SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
In Matter of John Carter
John Carter v. Township of Bordentown (A-16-06)
Argued January 17, 2007 -- Decided June 20, 2007
HOENS, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The issue in this appeal is whether the principle of progressive discipline should
have been applied when sanctioning a police officer for sleeping on duty.
Bordentown Police Officer John Carter was served with disciplinary notices charging him with,
among other things, sleeping on duty. Carter has been a police officer in
Bordentown since 1991. Beginning in September 2000, the Chief of Police issued a
series of Preliminary Notices of Disciplinary Action related to four incidents involving Carter.
The first was for Carters failure to request a vacation week in a
timely manner. When his belated request could not be accommodated, Carter nevertheless went
on vacation, providing his supervisor with an out-of-date doctors note. A second Notice
was based on Carters use of ninety-seven sick days in a two-year period
and calling out sick to go to a hockey game. The third Notice
charged Carter with calling out sick to attend a sporting event.
The fourth Notice of Disciplinary Action is the focus of this appeal. In
that Notice, Carter was charged with incompetency, inefficiency, failure to perform duties, conduct
unbecoming a public employee, neglect of duty, sleeping on duty, failure to check
in on radio and failure to adhere to general responsibilities of a police
officer arising from an investigation that Carter was sleeping on duty. Information that
Carter might be sleeping on duty first came to the attention of the
Chief of Police in July 2000, when a citizen complained. The citizen called
the police for assistance twice in one night, each time thinking that he
had awakened the dispatcher. The citizen complained that police were not sent in
response to the first call and they were not sent in a timely
manner after his second call. Carter was the dispatcher on duty both times.
After hearing the recording of the calls, the Chief agreed that each time
it sounded as if Carter had been awakened by the telephone calls. Carter
was issued a written warning that sleeping on duty was not authorized and
if he was found sleeping on duty, he would be served with major
disciplinary charges.
On June 7, 2001, the supervisor of the Internal Affairs Bureau notified the
Police Chief that other officers alleged that Carter was sleeping on the job.
An investigation was conducted on three successive dates. The investigating officers saw Carters
patrol car parked on the side of a road with its headlights off.
They made several drive-bys at high rates of speed to which Carter did
not react. They also documented that Carter failed to respond promptly to a
call for assistance from another officer regarding a local disturbance. In addition, each
night, using night vision binoculars, the officers observed Carter asleep in the front
seat of his parked police car for various periods of time, including one
in excess of two hours, and totaling more than five hours. When they
interviewed Carter, he conceded that he might have dozed off from time to
time. He denied, however, intentionally pulling off the road to sleep while on
duty.
In the other disciplinary actions, Carter received three suspensions for varying periods of
time. For the sleeping on duty charges, Carter was to be terminated from
his employment with the Bordentown Police Department. Carter appealed, and all four disciplinary
actions were referred to the Office of Administrative Law for a hearing. The
Administrative Law Judge found that Carter had slept in his patrol car on
three days in June 2001, that he had a history of violations of
the rules and regulations, and that removal from service was the proper remedy.
The Merit System Board accepted and adopted the ALJs findings and conclusions and
affirmed the penalty of removing Carter for sleeping on duty. In an unpublished
opinion, the Appellate Division agreed with the Board that there was sufficient factual
basis to sustain those charges, but concluded that the punishment was too severe
and should be reevaluated in accordance with the theory of progressive discipline. The
Supreme Court granted Bordentowns petition for certification.
HELD: The Appellate Division erred in treating the principle of progressive discipline as
a mandate of law. The offending behavior alone supported the police officers removal.
1. The scope of appellate review of a final agency decision is limited
and a decision is not ordinarily overturned in the absence of a showing
that it was arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable. In addition, the appellate court must
defer to an agencys expertise and superior knowledge in a particular field. (pp.
11-12)
2. In concluding that the penalty of removal for sleeping on the job
was excessive, the Appellate Division panel reasoned that the Merit System Board erred
in failing to abide strictly by the theory of progressive discipline. Progressive discipline
finds its origins in the Courts decision in
West New York v. Bock,
38 N.J. 500 (1962), which held that a firefighters prior disciplinary record was
relevant to determining an appropriate penalty for a subsequent offense. (pp. 12-14)
3. Progressive discipline is not a fixed and immutable rule to be followed
without question. Some disciplinary infractions are so serious that removal is appropriate notwithstanding
a largely unblemished prior record. The test to be applied is whether such
punishment is so disproportionate to the offense, in light of all of the
circumstances, as to be shocking to ones sense of fairness. (p. 14)
4. The Appellate Division has upheld dismissal where the acts charged, with or
without prior discipline, have warranted that sanction. In matters involving discipline of police
and corrections officers, public safety concerns may also bear upon the propriety of
the dismissal sanction. Moreover, courts should not substitute their own views of whether
a particular penalty is correct for those charged with making that decision. (pp.
14-16)
5. Here, the ALJ considered whether the offending behavior alone would support the
penalty. The ALJ concluded that dismissal was appropriate for a police officer who
pulls his patrol car to the side of the road to sleep on
three successive nights, for periods as long as two hours at a time,
who fails as a result to attend to his police duties and who
fails to promptly respond to another officers call for assistance. Under these circumstances,
there is nothing arbitrary or capricious about removing the police officer. (pp. 16-17)
6. Removal is not always the appropriate sanction to be imposed on a
police officer who is found sleeping while on duty. Circumstances relating to other
officers or staffing patterns and practices in other municipalities might well dictate the
imposition of a different penalty on anther officer. (p. 17)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is
REVERSED and the penalty imposed by
the Merit System Board is
REINSTATED.
CHIEF JUSTICE ZAZZALI and JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO join in
JUSTICE HOEN S opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
16 September Term 2006
IN THE MATTER OF JOHN CARTER
JOHN CARTER,
Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF BORDENTOWN,
Respondent-Appellant.
Argued January 17, 2007 Decided June 20, 2007
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Gregory J. Sullivan argued the cause for appellant (Hartsough Kenny Chase & Sullivan,
attorneys).
Mark W. Catanzaro argued the cause for respondent (Mr. Catanzaro, attorney; Mr. Catanzaro
and Ashley H. Auerbach, on the briefs).
Todd A. Wigder, Deputy Attorney General, submitted a letter in lieu of brief
on behalf of respondent Merit System Board (Stuart Rabner, Attorney General of New
Jersey, attorney).
JUSTICE HOENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Bordentown Police Officer John Carter was served with a series of disciplinary notices
charging him with, among other things, sleeping on duty. Although the Merit System
Board upheld the penalty of termination for that offense, the Appellate Division reversed,
concluding that imposition of that sanction violated the principle of progressive discipline. We
granted the Township of Bordentown's petition for certification, 188 N.J. 217 (2006), and
we now reverse and reinstate the penalty imposed by the Board.
I.
Carter has been a police officer in Bordentown since 1991. Because of serious
symptoms of an illness that first became manifest in 1998, he was out
of work for a significant period of time in 1999. Early in 2000,
Carters illness was diagnosed, and he underwent treatment, following which he returned to
his job in full active status. Thereafter, he continued to experience some symptoms
related to his illness, but he did not request medical leave or other
accommodations as a result.
Beginning in September 2000, the Bordentown Chief of Police issued a series of
Preliminary Notices of Disciplinary Action that related to four separate incidents involving Carter.
Each of those Notices advised Carter of the essential facts giving rise to
the charges and identified the sections that he had violated as found in
the New Jersey Administrative Code (
N.J.A.C.), the Bordentown Township Police Department regulations (BTPD),
and the Police Departments Standard Operating Procedures (SOP). Although only the sleeping on
duty charge remains in issue, a brief summary of the events involved in
the other charges is necessary to appreciate the context in which that charge
arose.
A.
The September 26, 2000 Notice charged Carter with failure to perform duties,
N.J.A.C.
4A:2-2.3(a)(1), being absent without leave (AWOL), BTPD 3:2.3, neglect of duty,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(7),
and unauthorized absence, BTPD 4:9.4(b), (c), and (e). These charges were all based
on an incident in August 2000 when Carter failed to request a vacation
week in a timely manner, was advised that his belated request could not
be accommodated, and nevertheless went on vacation. He did so by providing his
supervisor with a doctors note suggesting that he needed medical treatment on the
days he had requested for vacation after that request had been turned down.
Carter then went to Disney World, during which time his supervisor discovered that
the doctors note related to dates prior to his earlier return to active
status and thus was out-dated.
On March 2, 2001, Carter was served with two separate Notices, both of
which related to incidents involving absences and the use of sick time. In
particular, the first of the March Notices charged Carter with abuse of sick
time and excessive absenteeism,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(4), neglect of duty,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(7), unauthorized absence,
BTPD 4:9.4(a), (c), (e), and violating SOP 98-070. The charges in that notice
were based on Carters use of ninety-seven sick days in a two-year period,
as well as an incident in December 2000. In the December incident, Carter
called out sick but then went to a hockey game. As a result,
he was not at his home, which was the applicable authorized place of
confinement, when his supervisor arrived to verify his illness. The second of the
March 2001 Notices charged Carter with abuse of sick time,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(4), neglect
of duty,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(7), unauthorized absence, BTPD 4:9.4(a), (c), (e), and violation of
SOP 98-070. Those charges all related to an incident in January 2001 in
which Carter called out sick to attend a sporting event. As with the
December 2000 incident that gave rise to the other March 2001 Notice, Carter
was not at home, his authorized place of confinement, when his supervisor attempted
to find him.
The fourth Notice, dated November 7, 2001, is the focus of this appeal.
In that Notice, Carter was charged with incompetency, inefficiency, and failure to perform
duties,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(1), conduct unbecoming a public employee,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(6), neglect of duty,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(7), sleeping on duty, BTPD 3:2.1(a), failure to check in on radio,
BTPD 2:6.11, and failure to adhere to general responsibilities of a police officer,
BTPD 3:1.5(a)-(e). Each of the charges arose from a series of incidents discovered
during a June 2001 investigation of allegations that Carter was sleeping on duty.
Information that Carter might be sleeping on duty first came to the attention
of the Bordentown Township Chief of Police in July 2000. At that time,
a citizen complained that he twice in one night called the police for
assistance, each time thinking that he had awakened the dispatcher. The citizen complained
that the police were not sent in response to the first call to
the dispatcher and that they were not sent in a timely manner after
his second call. The police chief retrieved the recording of the citizens call
and determined that Carter was the dispatcher on duty both times. After hearing
the recording, the chief agreed that each time it sounded as if Carter
had in fact been awakened by the telephone calls. The chief issued a
written warning to Carter in August 2000, stating that sleeping on duty was
not authorized and if Carter were to be found sleeping on duty, he
would be served with major disciplinary charges.
See N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.2(a).
On June 7, 2001, Lieutenant Frank Nucera, who was the supervisor of the
Internal Affairs Bureau, notified the police chief that other officers had alleged that
Carter was sleeping on the job. The chief then authorized Nucera to investigate
the allegations. Nucera secured the assistance of two police detectives and a sergeant
to help with the investigation. On three successive dates in June, when Carter
was working the midnight shift, these officers conducted the investigation into the sleeping
on duty allegations.
During their investigation, the four officers saw Carters patrol car parked on the
side of Route 130 with its headlights off. The officers reported that they
made several drive-bys at high rates of speed to which Carter did not
react. They also documented that Carter failed to respond promptly to a call
for assistance from another officer regarding a disturbance at a local restaurant. In
addition, each night, the investigating officers, using night vision binoculars, observed Carter asleep
in the front seat of his parked police car for various periods of
time, including one in excess of two hours, and totaling more than five
hours.
On September 5, 2001, two detectives interviewed Carter about the sleeping on duty
allegations. When confronted, Carter conceded that he might have dozed off from time
to time. He also told the detectives that he had been taking medication
that could have caused him to do so. He denied, however, intentionally pulling
off the road to sleep while on duty. Nucera concluded the internal investigation
after that interview and informed the police chief of the findings.
B.
Following a departmental hearing relating to the sick time and place of confinement
charges set forth in the two March 2001 Notices, Carter was served with
two Final Notices of Disciplinary Action. The Final Notices imposed a fifteen-day suspension
and a forty-five day suspension for those two charges. Carter elected to pursue
an appeal of the charges and he then waived his right to a
departmental hearing on the other charges. As a result, he was served with
two additional Final Notices of Disciplinary Action. One addressed the charge in the
September 2000 Notice, referred to as the AWOL charge, and imposed a fifteen-day
suspension on Carter. The other Final Notice, relating to the sleeping on duty
charges, terminated Carter from his employment with the Bordentown Police Department. Carter appealed
those disciplinary penalties as well, and all four were referred to the Office
of Administrative Law for a hearing.
See N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10(c).
Prior to the commencement of the hearing before the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ),
Carter moved for dismissal of the sleeping on duty charges as untimely.
See
N.J.S.A. 40A:14-147. Following an initial decision by the ALJ and an interlocutory review,
the Merit System Board concluded that some, but not all, of those charges
were time-barred. The Board therefore sustained the dismissal of those charges that were
based on violations of Bordentowns internal Police Department Rules and Regulations. At the
same time, the Board concluded that the charges based on violations of Title
4A of the New Jersey Administrative Code were timely.
The ALJ conducted a hearing on all of the remaining disciplinary charges in
April 2004. Relevant to the matters before us, the ALJ heard testimony from
the Chief of Police, the investigating officers, and several other witnesses. Carter also
testified and, although he conceded that he might have dozed off briefly on
one or more occasions, he denied that he pulled his patrol car to
the side of the road and slept in it for extended periods of
time. He also explained that the previous police chief had an unwritten policy
of permitting officers who were tired to come to the station house to
sleep and that therefore sleeping on duty was not unauthorized. He testified that
he could not recall receiving the police chiefs August 2000 warning letter to
him that specifically advised him that sleeping on duty would not be tolerated,
but conceded that its language was clear and unambiguous.
In a written decision that thoroughly detailed each of the charges and all
of the relevant testimony, the ALJ sustained all of the charges except abuse
of sick time and excessive absenteeism in violation of
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)4. The ALJ
recommended that the fifteen-day suspension for the AWOL charge be reduced to ten
days. He then concluded that the facts relating to the place of confinement
allegations, which had resulted in separate fifteen-day and forty-five day suspensions, supported charges
of neglect of duty, but should be cumulated and reduced to a single
thirty-day suspension.
In considering the sleeping on duty charges, the ALJ concluded that the officers
who testified about their investigation and their observations were credible and that Carters
denials about being asleep at the side of the road were not. The
ALJ therefore found that Carter had in fact slept in his patrol car
on June 8, 9, and 10, 2001, and that he had violated
N.J.A.C.
4A:2-2.3(a)1,
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)6, and
N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)7, as charged. The ALJ noted that Carter
had a history of multiple violations of rules and regulations. Based on all
of the circumstances related to the sleeping on duty charge, and Carters disciplinary
history, which he considered to be of some significance, the ALJ determined that
removal from service [was] the proper remedy.
In its August 14, 2004 opinion, the Merit System Board accepted and adopted
the ALJs findings and conclusions. The Board therefore affirmed the penalty of removal
for the sleeping on duty charge and the modified penalties to be imposed
for the other charges. In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed the
Boards decision on the AWOL charge and the place of confinement violations, concluding
that both the findings of fact and the modification of the penalties were
supported by credible evidence in the record and did not constitute arbitrary, capricious
or unreasonable action. In its analysis of the sleeping on duty charges, the
Appellate Division agreed with the Board that there was a sufficient factual basis
to sustain those charges, but, citing
West New York v. Bock,
38 N.J. 500 (1962), concluded that the punishment of removal for the sleeping charges was
too severe and should be reevaluated in accordance with the theory of progressive
discipline.
C.
On appeal, Bordentown argues that the Appellate Division erred in failing to accord
appropriate deference to the Boards expertise, in describing Carter's prior disciplinary record as
meager, and in concluding that termination was not an appropriate sanction for sleeping
while on duty, thereby substituting its opinion for that of the Board and
the appointing authority. Carter contends that the Appellate Divisions analysis is correct and
that, in accordance with the principles of progressive discipline, the imposition of the
penalty of removal for the sleeping on duty infraction is both unwarranted and
unfair.
II.
We need only briefly recite the relevant principles of law that guide our
consideration of the issue before us. The scope of appellate review of a
final agency decision is limited,
see Aqua Beach Condo. Assn v. Dept of
Cmty. Affairs,
186 N.J. 5, 15-16 (2006), and we do not ordinarily overturn
such a decision in the absence of a showing that it was arbitrary,
capricious or unreasonable, or that it lacked fair support in the evidence,
Campbell
v. Dept of Civil Serv.,
39 N.J. 556, 562 (1963). As we have
consistently stated, our role, in general, is limited to determining:
(1) whether the agencys action violates express or implied legislative policies, that is, did
the agency follow the law; (2) whether the record contains substantial evidence to
support the findings on which the agency based its action; and (3) whether
in applying the legislative policies to the facts, the agency clearly erred in
reaching a conclusion that could not reasonably have been made on a showing
of the relevant factors.
[Mazza v. Bd. of Trustees,
143 N.J. 22, 25 (1995) (citing Campbell, supra,
39 N.J. at 562).]
Moreover, in reviewing agency actions, [a]ppellate courts must defer to an agencys expertise
and superior knowledge of a particular field. Greenwood v. State Police Training Ctr.,
127 N.J. 500, 513 (1992). Although an appellate court is in no way
bound by the agencys interpretation of a statute or its determination of a
strictly legal issue, Mayflower Sec. Co. v. Bureau of Sec.,
64 N.J. 85,
93 (1973), if substantial evidence supports the agencys decision, a court may not
substitute its own judgment for the agencys even though the court might have
reached a different result, Greenwood, supra, 127 N.J. at 513.
III.
With these well-settled principles as our guide, we turn to the issue before
us. Succinctly stated, the question we confront is whether the Appellate Division erred
in concluding that the penalty of removal for Carters sleeping while on duty
infractions was excessive. In reaching this conclusion, the panel relied solely on its
analysis of progressive discipline, reasoning that the Board erred both in relying on
the multiple other disciplinary charges then being considered simultaneously for purposes of evaluating
Carters disciplinary history, and in failing to abide strictly by the theory of
progressive discipline.
The progressive discipline concept finds its origins in this Courts decision in
Bock,
supra, 38
N.J. at 523. There, by finding that a firefighters prior disciplinary
record was inherently relevant to determining an appropriate penalty for a subsequent offense,
ibid., we rejected the argument that a proposed sanction must be based on
the severity of the current infraction alone. We explained:
While a single instance may not be sufficient, numerous occurrences over a reasonably
short space of time, even though sporadic, may evidence an attitude of indifference amounting
to neglect of duty. Such conduct is particularly serious on the part of
employees whose job is to protect the public safety and where the men
serve precise shifts to afford continuous protection.
. . . .
[An employees past record] cannot, of course, be utilized to prove a present
charge which is not one of habitual misconduct. However, it may be resorted
to for guidance in determining the appropriate penalty for the current specific offense.
[
Id. at 522-23.]
This Court further noted that relevant past disciplinary events, which had occurred within
a reasonable period of time prior to the offense being considered, could include
offenses [in which] minor discipline already had been imposed.
Id. at 523.
In the years since we decided
Bock, the theory of progressive discipline has
most often been discussed in the context of labor disputes, in which employees
rights are often defined by contractual provisions relating to the imposition of discipline.
See, e.g.,
County Coll. of Morris Staff Assn v. County Coll. of Morris,
100 N.J. 383, 392-93 (1985) (concluding that labor arbitrator lacked authority to reduce
penalty by reading progressive discipline into contract);
Local 462 v. Charles Schaefer &
Sons, Inc.,
223 N.J. Super. 520, 528 (App. Div. 1988) (holding that labor
arbitrator lacked authority to impose progressive discipline where contract was silent).
Even so, we have not regarded the theory of progressive discipline as a
fixed and immutable rule to be followed without question. Instead, we have recognized
that some disciplinary infractions are so serious that removal is appropriate notwithstanding a
largely unblemished prior record.
See Rawlings v. Police Dept of Jersey City,
133 N.J. 182, 197-98 (1993) (upholding dismissal of police officer who refused drug screening
as fairly proportionate to offense). In doing so, we have referred to analogous
decisions to discern the test to be applied.
See id. at 197. Thus,
we have noted that the question for the courts is whether such punishment
is so disproportionate to the offense, in the light of all the circumstances,
as to be shocking to ones sense of fairness.
In re Polk License
Revocation,
90 N.J. 550, 578 (1982) (considering punishment in license revocation proceeding) (quoting
Pell v. Bd. of Educ.,
313 N.E.2d 321, 327 (N.Y. 1974)).
Our Appellate Division, likewise, has both acknowledged and adhered to this principle, upholding
dismissal where the acts charged, with or without any prior discipline, have warranted
the imposition of that sanction.
See, e.g.,
Klusaritz v. Cape May County,
387 N.J. Super. 305, 317 (App. Div. 2006) (affirming termination of county CPA with
no prior disciplinary record who could not competently perform basic accounting duties),
certif.
denied,
N.J. (2007);
Cosme v. Borough of East Newark,
304 N.J. Super. 191,
205-06 (App. Div. 1997) (finding termination appropriate for police officer who went on
unauthorized paid vacation),
certif. denied,
156 N.J. 381 (1998);
City of Newark v.
Massey,
93 N.J. Super. 317, 322-25 (App. Div. 1967) (concluding that police officers
multiple acts of insubordination and his careless handling of police weapon warranted termination).
In matters involving discipline of police and corrections officers, public safety concerns may
also bear upon the propriety of the dismissal sanction.
See, e.g.,
Henry v.
Rahway State Prison,
81 N.J. 571, 580 (1980) (affirming appellate reversal of Board
decision to reduce penalty from dismissal to suspension for prison guard who falsified
report because of Boards failure to consider seriousness of charge);
In re Hall,
335 N.J. Super. 45, 51 (App. Div. 2000) (reversing Boards decision to reduce
penalty imposed on police officer for attempted theft from dismissal to suspension),
certif.
denied,
167 N.J. 629 (2001);
Bowden v. Bayside State Prison,
268 N.J. Super. 301, 305-06 (App. Div. 1993) (holding that it was arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable
to reduce penalty from removal to six months suspension where prison guard gambled
with inmates for cigarettes),
certif. denied,
135 N.J. 469 (1994).
Indeed, as our Appellate Division has recognized:
a police officer is a special kind of public employee. His primary duty
is to enforce and uphold the law. . . . He represents law
and order to the citizenry and must present an image of personal integrity
and dependability in order to have the respect of the public.
[Twp. of Moorestown v. Armstrong,
89 N.J. Super. 560, 566 (App. Div. 1965),
certif. denied,
47 N.J. 80 (1966).]
Moreover, as we have recently cautioned, courts should take care not to substitute
their own views of whether a particular penalty is correct for those of
the body charged with making that decision. See In re License Issued to
Zahl,
186 N.J. 341, 353-54 (2006). Here, the appellate panel did precisely that,
rejecting the well-reasoned analysis of the Board, considering the principle of progressive discipline
to be an absolute mandate of law and regarding Carters prior disciplinary history
as insufficient.
In doing so, however, the panel misperceived the Boards analysis. Neither the ALJ
nor the Board simply relied on Carters prior history, including the numerous charges
adjudicated along with the sleeping on duty charge, and applied the theory of
progressive discipline to support the dismissal sanction. Instead, the ALJ also considered whether
the offending behavior alone would support the penalty. The ALJ recognized that some
offenses are sufficiently severe that dismissal is appropriate regardless of the extent of
ones prior history of discipline. Noting that Carter did not have an unblemished
prior record, the ALJ concluded that dismissal was appropriate for a police officer
who pulls his patrol car to the side of the road to sleep
on three successive nights, for periods as long as two hours at a
time, who fails as a result to attend to his police duties, and
who fails to promptly respond to another officers call for assistance. Under these
circumstances, we find nothing arbitrary or capricious about the imposition of the sanction
of removal.
We do not suggest that removal is always the appropriate sanction to be
imposed on a police officer who is found sleeping while on duty. Circumstances
relating to other officers or staffing patterns and practices in other municipalities might
well dictate the imposition of a different penalty on another police officer. Nonetheless,
in mandating that only a lesser penalty could be imposed, our appellate panel
exceeded its proper role and inappropriately substituted its view for that of the
appointing authority and the Board.
IV.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and reinstate the penalty
imposed by the Merit System Board.
CHIEF JUSTICE ZAZZALI and JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, WALLACE, and RIVERA-SOTO join in
JUSTICE HOENS opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-16 SEPTEMBER TERM 2006
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
IN THE MATTER OF JOHN CARTER
____________________________________
JOHN CARTER,
Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF BORDENTOWN,
Respondent-Appellant.
DECIDED June 20, 2007
Chief Justice Zazzali PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Hoens
CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
CHIEF JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
JUSTICE WALLACE
X
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO
X
JUSTICE HOENS
X
TOTALS
7