Bridgman v. Kern

257 A.D. 420, 13 N.Y.S.2d 249, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7775
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 29, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 257 A.D. 420 (Bridgman v. Kern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridgman v. Kern, 257 A.D. 420, 13 N.Y.S.2d 249, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7775 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

Callahan, J.

The municipal civil service commission in ■January, 1937, published a notice of an examination to be held for the position of “ Examiner, Board of Education ” of the city of New York. The position is classified in the competitive class of the civil service. As stated by respondents in their brief: “ The position is one of the most important educational positions in the United States.” The duties of the position are to examine all applicants for a license to teach in the public schools of the city of New York, except examiners, and to prepare all necessary eligible lists for such teaching and other positions connected with the schools.

The subjects and weights of the proposed examination were advertised as follows:

Experience, weight 4, seventy per cent required.
Written test, weight 4, seventy-five per cent required; sixty-five per cent on each part.
Technical-oral, weight 2, seventy per cent required; sixty per cent on each factor listed.
General average required, seventy-five per cent.

Eighty-eight candidates who met the preliminary requirements were declared eligible to participate in the written examination. Sixty-one of such candidates actually participated in, and twenty-nine candidates passed the written examination, among them being the petitioners with ratings as follows:

Per cent.
Edith M. Ward..... 88.39
Edmund J. Gannon.. 87.50
Letitia Raubicheck. . . 87.28
Samuel D. Moskowitz 86.83
86.83
C. Frederick Pertsch., 82.81
Abraham Kroll....... 79.02
William C. Bridgman. 77.23

The respondent Jablonower also succeeded in the written examination with a rating of seventy-five and sixty-seven one-hundredths per cent. He was twenty-eighth on the list of twenty-nine persons. It is alleged that respondent Jablonower received a passing mark only after the ratings had been rescaled upward. Petitioners were never rated for their experience, but it is conceded [423]*423that if they had been they would have received passing marks. The petitioners, for many years, have held important supervisory or executive positions in the school system of the city of New York. The respondent Jablonower at one time had been a teacher in the city school system, but since the year 1919 was employed as a teacher in a private school.

The twenty-nine candidates who survived the written examination were called for the oral test. Twenty-eight out of the twenty-nine failed. Although there were at the time two vacancies for the position, respondent Jablonower was the only candidate the examiners passed in the oral test. An eligible list consisting only of Jablonower’s name was promulgated, and he has been appointed to fill one of the vacant positions. Subsequently a new examination was announced to fill the remaining vacancy and a new board of examiners selected to give the test.

This litigation is concerned with the manner of conducting the technical-oral test and the ratings thereunder. The technical-oral test was divided into two parts. Part I was intended to test the technical competence of the candidate, and to this part a weight of “ 1 ” was assigned. It was conducted before a group of three educators. Of the twenty-nine candidates who participated in part I, sixteen, including the petitioners and the respondent Jablonower, survived. The qualifying mark for this part was sixty per cent. In the directions to the panel of examiners on part I, the examiners received inter alia the following instructions:

“ Candidates will not be rated on a man-to-man scale. * * * In order to consider changing needs in education, examiners should fail ¡ not less than about one-half the total group of candidates * * (Emphasis mine.)
Unacceptable candidates should be given ratings below 60%. Ratings between 60% and 75% should be given to candidates whose technical competence is only very slightly below that of a high grade examiner. Ratings above 75% should be given to candidates who undoubtedly possess high technical competence as defined in this part of the examination.”
“ (5) After the candidate leaves, each examiner will record an initial rating for each of the two factors. The average of the ratings on the two factors will constitute the examiner’s tentative rating of the candidate. These initial ratings are independent evaluations and will be made by examiners without consultation with any other member of the panel.
“ (6) Each examiner will then read aloud the three tentative ratings he has recorded.
[424]*424“ (7) Discussion of the ratings will then ensue. It is the purpose of this discussion to present to all members of the panel such data as are noted by individual examiners. The presentation of these data may lead examiners to adjust initial ratings. Though adjustment of ratings is not obligatory, discussion of ratings may induce one or more examiners to change tentative ratings. Ratings following discussion are final for each examiner.”

The instruction, to fail not less than about one-half the total group of candidates,” was illegal. In effect it told the panel of examiners that, irrespective of how many candidates, in their judgment, should justly be rated above the passing mark, no more than one-half of the competing candidates were to be passed. Such direction was clearly improper when a passing mark was established. The passing mark might be made as high as the circumstances justified. That would be a different matter from directing compulsory failure of a definite percentage of candidates, irrespective of the mark they actually received or to which they were entitled. For example, if it should appear to the panel examiners that all candidates were above the passing mark, there would be no proper basis upon which one-half of the candidates might be failed, unless the passing mark was changed. While it appears that all of the petitioners passed the technical oral test and, accordingly, may not have been aggrieved by the instructions given, it is not certain that others who failed this half of the test were not aggrieved thereby.

It is charged by the petitioners, but denied by the respondents, that employees of the municipal civil service commission compelled members of the examining panel to lower marks given to some of the candidates. On part I, the respondent Jablonower was rated at seventy-five and eight-tenths per cent and the petitioners were rated as follows:

Per cent.
Kroll............................................. 74.2
Raubicheck....................................... 65.
Ward............................................ 62.5
Moskowitz........................................ 62.5
Gannon.......................................... 60.08
Pertsch........................................... 60.

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Bluebook (online)
257 A.D. 420, 13 N.Y.S.2d 249, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgman-v-kern-nyappdiv-1939.