George Connelly v. Paul H. Nitze, Secretary of the Navy

401 F.2d 416, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 351, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5783
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1968
Docket21085
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 401 F.2d 416 (George Connelly v. Paul H. Nitze, Secretary of the Navy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Connelly v. Paul H. Nitze, Secretary of the Navy, 401 F.2d 416, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 351, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5783 (D.C. Cir. 1968).

Opinion

McGOWAN, Circuit Judge:

Appellant brought suit in the District Court against the Secretary of the Navy and the Civil Service Commission, seeking a declaration of the illegality of his dismissal from federal employment and an injunction restoring him to his job. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the District Court, without any identification of its reasons, held for appellees. Our examination of the administrative record filed in the District Court fails to convince us that the Navy, in proceeding without a hearing, acted within either the spirit or the letter of its own regulations. Because its error in this regard may have been induced in some considerable degree by the ambiguities of appellant’s position vis-a-vis a hearing, we have concluded to vacate the judgment of the District Court dismissing the complaint, and, with all further proceedings thereunder stayed for the time being, to remit the parties to the holding by the Navy of an evidentiary hearing on its charges. 1

I

In 1961, appellant was a civil service employee with 17 years of unexceptionable service as a fire fighter at the Pa-tuxent River Naval Air Station. He was *418 also a life-long resident of the local community of Leonardtown, Maryland. On May 19 of that year he received a notice of proposed removal for immoral conduct, in which he was “charged with the commission of homosexual acts with (three enlisted men — Etheridge, Morrill, and Coyle) during the period of 1 January to 1 May 1961.” Appellant requested a formal hearing, and one was convened before a three-man group which characterized itself as “a fact finding board, not a court,” with the mission of making a report to the Commanding Officer of the Air Station.

At the outset of the hearing the chairman of the board, a naval officer, referred to the charges and said that appellant could proceed with evidence in his defense. When appellant’s counsel suggested that he had no evidence to present if the Navy had none, the chairman stated that “[W]e don’t intend to call any witnesses at this particular time.” When counsel then asked “[A]re you going to present the prosecution first?” the chairman replied “[T]his is not a court. We are just arriving at facts. We have some facts in our hands right now and we want other facts. * * * ” Appellant’s counsel then said he would, for the convenience of his character witnesses who were present, be willing to go ahead with their testimony alone, and this was done. 2

Following this evidence, the chairman read from written statements by Eth-eridge, Morrill, and Coyle. The chairman asked appellant why he thought these men would make such statements, and appellant said he thought it was because they wanted to get out of the Navy. 3 The three men were then successively called by the chairman as witnesses. When appellant’s counsel undertook to examine them about their statements (although the chairman had declined to make the statements physically available to counsel for this purpose) each refused to answer any questions. A typical exchange is the following with Coyle:

Q. How long have you known Mr. Connelly?

A. I refuse to say anything about that. I have taken Article 31.

Q. Have you engaged in any unnatural sexual acts with Mr. Connelly?
A. I say I refuse to testify.
Q. You made a statement that at one time you were trying to get out of the Navy?
A. That’s true.
Q. How would you go about that?

A. There was some hardship difficulties at my home and I put in a request that was denied.

Q. You are not particularly anxious about staying in the Navy, are you?
A. It doesn’t matter one way or another.

The chairman formally read into the record the complete written statements of Etheridge, Morrill, and Coyle, and then asked appellant if he denied their truth. He replied that “[T]hese are all untrue as far as I’m concerned.” The hearing ended with counsel protesting that appellant could not possibly be found guilty on written charges which the makers refused to affirm in open hearing.

The Commanding Officer did, however, find appellant guilty of the acts *419 charged, and separated him from his job. However, the Secretary of the Navy, on December 1, 1961, sustained appellant’s appeal and directed his restoration to duty because “the procedure followed in effecting your removal from employment was fatally defective.” He added that, if appellant accepted restoration, “new and proeedurally correct action to remove you may be instituted upon your return to duty.”

Appellant did not learn until after the entry of judgment by the District Court in this case that, coincidentally with rendering this decision, the Secretary of the Navy had transmitted to the Commanding Officer at Patuxent a memorandum, dated September 14, 1961, by the Chief of the Bureau of Naval Weapons. 4 Although this memorandum recommended that appellant’s appeal be denied, it pointed out what it considered to be a number of procedural deficiencies under the governing regulations contained in the Navy Civilian Personnel Instructions [hereinafter cited as NCPI]. Of central interest for present purposes are the following:

(a) Management failed to introduce evidence in support of its case.
(b) The three enlisted men should have been asked to verify their signatures on their written statements and to reaffirm their correctness. Appellant and his counsel should also have been given an opportunity to examine these statements at the outset of the hearing.
(c) No background information with respect to the taking of the written statements was presented. The special investigators who obtained them should have testified.

Following appellant’s return to duty on December 21, 1961, a new action was initiated on January 25, 1962. 5 The notice this time charged only homosexual acts with Etheridge and Coyle, each of whom was referred to as a “former enlisted man” because, as a Government pleading in the District Court states, “[Bjefore the Navy began its second removal proceedings in plaintiff’s (appellant’s) case, Etheridge and Coyle had been, themselves, separated from the Navy” midway through a four-year enlistment in each case. The reason for omitting Morrill, as given by the Government in the same pleading, was that he had, after the hearing described above, repudiated his written statement as false. Attached to the notice were the same written statements by Etheridge and Coyle which had been read into the record of the earlier hearing. But also attached was a new written statement by Coyle, given by him on July 12, 1961, and relating the commission of a fifth homosexual act with appellant on the night of June 14, 1961.

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Bluebook (online)
401 F.2d 416, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 351, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-connelly-v-paul-h-nitze-secretary-of-the-navy-cadc-1968.