Keith v. Civil Service Board

111 P.2d 57, 57 Ariz. 85, 1941 Ariz. LEXIS 167
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1941
DocketCivil No. 4293.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 57 (Keith v. Civil Service Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith v. Civil Service Board, 111 P.2d 57, 57 Ariz. 85, 1941 Ariz. LEXIS 167 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

This is an appeal by Joe Keith from a judgment of the superior court affirming an order of the civil service board of the City of Phoenix which sustained the action of the chief of police of that city in dismissing him from the position of patrolman in the city’s police department.

According to the record the chief of police of the City of Phoenix dismissed him from the service on November 16, 1938, and on November 19, 1938, caused to be served upon him and also filed with the civil service board of the city the following order:

“For the reasons stated below, you are hereby dismissed from the position of Patrolman in the Depart *87 ment of Police, effective upon service. Reasons for dismissal:
“Incompetent and inefficient in the performance of duty; conduct unbecoming an officer and guilty of annoying his superiors through non-payment of just debts.
“Dave W. Fountain
“Head of Department
“Chief of Police”

The petitioner answered a few days later denying the charges and at the same time requested a hearing before the civil service board of the City of Phoenix. On November 29, 1938, he asked for a specification of the various acts of commission and omission relied upon to constitute the charges, and on November 30, 1938, this was furnished him. It was in the following language:

“Reasons for dismissal:
“Incompetent and inefficient performance of duty; improper and unlawful performance of duty; conduct unbecoming an officer; failure to pay just debts causing annoyance to superiors because thereof, particulars thereof being:
“1. During month of November, 1938, while acting as jailer in city jail, you failed to keep proper and intelligible record of the perfomance of your duties as jailer;
“2. During month of November, 1938, while acting as jailer in city jail, you failed to properly account for property of prisoners which came into your custody;
“3. During month of November, 1938, while acting as jailer you failed to properly lock tank number three, the safety door being left open, the safety latch on the outer door being left open, and the door entering into the tank from the jailer’s office being left open;
“4. During month of November, 1938, while acting as city jailer, you were under the influence of intoxicating liquor while on duty on various occasions;
“5. For a long period of time last past you have been under the influence of intoxicating liquor while on duty.
*88 “6. For a long period of time last past you have failed to pay your just debts causing numerous complaints from your creditors to your superiors;
“7. During the month of October, 1938, you were guilty of conduct unbecoming an officer toward a woman;
“8. During the month of April, 1937, you failed to truthfully report the facts concerning the attempted arrest and death of Rudolph Blanco.
“9. During the month of October, 1937, you took a book of parking permits for commercial vehicles from your superior officers without their consent or knowledge and after being confronted and charged therewith, admitted taking same, and returned the book, but still secretly kept four of the permits which were later obtained from you.
“Dave "W. Fountain
“Head of Department
“Chief of Police”

The petitioner demurred to the sufficiency of each of these specifications, but the record does not disclose that the board took any action thereon. Evidently the demurrer was treated as overruled, because on July 19, 1939, the matter proceeded to a hearing at which some twenty-five witnesses were examined. Testimony supporting each of the charges was introduced though to justify the action of the board in dismissing the petitioner it was not necessary that all of them be established. Appellee calls particular attention to the evidence supporting the charge of frequently drinking liquor and at times being under its influence in 1938, while on duty; of taking advantage of his position as an officer to buy meals and liquor from the Pure Food Cafe and failing to pay for them; of conduct unbecoming an officer toward a woman in that late in October, 1938, about 10:30 A. M., while in uniform, he went into the Pure Food Cafe, ordered a cup of coffee from Ruth Belfils, a young-married woman employed there, and, after being *89 served, handed her a small package wrapped in paper, saying as he did so, “This is something to remember me, by.” As she started to open it, he remarked, “Don’t open it here,” whereupon she took it to the back room and found it contained a “rubber condom, which was all wrinkled up, dirty and all unrolled.” She was shocked and hurt by this conduct, because she. had always served the police officers and considered them gentlemen. Appellee points out also that the petitioner himself admitted violation of the rules by writing the chief of police a letter under date of April 25, 1939, in which he stated, among other things, the following:

“I am hereby applying to you for an opportunity to prove to you that I have entirely quit the use of all intoxicating liquors and that I can do good work and if permitted over a period of months, I can prove to the satisfaction of the captains and yourself that I am permanently off of drink, both on and off of duty. ’ ’

On August 14, following the hearing, the civil service board entered an order that “the dismissal of Joe Keith made on November 22, 1938, be sustained.” No appeal to the courts lies from the action of the civil service board, so the petitioner took the case to the superior court of Maricopa County on a writ of certiorari and the judgment of that court was “that the proceedings below of the Civil Service Board of the City of Phoenix in the matter of the dismissal of Joe Keith be affirmed.”

The petitioner contends that in quashing the writ of certiorari the court committed error. There was no order quashing the writ and no reason why one should have been made. The writ merely directed the civil service board to file with ■ the superior court the record made by it in the case and when this was done the purpose of the writ had been accomplished. We take it, however, that what the petitioner meant is *90 that the court exceeded its jurisdiction in entering the order of affirmance and will so treat it. He points out three reasons why this is true.

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Related

Woerth v. City of Flagstaff
808 P.2d 297 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1990)
Bishop v. Law Enforcement Merit System Council
581 P.2d 262 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1978)
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238 P.2d 950 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 57, 57 Ariz. 85, 1941 Ariz. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-civil-service-board-ariz-1941.