Ex Parte City of Birmingham, 2091117 (ala.civ.app. 2-18-2011)

75 So. 3d 152, 2011 WL 754960
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 18, 2011
Docket2091117
StatusPublished

This text of 75 So. 3d 152 (Ex Parte City of Birmingham, 2091117 (ala.civ.app. 2-18-2011)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte City of Birmingham, 2091117 (ala.civ.app. 2-18-2011), 75 So. 3d 152, 2011 WL 754960 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MOORE, Judge.

The City of Birmingham seeks certiorari review of a judgment entered by a three-judge panel of the Jefferson Circuit Court reversing a decision of the Jefferson County Personnel Board terminating the employment of Sean F. Hudson. We reverse the decision of the three-judge panel.

Facts and Procedural History

Hudson was employed as a police officer by the City of Birmingham Police Department (“the BPD”) for approximately 12 years; he had been assigned to work at the Birmingham International Airport (“the airport”) for approximately 10 of those 12 years. Hudson’s duties at the airport required him to monitor a locked gate at “Checkpoint C” on the morning shift. According to Hudson, the Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”), a component of the federal Department of Homeland Security, had taken over security at the airport in 2008. According to Edward Downing, the assistant federal security director for screening at TSA, when passengers at the airport travel through a checkpoint, there is certain property that passengers may not take onto an airplane. At that point, according to Downing, passengers have a choice — they can take the item out of the airport, they can place certain items in their luggage that goes “into the belly of the plane,” or they can abandon the item. If the passengers abandon the item, it is deposited by a TSA agent into a bin that is used specifically for collection of voluntarily abandoned property (“VAP”).

TSA Directive No. 200.51, regarding “Disposition of Lost or Unclaimed Personal Property Found in TSA-Occupied Spaces,” states in a footnote that “[l]ost personal property is distinct from prohibited items voluntarily abandoned to the TSA at screener checkpoints, also known as voluntarily abandoned property (VAP).” TSA Directive No. 200.52, regarding “Care, Handling, and Disposition of Voluntarily Abandoned Property,” states that “VAP deposited in collection bins shall not be recovered by, and will not be returned to, passengers. Upon voluntary abandonment of the prohibited item, the item immediately becomes the property of the Federal Government.” Directive No. 200.52 further instructs that VAP is to be segregated by TSA according to different category types. The first category, VAP with an estimated resale value of less than $500, “may be retained for official mission use only, transferred to another federal agency without reimbursement, donated, or abandoned or destroyed. If donations are authorized, they always take priority over destruction. A donation in lieu of destruction is authorized to public bodies only.” (Emphasis in original.) Downing testified that “official mission use” would include TSA functions; in other words, [154]*154TSA can use the items in the VAP bin that are valued at less than $500 at the airport. He stated that “donated” in the directive means given away to the State of Alabama.

Column C on Attachment A to Directive No. 200.52, entitled “Disposition Guidance Table for [VAP] Prohibited Items,” includes a list of certain items that should be destroyed; some of the items included in that column have an asterisk next to them, indicating that those are “additional items that may be donated to a public body in lieu of Abandonment and Destruction.” Included in those items denoted with an asterisk are knives and box cutters, among other items. Column D on Attachment A lists items that are to be donated, and it includes screwdrivers, among other items.

Downing stated that the VAP bin is locked and that only TSA employees have access to the key to the lock on the VAP bin. Hudson testified, however, that, at one time, he had authorization to go into the VAP bin to take out dangerous items. He stated that TSA had supplied the police precinct with a key when it took over in 2003. According to Hudson, that key was lost, so he began to open the VAP bin any way he could. Hudson testified that he would take things out of the VAP bin if he needed them for his official use and that he had given some items to others to use in construction and for other official uses at Checkpoint C, but that he had never kept any of those items or taken them home with him. Hudson stipulated that he had opened the VAP bin with a screwdriver. Hudson testified that he knew that the area was videotaped and that he was being recorded. He stated that other police officers assigned to work at the airport also regularly accessed the VAP bin to obtain items therein and that it was standard operating procedure at the airport for them to do so. According to Hudson, the VAP bin was labeled “throwaway bin,” and he considered its contents to be trash.

Captain William John Crane testified that, at some point, he was the commander of the east precinct of the BPD and that he had overseen officers that were assigned to the airport. Captain Crane testified that, in his opinion, it is not important for him to know what the rules and regulations of the airport are because he relies on the BPD rules, which require his officers to turn in property that comes within the control of a police officer. Sergeant Matthew Rostowski, who had supervised Hudson and other officers working at the airport, testified that he did not recall seeing anything in the manuals of rules and regulations at the airport regarding VAP. Sergeant Rostowski testified that he had had a conversation with Hudson and Captain Crane regarding what to do with items that were found at the airport and that, according to BPD’s rules and regulations, officers are supposed to take any found property, to fill out a property inventory, and to take the property to the property room at the BPD headquarters. Sergeant Rostowski stated, however, that working in the airport creates a different working condition because property is constantly being found and he, Captain Crane, and Hudson were wrestling with the problem of discerning whether items were properly categorized as property found by the police department that they were taking charge of or whether those items were simply articles left by a passenger that needed to go to the lost and found area at the airport. Sergeant Rostowski stated that it could be said that, because of that problem, he had deviated from the normal rules and regulations of the BPD.

Tabitha Kline, Edward Lewis Hannon, Ronald Edward Youngblood, Jr., and Manual Diaz, all police officers employed by [155]*155the BPD, testified that they had been assigned to the airport and that they had not received any instruction as to what to do with VAP. Preston Weed, who is also an officer with the BPD, had also been assigned to the airport. Officer Weed testified that, when TSA first assumed authority at the airport, it was making policies as it went along and that TSA had allowed the officers to take knives that had been abandoned and that, at one point, it was the standard operating procedure of TSA to allow police officers to take what they wanted from the property that had been abandoned by passengers. Another BPD police officer, Darryl Trucks, testified that he had been assigned to the airport and that one of the TSA agents had told him that TSA agents simply throw away the items that go into the VAP bin and that TSA does not have any use for those items.

Downing testified that, on May 30, 2009, he learned that, on several occasions, Hudson had opened the VAP bin with a screwdriver and had removed items. On June 2, 2009, Downing reported to the BPD that he had videotaped footage of Hudson forcing entry into the VAP bin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 So. 3d 152, 2011 WL 754960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-city-of-birmingham-2091117-alacivapp-2-18-2011-alacivapp-2011.