Ben v. Housing Authority of New Orleans

879 So. 2d 803, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 1247, 2004 WL 1078477
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 2004
DocketNo. 2003 CA 1664
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 879 So. 2d 803 (Ben v. Housing Authority of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ben v. Housing Authority of New Orleans, 879 So. 2d 803, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 1247, 2004 WL 1078477 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

JgFITZSIMMONS, J.

Plaintiff, Wallace Ben, appeals the Civil Service Commission’s reinstatement of his termination by the employer-defendant, the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO). We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Mr. Ben was a civil service employee with permanent status. HANO notified Mr. Ben that he was being terminated from his position as a police officer for insubordination and threatening his superior officer with a gun. Mr. Ben appealed his dismissal, and the matter was heard by a referee appointed by the Civil Service Commission (commission). The referee found that Mr. Ben was insubordinate when he twice refused to follow a direct order from a superior officer; and, after the refusals, engaged in a heated exchange with his superior. However, the referee did not find that the acts of insubordination merited dismissal of an officer with no prior disciplinary action during his almost three years with HANO. In place of the termination, the referee imposed a thirty-day suspension.

HANO applied to the commission for a rehearing. After a review of the record and transcript, the commission found as follows:

On the day of the events in question, another subordinate police officer called [stating] that he would not be able to assume his post, and appellant’s lieutenant called for ..., the appellant [Mr. Ben], to come to a housing project to assume the post of the absent police officer. The lieutenant, himself, proceeded to this post and parked inside the fence surrounding the housing project to await the arrival of the appellant [Mr. Ben], The appellant finally arrived, but the lieutenant felt that an inordinate amount of time had been spent by the appellant in getting to his new post. The lieutenant was aware that part of the delay was caused by the inability to contact the appellant by radio, but the lieutenant testified he also suspected the appellant had not come directly to the location of this new post. The lieutenant’s suspicions were fueled by the fact that the appellant did not come into the gate of the housing project, but parked on the median of the roadway that ran beside the project. In addition, the lieutenant’s uncontradicted testimony was that he had verbally reprimanded the appellant in the past for not traveling directly from one post to another, but, instead, obtaining a meal in the course of the traveling. In this case, the appellant admitted that he had, in fact, [805]*805| .-¡stopped by an “eatery” to obtain a meal which he had with him in the HANO vehicle parked in the median.
The appellant[Mr. Ben] remained in the HANO police unit in which he had arrived and had parked on the median. It is not clear whether he saw the approach of the lieutenant from the lieutenant’s own police unit. Whatever the case, both the appellant and the -lieutenant agree that when the lieutenant arrived at the driver’s side window of appellant’s unit the appellant saw the lieutenant standing outside the closed window, but did not lower the window until asked to do so by the lieutenant. Both the appellant and the lieutenant agree that conversation then ensued about the inability of the appellant to have been contacted by radio at his previous post, and that the lieutehant asked the appellant to hand him the radio the appellant stated he had in his possession and that was located between the two seats of the HANO vehicle. It is further agreed that the appellant refused to give the radio to his lieutenant, and it is also agreed that further communication ensued between the two about this refusal and culminated in the appellant stating to the lieutenant to “get up off me,” and the appellant’s opening of the vehicle’s door and his partial exit from that door in the direction of his lieutenant. What stopped the appellant’s exit was the slippage of his service pistol from his lap. The appellant caught the falling pistol in his hand and the. lieutenant backed away with a mollifying statement or statements. The lieutenant testified he believed he was being assaulted by the appellant. The appellant then re-entered the vehicle, closed the •door, and put the pistol -in its holster. How the pistol came to be in the appellant’s lap and not in its holster is explained by the appellant. The appellant states that he habitually would, remove his service pistol from its holster and place it in his lap while at a post in order for the pistol to be more readily accessible. His lieutenant and Chief of Police, however, testified that the appellant knew or should have known that while a police officer is on duty, the service pistol should be removed from the holster only to defend life. This conflict, however, need not be resolved as the appellant was not charged by his appointing authority with any fault in removing- the pistol from the holster, and, in fact, the pistol was in the appellant’s lap. •
We readily conclude that the appellant was guilty of gross insubordination in failing to follow the directive of his lieutenant that the radio be given to the lieutenant by the appellant. It was a reasonable directive related to the performance of appellant’s duties, but was intentionally disobeyed by the appellant. The appellant states that he refused to turn over the radio because it was located in such a position that when he moved to pick it up the pistol on his lap would have been exposed to the view of the lieutenant. He states that he did not want the lieutenant to see the pistol because he felt that the lieutenant would then accuse him of pointing the pistol at the lieutenant. We do not consider this as mitigation. The directive given to the appellant was clear, related to police work, and had to be obeyed. The refusal to obey the directive constituted willful, gross insubordination by the appellant.
Upon suffering the insubordination, it might have been a proper course for the lieutenant to remove himself from the area, seek a | replacement for the appellant, and to begin the proceedings to [806]*806terminate the appellant. An equally proper course, however, was for [him], as a lieutenant of police, to berate his subordinate officer for the insubordination. Whatever its level, the appellant testified that some communication occurred before he exited the vehicle thereby exposing his pistol and causing his lieutenant to believe he was being assaulted. There are two conclusions that can readily be drawn from the appellant’s actions at this point. The first is that the proffered excuse for the insubordination in refusing to turn over the radio had no validity as the appellant readily and voluntarily abandoned the hiding of the gun. The second is that the appellant was escalating his insubordination by moving from the vehicle towards his lieutenant in a threatening manner and under' circumstances that caused him to actually forget about the pistol in his lap. It was the Referee’s conclusion that at this point the appellant was angry with his lieutenant, and the record and transcript readily support this conclusion.
Cause for appellant’s termination from his position as a police officer was shown by his intentional insubordination to his lieutenant in refusing to hand over his radio. The resulting sequence of events is the natural result of such insubordination at the hands of a police officer who has no respect for authority and the actions of appellant in those events constitute an extension of the original insubordination. The appellant has proven himself to be a police officer with little or no respect for authority.

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Bluebook (online)
879 So. 2d 803, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 1247, 2004 WL 1078477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-v-housing-authority-of-new-orleans-lactapp-2004.