Gamble v. Hoffman

695 S.W.2d 503, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3514
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 6, 1985
DocketWD 35638
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 695 S.W.2d 503 (Gamble v. Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gamble v. Hoffman, 695 S.W.2d 503, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3514 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

NUGENT, Judge.

Ronald W. Gamble appeals from the circuit court’s affirmance of his dismissal from the Missouri State Highway Patrol. The Highway Patrol cross-appeals from the circuit court’s interlocutory order finding the patrol’s first dismissal of Trooper Gamble not in accordance with §§ 536.080 and 536.090.1 We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the circuit court with directions.

Trooper Gamble was a member of the Missouri State Highway Patrol when this case arose. On November 19, 1982, the Patrol filed charges accusing him of violating four general orders involving inattention and lack of devotion to duty, conduct unbecoming a member of the patrol, untruthfulness in reporting his actions to his supervisors, and immoral conduct.

The charges all stemmed from an incident which occurred on November 8, 1982, when Gamble visited the home of Rose Ann Sears to pay for some firewood he had agreed to purchase. Gamble and Ms. Sears were social acquaintances, and he was a friend of the Sears family. At the time she was unwed whereas he was married. Ms. Sears complained that Trooper Gamble made unwelcome sexual advances to her involving kissing her and rubbing her breasts. She also complained that the trooper tried to get her to go into her bedroom with him. He denied those complaints, saying that he only rubbed her shoulders because she told him that she was tense and nervous.

After the Trooper left her house, Ms. Sears reported to her father and to her friend, Jetta West, her version of what had occurred. They advised her to complain to the Highway Patrol, which she did. Gamble’s commanding officer questioned him about the event, and he denied the sexual advances. The Patrol filed formal charges, and at Gamble’s request a disciplinary hearing board was convened pursuant to § 43.150.

At the hearing, Gamble’s attorney attempted to impeach Ms. Sears’ credibility by showing that she had pled guilty to a charge of stealing over $500 from an employer and that she had made inconsistent statements to her father and friend about the incident. The evidence mainly consist[505]*505ed of the testimony of Trooper Gamble and Ms. Sears. They were the only persons present at the critical time.

The board found that the charges were true and sufficiently serious to warrant Gamble’s dismissal. It made no detailed written findings of fact and conclusions of law, but stated in its written findings only that it found that the charges were true. The board recommended to the commanding officer that Trooper Gamble be dismissed. The Superintendent, Colonel H.J. Hoffman, without reading a transcript of the hearing or reviewing the record, ordered Gamble dismissed.

The trooper appealed his termination to the circuit court of Randolph County. After a hearing, the court issued an interlocutory order remanding the case to the disciplinary board, ordering it to make findings of fact and draw conclusions of law in accordance with § 536.090. The court further held that Colonel Hoffman was the official charged with making the final decision in the case. Accordingly, the court ordered that before he rendered a decision the superintendent read the full record or personally consider those portions of the record referred to in written arguments or briefs.

In accordance with the circuit court’s interlocutory order, the disciplinary board reconvened and held a second hearing. Ms. Sears’ credibility was further impeached when Trooper Gamble’s attorney showed and counsel for the Patrol agreed that at the first board hearing she had lied in testifying that she was single, that her name was Sears and that she had been married only twice. In fact, as Trooper Gamble’s counsel showed the board at the second hearing, Ms. Sears had been married for a third time on November 30,1982, only nine days before she testified at the first hearing. Her new husband’s name was Sumpter, not Sears.

In addition, at the second hearing, Trooper Gamble called as a character witness a deputy sheriff who knew Ms. Sears. He specifically testified that her reputation for honesty and truthfulness in the community in which she resided was “bad.”

At the end of the second hearing, the board once again found the charges to be true and sufficiently serious to warrant dismissal. Its decision included detailed written findings of fact and conclusions of law. At the request of Trooper Gamble’s attorney, the board made a finding on the credibility of Ms. Sears, stating that:

30. To substantiate the charge of ‘conduct unbecoming,’ the Board had only to listen to testimony given by both Sears and Gamble. Each testified as to what transpired on the couch at the residence on November 8, 1982. Both testified there was physical contact to some degree. The degree of physical contact as testified to by Sears was carried further than that admitted to by Gamble. It again becomes the duty of the Board to consider truthfulness. The majority of the Board assessed more credence to the testimony given by Sears, corroborated by the testimony of Jetta West and Keith Sears because of the following reasons:
a. There simply was no evidence presented to substantiate that Rose Ann Sears has anything to gain from concocting such a complaint. Certainly she has far less reason to prove the issue than Trooper Gamble does to disprove it. Substantial testimony has not been presented to indicate she has a reason to lie, especially against a person who has been characterized as her friend. Trooper Gamble could give no reason for her to lie. The thought that she ‘wanted her moment on the stage’ or ‘wanted to be the center of attention’ has no merit.

The board once again recommended to Colonel Hoffman that the trooper be fired.

After reading the transcript from the December 8 hearing and listening to a tape of the board’s second hearing, Colonel Hoffman ordered that Trooper Gamble be dismissed. Once again the trooper appealed to the circuit court, which held two hearings. At the second hearing, Trooper Gamble presented the testimony of Ms. Sears’ previous husband and a former boy[506]*506friend. Both testified that she had a very bad reputation for truth and veracity. Ultimately, the court affirmed Gamble’s dismissal.

In its findings, the court concluded that the board’s decision was supported by substantial and competent evidence. It also found that judging the credibility of witnesses was not within its scope of review and, therefore, that the issue of Ms. Sears’ credibility was not before it. The court also awarded Gamble back pay for the time he was improperly dismissed according to the circuit court’s earlier interlocutory order.

Gamble’s only point on appeal is that he was denied due process because the disciplinary board impermissibly shifted to him the burden of proof and risk of non-persuasion as shown by its finding No. 30. In its cross-appeal the Highway Patrol raises three points. First, that the court erred in ruling that the superintendent of the Patrol and not the board makes the final decision on dismissal of a trooper and, therefore, that Colonel Hoffman was not required to read the record before ordering the dismissal. The Patrol further complains that the disciplinary board was not required by § 536.090 to make detailed written findings, and that it made the findings required by § 43.150.

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Bluebook (online)
695 S.W.2d 503, 1985 Mo. App. LEXIS 3514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamble-v-hoffman-moctapp-1985.