SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3520-96T1
ROBERT HAMMOND,
Appellant-Respondent,
v.
MONMOUTH COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT,
Respondent-Appellant.
___________________________________
Argued: October 14, 1998 - Decided: January 7, 1999
Before Judges Long, Kestin and Carchman.
On appeal from the Merit System Board.
Robert J. Hrebek, Assistant County Counsel,
County of Monmouth, argued the cause for appellant.
Amy E. Weedman argued the cause for respondent
(Giordano, Halleran & Ciesla, attorneys; Norman M.
Hobbie, of counsel; Edward C. Bertucio, Jr., and
Nicholas P. Kapur, on the brief).
Peter Verniero, Attorney General, attorney for the
Merit System Board (Andrea R. Grundfest, Deputy
Attorney General, on the statement in lieu of brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
The Monmouth County Sheriff's Department (Sheriff) appeals
from the Merit System Board's (Board) March 24, 1997 final decision
dismissing disciplinary charges against County Correction Officer
Robert Hammond. In reaching its decision, the Board adopted the
findings of fact and conclusion of Administrative Law Judge Tassini
articulated in an initial decision rendered on February 28, 1996.
The Board ordered back pay and a restoration of benefits and
seniority for the period of suspension as well as the payment of
Hammond's counsel fees. We affirm.
Five charges had been preferred against Hammond on the local
level in a preliminary notice of disciplinary action dated March 9,
1995:
1. Conduct unbecoming a public employee.
2. Discrimination that affects equal employment
opportunity, including sexual harassment.
3. Verbal abuse of a co-worker.
4. Insubordination in connection with an
investigatory interview.
5. Resisting supervisory authority in connection
with an investigatory interview.
A departmental hearing was held on April 4, 1995. The resulting
final notice of disciplinary action dated April 20, 1995 stated
that charges 1, 2 and 3 had been sustained, and that charges 4 and
5 had been dismissed. A ten-day suspension was ordered. After
Hammond agreed in writing on April 25 to forfeit five vacation days
in lieu of five suspension days, an amended final notice of
disciplinary action was issued on April 27 to reflect a change in
the period of suspension to five working days and five vacation
days.
In the meantime, also on April 25, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 11A:2-14, Hammond filed an appeal with the Board from the disciplinary
determination sustaining charges 1, 2 and 3 and suspending him. In
accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-9, -10, the matter was classified as a contested case and
transmitted to the Office of Administrative Law for a hearing. On
December 29, 1995, counsel for the Sheriff wrote Judge Tassini that
he would "be seeking an enhanced penalty" when the case was
presented. Judge Tassini responded: "I suggest that you notify
your adversary . . . of what specific `enhanced penalty' you expect
to seek." Counsel wrote his adversary accordingly, "advis[ing]
that the . . . Sheriff will be seeking an enhanced penalty of a
ninety (90) day suspension. . . . This enhanced penalty is sought
because of the serious nature of the sexist remark made by
[Hammond], his refusal to cooperate in an investigation of the
incident and his extensive past disciplinary record."See footnote 1
The matter came on for hearing on January 12, 1996. According
to Judge Tassini's initial decision,
at that time, the appointing authority argued
(essentially moving for amendment of its claim to
add charges) that, in addition to charges 1, 2 and
3, the appellant should also be subject to
prosecution on charges 4 and 5. The appellant
objected to the appointing authority's motion.
Administrative adjudication must be governed by
principles of notice, due process and fundamental
fairness. N.J.S.A. 52:14B-2(b) and (c), -10; Juzek
v. Hackensack Water Co.,
48 N.J. 302, 314-15 (1966);
Department of Envtl. Prot. v. Stavola,
103 N.J. 425,
436 n.2 (1986). N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.6(d) requires that
"[w]ithin 20 days of the [appointing authority's]
hearing . . . the appointing authority shall make a
decision on the charges and furnish the
employee . . . with a Final Notice of Disciplinary
Action," and thereby notify him of the charges he
faces. The appointing authority's motion was
inexcusably late; the addition of charges to those
in the final notice was contrary to the express
requirement of N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.6(d); and the
appellant would have had no time to prepare for the
additional charges. Therefore, the appointing
authority's motion was denied. The case was then
heard and the record was kept open until February 6,
1996, to allow the attorneys to submit written
summations.
Based upon the testimony of nine officers in the Sheriff's
department and a county personnel officer, Judge Tassini made
mediate findings of fact and an ultimate finding:
Balancing all of the credible evidence and
considering the demeanor of the witnesses, [the
complaining officer] was not credible in her
testimony describing the alleged incident and the
appointing authority has not proven that the
appellant committed the acts charged.
The judge also found, contrary to earlier intimations by counsel
for the Sheriff, that Hammond "has not previously been the subject
of major disciplinary action." Judge Tassini concluded that "the
appointing authority has not met its burden of proof and the
charges must be dismissed with prejudice."
In accepting the administrative law judge's findings and
conclusion in the light of the Sheriff's exceptions and Hammond's
cross-exceptions, the Board focused on the judge's credibility
determinations. On the authority of Public Advocate v. Board of
Public Utilities,
189 N.J. Super. 491 (App. Div. 1983), and In re
Silberman,
169 N.J. Super. 243 (App. Div. 1979), aff'd,
84 N.J. 303
(1980), it deferred to those findings; and it adopted the initial
decision.
On appeal, the Sheriff challenges the credibility
determinations and evaluations of the witnesses' testimony. One
evidentiary ruling is also disputed.
Our review of the Board's decision is governed by the
substantial evidence rule. According appropriate respect to the
agency's expertise, we are obliged to affirm, if "`the findings
made could reasonably have been reached on sufficient credible
evidence present in the record,' considering `the proofs as a
whole,' with due regard to the opportunity of the one who heard the
witnesses to judge of their credibility." Close v. Kordulak Bros.,
44 N.J. 589, 599 (1965) (quoting State v. Johnson,
42 N.J. 146, 162
(1964)). See also Clowes v. Terminix Int'l Inc.,
109 N.J. 575, 587
(1988); Gloucester County Welfare Bd. v. New Jersey Civil Service
Comm'n,
93 N.J. 384, 390-91 (1983); Henry v. Rahway State Prison,
81 N.J. 571, 579-80 (1980). The substantial evidence test is
clearly satisfied in this case; and the Board was well warranted in
relying upon the administrative law judge's credibility
determinations and other findings of fact. See, e.g., Carpet
Remnant Warehouse v. Department of Labor,
125 N.J. 567, 587 (1991);
Clowes v. Terminix Int'l Inc., supra, 109 N.J. at 587-88.
The challenge to Judge Tassini's evidentiary ruling is without
merit. His determination to permit testimony regarding past
conversations between Hammond and the female complaining witness
was, in the circumstances depicted, well within his discretion.
The Sheriff argues also that "it was error to prohibit the
appointing authority from proceeding on the five original charges
below in the preliminary notice of disciplinary action in this de
novo hearing and review before the Merit System Board." This
argument is premised upon the de novo nature of the hearing before
the Board, East Paterson v. Civil Service Dept,
47 N.J. Super. 55,
64 (App. Div. 1957); see also In re Morrison,
216 N.J. Super. 143,
151 (App. Div. 1987); Grasso v. Borough Council of Glassboro,
205 N.J. Super. 18, 25 (App. Div. 1985), certif. denied,
103 N.J. 453
(1986); cf. Henry v. Rahway State Prison, supra, 81 N.J. at 579;
West New York v. Bock,
38 N.J. 500, 513 n.3 (1962), and a literal
reading of statements such as "[t]he de novo hearing on the
administrative appeal is limited to the charges made below." Id.
at 522.
We are in substantial agreement with the reasons articulated
by Judge Tassini, adopted by the Board, for denying the Sheriff's
motion in this regard essentially on procedural grounds. There is,
as well, a substantive basis for reaching the same result.
It is clear that the right to appeal to the Merit System Board
belongs to the employee. See N.J.S.A. 11A:2-14 ("[T]he employee
shall have a right to appeal to the board."); N.J.S.A. 11A:2-15
(Appeals are from "adverse actions" of the appointing authority.);
cf. Communications Workers of America v. New Jersey Dep't of
Personnel,
154 N.J. 121, 126 (1998) ("The goal of the Act is to
secure the appointment and advancement of civil service employees
based on their merit and abilities."); Prosecutor's Detectives and
Investigators Ass'n v. Hudson County Bd. of Chosen Freeholders,
130 N.J. Super. 30, 41 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
66 N.J. 330 (1974)
(The Act "provides relief against arbitrary action by the public
employer that deprives the employee of his rights under [law].").
No provision of law empowers the public employer to prosecute
charges before the Board which the appointing authority has,
itself, dismissed after the required local disciplinary proceedings
have been held. Cf. N.J.S.A. 11A:2-13, -14, -15; City of Orange v.
DeStefano,
48 N.J. Super. 407, 419-20 (App. Div. 1958).
The Board, in its statement in lieu of brief, offers Cliff v.
Morris County Bd of Social Services,
197 N.J. Super. 307 (App. Div.
1984), as suggesting that it could have considered the dismissed
charges and that the matter should now be remanded for that
purpose.See footnote 2 The Board stresses our holding in Cliff that the Board's
predecessor, the Civil Service Commission (Commission), possessed
broad statutory authority, "including the right to investigate an
employee's removal on its own motion, N.J.S.A. 11:15-4," id. at
316, thereby empowering it "to consider all aspects of the case
anew." Ibid. The Board's citation of Cliff, however, fails to
note that the decision was reversed on a different, but related,
issue by the Supreme Court at
101 N.J. 251 (1985), and remanded to
the Commission for reconsideration in the light of Steinel v. City
of Jersey City,
99 N.J. 1 (1985). The decisional rationale of
Steinel undermines the proposition which the Board advances.
Even if the reversal of Cliff had not occurred, that case
would be inapposite here. The cited holding may be read to
establish that the Commission was authorized, as a discretionary
exercise in an appeal from the local sustainment of disciplinary
charges, to examine other charges which had been dismissed by the
appointing authority.See footnote 3 It does not stand for the proposition that
the Commission was required to consider such charges at the
appointing authority's behest, as is contended here. Moreover, we
did not hold that the Commission, once it had expressly determined
in the course of deciding a matter before it not to expand the
scope of its consideration, could thereafter impugn its own
adjudication in the appointing authority's appeal from that "final
administrative action," as it seeks to do here.
Manifestly, an appeal to the Merit System Board is from the
final notice of disciplinary action issued by the appointing
authority. The Civil Service Act mandates review only of the
adverse decision of the appointing authority as stated in the final
notice of disciplinary action, since that is what the employee
appeals to the Board. To hold that the appointing authority, on
appeal, is entitled to broaden the charges as determined on the
local level, would be to surcharge the right to appeal with a cost
which violates any decent sense of due process or fair play. See
In re Disciplinary Hearing of Bruni, supra, 166 N.J. Super. at 291;
cf. Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
412 U.S. 17, 24-25,
93 S. Ct. 1977,
1981-82,
36 L. Ed.2d 714, 722 (1973). Here, furthermore, the
Board held the Sheriff to be barred from proceeding on the
dismissed charges. That determination in the Board's "final
administrative action" adopting the administrative law judge's
initial decision, rendered in an adjudicatory framework, must be
viewed as defining the rights of the parties in this matter at
least to the extent of binding the Board to the result in the
absence of some regular adjudicative exercise.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 The Sheriff's determination to seek an enhanced penalty for the charges upheld on the local level has since been abandoned. Footnote: 2 During the pendency of this appeal, we denied the Board's motion to remand the matter for further consideration of the previously dismissed charges. Footnote: 3 It is an open question whether modifications in the statutory scheme effected subsequently in the broad reform enacted in the Civil Service Act of 1986, N.J.S.A. 11A:1-1 to :12-2, have, in any particular, expanded, diminished, or maintained the prerogatives of the Board in considering appeals from the disciplinary actions of local bodies. Compare, e.g., N.J.S.A. 11:15-5 with N.J.S.A. 11A:2-18, and N.J.S.A. 11:15-4 with N.J.S.A. 11A:2-6(f), -14, -15.