Davis v. Civil Service Board

593 P.2d 1209, 39 Or. App. 695, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 23, 1979
DocketNo. A 78-05-07360, CA 11570
StatusPublished

This text of 593 P.2d 1209 (Davis v. Civil Service Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Civil Service Board, 593 P.2d 1209, 39 Or. App. 695, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2219 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

RICHARDSON, P. J.

The Civil Service Board (Board) appeals a declaratory judgment requiring it to add veterans’ preference points to plaintiffs’ civil service promotional examination scores. The issue is whether an amendment to the veterans’ preference statute, which took effect October 4, 1977, would apply to a civil service eligibility list established on April 30, 1976.

The Board is authorized to conduct competitive examination of candidates for appointment and promotion to positions in the City Fire Bureau. After the examinations are graded, the scores are published in an eligibility list in decending order. When a vacancy occurs, the Board is notified and certifies to the appointing authority the three highest ranking candidates on the eligibility list. The appointing authority is obligated to consider one of the three candidates for appointment.

Plaintiffs are armed forces veterans who at the time of their appointment as firefighters did not qualify for veterans’ preference points. Plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor took a promotional examination for fire captain and were placed on the April 30, 1976, eligibility list. Plaintiffs Davis, Getch and Hamm ranked fifth, tenth and fourteenth, respectively. Plaintiff-intervenor ranked sixteenth.

The promotional eligibility list was to be operational for three years. On October 4, 1977, subsequent to promulgation of the eligibility list, Oregon Laws 1977, Chapter 854, became effective. It, inter alia, amended the veterans’ preference statutes, ORS 408.210 through 408.290, by broadening the coverage to include veterans with plaintiffs’ type of military service.

In addition, chapter 854 amended ORS 408.230(1). Prior to the amendment that section provided:

"Every war veteran and disabled veteran who has successfully completed all phases of a civil service entrance test shall be allowed preference on the list [698]*698established as a result of such test. * * *” (Emphasis added.)

The amendment deleted the word "entrance,” thus making the veterans’ preference applicable to promotional as well as entrance tests. If the preference points were added to plaintiffs’ and plaintiffintevenor’s scores they would rank one through four on the eligibility list. Subsequent to the effective date of the amendment, plaintiffs requested the Board to add the veterans’ preference points to their scores on the promotional examination. The request was denied.

Plaintiffs filed a declaratory judgment action seeking to require the Board to add veterans’ preference points and amend the eligibility list accordingly. Plaintiff Tyner was allowed to intervene. He contended that he was entitled to veterans’ preference points under the amended ORS 408.235(1), which provides:

"A veteran is eligible to use the preference provided for in ORS 408.230 only for a position for which application is made within 15 years of discharge or release from service in the Armed Forces.* * *”

He argues although he left active duty more than 15 years prior to the promotional examination he served in an Army Reserve unit until 1962. The 15 year limit, he argues, should run from 1962 and not from the date of his transfer from active to reserve service.

The facts alleged in plaintiffs’ and plaintiffintervenor’s complaint were admitted by the Board. The court granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and decreed that the Board correct the eligibility list to reflect the veterans’ preference according to the amended statute and revoke the previous certification of the eligibility list.1

[699]*699Respecting the intervenor’s claim, the court held he was not entitled to a veterans’ preference because his release from active service was more than 15 years prior to the examination. Plaintiff-intervenor cross-appeals that portion of the court’s judgment.

The issue posed by the parties is whether changing the existing eligibility list to add the veterans’ preference points is a retroactive application of the amended statute. Defendants argue the eligibility list was established prior to the effective date of the amendment and a correction of the list would be applying the statute retroactively. They contend such application would affect the rights of all candidates who presently rank higher than plaintiffs to maintain their relative positions on the list.

Plaintiffs argue the legislature intended the preference points to be applied upon the amendment becoming effective. They contend the certification of the top three candidates on the list occurs when the Board is notified of a vacancy by the appointing authority. Since, they contend, that is the critical time when certification occurs correcting the list to reflect veterans’ preference points does not require a retroactive application of the statute.

The statute in question provides:

"Every veteran and disabled veteran who has successfully completed all phases of a civil service test shall be allowed preference on the list established as a result of such test. Preference means that [700]*700to the score of a veteran who has passed a test five points shall be added, and to the score of a disabled veteran who has passed the test 10 points shall be added. * * *” ORS 408.230(1).

The purpose of the veterans’ preference statute is to accord qualified veterans an advantage in hiring and promotion in the classified service. The method selected by the legislature to accord this advantage was to require civil service examiners to add preference points to the veterans’ examination score. Although a person must be one of the top three candidates on the eligibility list to be considered for promotion, the preference is accorded for the purpose of promotion and not for the purposes of being placed on this eligibility list. In other words the eligibility list is merely the vehicle for giving qualified veterans a preference in promotion when a vacancy occurs.

The plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that several vacancies were due to occur in the rank of Fire Captain before the eligibility list expired. It is conceded that plaintiffs are all qualified veterans entitled to five preference points and would be the top three candidates if the list were corrected. If the list were not corrected plaintiffs would be effectively denied the veterans’ preference to which they were entitled in seeking promotions to the positions of Fire Captain. According them the preference the statute provides for promotion to vacancies that occur after the effective date of the amendment is not a retroactive application of the statute. It is an amendment of existing eligibility but by operation of the statute which applies prospectively to promotions after the date of the amendment.

It is a common practice of civil service commissions and boards to establish an eligibility list in advance of a vacancy and to keep the list operational for a set period of time.

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Bluebook (online)
593 P.2d 1209, 39 Or. App. 695, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-civil-service-board-orctapp-1979.