CIV. SERV. COM'N OF CITY OF NEW ORLEANS v. Foti

349 So. 2d 305
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 20, 1977
Docket59386
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 349 So. 2d 305 (CIV. SERV. COM'N OF CITY OF NEW ORLEANS v. Foti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CIV. SERV. COM'N OF CITY OF NEW ORLEANS v. Foti, 349 So. 2d 305 (La. 1977).

Opinion

349 So.2d 305 (1977)

CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OF the CITY OF NEW ORLEANS
v.
Charles C. FOTI, Jr., Criminal Sheriff of the Parish of Orleans.

No. 59386.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

June 20, 1977.
Rehearing Denied September 2, 1977.

*306 William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Louisiana Dept. of Justice, Ralph D. Dwyer, Jr., Many, LoCoco & Dwyer, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

T. Allen Usry, Usry, Leefe, Hartley & Stahl, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.

DIXON, Justice.

This declaratory judgment action was brought by the Civil Service Commission of the City of New Orleans against the Criminal Sheriff of the Parish of Orleans seeking a decree that all personnel of the sheriff's "Rehabilitation Unit" are members of the classified service of the City of New Orleans. The sheriff reconvened, praying for a declaration that R.S. 33:1529 (Act 509 of 1968) is unconstitutional and that all his employees are in the State unclassified civil service.

The district court dismissed plaintiff's suit and granted judgment on the defendant's reconventional demand, decreeing that R.S. 33:1529 is unconstitutional as having been repealed by the 1974 Constitution,[1] and that all employees of the sheriff, except those who had attained classified status prior *307 to January 1, 1975, were unclassified employees in the State civil service.

The record shows that Louis Heyd, Jr., the predecessor of defendant Charles C. Foti, Jr., planned the establishment of a rehabilitation program in the Orleans Parish Prison, and obtained the passage of Act 509 of 1968, now R.S. 33:1529, which provides:

"A. The positions of employment covering the employees of the criminal sheriff of the parish of Orleans within the Orleans Parish Prison proper shall, on and after January 1, 1969, be in the classified service of the city of New Orleans, and on and after said date shall be governed by all of the provisions of Section 15, Article XIV of the Constitution of Louisiana in the same manner and to the same extent as are other employees and positions placed by said provisions within the classified civil service of New Orleans.
"B. All employees of the criminal sheriff of the parish of Orleans whose positions of employment are placed in the classified civil service of the city by the provisions of this section shall, on January 1, 1969, acquire permanent civil service status in the class of position they are occupying on such date, subject to passing a qualifying noncompetitive test, prescribed and given within a reasonable time thereafter by the director of the Department of City Civil Service, in order to determine their fitness to perform satisfactorily the duties of their positions. Thereafter they shall be deemed classified civil service employees in their respective classifications, and shall be subject to and governed by the provisions of Section 15 of Article XIV of the Constitution of Louisiana and the rules and regulations adopted by the New Orleans Civil Service Commission; provided, however, that the pay of any employee on the date of the inclusion of his position in the classified state service shall not be reduced by the application of the uniform pay plan to his class of position."

The reference in the act to employees "within the Orleans Parish Prison proper" was intended, the testimony shows, to divide the employees of the sheriff into two divisions: "front office people," courtroom employees, process servers, etc. would remain unclassified employees; employees who dealt with prisoners who were confined would be classified, because "that is where you needed professional people." The rehabilitation program was vague and ill-defined, consisting largely of volunteer workers operating a "crisis" program and a "work release" program from one of the floors of the prison. The program, or part of it, was moved during Heyd's administration to an abandoned fire station on Thalia Street, but Heyd still considered that the rehabilitation employees would be in the classified service. Therefore, though the act by its words created a geographical division among the employees of the sheriff, Heyd's intention was to classify those employees whose functions required them to deal with the prisoners.

Sheriff Foti testified that when he took office in April, 1974, there was practically no rehabilitation program—only a chaplain paid in part by a church organization and a crisis clinic, both located in the prison. A work release program was operated on Thalia Street by classified deputies under an unclassified director. In financing the new rehabilitation unit, Foti activated a dormant federal grant, and with funds from the federal and city governments employed personnel under what he called "personal service contracts." The failure of Foti to obtain the director for the Rehabilitation Unit from a list of qualified applicants on the civil service list precipitated this litigation.

Sheriff Foti contends that R.S. 33:1529 is unconstitutional as violative of both the 1921 and 1974 Constitutions. It is argued that the statute was unconstitutional when written (in 1968) because (1) it attempted to place unclassified State civil servants in the classified city civil service in violation of La.Const. of 1921, Art. XIV, § 15(G)(c) and (2) it constituted a "local and special" law, and no compliance with the publication requirements of La.Const., Art. IV, § 6. Alternatively, *308 if the court concludes that the statute does not violate the 1921 Constitution, Sheriff Foti argues that the statute is in conflict with certain provisions of the present Constitution.

Article XIV, § 18 of the present Constitution provides:

"(A) Laws in force on the effective date of this constitution, which were constitutional when enacted and are not in conflict with this constitution, shall remain in effect until altered or repealed or until they expire by their own limitation.
"(B) Laws which are in conflict with this constitution shall cease upon its effective date." (Emphasis added).

Accordingly, laws which violated the former Constitution are void and ineffective. Sheriff Foti's initial argument is that the State could not constitutionally place a State unclassified civil servant in the city classified civil service. This argument is based on La.Const. of 1921, Art. XIV, § 15(G)(c) which provided:

"(c) Although the Legislature shall not increase the exemptions or add to the unclassified service defined in (G)(a), no provision or restriction in (G)(a) or this section shall deny to the Legislature or to the governing body of any city, or any parish government jointly with one or more municipalities under a plan of government, having a Civil Service System, the power to place in the classified state or city service, as the case may be, any offices and positions, except elective offices, which are placed in the unclassified service by (G)(a), provided the governing body of any city or any parish governed jointly with one or more municipalities or any municipality desiring to so place in the classified state or city service, as the case may be, any offices and position shall notify, in writing, the city or state Civil Service Commission, as the case may be, of its desire and intent to do so at least six months prior to the effective date of the inclusion of said offices under said system." (Emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
349 So. 2d 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/civ-serv-comn-of-city-of-new-orleans-v-foti-la-1977.