Gill v. Dept. of Wildlife Conservation

574 So. 2d 586, 1990 WL 257415
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1990
Docket07-CC-59222
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 574 So. 2d 586 (Gill v. Dept. of Wildlife Conservation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill v. Dept. of Wildlife Conservation, 574 So. 2d 586, 1990 WL 257415 (Mich. 1990).

Opinion

574 So.2d 586 (1990)

Jesse Ty GILL
v.
MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE CONSERVATION.

No. 07-CC-59222.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

December 12, 1990.
Rehearing Denied January 16, 1991.

*588 Albert Necaise, Gulfport, for appellant.

Mike C. Moore, Atty. Gen., Richard D. Mitchell, Douglas Drew Malone, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.

Before ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., and ROBERTSON and BLASS, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

I.

This case presents important questions regarding the nature and extent of influence our elected political officials may lawfully have and exercise over who should hold certain state jobs below the policy-making level. These questions arise through the process legislatively committed Employee Appeals Board and we are charged to vindicate the integrity of that Board's findings, interpretations, and redress of an employee's grievances against unlawful political interference.

II.

For many years Jesse Ty Gill, 32, had on file with the Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC) an application for the position of conservation officer (formerly "game warden") in Harrison County. In the Spring of 1986 such a position came open, and DWC considered Gill, along with many others. Nineteen of twenty-one hunting clubs in the Harrison County area backed Gill for the job. A DWC administrative personnel team interviewed Gill, and DWC's Internal Affairs Office conducted a background investigation. On March 18, 1986, DWC hired Gill for the position of Conservation Officer I, Harrison County. Gill resigned his private employment and enrolled in Basic Law Enforcement Training class at Laurel, Mississippi. He completed this training at the end of May 1986, finishing seventh in his class.

On the day of graduation, May 30, 1986, T.J. Jennings, Chief Investigator, came to the training academy to congratulate the DWC graduates and told Gill, "They need to talk to you in Jackson. They called me on the radio when I was coming down here and told me that you needed to be up there before closing time."

Gill drove immediately to DWC Headquarters, where he was met by Jack Herring, Bureau Director of Fish and Wildlife, Dan Tullos, Assistant Chief of Law Enforcement, and Lynette Conklin. Tullos informed Gill that his employment was not in the best interest of the department and that he might resign if he so wished. Gill declined to resign and was told he was terminated. When he asked why, Herring, Tullos, and Conklin each refused any explanation. Gill was told to take his truck and park it. On June 3, 1986, Gill received a letter from the DWC, reciting that he had been advised DWC had terminated his employment and that he should collect pay only through June 13, 1986. DWC's official reason for terminating Gill was that he had practiced deception in his employment application by failing to disclose prior misdemeanor offenses against the state's wildlife conservation laws.

Gill appealed his termination to the Mississippi Employee Appeals Board (EAB), alleging the grounds given were but a pretext and that DWC had in fact acted solely for partisan and political reasons. EAB's Chief Hearing Officer William H. Smith, III, afforded Gill a full hearing. See Miss. *589 Code Ann. § 25-9-131(1) (Supp. 1990). It then came to light that two members of the Mississippi House of Representatives elected from Harrison County and, as well, at least one other politically potent local elected official, had, upon hearing that DWC had hired Gill, objected strongly and sought his termination. These political officials appear in part to have been motivated by support for Andy Patton, a state employee who had been a disappointed applicant for the same job. They pressed their complaints before top executive officers within DWC, members of the gubernatorially appointed Commission of Wildlife Conservation, and even the Governor himself.

The purported basis for these officials' complaints against Gill was that he had a record of arrests and convictions for illegal game offenses.[1] With one minor exception, each of these offenses occurred more than ten years earlier, when he was a teenager, and Gill's explanation was that he had tried to tell the DWC personnel interviewers about them and had been told the department was interested only in offenses within the past five years. Gill's only such offense was on January 15, 1986, when he had been given a ticket and fined for not wearing hunter's orange. DWC's Chief Law Enforcement Officer said DWC had no consistent policy of refusing to hire as conservation officers persons who had been convicted on game offenses and that he himself had such a conviction in years past.

No useful purpose could be served by recitation of all that occurred leading to Gill's termination. The record is replete, and is convincing, that several elected political officials who held no lawful authority over DWC personnel displayed a substantial interest in securing Gill's termination. Numerous telephone and personal conferences were held between and among these elected officials, persons in the Governor's office, DWC Commissioners, and top executive officials. The evidence may fairly be read that, in the minds of those who first brought the complaints against Gill, his more than ten years old game offenses were but a ruse, as was his failure to disclose these on his written DWC employment application.[2]

On November 12, 1986, Hearing Officer Smith rendered his decision and, after reciting a summary of the evidence, said the question before him was "whether Jesse Ty Gill would have been terminated had the political contacts not occurred." Hearing Officer Smith then answered the question

Although I do not find that the political contacts specifically and emphatically ordered that Jesse Ty Gill be terminated, I do find that he would not have been terminated if the numerous contacts had not occurred. I do, therefore, feel that the termination of Jesse Ty Gill was the result of influence exerted by persons in political positions of responsibility.

Smith then ordered Gill reinstated with full back pay and other benefits.

DWC appealed to the full Employees' Appeal Board which extensively reviewed the matter and, in the end, affirmed. EAB regarded the objective grounds DWC asserted — the old game violations and Gill's failure to disclose them — a pretext and stated

It is obvious to anyone that Jesse Ty Gill was fired for partisan political and personal reasons and that he was not treated with the fairness, justice and respect as is demanded by the laws of the State *590 of Mississippi... . There can be but one conclusion... . The inescapable conclusion is that Jesse Ty Gill was fired from employment with the State Department of Wildlife Conservation for partisan and political reasons, which reasons are prohibited by the rules of the state Personnel Board under the laws of the State of Mississippi.

DWC then sought review in the Circuit Court of Hinds County which considered the matter via writ of certiorari. The Circuit Court did not question any of the EAB's findings of evidentiary or ultimate fact but looked only to errors on the face of the record and proceedings below and reversed on grounds that EAB had read the law too broadly. The Court held Gill protected only in his political opinions and affiliations and that the "political interference" so effective and so replete within the record did not render Gill's discharge legally illicit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Angela A. Avery v. The University of Mississippi
Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2022
CLC of Biloxi, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid
238 So. 3d 16 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2018)
Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Alliance Health Center
174 So. 3d 254 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2015)
Fishbelt Feeds, Inc. v. Mississippi Department of Revenue
158 So. 3d 984 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2014)
Mississippi Department of Public Safety, Office of Standards & Training v. Raybon
138 So. 3d 220 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)
Wrenn v. State
121 So. 3d 913 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2013)
Mississippi State & School Employees' Life & Health Plan v. KCC, Inc.
108 So. 3d 932 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2013)
5K Farms, Inc. v. Mississippi Department of Revenue
94 So. 3d 221 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2012)
Mississippi State v. KCC, Inc.
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2011
5K Farms, Inc. v. Mississippi State Tax Commission
94 So. 3d 291 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2011)
Jones v. City of Ridgeland
48 So. 3d 530 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
Hill Bros. Construction Co. v. Mississippi Transportation Commission
42 So. 3d 497 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
City of Laurel v. Keyes
30 So. 3d 397 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2010)
Haas Trucking, Inc. v. Hancock County Solid Waste Authority
29 So. 3d 853 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2010)
Dialysis Solution, LLC v. Mississippi State Department of Health
31 So. 3d 1204 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
Division of Medicaid v. Mississippi Independent Pharmacies Ass'n
20 So. 3d 1236 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
574 So. 2d 586, 1990 WL 257415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-dept-of-wildlife-conservation-miss-1990.