Mayerhafer v. Department of Police, New Orleans

104 So. 2d 163, 235 La. 437, 1958 La. LEXIS 1219
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1958
Docket43650, 44004
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 104 So. 2d 163 (Mayerhafer v. Department of Police, New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayerhafer v. Department of Police, New Orleans, 104 So. 2d 163, 235 La. 437, 1958 La. LEXIS 1219 (La. 1958).

Opinions

TATE, Justice ad hoc.

Consolidated herein are two appeals by Captain Adolph A. Mayerhafer from the affirmance by the Civil Service Commis[439]*439sion for the City of New Orleans of .plaintiff’s discharge by the Superintendent of Police on February 21, 1956.

By plaintiff’s first appeal, No. 43,650 of the Docket of this Court, he assigns as error, principally, a Commission holding that the appointing authority properly concluded that appellant knew or should have known of the existence of a graft system in the Third Police District while he was assigned as one of its three station captains from January 9, 1954 through May 18, 1954.

The second appeal, Docket No. 44,004, is grounded upon the Commission’s failure to hold discriminatory, inter alia, the appointing authority’s having singled out petitioner alone for permanent discharge, from approximately seven police officers allegedly similarly situated with regard to the opportunity of acquiring knowledge of the existence of a graft system.

Article XIV, Section 15, Louisiana Constitution of 1921, as amended by Act No. 18 of 1952, LSA, establishing and regulating that State civil service system, also under its terms governs the civil service system for employees of the City of New Orleans.

The basic pertinent provision therein is, 15(A) (1),“* * * No person in the ‘State’ or ‘City Classified Service’, having gained civil service status shall be discriminated against or subjected to any disciplinary action except for cause. * * * ” See, also, Section 15(N)- (1). The appropriate civil service commission is given “the exclusive right to hear and decide all appeals and the legality of all removal and disciplinary cases,” Section 15(0) (1), but “The burden of proof on appeal, as to the facts, shall be on the employee,” Section 15 (N) (1) (a). The Civil Service Commission’s decision shall be final on the facts, although an appeal to the Supreme Court of Louisiana is granted, restricted to questions of law. Section 15(0) (1). In such judicial review, this Court is without authority to examine the weight or sufficiency of evidence, where there is some evidence to support the finding of the Commission. Jordan v. New Orleans Police Department, 232 La. 926, 95 So.2d 607; Cottingham v. Department of Revenue, 232 La. 546, 94 So.2d 662.

In the present instance, the City civil service commission did not itself find that the appellant captain knew or should have known of a system of graft maintained by some of the policemen of the Third District, but found that there was before the Superintendent of Police “substantial, but conflicting, evidence” to that effect upon which this department head had based the discharge. Pretermitting a discussion of whether — rather than merely determining whether evidence existed from which the discharging department head might have concluded valid cause existed [441]*441for appellant’s dismissal — the commission itself was under a duty to determine whether such valid cause existed in fact, we are. constrained under the ruling in State v. Sbisa, 232 La. 961, 95 So.2d 619, to hold that there was no probative evidence by which either the appointing authority or the commission could find that the present appellant either knew or should have known of the graft system sporadically maintained in the Third District.

The evidence at the Commission hearing shows, as the Civil Service Commission found, that a system of graft had existed in the Third Police District from 1951 through 1955. In brief recapitulation, the evidence shows that Police Sgt. Bray, the chief witness for the appointing authority, was in charge of the system of bribery in the Third District whereby money was collected from four establishments by another police sergeant, for the alleged purpose of protecting such lottery and handbook operators from police interference with this illegal gambling. Bray directed the collections and divided the proceeds into three equal parts, placing (according only to his own testimony) one-third of the proceeds in an envelope which he marked “captains” and placed in the general mail basket in the office used by the three captains, which office was also generally open and available to all police at the station and used for interrogations. Bray specifically denied ever having placed the alleged bribe envelope on the desk when any captain was present in the office, nor could he recall if said -envelope had ever been placed on the desk when the appellant himself was on duty at the station.

The facts are practically identical with those in State v. Sbisa, supra cit., wherein the conviction of a captain assigned to the Third District from May, 1953 to February, 1954, for malfeasance, LSA-R.S. 14:134, in that he knew or should have known of the existence of the same system of graft as is here involved (i. e., that directed and maintained by Sgt. Bray) and failed to take appropriate action, was annulled on the ground that there was no evidence of any probative value from which the conclusion could be drawn that the defendant captain therein had knowledge that Bray and others were accepting bribes from gambling establishments in the Third District. In the present case, in addition, the evidence without contradiction indicates that the graft system, always (according to the description of one of its participants) “a cloak and dagger affair,” was only sporadically maintained during the Kohn investigation of police bribery, which investigation preceded and was co-extensive with appellant’s brief tenure when, from detective assigned elsewhere, he was promoted and transferred to the Third District to serve as probationary captain thereof for four and a half months in 1954.

Appellant emphatically denied any knowledge whosoever of the clandestine and in[443]*443termittent bribery system maintained by Bray. He produced uncontradicted evidence that he had requested the aid of his police supervisors and of the State police in suppressing gambling operations in the Third District during his tenure. Further, under cross-examination, most of the witnesses called by the department head to establish that a graft system existed at the Third District admitted that they were uncertain as to its existence during appellant’s relatively brief tenure at the station.1 There is absolutely no evidence in the record that Captain Mayerhafer received any bribe money or had any other notice of Bray’s system of bribery in the Third District.2

Following our ruling in the Sbisa case that such testimony is not evidence that the police captains had actual or constructive knowledge of the graft system maintained by some of the personnel in their district, there is no evidence herein to support a conclusion that the appellant knew or should have known of this police bribery in his district, accepting the finding of the commission (since supported by some evidence) that this system was in existence at least part of the time that appellant was stationed in the Third District. The action of the appointing authority in discharging appellant was therefore without foundation or cause, and the Civil Service Commission’s dismissal of his appeal from such discharge must be reversed.

In view of this determination, it is unnecessary to discuss the contentions of the appellant raised by the second appeal, Docket No. 44,004, that the firing was so discrim[445]*445inatory 3 as to be in violation of the constitutional prohibition of such discrimination against classified employees.

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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 2d 163, 235 La. 437, 1958 La. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayerhafer-v-department-of-police-new-orleans-la-1958.