Leeds v. Gray

242 P.2d 48, 109 Cal. App. 2d 874, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1929
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1952
DocketCiv. 14922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 242 P.2d 48 (Leeds v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leeds v. Gray, 242 P.2d 48, 109 Cal. App. 2d 874, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1929 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*876 BRAY, J.

Petitioner appeals from an order of the superior court denying his petition for a writ of mandate to compel the California State Personnel Board to restore him to his former position.

Questions Presented

1. Sufficiency of evidence. 2. Did petitioner have a full and fair hearing before the board? 3. Where the hearing officer made no findings and the board heard no witnesses, is the board’s order valid? 4. Is the punitive action excessive?

Record

Petitioner was a referee of the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board, Department of Employment. Charges were preferred against him before the State Personnel Board. Petitioner had a hearing before a hearing officer. However, no member of the board was present. The hearing officer made no findings, decision or recommendation. The Personnel Board reviewed the transcript of the proceedings and made certain " findings in his favor and certain against him. It then ordered him demoted from his position to that of Employment Security Officer, Grade 2. Heard with these charges was petitioner's appeal from the factor ratings of his performance report. The Personnel Board adjusted his record upward in certain respects. Petitioner then applied to the superior court for a writ of mandate as above mentioned. The matter was heard on the transcript of the proceedings before the board and denied.

Charges and Findings

After a probationary period of six months during which he received good performance reports, petitioner acquired permanent status as referee. At the time the charges were filed his overall period of service in that capacity was approximately 15 months. (He had over nine years service with State Civil Service.) His superior, Healy, had become dissatisfied with petitioner’s work, kept a record in a book of his shortcomings, and had called a meeting of the reporters who had reported his hearings to discuss his behavior in them. Healy then caused charges to be filed against petitioner.

The charges which the board found to be true follow: Generally, incompetency, inefficiency, inexcusable neglect of duty, physical or mental disability, insubordination, discourteous treatment of the public or other employees and other failure of good behavior or acts which are incompatible with *877 or inimical to the public service.; that his temperament, personality and disposition are such that as referee, he was rude, intolerant, argumentative, brusque, discourteous, easily annoyed and is now unable to consistently conduct hearings in a judicial, impartial, objective, dispassionate, calm, fair and courteous manner. Specifically he conducted certain named hearings in a rude, unfair, discourteous and insulting manner, frequently ridiculed the claimants, causing them to become excited and upset, causing some to be reduced to tears, manifested his anger by raising his voice and getting red in the face.

1. Sufficiency of the Evidence-.

Petitioner attacks the sufficiency of the evidence from many corners. He contends that his superior, Healy, became angry at him because one day in his absence petitioner took from Healy’s desk a box of candy which he intended to replace, and from then on Healy started to build up a ease against him and for that purpose kept entries in a black book; that the 43 letters written by Healy to him before the charges were brought, and which appear to be attempting to correct his conduct, were intended to upset him and to enable a ease to be built against him. Again, he attacks the credibility of the witnesses against him; the claimants were all persons of whose claims he had recommended denials; the department reporters who testified against him were “very much alike, ostentatious, pompous, definite and enjoying the cynosure of being a witness. ’ ’ Petitioner points out that his testimony and that of witnesses called in his behalf was contrary to that of the witnesses called against him. All these and the many other criticisms of the evidence against him were matters affecting the weight of the evidence and for the determination of the board. (There is no trial de novo in the superior court in this character of proceeding.) It would serve no purpose to detail the evidence concerning the charges which the board found true. Suffice it to say that there is ample evidence to support their findings. This is true, even though, as claimed, approximately two thirds of the transcript of the evidence before the board contains evidence concerning charges on which the board found in favor of petitioner. Actually, the most damning evidence against petitioner is the transcripts of various hearings he conducted, which definitely show that because of a lack of a judicial, impartial, *878 objective temperament and a fair and courteous manner, he is unfit to be a referee.

Petitioner contends that the general charges above mentioned were too general and did not give him a fair notice of details of time, place, names, etc. Possibly this contention has merit. However, at the hearing it was pointed out that these charges were to be proved only by the proving of the specific charges and items which were set forth in detail in the accusation. Actually they are not independent of those charges and items and are merely conclusions as to the manner in which the specified hearings were conducted, and petitioner’s conduct therein. We fail to see how petitioner is injured by what is at most a general summing up of his conduct and manner in the particular hearings.

Petitioner contends that the modification upward by the board in some respects of his “Report of Performance” is inconsistent with their findings against him on certain charges. The original report was made by his superior, Healy. With the exception of “quality of work” which was rated “Improvement needed to reach standard” it rated all other “Performance Factors” as “Unacceptable.” The board changed these factor ratings as follows: “Quantity of Work,” “Work Habits,” “Initiative,” from “Unacceptable” to “Improvement needed”; “Analytical Ability” from “Unacceptable” to “Standard Outstanding.” They left “Relationships with People,” “Dependability” and “Overall Rating” “Unacceptable,” and “Quality of Work,” “Improvement needed.” Obviously this change of rating is in nowise inconsistent with their finding that he was unfit to act as a referee. In fact it supports such conclusion.

2. Fair Searing.

Petitioner contends that he was denied a fair and full hearing, first, because the pattern of action followed by the department prior to trial hampered and prejudiced his defense. (a) The maintaining of a “black book” by Healy, setting forth petitioner’s derelictions, constitutes an unfair means of supervisory control. Merely to state this contention shows its absurdity, (b) The 43 corrective letters written petitioner by Healy were “a device to keep constant pressure” on petitioner. Even though the board found untrue Healy’s charges that petitioner was incompetent and inefficient, we find no reason why the head of a department may not write letters to his subordinates criticizing their conduct. Even if *879

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Bluebook (online)
242 P.2d 48, 109 Cal. App. 2d 874, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leeds-v-gray-calctapp-1952.