Cutler v. State Civil Service Commission

924 A.2d 706, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 365
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 17, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 924 A.2d 706 (Cutler v. State Civil Service Commission) 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
Cutler v. State Civil Service Commission, 924 A.2d 706, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 365 (Pa. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Gregory L. Cutler petitions for review of an adjudication of the State Civil Service Commission (Commission) sustaining the decision of the Office of Administration not to appoint him to the position of Pennsylvania Management Associate. 1 The Commission held that Cutler, a veteran, was not entitled to have ten points added to his civil service examination test results because he had already used a veterans’ preference at the time he was first hired by the Commonwealth. In this case, we consider the validity of the Commission’s holding that a veterans’ preference may be used once, and once only, in the course of one’s employment in the classified service of the Commonwealth.

The facts material to this case are as follows. Cutler served six years of active duty in the U.S. Army, which was followed by eighteen years in the Army Reserve and Pennsylvania National Guard. He remains a reservist; as recently as 2003, he was activated and served in Ko-sovo. Upon his return, Cutler took a job in July 2004 as an income maintenance worker with the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare. In December 2004, while still within his six month probationary period, Cutler applied for a Pennsylvania Management Associate (PMA) position with the Office of Administration. Individuals chosen for the PMA program undergo eighteen months of intensive on-the-job-training for careers in state government; training covers such areas as budget, human resources and public policy. Applicants must have a post-graduate degree and are required to take a civil service examination designed particularly for the PMA position. Cutler, who has a law degree, took the civil service examination along with numerous other applicants.

On April 15, 2005, after the examinations were scored, the Commission issued a list of eligible candidates. Cutler’s name appeared at the top of the list as the only candidate to receive a score of 118. The director of the PMA program, Richard Whorl, phoned Cutler to offer him the position as a PMA, and Cutler accepted. The offer was confirmed by correspondence dated May 24, 2005, which Cutler signed and returned.

The next day, Whorl’s assistant noticed that Cutler’s application showed that he was a “working vet,” a designation that suggested that Cutler had been given a veterans’ preference when he was hired by the Department of Public Welfare as an income maintenance worker. However, a management directive of the Governor’s Office provides that the veterans’ preference may be used only once, ie., at the *708 time an employee enters the classified service. Believing that Cutler’s top score on the PMA examination resulted from a veterans’ preference, to which he was not entitled under this management directive, Whorl’s assistant contacted the Commission. Agreeing that it had made a mistake, the Commission removed the ten-point veterans’ preference from Cutler’s score and reissued the certified list with the original date of April 15, 2005. On the reissued list, Cutler was one of twenty-nine applicants to receive a score of 108, now the top score on the examination.

The Office of Administration then examined Cutler’s qualifications and compared them to those of the other twenty-eight applicants who had also scored 108 on the civil service examination. On his most recent performance evaluation of December 17, 2004, Cutler received a “needs improvement” rating, specifically in the areas of work habits, communication and job skills. As a result, his probationary status was extended for six months. The Office of Administration found Cutler not qualified for one of the thirte'en openings in the PMA program. Accordingly, on May 27, 2005, Whorl called Cutler and informed him that the offer of employment as a PMA was being withdrawn; this conversation was confirmed by a letter dated June 9, 2005.

Cutler appealed to the Commission. Initially, he appealed the Commission’s refusal to add ten points to his civil service examination test results. Cutler later amended his appeal to add a claim of discrimination, asserting that it was his forthcoming National Guard duty that prompted the Office of Administration to withdraw its job offer. By way of relief, Cutler requested the Commission to direct the Office of Administration to appoint him to the position of PMA and to award “[mjonetary damages equal to loss of pay [and] punitive damages.” Reproduced Record at 76b (R.R. _). In response, the Commission scheduled an investigative hearing to determine “whether there was a merit-related basis for the rescission of the May 24, 2005 offer of employment.” R.R. 80b. Because Cutler had received a “needs improvement” performance evaluation, the Commission concluded that the Office of Administration acted on the basis of merit and dismissed Cutler’s appeal.

On September 20, 2006, this Court reversed the Commission’s adjudication for the reason that the management directive, on which the Commission relied, could not be reconciled with Chapter 71 of the Military Affairs Code. As such, the management directive did not justify the Commission’s refusal to add 10 points to Cutler’s examination results. The Office of Administration sought reconsideration, asserting that this Court erred in describing the management directive as issued by the Governor’s Office, asserting that it was actually issued by the Executive Director of the Commission. Application for Rear-gument at 4. In granting reconsideration, this Court directed the parties to explain the nature of the management directive in question. 2

*709 The matter now stands ready for disposition. The Court addresses the issues raised by Cutler on appeal to this Court as well as the issue raised by the Office of Administration in its request for reconsideration.

On appeal, 3 Cutler has presented four issues for this Court’s consideration. First, he contends that the Commission erred by removing the veterans’ preference from his civil service examination results. Specifically, he contends that the management directive limiting the veterans’ preference to a one-time use was based upon an improper construction of the Military Affairs Code, and, therefore, in no way can this management directive justify the Commission’s holding. Second, Cutler contends that the Commission erred in treating his appointment to the position of PMA as a promotion rather than an initial appointment. Third, Cutler contends the Commission erred because it was impossible that in less than two days the Office of Administration could have given due consideration of Cutler’s qualifications, as compared to those of twenty-eight other candidates. Fourth, Cutler contends that the Commission erred in concluding that he did not effect a valid enforceable contract with the Office of Administration by signing and returning the offer letter of May 24, 2005.

As a preliminary matter, we consider, first, the contention of the Office of Administration that Cutler has waived two of these issues: (1) the claim that the Commission improperly denied him a veterans’ preference on his PMA examination results and (2) the claim that the Commission improperly refused to enforce his employment contract.

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924 A.2d 706, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutler-v-state-civil-service-commission-pacommwct-2007.