Florian v. State Civil Service Commission

832 A.2d 1171, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 694
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 832 A.2d 1171 (Florian v. State Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florian v. State Civil Service Commission, 832 A.2d 1171, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 694 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge PELLEGRINI.

Diane Florian (Florian) appeals from an order of the State Civil Service Commission (Commission) upholding the Department of Military and Veteran’s Affairs’ (Department) termination of her employment due to her failure to respond to a reinstatement offer; the offsetting of her back pay award by unemployment benefits and wages she received prior to her reinstatement offer; its failure to pay her interest and fringes; and its refusal to pay her counsel fees that resulted in the reinstatement offer.

Florian was employed by the Department as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) at the Southwestern Veteran’s Center (Center) in Pittsburgh from September 27, 1997 until September 25, 1999, when she was terminated due to the alleged occurrences of three different medication errors she committed during her two years of employment. She appealed her dismissal to the Commission which sustained the discharge but then, on appeal, this Court reversed the Commission’s decision concluding that the evidence only supported one medical error, and that this one error standing alone was insufficient to support her dismissal from employment.

In compliance with our order directing reinstatement, by letter dated March 6, 2002, the Department reinstated Florian as a full time civil service LPN at the Center but conditioned the reinstatement upon her passing a pre-reinstatement physical examination.1 Florian reported for the required physical which was conducted by a nurse practitioner assigned to the Center. In response to questions she was asked by the nurse practitioner during the exam, Florian indicated that she had some back pain. As a result, the Center’s Director of Nursing, Judith Trout-Weyers (Director Trout-Weyers), gave Florian several medical forms for her doctor to complete and return as soon as possible, certifying that there were no medical restrictions preventing her from returning to work.

Because it had not received the required forms, by letter dated April 15, 2002, the Center informed Florian that it had yet to receive any additional information regarding Florian’s ability to work as an LPN and asked Florian to report to work or contact the Center by April 23, 2002. It [1174]*1174warned, “Failure to either provide medical documentation of an inability to perform the essential functions of an LPN or report for work by that date will indicate your non-interest in a LPN position at [the Center].” Florian did not contact the Center, provide the requested medical documentation or report for work by April 23, 2002.2

By letter dated May 7, 2002, the Department advised Florian that her failure to provide the requested documentation or to report to work as directed was being viewed as a refusal of the job offer at the Center effective April 23, 2002. In connection with calculating the amount of back pay that it owed Florian, the Center also informed Florian in the May 7th letter that it would process her work history to reflect the changes from September 25, 1999 through April 23, 2002. The Department stated that Florian would receive regular pay status through February 15, 2002, and leave without pay status from February 16, 2002 to April 23, 2002. The letter requested that Florian provide information regarding her earnings between September 26, 1999 and February 15, 2002, which would be deducted from her back pay award. Florian responded by appealing the Department’s actions to the Commission, arguing that the Department did not act properly when it determined that she had abandoned reinstatement and when it declined to resolve a dispute concerning the calculation of a back pay award.

Before the Commission, Florian testified that after receiving the March 6th letter offering her reinstatement conditioned on the physical exam, she reported for and took the physical despite her reservations about returning to the job. Florian testified that during the examination, the nurse practitioner asked her if she had back pain. “I answered, ‘Yes.’ ” She also testified, “He asked me if I had ever sustained a work related back injury. I told him in 1996.” Florian stated that after the exam, she was sent to meet with Director Trout-Weyers, who, “... gave me a bunch of papers and said because we have to address your limitations, you need to take these out there ... You have to do this immediately.” She was told to take the forms to her primary care physician, but testified that when she did, her physician would not fill them out because, “he never treated [her] for a back injury.” (Reproduced Record at 60a; 65a-66a.)

Florian also testified that she believed the Department was not really concerned with her back, but only raised the issue “to generate an additional problem.”3 (Reproduced Record at 63a.) She pointed out that in a May 2, 2002 letter, Commonwealth records had not been revised to include the Commonwealth Court’s Order reversing the Commission’s original adjudication, but still reflected the September 1999 removal. (Reproduced Record at 70a.) She testified that on the issue of [?]*?reinstatement, “[She] felt [she] was sabotaged.” (Reproduced Record at 108a.)4

To support its assertion that a good faith offer of reinstatement was made, Employer offered the testimony of William Bergin (Nurse Bergin), the nurse practitioner who conducted Florin’s physical examination. Nurse Bergin testified that he asked Florian whether or not she thought a reoccurrence of the injury would interfere with her ability to perform her duties and she responded, “Yes.” Further, he stated that his questions about her previous back injuries were asked because it was on the form prepared during the physical examination. Nurse Bergin stated that he was not aware of Florian’s back injury prior to asking her the question. He also testified that he and an associate doctor, Dr. Ward, who was present in the room during appellant’s examination, were reluctant to sign the form indicating that Florian was free of any “physical or mental conditions that would in any way handicap the employee in carrying out assigned duties.”

Mary Yurko, the Human Resource Director at the Center, testified that a physical examination was required of all new employees and all employees returning from extended absences, including those returning from a termination or non-illness-related leave without pay. She also explained why, as of May 2, 2002, Florian’s personnel record had not been revised to show her reinstated status. She testified that when Florian was initially removed in September 1999, a computer code was put into a previously-used computer system that reflected her status as “terminated.” She further stated that if an employee was reinstated following termination, the computer record was modified at the time the individual returned to work.5

On December 17, 2002, the Commission issued its adjudication and order finding that Florian had rejected the offer of employment effective April 23, 2002; that she was entitled to back pay from the date of termination to April 23, 2002; and that the Department was entitled to offset that back pay award by the unemployment benefits and wages received in lieu of her civil service position earned by Florian as a LPN during that period of time. The Commission awarded Florian $22,006.87 in back pay, which equaled $78,689.00 in wages she would have received, increased by Florian’s leave entitlement and offset by her earnings in lieu of her civil service employment and unemployment compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
832 A.2d 1171, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florian-v-state-civil-service-commission-pacommwct-2003.