Dozier v. Chupka

763 F. Supp. 1430, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6768, 57 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,134, 1991 WL 84159
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 15, 1991
DocketC-2-73-0447
StatusPublished

This text of 763 F. Supp. 1430 (Dozier v. Chupka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dozier v. Chupka, 763 F. Supp. 1430, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6768, 57 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,134, 1991 WL 84159 (S.D. Ohio 1991).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

KINNEARY, District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court to consider the motion of the intervening plaintiffs, Brian J. Selegue, Bret E. Levin, and a class of similarly situated white male firefighter applicants (hereinafter “Selegue plaintiffs”) to dissolve paragraph 5(b) of the injunction ordered in this case in 1975, as amended in 1986, and for prospective relief from the provisions of the amended injunction. Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(5). For the reasons that follow, the Court grants the motion of the Selegue plaintiffs. In addition, the Court dissolves the injunction in its entirety.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

What follows is a brief overview of the history of the Dozier injunction. The details of the terms of the injunction will be dealt with as necessary to resolve the pending dispute. In the original case, which began in 1973, 1 Eddie Dozier, Charles Wilson, Adrien Burks, Daniel Moon, John Starnes, and Eddie Brown (“the Dozier plaintiffs”) filed a class action suit alleging that they had been the victims of discriminatory hiring practices by the Columbus Division of Fire. The Court found that the City of Columbus had utilized certain recruiting and hiring practices that had a discriminatory effect on the plaintiff class. Dozier, 395 F.Supp. at 851, 854. As a result of this finding, the Court issued a permanent injunction requiring the City to refrain from using certain objective hiring criteria, 2 and affirmatively ordered it to *1432 develop and validate content-valid, job-related testing procedures, 3 to develop a more rigorous minority recruiting program, 4 and to institute a one-to-one hiring ratio of blacks to whites until the representation of black firefighters approximated the percentage they bore to the general population, which was found to be 19.4%. Id. at 860.

The record before the Court reveals that there was little litigation in the years following the initial injunction. Aside from various motions dealing with payment of attorneys’ fees and the like, the first substantive matter to arise after 1975 occurred in 1979 when the proposed agility test for firefighter applicants was submitted to counsel for the plaintiff class, Fred Ransier, who approved its use for testing purposes. The Court approved its use on August 20, 1979. In 1980, the defendants presented to the Court a report of the testing and validation efforts for the cognitive portions of the entrance examination, known as the “Barrett Battery,” which the plaintiffs did not accept. The cognitive testing procedure was then changed in December of 1985, and was subjected to validation review by an independent consulting company, known as Landy, Jacobs & Associates. See Affidavit of Ronald J. O’Brien, Attached Exh. By April of 1986, the defendants had circulated a copy of the Lan-dy, Jacobs validating study to Mr. Ransier and the Court for review. The Court and the plaintiffs accepted the report as accurate, 5 as reflected by the Court’s Order dated August 12, 1986, in which the Court modified the terms of the original injunction to reflect the achievement of nondiscrimination in the appointment of black firefighters by virtue of their numerical representation on the force. 6 As a result of the judicial finding of nondiscrimination, paragraph five was modified to allow selection of firefighting recruits on the basis of merit only. Paragraph 5(b), however, required the City to resume the one-to-one hiring ratio at any time the percentage of blacks fell below 19.4%, and to maintain the ratio until the imbalance was rectified. Significantly, there was no provision indicating when the modified injunction would terminate.

*1433 The next recorded activity in the case was Mr. Ransier’s motion to withdraw as counsel, dated January 8, 1987, due to a conflict of interest which arose as a consequence of his appointment to the Civil Service Commission in Columbus, Ohio. The motion was granted on January 10, 1987. No other counsel was ever selected by the plaintiff class subsequent to Mr. Ransier’s withdrawal, nor did the Court appoint new counsel, given that Mr. Ransier was retained and not court-appointed. Thus from 1987 until the present date, the Dozier plaintiffs have been without legal representation.

The final action in the case prior to 1991 was the defendants’ request for a modification of the injunction to require a high school diploma as a condition of employment with the Fire Department. The request was made because a change in federal regulations required that emergency personnel responding to accidents on interstate highways were required to have Emergency Medical Technician certificates for which a high school diploma or a GED certificate was a prerequisite. The City proposed that the injunction be modified to require the diploma, and that recruits be allowed to obtain their diploma or GED while proceeding through the application and entrance process. The motion was granted on January 13, 1988, with no opposition from the Dozier plaintiffs.

The foregoing synopsis demonstrates the relative ease and lack of litigation encountered by the Court in administering the Dozier injunction for the first sixteen years of its existence. Thus what appeared at first to be the beginning of nothing less than a Homeric odyssey, was for sixteen years nothing more than smooth sailing in deep, placid water. Not until February 15, 1991, did the Siren’s call lure the Court to the shoals of litigation. That call came in the form of a temporary restraining order filed by the Selegue plaintiffs who were seeking admission to the class of firefighting recruits which was scheduled to commence on March 4, 1991.

The temporary restraining order had its genesis in the selection of the 1991 firefighting class. During the spring of 1990, the Selegue plaintiffs, and approximately 1500 others, applied to the Civil Service Commission for employment as firefighters. Typically, once the top fifty applicants have been ranked by merit, the City then drafts a supplemental list of black applicants to be selected in the event that, after selecting applicants from the top fifty, the percentage of black representation bn the force falls below 19.4%. The Selegue plaintiffs completed the required testing procedures, with Mr. Levin and Selegue ranked 29th and 30th respectively among all applicants. On February 1, 1991, the Civil Service Commission notified both men that they had been certified for appointment as firefighters, which meant that in all likelihood the two would be included in the upcoming class. 7 This result would have obtained because, after accounting for two positions reserved for women, 8 the City sought to fill thirty-six positions in the March, 1991 class.

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Bluebook (online)
763 F. Supp. 1430, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6768, 57 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 41,134, 1991 WL 84159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dozier-v-chupka-ohsd-1991.