any civil action or proceeding commenced upon
      such claim in a United States district court shall be deemed
      an action against the United States under the provisions of
      this title and all references thereto, and the United States
      shall be substituted as the party defendant.

            (2) Upon certification by the Attorney General that the
      defendant employee was acting within the scope of his office
      or employment at the time of the incident out of which the
      claim arose, any civil action or proceeding commenced upon
      such claim in a State court shall be removed without bond at
      any time before trial by the Attorney General to the district
      court of the United States for the district and division
      embracing the place in which the action or proceeding is
      pending. Such action or proceeding shall be deemed to be
      an action or proceeding brought against the United States
      under the provisions of this title and all references thereto,
      and the United States shall be substituted as the party
      defendant. This certification of the Attorney General shall
      conclusively establish scope of office or employment for
      purposes of removal.

             (3) In the event that the Attorney General has refused
      to certify scope of office or employment under this section,
      the employee may at any time before trial petition the court
      to find and certify that the employee was acting within the
                                    35
      scope of his office or employment. Upon such certification
      by the court, such action or proceeding shall be deemed to
      be an action or proceeding brought against the United States
      under the provisions of this title and all references thereto,
      and the United States shall be substituted as the party
      defendant.

28 U.S.C. § 2679(d) (emphasis added).

      Thus, by specifically stating that certification is conclusive in the

context of removal, the Westfall Act allows for an inference that the

attorney general’s certification is not conclusive in situations other than

removal. The ITCA contains no comparable language. The presence of

the “conclusively” language was critical to the Supreme Court’s decision

in Gutierrez de Martinez v. Lamagno.     See 515 U.S. 417, 433–34, 115

S. Ct. 2227, 2235–36, 132 L. Ed. 2d 375, 388–90 (1995). That language

made the statute “reasonably susceptible to divergent interpretation” and

thus allowed the Court to follow the interpretive principle “that executive

determinations generally are subject to judicial review.” Id. at 434, 115

S. Ct. at 2236, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 390.

      Notably, four justices dissented in Lamagno and said that “a plain

reading of the text” did not allow for judicial review of the attorney

general’s certification that the defendant was acting within the scope of

his or her federal employment. Id. at 439–40, 115 S. Ct. at 2238–39, 132

L. Ed. 2d at 392–94 (Souter, J., dissenting). But for present purposes, as

the district court emphasized in Mills, we need only focus on the relevant

differences between the ITCA and federal law as revealed by the majority

opinion in Lamagno.     Mills, 770 F. Supp. 2d at 994–95.     As the Mills

court put it, “[I]t is the final sentence of the removal provision of

§ 2679(d)(2) that creates an ambiguity in the framework of the federal

statute, leaving it open to judicial interpretation.”   Id. at 995 (citing
                                           36

Lamagno, 515 U.S. at 434, 115 S. Ct. at 2236, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 390).

And that final sentence is not present in the ITCA.

       Furthermore, if you think about it, the different outcome in

Lamagno makes sense. Suppose the federal judge who wrote Mills and I

got into a public spat and said bad things about each other. (That would

never happen, but let’s assume it did for hypothetical purposes.) If he

sued me for defamation in my personal capacity, I would have to defend

the case personally or persuade a court that I was acting in the scope of

my employment. On the other hand, if I sued him for defamation in his

personal capacity, the United States Attorney General could unilaterally

remove the case to federal court under Title 28 of the United States Code

section 2679(d)(2). Then, but for Lamagno, the Attorney General could

certify that this federal judge was acting in the scope of employment,

thereby depriving me of my cause of action because, under both the ITCA

and the FTCA, defamation claims are not available.                  In short, judicial

review of certification is needed to plug a potential reviewability hole in

the federal system, but not in the state system. 10

       The facts of Lamagno illustrate this point.                 Late at night, in

Colombia, South America, a car driven by an allegedly intoxicated drug
enforcement agent ran into the plaintiff’s vehicle. 515 U.S. at 420–21,

       10I  acknowledge that the Alaska Supreme Court followed Lamagno in holding
that a certification by the Alaska attorney general under Alaska’s counterpart to the
Westfall Act is judicially reviewable. See State v. Heisey, 271 P.3d 1082, 1088–91
(Alaska 2012). I believe Lamagno does not apply to the ITCA, for the reasons I have
already explained. Regardless, the Alaska Supreme Court did not embrace my
colleagues’ view that certification can never occur when a state employee is named in
his or her individual capacity. See id. at 1085–86 (“When a lawsuit is filed against state
employees, AS 09.50.253(c) allows the Attorney General to determine whether the
individually named defendants were acting within the scope of their employment during
the conduct giving rise to the lawsuit.”). Further, while the Alaska court recognized a
right to judicial review, it emphasized that the review should be performed by a court,
not by a jury, and should always occur before trial. See id. at 1090–91.
                                     37

115 S. Ct. at 2229, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 381. The plaintiff sued the agent in

the United States and maintained the agent had been acting in his

personal capacity.   The Attorney General, however, certified the agent

had been acting in the scope of his employment when driving the vehicle.

Id. at 421, 115 S. Ct. at 2230, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 382. At that point, the

lawsuit ended, because the FTCA does not allow claims that arose in a

foreign country, until the United States Supreme Court reversed and

found the Attorney General’s certification reviewable. Id. at 422–23, 115

S. Ct. at 2230–31, 132 L. Ed. 2d at 383.

      That situation could not arise under the ITCA. Under the ITCA, if

the defendant is sued in his or her personal capacity outside the

framework of the ITCA, the case goes forward unless and until a court

rules that the defendant was acting in the scope of state employment.

      Still, Lamagno leads me to two additional observations regarding

the majority opinion. First of all, if the majority is right, then the entire

United States Supreme Court missed the boat in Lamagno.           In a case

where the plaintiff maintained the defendant had not been acting in the

scope of his government employment, the Justices devoted many pages

to debating a single fighting issue—i.e., whether the Attorney General’s

certification could be judicially reviewed or not. My colleagues indicate

that this was wasted effort. So long as the complaint contained some

allegation that the defendant was also being sued individually, the

certification would have no impact. I think this would be a revelation for

the Justices of the United States Supreme Court. To the contrary, the

Westfall Act allows the Attorney General to issue a certification whether

or not the employee has been sued in his individual capacity. See, e.g.,

Winters v. Taylor, 333 Fed. Appx. 113, 116 (7th Cir. 2009) (“The Westfall

Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2679, allows a federal employee sued in an individual
                                            38

capacity to convert the action to one against the United States, thereby

obtaining    indirectly    the    benefit    of   the   United     States’   sovereign

immunity.”).

       The majority suggests the ITCA should be interpreted differently

because “the first sentence of section 669.5 makes it clear the provisions

of section 669.5 only apply to suits brought under the Iowa Tort Claims

Act.” But as I have already explained, this is a suit under the ITCA. It

contains “a claim under [chapter 669].” See Iowa Code § 669.5(1). 11

       My second observation is that although the Lamagno decision went

against the government, it protects government employees in an

important, practical way. It does so by assuring the attorney general’s

certification, if challenged by the plaintiff, will be reviewed by “the

District Court.” Lamagno, 515 U.S. at 436–37, 115 S. Ct. at 2237, 132

L. Ed. 2d at 391.      By contrast, as I have already noted, the majority’s

approach here simply renders the certification irrelevant and leaves the

state employee dangling until trial or at best summary judgment, unable

to ascertain whether he or she will or will not have personal liability.

This seems to undermine one purpose of the ITCA, which is to encourage

people to work for the government by providing safeguards if they are




        11Furthermore, nothing in the Westfall Act affirmatively indicates the United

States Attorney General’s certification authority extends to cases where a federal
employee has been sued in his or her individual capacity, but the statute has been
uniformly interpreted as granting that authority, because otherwise it would make no
sense. See 28 U.S.C. § 2679(b)(1) (stating that the remedy is exclusive for injury or
property loss “arising or resulting from the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any
employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment”);
see also, e.g., Hamad v. Gates, 732 F.3d 990, 994–95 (9th Cir. 2013); Sharratt v.
Murtha, 437 F. App’x 167, 169 (3d Cir. 2011); Parham v. Clinton, 374 F. App’x 503, 506
(5th Cir. 2010); Winters, 333 Fed. Appx. at 116.
                                          39

sued. Those safeguards mean little if the plaintiff can simply circumvent

them by adding a few words in the caption of a lawsuit. 12

       VI. Defense Costs.

       I now turn to the subject of defense costs.                Here we come to

another flaw in the majority’s opinion.

       The majority says that the attorney general’s certification authority

only extends to claims as defined in section 669.2(3)(b). Such claims, in

the majority’s view, cannot include claims where the state employee is

alleged to have acted in his or her individual capacity.                     Thus, for

certification purposes, according to the majority, we go claim by claim

and the allegations control.

       However, when my colleagues get to the subject of defense costs,

their reading of the statute changes. My colleagues say the State has a

duty to defend the state employee if “a question exists” as to whether he

or she was acting in the scope of employment, even if the plaintiff alleges

the state employee was not acting in the scope of employment. 13

       How can this be? How can the certification authority be narrower

than the authority to provide a defense? Iowa Code sections 669.21 and

669.5 incorporate the same definition of claim from Iowa Code section
669.2(3)(b). Thus, section 669.21, which the majority cites but does not

quote, provides that the State “shall defend any employee, and shall


       12As   the United States Supreme Court has said, “the purpose of the Westfall Act
[is] to shield covered employees not only from liability but from suit.” Osborn v. Haley,
549 U.S. 225, 248, 127 S. Ct. 881, 898, 166 L. Ed. 2d 819, 841 (2007). I think the
general assembly had the same purpose when it enacted section 669.5, modeled after
the Westfall Act, in 2006. See 2006 Iowa Acts ch. 1185, § 107 (codified at Iowa Code
§ 669.5 (2007)).
       13Who   decides if “a question exists”? The majority does not say, but presumably
this would be the attorney general. According to the majority, the employee “should
deliver the suit papers to the attorney general.”
                                   40

indemnify and hold harmless an employee against any claim as defined

in section 669.2, subsection 3, paragraph ‘b.’ ” Iowa Code § 669.21.

      I submit: Either you can go behind the allegations of individual

capacity or you cannot.       The majority cannot interpret the same

statute—section 669.2(3)(b)—two different ways in the same opinion.

      The majority justifies this contradiction by citing a private

insurance case for the proposition that “[t]he duty to defend is broader

than the duty to indemnify.” First Newton Nat’l Bank v. Gen. Cas. Co. of

Wis., 426 N.W.2d 618, 630 (Iowa 1988). I do not follow the majority’s

reasoning.   In First Newton National Bank, we held as a matter of

insurance law that when a lawsuit includes covered and uncovered

claims, the insurer has a duty to defend the entire lawsuit. Id.       That

case does not apply here because we are interpreting statutes and do not

get to write the law ourselves. The legislature has defined the duty to

defend and indemnify in section 669.21 based on the definition of claim

in section 669.2(3)(b). We are constrained by those definitions. Either

the statutory definition of claim allows the attorney general to look past

the bare allegations to the underlying facts, or it doesn’t. Chapter 669

will not support an interpretation that the attorney general gets to look

beyond the bare allegations for defense and indemnification purposes but

not for certification purposes.

      In any event, First Newton National Bank does not go where the

majority wants to go. That decision only imposes a duty to defend when

a lawsuit includes both covered and uncovered claims, and thus would

not apply to the majority’s example of a state employee who is sued only

in his or her individual capacity. Further, First Newton National Bank

distinguishes the duty to defend from the duty to indemnify, whereas the

majority is talking about something different and wants to distinguish
                                      41

both of those duties from the ability to certify. For all these reasons, the

majority’s private insurance analogy falls apart on careful analysis.

        I can understand the majority’s reluctance to reach the logical

conclusion of their reasoning and their desire to limit the collateral

damage from today’s opinion. Still, there should be no doubt that this

reluctance leads them to interpret section 669.2(3)(b) in two different

ways in the same opinion.

        VII. Conclusion.

        Offering a policy justification for today’s decision, the majority

says:

        In circumstances where the employee’s actions are not
        within the scope of their employment, the public fisc should
        not be used to pay for that employee’s defense or damages
        awarded a third party for that employee’s actions. The
        legislature has never authorized the expenditure of public
        funds to pay for the acts of its employees when done outside
        the scope of their employment. We are not going to do so
        today.

No one disputes this broad proposition that the public should not pay for

actions taken by state employees outside the scope of their employment,

including the defense of lawsuits against those employees. The majority,

in this regard, is attacking a straw man.        The real issue we need to

resolve is who decides the employee’s status.

        As I’ve already explained, I believe a plaintiff has two alternatives.

If the plaintiff elects to proceed under the ITCA, then he or she

authorizes the attorney general to decide whether the claims within that

suit are in fact claims against a state employee in the scope of

employment. Public funds will not pay for the defense of the employee

unless the attorney general, an elected official answerable to the citizens

of this State, makes this determination.
                                        42

      Alternatively, if the plaintiff wants to have a court decide whether

the state employee acted within the scope of employment, he or she need

only file a run-of-the-mill tort lawsuit against the employee.              At that

point, the employee must raise as a defense that he or she was acting

within the scope of state employment. A court would decide whether the

defense is valid.

      In short, the ITCA contemplates a quick, early decision by either

the attorney general or a court, depending on how the plaintiff chooses to

bring his or her action.         Either way, a third-party decision maker

protects the public fisc.       And the plaintiff, by choosing whether to

proceed inside or outside the ITCA, gets to select that decision maker.

      I want to note one further inconsistency in the majority opinion.

The majority asserts that “our holding protects the public fisc by making

sure the State does not have to pay any defense costs or damages arising

out of a tort committed by state employees acting outside the scope of

their employment.”        Yet just a few paragraphs before, the majority

indicates that if a state employee is sued on an allegation that he or she

acted outside the scope of employment, the public fisc must pay for the

employee’s defense if merely “a question exists” whether he or she acted

in the scope of employment. Since a mere “question” in the eyes of the

attorney general is enough to require the State to provide a defense,

according to the majority, there obviously will be situations where the

employee gets a state-paid defense even though it is later determined he

or she was not acting in the course of employment.

      Finally,      I   would   like   to    close   with   a   practical    point.

Notwithstanding the zealous and effective advocacy by both sides before

this court, the attorney general’s certification actually eliminates only a

small part of Godfrey’s case. It has no impact on Godfrey’s civil rights
                                     43

claims, including his allegation that he was discriminated against based

on sexual orientation. Nor does it affect his constitutional claims or his

extortion claim.    The certification would only bar Godfrey’s intentional

interference and defamation claims, which are expressly exempt from the

ITCA.      See Iowa Code § 669.14(4).       The FTCA has comparable

exemptions. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). Presumably, these exemptions are

based on the general notion of giving public officials some leeway in

speaking and acting when they are performing their job duties. My vote

would be to preserve that leeway, by allowing the ITCA to operate as the

legislature intended. Regardless, Godfrey would still have his full day in

court on the discrimination and constitutional claims that are the core of

his lawsuit.

        Waterman, J. joins this dissent.
