A.N. Irani v. SCSC (Department of Health)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 2018
Docket1135 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of A.N. Irani v. SCSC (Department of Health) (A.N. Irani v. SCSC (Department of Health)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.N. Irani v. SCSC (Department of Health), (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Afrid N. Irani, : : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1135 C.D. 2017 : Submitted: February 2, 2018 State Civil Service Commission : (Department of Health), : : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE COLINS FILED: March 22, 2018

Afrid N. Irani (Petitioner) petitions, pro se, for review of an order issued by the State Civil Service Commission (Commission) on July 25, 2017 that sustained the July 16, 2015 termination of his employment by the Department of Health (Department) for failure to report for work following reinstatement of his employment with the Department. The reinstatement and termination at issue here followed this Court’s reversal of the Department’s 2013 termination of Petitioner’s employment in Irani v. State Civil Service Commission (Department of Health) (Irani I), (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1038 C.D. 2014, filed April 20, 2015). We affirm. Petitioner was employed by the Commonwealth from September 2005 to June 7, 2013 and worked from February 2012 to June 7, 2013 as an Accountant 2 in the Department’s Bureau of WIC, which is responsible for administering the federal Women, Infants and Children (WIC) supplemental nutrition program in Pennsylvania. Irani I, slip op. at 1-3. The Department terminated Petitioner’s employment effective June 7, 2013 for sending a somewhat argumentative work- related email to another Department staffer and for allegedly excessive personal use of his office computer. Id. at 3-5. Petitioner appealed his dismissal to the Commission, which sustained the discharge, and appealed the Commission’s decision to this Court. This Court reversed the Commission and ordered that Petitioner be reinstated as of June 7, 2013 to his Accountant 2 position with the Department, concluding that the email, which was not personally insulting, profane, abusive or threatening, did not constitute just cause for removal, and that the Department failed to show the amount of time that Petitioner spent on non-work- related internet sites or that he had been advised that personal internet usage was restricted to lunch and break periods. Id. at 7-11 & Order. Following this Court’s decision, the Department sent a letter dated June 18, 2015 notifying Petitioner that he was being reinstated to his Accountant 2 position in the Department’s Bureau of WIC as of June 29, 2015 and instructing him to report for work on that date. (Certified Record Item (R. Item) 11, Commission Adjudication Finding of Fact (F.F.) ¶5; R. Item 1, Hearing Transcript (H.T.) at 16- 20, 128 & Department Ex. 3.) Department human resources personnel also contacted Petitioner by telephone on June 24, 2015 and by email on June 26, 2015 concerning his June 29, 2015 return to work. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶5; R. Item 1, H.T. at 17-18, 21-24 & Department Ex. 5b.) Petitioner sent the Department an email on June 26, 2015 stating:

I’ll be as polite as I can possibly be since everyone at the Department of Health is such a perfectionist. I’m sorry but I will 2 not be delighted at all to return to the Department of Health since I’ve lost all respect for everyone there. In fact I’ve cursed the people involved in my termination all this while. Unfortunately, I will not be commencing work at the Department of Health on June 29, 2015 or ever in the future and I’ve tried conveying this message to some of your staff at your Department but to no avail as usual. I am taking this matter up with the Commission and if the Commission again errs I will be returning back to the court. I hope I have made myself clear. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶6; R. Item 1, H.T. at 25-27, 147 & Department Ex. 5b (emphasis added).) Petitioner also sent emails to the Commission on June 25, 2015, in which he stated that “I want nothing to do with the Department of Health anymore,” “I do not want to work for the Department of Health because I’ve had enough of their nonsense,” and “I’ll work with any other agency within the Commonwealth of PA except the Department of Health.” (R. Item 1, H.T. at 145-46 & Department Ex. 5a.) The Commission advised Petitioner in response to the first of these emails that while he could challenge the terms of his reinstatement and the amount of compensation for the period before the reinstatement, “you must first return to work” in accordance with the Department’s reinstatement letter directing him to report to work on June 29, 2015. (R. Item 1, Department Ex. 5a.) Petitioner did not report to work on June 29, 2015 or at any time after that date. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶9; R. Item 1, H.T. at 38, 56- 57, 59-60, 68-70.) When he did not report to work, the Department attempted to reach Petitioner by telephone on the morning of June 29, 2015 and left a message requesting that he call. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶8; R. Item 1, H.T. at 57-59, 69-70.) Petitioner did not return the call or contact the Department concerning his absence from work. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶9; R. Item 1, H.T. at 59, 70.) On July 7, 2015, the Department notified Petitioner that 3 a pre-disciplinary conference was scheduled for July 10, 2015 to address his failure to report to work. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶10; R. Item 1, H.T. at 80-82, 99-100, 107; Department Ex. 8.) Petitioner did not attend the pre- disciplinary conference. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶10; R. Item 1, H.T. at 82-83, 88, 100-02.) On July 14, 2015, the Department terminated Petitioner’s employment effective July 16, 2015. (R. Item 11, Commission Adjudication F.F. ¶1; Commission Ex. A.) Petitioner timely appealed this discharge to the Commission and a hearing was held before a Commissioner on December 18, 2015. At the hearing, the Department introduced in evidence its letters to Petitioner and the emails between Petitioner and the Department and the Commission concerning his reinstatement. The Department called five witnesses: Mr. Gottdiner, the Department human resource analyst who spoke by telephone with Petitioner on June 24, 2015 concerning the reinstatement and date that Petitioner was to report to work; Mr. Watts, the Bureau of WIC manager who was Petitioner’s supervisor in his reinstated position; Mr. Watts’ supervisor, Mr. McLaughlin; the Director of the Bureau of WIC; and a Department labor relations coordinator. Mr. Gottdiner testified that he called Petitioner on June 24, 2015 to make sure that Petitioner had received the reinstatement letter, and that Petitioner told him that he wanted reinstatement to an Accountant 4 position and wanted to talk to the Commission, not the Department. (R. Item 1, H.T. at 17-18, 21-22.) Mr. Gottdiner testified that Petitioner did not say that he had any problem with the June 29, 2015 start date or that he needed a change in the start date or work schedule. (Id. at 21-23.) Mr. Watts and Mr. McLaughlin, the Department employees under whom Petitioner was to work, testified that they did not work at the Bureau of WIC at the time of Petitioner’s prior employment and

4 discharge and had never met or communicated with Petitioner before his reinstatement. (Id. at 54-56, 65-68.) Mr. Watts and Mr. McLaughlin also testified that Petitioner did not report to work on June 29, 2015, that they telephoned Petitioner that morning and left a message requesting that he call, and that Petitioner never returned the call, never contacted them about any problems with the date he was to start work or his work schedule, and never reported to work. (Id.

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Bluebook (online)
A.N. Irani v. SCSC (Department of Health), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/an-irani-v-scsc-department-of-health-pacommwct-2018.