Evans v. UNIVERSITY AGRICULTURE CENTER

965 So. 2d 418, 2007 WL 1651206
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 2007
Docket2006 CA 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 965 So. 2d 418 (Evans v. UNIVERSITY AGRICULTURE CENTER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. UNIVERSITY AGRICULTURE CENTER, 965 So. 2d 418, 2007 WL 1651206 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

965 So.2d 418 (2007)

Randall Wayne EVANS, Jr.
v.
LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY AGRICULTURE CENTER.

No. 2006 CA 2025.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 8, 2007.

*419 Floyd J. Falcon, Jr., Avant & Falcon, Baton Rouge, for Plaintiff-Appellant Randall Wayne Evans, Jr.

William A. Norfolk, Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips L.L.P., Baton Rouge, for Defendant-Appellee Louisiana State University Agriculture Center.

Before: McKAY, GORBATY, and CANNIZZARO, JJ.[1]

*420 CANNIZZARO, J.

Randall Wayne Evans, Jr. was terminated from his employment with the Louisiana State University Agriculture Center (the "Ag Center"). He appealed the termination, and after a hearing before a referee of the Louisiana Civil Service Commission (the "Commission"), Mr. Evans' job was reinstated. The Ag Center appealed the referee's decision to the Commission, and the Commission upheld the original termination of Mr. Evans' job. Mr. Evans is now appealing the Commission's decision. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the Commission's ruling.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mr. Evans was employed at the Ag Center machine shop as a permanent employee. His supervisor was Thomas McClure. Mr. Evans and Mr. McClure shared an office in the machine shop, and the office contained a desk with a telephone and a calendar that both men used. The two men normally made work related notations on the calendar.

On June 17, 2005, Mr. Evans was sitting at the desk using the telephone, and he jotted the following notations in the squares of the calendar for the following dates:

June 6, 2005: "Tom received his new A.K. 47 Via Mail order"
June 7, 2005: "Tom assembled his new A.K. 47"
June 8, 2005: "Tom gunned down All of the student workers for Fun"
June 9, 2005: "Tom sharpened his knife"
June 10, 2005: "Watched Tom Kill a Person In cold Blood."

On Saturday, June 18, 2005, Mr. McClure was at work, and he saw the notations on the calendar. He recognized the handwriting as that of Mr. Evans. Mr. McClure then notified Michael Mailander, an associate professor at Louisiana State University ("LSU") in the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering (the "Department") and asked Dr. Mailander to come to the machine shop and look at the calendar. Dr. Mailander secured the calendar until Daniel Thomas, a professor at LSU who was the head of the Department, could see it.

Dr. Thomas gathered information regarding the notations on the calendar. Mr. Evans admitted to Dr. Thomas that he had made the notations but said that he was "joking" when he made them. He also admitted that "Tom" referred to Mr. McClure, his supervisor. After the incident involving the calendar, Mr. McClure was no longer willing to work in the machine shop with Mr. Evans. Therefore, Mr. McClure was transferred to another position in the Ag Center, and his workplace for the new job was two buildings away from the machine shop.

In a letter dated July 5, 2005, Mr. Evans was advised that disciplinary action against him was being considered on the ground that he had violated the Ag Center's Violence-Free Workplace policy (the "Violence-Free Policy"). He was permitted to respond to the letter, and his attorney answered the letter on behalf of Mr. Evans. In a subsequent letter dated July 20, 2005, Mr. Evans was advised that he was being dismissed from his position at the Ag Center. The letter stated that "[t]he reason we are taking disciplinary *421 action against you is for violating the LSU AgCenter Violence-Free Workplace policy. . . ." The letter then detailed the reasons for the action.

The July 20 letter further stated that "[w]e also noted that during the investigation into your actions, others expressed concern about your anger and how you manage it. In addition to the statements written on the shop calendar, you have exhibited behavior that has caused others in the workplace to be fearful of you, such as a tendency to abuse machinery in the shop when you become angry." Finally, the letter notified Mr. Evans that he was being dismissed from his job effective as of the close of business on July 29, 2005. The letter also advised Mr. Evans that he had the right to appeal the termination of his job to the Commission.

Mr. Evans appealed to a Commission referee the Department's decision to terminate his job. A hearing was held before the referee. Prior to the taking of testimony, however, the charge contained in the July 20 letter regarding how Mr. Evans managed his anger and his tendency to abuse machinery was dismissed, because it did not comply with Louisiana Civil Service Rule 12.8(a)(2). That rule provides:

A permanent employee who is removed or subjected to any disciplinary action, other than an emergency suspension or a suspension pending criminal proceedings, shall be given prior written notice which:
. . . .
2. contains such information as will fully inform the employee of the conduct for which the action is being taken and will enable him to prepare a defense, including, where pertinent, the date, time and place of such conduct and the names of persons directly involved in or affected by such conduct (unless their identities are protected by law, in which case, identification shall be made as permitted by law);

The referee found that the allegations regarding Mr. Evans' anger management and the machinery abuse did not contain a sufficiently clear and concise statement of those charges for the purpose of Rule 12.8(a)(2), and she dismissed them. The Ag Center did not contest the dismissal of the charges.

At the hearing that was held before the referee, Dr. Mailander testified that he had secured the calendar on which notations had been made so that Dr. Thomas could review the notations. Dr. Mailander further testified that Mr. McClure was very upset by what he saw on the calendar and that Mr. McClure could not believe what he was reading. The calendar with the notations on it was introduced into evidence.

Dr. Thomas also testified at the hearing before the referee. Dr. Thomas stated that Mr. Evans told him that the notations on the calendar were supposed to be a joke on Mr. McClure. Dr. Thomas further said that after the calendar notations were made, Mr. McClure was no longer willing "to go back in the shop with Mr. Evans at that point." Therefore, Mr. McClure "was no longer operating in the primary responsibility —job responsibility that he had." Mr. McClure was moved elsewhere to work for the Ag Center. This created a hardship on the Department, because, according to Dr. Thomas' testimony, "we operate with two mechanical technical folks out of the shop and, essentially, one of those was not available to do whatever jobs or responsibilities were necessary in that shop area."

Mr. McClure stated at the hearing before the referee that after the calendar incident, he could no longer continue a close working relationship with Mr. Evans. *422 Mr. McClure testified that "I didn't want to be around him. I didn't know what this was all about and what he was up to." Although Mr. McClure did say that Mr. Evans had never struck him nor threatened him, Mr. McClure also said that he knew Mr. Evans was "capable of hitting a person, because he has in the past and has admitted that he has."

Michael F.

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Related

Shortess v. DEPT. OF PUBLIC SAFETY & CORRS.
991 So. 2d 1067 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
965 So. 2d 418, 2007 WL 1651206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-university-agriculture-center-lactapp-2007.