City of Huntington v. Black

421 S.E.2d 58, 187 W. Va. 675, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 130
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1992
Docket20736
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 421 S.E.2d 58 (City of Huntington v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Huntington v. Black, 421 S.E.2d 58, 187 W. Va. 675, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 130 (W. Va. 1992).

Opinion

WORKMAN, Justice:

Through certified questions, this case presents issues of statutory construction and due process arising from the disciplinary reduction in rank and pay of a police officer. Appellants, the City of Huntington and Robert R. Nelson, as mayor of the city (hereinafter sometimes referred to collectively as either the City, the Mayor, or Mayor Nelson), raise the following certified questions:

(1) Whether, under chapter 8, article 14A, Section 3 of the West Virginia Code as amended, a police officer is entitled to an internal hearing before being discharged, removed, terminated, suspended or reduced in rank or pay?
(2) Whether due process requires that a police officer be afforded a pre-discipli-nary hearing 1 prior to any punitive action being taken by the officer in charge?

The Circuit Court of Cabell County responded to each of these certified questions by ruling in the affirmative. With regard to the first certified question, we determine that West Virginia Code § 8-14A-3 (1990), by its express provisions, does not require that an internal hearing be conducted prior to discharge, suspension, or reduction in rank or pay if the punitive action has already been taken. Principles of due process, however, dictate that we respond to the second certified question by ruling that a predisciplinary proceeding is required prior to any discharge, suspension, or reduction in rank or pay absent exigent circumstances.

On August 24, 1990, without the benefit of any hearing, appellee Darrell Black (hereinafter referred to as Sergeant Black) was summarily demoted in rank and pay and placed on probation. The Mayor’s decision to discipline Sergeant Black was based on an alleged racial remark purportedly made by Sergeant Black while on duty sometime in October 1989. Mayor Nelson was first apprised of the alleged racial slur in August of 1990 when, following a cross burning in the residential yard of Francia Ferguson, Mrs. Ferguson’s daughter accused Sergeant Black of having uttered a racist remark ten months earlier.

*677 In response to the daughter’s accusations, Mayor Nelson requested an internal investigation on August 10, 1990. The Mayor subsequently took matters into his own hands by interviewing Mrs. Ferguson and her daughter on August 21, 1990. Two days later, Mayor Nelson summoned the police chief and Sergeant Black to his office. When these individuals arrived, Mayor Nelson stated summarily that Sergeant Black was guilty of making the alleged racial statement and gave him the option of retiring, taking a reduction in rank, or termination. Sergeant Black was not provided with the opportunity to respond to the charges against him nor was he given any information concerning the evidence compiled by Mayor Nelson.

On August 24, 1990, Mayor Nelson held a press conference during which he announced the disciplinary actions taken against Sergeant Black. Only after this public announcement did Sergeant Black receive the requisite written notice of the charges against him and the punitive action taken. 2 The written notice took the form of a letter from Mayor Nelson which was delivered to Sergeant Black on the afternoon of August 24, 1990. The disciplinary action taken against Sergeant Black included a demotion from sergeant to officer first class and a pay cut that resulted in Sergeant Black’s annual salary being reduced from $22,500 to $20,800.

Sergeant Black appealed Mayor Nelson’s actions to the Police Civil Service Commission (“Commission”) for the City of Huntington, West Virginia. The Commission held a hearing in connection with the appeal on May 14, 1991. At the start of the hearing, counsel for Sergeant Black made a motion to dismiss the charges and to reinstate Sergeant Black to his former rank with back pay. As support for this motion, appellee’s counsel argued that Mayor Nelson had reduced Sergeant Black’s rank and pay without providing adequate notice or affording a hearing before an internal hearing board on the issues giving rise to the punitive action and that these failures constituted violations of West Virginia Code § 8-14A-3 and both the state and federal constitutions. The Commission took Sergeant Black’s motion for dismissal and reinstatement under advisement and the matter proceeded to a hearing on the merits. Following the close of the City’s case, the Commission recessed the hearing and continued it generally. On August 21, 1991, the Commission entered an order granting Sergeant Black’s motion for dismissal and reinstatement, ruling that appel-lee was entitled to notice and a hearing prior to being reduced in rank and pay. It is from that order that the appellants now appeal.

Appellants take the position that West Virginia Code § 8-14A-3 does not require an internal hearing prior to a reduction in rank and pay. That statute provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

(a) If the investigation or interrogation of a police officer or fireman results in the recommendation of some punitive action, then, before taking such action the police or fire department shall give notice to the police officer or fireman that he is entitled to a hearing on the issues by a hearing board. The notice shall state the time and place of the hearing and the issues involved and be delivered to the police officer or fireman no later than ten days prior to the hearing. An official record, including testimony and exhibits, shall be kept of the hearing.
(b) The hearing shall be conducted by the hearing board of the police or fire department except that in the event the recommended punitive action is discharge, suspension or reduction in rank or pay, and such action has been taken the hearing shall be pursuant to the provisions of article fourteen, section twenty [§ 8-14-20], and article fifteen, section twenty-five [§ 8-15-25] of this chapter, if *678 applicable. Both the police or fire department and the police officer or fireman shall be given ample opportunity to present evidence and argument with respect to the issues involved.

W.Va.Code § 8-14A-3.

Appellants interpret West Virginia Code § 8-14A-3 to require a hearing before an internal hearing board only when the contemplated disciplinary action does not involve discharge, suspension, or reduction in rank and pay. Their position is that only one as opposed to two hearings are contemplated by West Virginia Code § 8-14A-3, since the introductory language of subsection (b) begins “[t]he hearing.” Appellants further maintain that an internal hearing is bypassed in the event of discharge, suspension, or reduction in rank and pay when the sanction has already been taken, as in this case, because “[t]he hearing” contemplated is a public hearing before the Commission pursuant to West Virginia 8-14-20 3 rather than an internal hearing before a policemen’s hearing board. 4

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Bluebook (online)
421 S.E.2d 58, 187 W. Va. 675, 1992 W. Va. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-huntington-v-black-wva-1992.