IN THE MATTER OF
MARK HRUSKA.
________________________________________________________________
Submitted December 14, 2004 - Decided February 8, 2005
Before Judges Kestin, Lefelt and Alley.
On appeal from a Final Decision of the
New Jersey Merit System Board, Docket
No. CSV-8982-00.
John W. Spoganetz, attorney for
appellant Mark Hruska.
Peter C. Harvey, Attorney General,
attorney for respondent New Jersey
Merit System Board (Todd A. Wigder,
Deputy Attorney General, on the
brief).
Genova, Burns & Vernoia, attorneys
for respondent Borough of Carteret
(Brian W. Kronick, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LEFELT, J.A.D.
Petitioner Mark Hruska appeals from a Merit System Board decision upholding respondent Borough
of Carteret's refusal to appoint Hruska, under the "rule of three," from two
Department of Personnel certified lists of eligible candidates for Carteret's paid fire department.
On appeal, Hruska makes three arguments for reversal of the Board's decision. He
alleges that (1) Carteret refused to appoint him on August 17, 1998 and
June 2, 1999 for discriminatory and retaliatory reasons, (2) Carteret failed to support
its decision denying him appointment on June 2, 1999, and (3) both refusals
to appoint were improper because Carteret modified the Department of Personnel eligibility criteria
by adding a threshold requirement that applicants be active volunteer firefighters. We affirm,
without further discussion, the Board's decision that Hruska failed to prove age discrimination
and retaliation. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(D). That decision was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable and
warrants our affirmance. Karins v. City of Atlantic City,
152 N.J. 532, 540
(1998). We find Hruska's second argument without sufficient merit to warrant further discussion.
R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). However, we disagree with the Board's conclusion that Carteret properly utilized
the "rule of three," and reverse on that basis.
Carteret has a combination Fire Department, consisting of two volunteer departments and one
paid, or career, department. There are a maximum of seventy-four firefighters permitted to
join the volunteer departments and only eighteen firefighters are allotted to the career
department.
Hruska acquired his firefighting experience in Carteret by enrolling in the volunteer departments
in 1980. He advanced as a volunteer until he became Chief of the
volunteers in 1994, when he was about thirty-five years of age. In his
fifteen years of fighting fires, Hruska was involved in seventy to seventy-five percent
of all fire calls, thereby fighting from 300 to 500 fires each year.
There is no question that Hruska's service as a volunteer firefighter was commendable
and that he was the recipient of several awards and honors. In 1993,
Hruska was awarded a certificate of exemption, which qualified him for various firefighter
benefits. See N.J.S.A. 40A:14-56 to -65.
In 1994 or 1995, Hruska took a civil service exam and physical to
become a paid firefighter in Carteret. After completing the exam and physical, the
Department of Personnel told Hruska that he ranked number one on the certification
list. In 1996, Hruska became an "inactive" volunteer firefighter and, though he remained
inactive through all relevant dates, as openings in the paid firefighter service department
occurred, he began to apply for appointment.
Carteret followed the normal civil service process to fill openings in the career
service. As openings occurred, the Borough Council's Fire Committee requested from the Department
of Personnel a certified list of candidates who had passed the physical and
written exam and were eligible for appointment to the paid department. The Fire
Committee considered the persons on the list and made recommendations to the Borough
Council, which was responsible for making the final hiring determinations.
The Council denied appointment to Hruska three times, but he appeals from only
the last two rejections. The circumstances surrounding the last two rejections, August 17,
1998 and June 2, 1999, are as follows. On August 17, 1998, the
Department of Personnel certified a list of candidates and Hruska was ranked second.
The Council appointed the first-ranked candidate and bypassed Hruska to appoint the third-
and fifth-ranked candidates. On June 2, 1999, the Council once again bypassed Hruska
on the certified list. This time, Hruska was ranked first, but the Council
appointed the second- and third-ranked candidates instead.
Hruska's objections to the Council's actions eventually came before Administrative Law Judge Joseph
Lavery, who found that "[t]he Borough Council imposed a threshold requirement of active
volunteer firefighting status which overrode any other consideration of suitability for appointment." The
ALJ criticized Carteret for creating "a threshold, qualifying requirement for appointment of already-qualified,
[Department of Personnel-]certified eligibles, of whom [Hruska] was one. This unlawful requirement was:
active participation in volunteer firefighting." Because the judge concluded that the Council "had
no legal authority" to "effectively eliminate[] [Hruska] from the certification," the "bypass under
the rule of three was consequently invalid."
The Merit System Board rejected the ALJ's determination as a "legal conclusion." The
Board explained that "under the Rule of Three, [an appointing authority like Carteret]
may use any legitimate basis to bypass an individual in favor of lower-ranked
eligibles." The Board reasoned that "[i]n this case, it was not illegal for
the appointing authority to use active volunteer service in differentiating between the candidates.
Such a distinction appears to be job-related and consistent with principles of merit
and fitness, and does not present any form of illegal discrimination . .
. ."
We disagree with the Board and believe that the agency has misinterpreted Judge
Lavery's fact finding and consequently reached the wrong legal conclusion. The ALJ found
that Carteret had "created a threshold, qualifying requirement for appointment" that was not
among the qualifying eligibility requirements developed by the Department of Personnel.
This finding was based on the judge's credibility assessment of several lay witnesses
who testified at the hearing, and focused on the Council's determination that in
essence found Hruska ineligible for the position and not on the Council's differentiation
among candidates on the eligibility list.
The ALJ's finding was, therefore, not a legal determination that could be reversed
by the Board simply because it disagreed with the judge. The Board can
only reverse fact findings based on the credibility of lay witnesses if the
findings are "arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable or are not supported by sufficient, competent,
and credible evidence in the record." N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10(c). If it wished to reverse
the fact finding at issue, the Board had to state "with particularity" its
reasons for rejecting the finding. Ibid. The Board may not simply recast the
finding as a legal determination because it wishes to reach a different conclusion
than the one reached by the ALJ. See Cavalieri v. Bd. of Trs.
of PERS,
368 N.J. Super. 527, 534 (App. Div. 2004).
Because the ALJ's fact finding distinguished between an appointing authority preferring active volunteers
and using that criterion as an eligibility factor, the Board incorrectly reviewed the
judge's fact finding. The Board not only improperly considered the fact finding a
"legal conclusion," but also shifted the judge's finding from its eligibility context to
the context by which active volunteer service was merely used to compare qualified
candidates on the eligibility list. This also was improper.
The judge in essence found that the Council had disqualified Hruska and never
compared or attempted to distinguish his service from others on the list. Hruska's
candidacy was, therefore, not fairly reviewed by the Council because, according to the
ALJ, the Council concluded that Hruska failed to meet the threshold qualification of
active volunteer service.
We also are bound by Judge Lavery's fact finding, In re Grossman,
127 N.J. Super. 13, 23 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
65 N.J. 292 (1974), and
may reverse only if the finding is not supported by sufficient credible evidence
in the record. In re Taylor,
158 N.J. 644, 656 (1999). Our review
of the record has disclosed sufficient credible evidence supporting the judge's finding. For
example, when Hruska was bypassed the first time
See footnote 1
in favor of two older
applicants who were ranked below him, a councilman advised Hruska that "the only
reason why you were passed up is because these two guys were active
and you weren't for the last three years. That's the only reason." Hruska
then asked the councilman "[o]kay, so then that . . . does exclude
me from the rest of the hires then?" The councilman replied, "No, no,
no, no, no." Hruska then interjected his concern by asking, "[c]ause what, we're
gonna change criteria mid-stream?" The councilman told Hruska that the Council could change
criteria mid-stream, and said "[c]ould. Sure. Sure. But that was in this case.
Now the next hiring is a whole nother case."
Despite the councilman's assurance that the next hiring would be different, another councilman
who testified about the August 1998 hiring explained that you had to be
an active volunteer to be appointed to the position. "That was the criteri[on]
that the committee and the chairperson set." If you were not an active
volunteer, according to the councilman, you could not be appointed. When asked whether
being an active volunteer was important to the Borough, the councilman replied "[t]hat
was the prerequisite that the committee had set originally."
When the Department of Personnel informed Carteret that the Borough had failed to
supply the Department with a statement of reasons for the June 2, 1999
hiring, Communications Workers of Am. v. N.J. Dep't of Pers.,
154 N.J. 121,
129-30 (1998), the Borough Clerk replied that Hruska was bypassed in part because
"[p]articular weight was given to the successful candidates' active volunteer status, in contrast
to Mr. Hruska's inactive status over the past five (5) years." The only
other reasons provided by the Clerk to the Department for bypassing Hruska were
general statements regarding "personal interviews of the candidates and careful consideration of the
experience and past work history as well."
See footnote 2
Accordingly, we accept the ALJ's fact finding that the Borough Council adopted and
applied a new eligibility criterion after the Department of Personnel had certified lists
of eligible candidates for appointment to the Carteret career firefighting service. We proceed
to review the legal implications of such action.
A career civil service job, such as a paid firefighter in Carteret, is
subject to competitive examination procedures. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-2.1 to -2.17; N.J.A.C. 4A:3-1.2(b). The minimum
qualifications of candidates must be announced beforehand. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-2.1(c)3. The scope of requirements
that applicants must meet are established by the Department of Personnel and specified
in the examination announcement. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-2.3. After the examination, the Department of Personnel
may certify the names of eligibles for each position. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.2. Upon receipt
of a certification, an appointing authority may, under the "rule of three," appoint
"one of the top three interested eligibles" from the list, provided that preference
is given to veterans and in the case of a tie, specific procedures
are followed. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8(a)3 i, iii; N.J.S.A. 11A:4-8. If a "higher ranked eligible"
is bypassed by the appointing authority, the authority must advise the Department of
Personnel of the persons appointed and explain "why the appointee was selected instead
of a higher ranked eligible or an eligible in the same rank due
to a tied score." N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8(b)4.
Under the rule of three, an appointing authority like Carteret has the statutory
discretion to appoint any one of the top three candidates who the public
employer considers best suited to fill the position. N.J.S.A. 11A:4-8; N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8(a); Nunan
v. N.J. Dep't of Pers.,
244 N.J. Super. 494, 497 (App. Div. 1990).
Carteret could bypass Hruska for any legitimate reason based upon the candidate's merit.
In re Crowley,
193 N.J. Super. 197, 214 (App. Div. 1984).
However, the rule of three, while permitting a broad exercise of discretion, also
operates to "narrow hiring discretion." Terry v. Mercer County Bd. of Chosen Freeholders,
86 N.J. 141, 149 (1981). Its "basic intent and effect[] acts to fetter
the absolute discretion of government to hire." Id. at 150. "[T]he discretion of
government to hire is not absolute," and "other important criteria in governmental employment
practices" are still relevant. Ibid. Discretion may not be "exercised in a way
inconsistent with 'merit' considerations." Ibid. All civil service appointments must "be made according
to merit and fitness to be ascertained, as far as practicable, by examination
. . . ." N.J. Const. art VII, § 1, ¶ 2.
So, for example, the Law Against Discrimination, N.J.S.A. 10:5-17, further limits the appointing
authority's discretion during hiring determinations despite the rule of three. Terry, supra, 86
N.J. at 152. "Significant limitations, founded on constitutional and statutory principles, have always
been an inherent concomitant of government's authority to employ." Id. at 150. "[T]here
is nothing intrinsic in the 'rule of three,' either in a constitutional sense
or as a matter of legislative contemplation, that renders it totally impervious to
reasonable modifications or influences." Id. at 151.
Here, the Department of Personnel job specifications for firefighters did not require applicants
to be active volunteer firefighters. The requirements for the firefighter exam also did
not mandate that candidates be active volunteers at the time of appointment. To
qualify for the firefighter examination, an applicant needed to be a citizen, a
High School or Vocational High School graduate, a licensed driver, and not less
than 18 years of age. In addition, applicants needed to pass a medical
and performance examination. There was no threshold requirement that applicants be active volunteer
firefighters.
Considering the persons hired by Carteret, the criterion of active volunteer excluded only
Hruska. In essence, Carteret removed Hruska from the eligibility list, without allowing any
right to appeal the removal. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.7(d); see Nunan, supra, 244 N.J. Super.
at 498 (When a name is improperly deleted from the certified list of
eligibles, the proper remedy is "to revive an expired list and add appellant's
name.").
Had the active volunteer criterion been included in the examination announcement, Hruska could
have decided at that time whether he wanted to become active again or
whether he wanted to forsake his goal of career service appointment and not
take the examination.
Applying the unannounced threshold qualification after Hruska appeared on the list as eligible
for appointment was unjust to Hruska and in violation of the pertinent regulatory
framework. We do not intend by this decision to restrict the factors that
may be considered by an appointing authority when utilizing the rule of three
to only the criteria previously listed as eligibility factors. As the Board emphasized,
the appointing authority could have compared the candidates on the list and for
merit and fitness reasons selected those who were active volunteers. We merely conclude
that there is a difference between comparing candidates on the list by carefully
and in good faith evaluating their merit and fitness, as required by the
Constitution and our civil service system, and excluding a candidate from any consideration
or comparison with other candidates because of an unannounced, secret eligibility requirement. It
is the latter that, according to the ALJ, occurred in this case, and
that in our opinion warrants reversal.
The conditional appointments from the August 17, 1998 and June 2, 1999 lists
are voided. The Department of Personnel is directed to reissue the certification as
the list stood on August 17, 1998, and the Borough Council shall reconsider
the appointments without applying the active volunteer firefighter status as an exclusive reason
for bypass. The factor can be used as one factor in evaluating the
merit and fitness of all of the certified candidates. Should the Council again
decide to bypass Hruska, it must set forth the reasons for its action
based on the merit and fitness of all of the certified candidates. N.J.A.C.
4A:4-4.8(b)4.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this decision.
Footnote: 1
Hruska did not appeal the first rejection and, therefore, as we explained
above, this appeal involves only the Council's failure to appoint Hruska from the
certification lists of August 17, 1998 and June 2, 1999.
Footnote: 2
We also note that the Borough failed to comply with N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8 in
the August 17, 1998 certification. The record is devoid of any statement of
reasons, provided the Department of Personnel, justifying the bypass of Hruska by a
lower-ranked individual in that certification.