Ala. Peace Officers' Standards & Training Comm'n v. Grimmett

238 So. 3d 48
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 5, 2017
Docket2150888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 So. 3d 48 (Ala. Peace Officers' Standards & Training Comm'n v. Grimmett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ala. Peace Officers' Standards & Training Comm'n v. Grimmett, 238 So. 3d 48 (Ala. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DONALDSON, Judge.

The Alabama Peace Officers' Standards and Training Commission ("the commission") appeals from the judgment of the Montgomery Circuit Court ("the trial court") reversing the commission's December 2015 order affirming its revocation of Bryan Mark Grimmett's law-enforcement certification. The commission's decision to revoke relied solely on a provision in a plea agreement filed in the Cullman Circuit Court in 2001 in which Grimmett had agreed not to work in law enforcement. The Cullman Circuit Court, however, had entered an order in May 2015 removing that provision in the plea agreement. Although the commission may base a decision regarding law-enforcement certification on an evaluation of an applicant's character, the commission did not conduct a character evaluation on Grimmett. Instead, the commission based its revocation of Grimmett's law-enforcement certification exclusively on the rescinded portion of the plea agreement. We therefore affirm the portion of the trial court's judgment reversing the commission's revocation of Grimmett's law-enforcement certification. In the judgment, the trial court also directed the commission to reinstate Grimmett's law-enforcement certification to work in a law enforcement agency. Because Grimmett had not completed the requirements necessary for a full reinstatement at the time his law-enforcement certification was revoked, we reverse that portion of the trial court's judgment.

Facts and Procedural History

The commission is an agency of the State of Alabama. Ex parte Alabama Peace Officers' Standards & Training Comm'n, 34 So.3d 1248, 1251 (Ala. 2009) (" Section 36-21-41, Ala. Code 1975, creates the Alabama Peace Officers' Standards and Training Commission. It is undisputed *51that the statutorily created commission is an agency of the State of Alabama."). The following facts in the administrative record before the commission are not in dispute.

Before 2001, Grimmett was employed as a state trooper and was certified by the commission to work as a law-enforcement officer. In 2001, Grimmett was indicted by a Cullman grand jury on felony charges of theft of property and of altering computer equipment with intent to defraud. The State was represented in the criminal case by the Alabama Attorney General's Office. Grimmett entered into a plea agreement ("the plea agreement") in the Cullman Circuit Court in which he pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor offense of violating § 13A-8-103(a)(1), Ala. Code 1975.1 As a part of the plea agreement, Grimmett agreed to the following condition, among others: "Bryan Grimmett agrees that he will not seek future employment in any capacity with any law enforcement agency." Grimmett also agreed to pay $1,740 in restitution. On June 25, 2001, based on the plea agreement, the Cullman Circuit Court dismissed the felony charges, adjudicated Grimmett guilty of the misdemeanor offense, and sentenced Grimmett to 12 months' hard labor. The sentence was suspended, and Grimmett was placed on unsupervised probation for 24 months. The commission was not notified of the conviction or of the terms of the plea agreement at that time.

Effective December 11, 2006, the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles granted Grimmett a pardon of his conviction in the criminal case in the Cullman Circuit Court.2 In December 2014, Grimmett applied to work as a state trooper with the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency ("ALEA"). ALEA hired Grimmett. A law-enforcement officer hired by ALEA must be certified by the commission to work in that capacity. See § 36-21-50, Ala. Code 1975. Apparently, Grimmett's certification to work as a law-enforcement officer had never been revoked following the 2001 plea agreement. Although the record is not clear, it appears that Grimmett's hiring by ALEA triggered an examination into his certification status. Grimmett was later discharged from his employment with ALEA. According to both parties, the discharge occurred in February 2015.

On May 11, 2015, Grimmett and an assistant district attorney in Cullman County ("the Cullman County assistant district attorney") filed a joint motion in the Cullman Circuit Court seeking an order deleting the provision in the plea agreement regarding Grimmett's agreement not to seek employment with any law-enforcement agency. On that same day, the Cullman Circuit Court entered an order granting the joint motion and removing the provision from the plea agreement. That action was taken without the knowledge or participation of the Attorney General's Office. At the time the Cullman Circuit Court entered that order, Grimmett had been discharged from probation.

On June 24, 2015, the commission sent Grimmett an "Official Notice of Revocation." The notice stated:

"As a result of your conviction of Altering Computer Equipment in violation *52of Ala. Code § 13A-8-103(a)(1), specifically the conditions of your plea agreement, which states that you 'would not seek future employment in any capacity with any law enforcement agency,' THE ALABAMA PEACE OFFICERS STANDARDS AND TRAINING COMMISSION HAS REVOKED YOUR CERTIFICATION as a law enforcement officer in Alabama. The revocation is effective immediately.
"Should your conviction be reversed or set aside, you may, at that time, request a hearing before the Commission."

The commission also sent a letter to Grimmett dated August 11, 2015, again stating that the sole basis of the revocation was Grimmett's plea agreement in which he had agreed not to seek future employment with a law-enforcement agency.

Grimmett administratively appealed the revocation and requested a hearing. The commission conducted a hearing on December 2, 2015. At the commencement of the hearing, one of the members of the commission announced that the subject of the hearing was Grimmett's law-enforcement certification. The member also stated that the commission first learned of the work restriction in Grimmett's plea agreement when Grimmett applied to become a state trooper again in December 2014. At the hearing, the commission received documents related to Grimmett's criminal case, including an arrest record, the indictment against him, the plea agreement, the case-action summary, and the Cullman Circuit Court's order modifying the plea agreement. One of the members of the commission stated: "We are here on [the Cullman Circuit Court's order to modify the plea agreement] and [the plea agreement] ... which was [Grimmett's] agreement."

The commission received testimony from the assistant attorney general who had prosecuted Grimmett in 2001 ("the assistant attorney general") regarding the circumstances of the plea agreement and the allegations against Grimmett that led to the indictment. The assistant attorney general testified that the Alabama Attorney General's Office was not consulted or notified regarding the 2015 joint motion to remove the work-restriction provision in the plea agreement that had been filed by Grimmett and the Cullman County assistant district attorney.

Grimmett submitted character evidence on his behalf; however, Grimmett did not testify at the hearing.

On December 8, 2015, the commission entered an order denying Grimmett's appeal, stating:

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238 So. 3d 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ala-peace-officers-standards-training-commn-v-grimmett-alacivapp-2017.