David S. Divis v. Washington State Patrol

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 28, 2014
Docket43744-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of David S. Divis v. Washington State Patrol (David S. Divis v. Washington State Patrol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David S. Divis v. Washington State Patrol, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

T OF A P EALS DIVISION Li 2i1i MAY 28 M; 8: 31

ST :\TE aI.- SFr llNG ! oN Y

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

DAVID S. DIVIS, No. 43744 -941

Appellant,

v.

WASHINGTON STATE PATROL, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent.

HUNT, J. — David S. Divis appeals the superior court' s affirmance of the Washington

State Patrol Chief John R. Batiste' s order demoting him from sergeant to trooper. Divis argues

that we should reverse the superior court because Chief Batiste ( 1) exceeded his authority and

wrongly entered his own independent findings of fact that differed from the Washington State

Patrol ( WSP) Trial Board' s findings of fact; ( 2) improperly relied on a prior settlement

agreement arising from Divis' s earlier acts of misconduct, which settlement agreement was not

before the Trial Board; ( 3) failed to weigh the proportionality of his discipline of Divis against

his discipline of other troopers in similar situations; and ( 4) lacked just cause to demote him

because the investigation was not conducted fairly, one of the elements of cause in the WSP' s

Administrative Investigation Manual. Holding that Chief Batiste acted within his supervisory

authority, we affirm. No. 43744 -9 -II

FACTS

The Washington State Patrol (WSP) hired David S. Divis as a trooper in 1989. On March

2, 2006, WSP promoted Divis to sergeant; later that month, WSP assigned him to supervise a

trooper detachment in South Seattle.

In January 2008, WSP' s Office of Professional Standards Internal Affairs investigated

allegations that Divis had made racially insensitive comments in front of his troopers multiple

times during 2006 and 2007 and that he had used intimidation techniques to prevent employees

from reporting his racially insensitive behavior. WSP initiated disciplinary proceedings, alleging

eleven specific violations.

An administrative WSP Trial Board conducted a six -day hearing in December 2009 and

January 2010. After hearing testimony from 18 witnesses and reviewing over 3, 000 pages of

information, the Trial Board ( 1) determined that WSP had proved three of the alleged racially

insensitive remarks'; ( 2) unanimously agreed that Divis had violated WSP Regulation 8. 00. 010

A), requiring employees to obey WSP rules of conduct, and WSP Regulation 8. 00. 030 ( A),

prohibiting unacceptable conduct by employees; and ( 3) unanimously recommended that Divis be sanctioned by suspending him for 20 working days. The Trial Board forwarded its findings

1 More specifically, in its April 2010 decision, the Trial Board found that WSP had proved ( 1) Divis made a comment something to the effect of, `The three laziest troopers in this detachment happen to be black, ' Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 178; ( 2) " Divis made a racially insensitive remark when he compared major league baseball player Tony Gwynn to Aunt Jemima," CP at 180; and

3) Divis improperly " used an ` open forum' management style to discuss an individual' s activity, performance, disciplinary issues between detachment members." CP at 185. The Trial and

Board qualified these findings as follows: WSP did not prove that Divis used the word " lazy," Divis improperly referred to race " when reviewing or discussing employee performance," and his " Aunt Jemima" comment was " insensitive and was offensive." CP at 179, 180.

2 No. 43744 -9 -II

and recommendation to Chief Batiste, who entered a two - page final order ( First Final Order),

demoting Divis from sergeant to trooper. 2 Divis petitioned the superior court for a judicial writ of review. The superior court

dismissed the Trial Board' s finding that Divis had engaged in an open forum management style,

vacated Chief Batiste' s demotion order because it did not comply with RCW 34.05. 461( 3) 3, and remanded for additional review and entry of a new order. On December 2, 2011, Chief Batiste

entered a new final order ( Second Final Order), again demoting Divis from sergeant to trooper.

Divis filed a new Petition for Judicial Writ of Review. The superior court upheld the chief's

Second Final Order. Divis appeals.

ANALYSIS

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

Divis first contends that Chief Batiste exceeded his authority under RCW 43. 43. 090 by

making his own findings of fact in his Second Final Order that contradicted or exceeded the

scope of the Trial Board' s findings, which were binding on him. The record does not support

Divis' s contentions. Furthermore, Divis mischaracterizes Chief Batiste' s recitation of the Trial

Board' s findings of facts.

2 A WSP trooper may appeal an adverse administrative action to the superior court by apply[ ing] to the superior court ... for a writ of review to have the reasonableness and lawfulness of the [ WSP] order inquired into and determined. The superior court shall review the determination of the chief of the [ WSP] in a summary manner. RCW 43. 43. 100.

3 The legislature amended RCW 34. 05. 461 in 2013. LAws OF 2013, ch. 110 § 2. The

amendments did not alter the statute in any way relevant to this case; accordingly, we cite the current version of the statute.

3 No. 43744 -9 -II

On the contrary, the record supports WSP' s assertion that Chief Batiste did not make new

findings of fact. Rather, he merely summarized the Trial Board' s record and findings, and issued 4 his final order based on two ultimately- sustained allegations against Divis. For example, the

chief s Second Final Order stated: " Credible testimony ... confirms that Sergeant Divis made a

statement to the effect, ` The three laziest troopers in this detachment happen to be black. "'

Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 22 ( emphasis added). Chief Batiste did not find that Divis had used the

term " lazy "; rather, in noting that some troopers had testified that Divis had " made a statement to

that] effect," the chief was merely summarizing parts of the administrative record before the

Trial Board. CP at 22. Thus, Divis is mistaken in his contention that Chief Batiste' s Second

Final Order revised the Trial Board' s findings about whether he ( Divis) had used the term " lazy

trooper" in a racial context. Br. of Appellant at 17.

Similarly, the record does not support Divis' s contention that Chief Batiste found his

Divis' s) " Aunt Jemima" comment to have been racially discriminatory, in contrast to the Trial

Board' s finding no evidence of discrimination. Br. of Appellant at 18. First, Divis fails to

identify what finding in the chief' s Second Final Order was allegedly contrary to the Trial

Board' s finding; nor does Divis provide a record citation for such finding, contrary to RAP

4 The Trial Board found three of seven allegations of misconduct proven. On appeal, however, the superior court dismissed one of the three proven findings, leaving two " sustained" findings, on which Chief Batiste ultimately based his final order. CP at 21.

4 No. 43744 -9 -II

5 10. 3 ( a)( 6).

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