McDermott v. Commissioner of Children & Youth Services

363 A.2d 103, 168 Conn. 435, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 972
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 13, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 363 A.2d 103 (McDermott v. Commissioner of Children & Youth Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDermott v. Commissioner of Children & Youth Services, 363 A.2d 103, 168 Conn. 435, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 972 (Colo. 1975).

Opinion

MacDonald, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, commissioner of the department of children and youth services, hereinafter commissioner, from a judgment rendered by the Court of Common Pleas sustaining the plaintiff’s appeal from the commissioner’s action in discharging the plaintiff from her position as a teacher in the service of the state on the grounds of ineompetency and insubordination. It is the claim of the commissioner that the court erred: (1) in concluding that the plaintiff did not receive a fair and impartial hearing; (2) in concluding that there was insufficient evidence to support the termination of the plaintiff’s contract as a teacher for incompetency and insubordination; [437]*437(3) in ordering the commissioner to reinstate the plaintiff with hack pay and benefits lost since her discharge.

The plaintiff, Florence McDermott, employed by the department of children and yonth services as a state teacher at Long Lane School in Middletown, was “suspended immediately . . . for serious misconduct” by written notice, dated February 21,1973, in accordance with the provisions of § 5-242 (b) of the General Statutes, the relevant portions of which are set forth in the footnote,1 which further notified [438]*438her that her contract of employment was terminated for reasons of incompetency, moral misconduct and insubordination. Following the procedure outlined in §5-242 (b), the plaintiff, on March 9, 1973, requested a hearing on all issues and was duly notified that such a hearing would be held on March 28, 1973. Thereafter, it was agreed that the hearing would be continued until certain criminal charges then pending against the plaintiff were terminated, and on August 28, 1973, the commissioner notified the plaintiff that the moral misconduct charge would be dropped owing to her exoneration of the criminal charges.

Following the plaintiff’s request for a hearing on the remaining charges of incompetency and insubordination, and a request by her for more specific information as to those charges, the commissioner furnished the plaintiff with the information requested together with a memorandum in support of the charges. A hearing was conducted on the two remaining charges on October 5 and October 12, 1973, and the plaintiff was thereafter notified by letter dated October 25 that the evidence elicited at the hearings fully sustained the charges and by another letter dated October 26 that her contract had been terminated because of incompetency and insubordination. The plaintiff appealed the commissioner’s decision to the Court of Common Pleas under the provisions of § 5-242 (e),2 and that court [439]*439sustained her appeal and ordered that she be reinstated and further that she be awarded all back pay and benefits from the date of her suspension.

The statutory provision, General Statutes § 5-242, of the State Personnel Act, pursuant to which the disciplinary proceedings in this case were conducted, is substantially similar to the provision (§ 10-151 [b]) of the Teachers Tenure Act. We recently held that hearings conducted under the latter act are subject to the provisions of the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act, hereinafter UAPA, General Statutes §§ 4-166—4-189; Murphy v. Berlin Board of Education, 167 Conn. 368, 374, 355 A.2d 265. The reasons which led us in that case to conclude that the UAPA applied to Teachers Tenure Act hearings just as urgently compel the conclusion that the UAPA likewise applies to the procedures followed with respect to hearings held under the auspices of the State Personnel Act: The “employer” of the plaintiff was a “state board” or “commission” within the meaning of §4-166 (1); see §5-242 (a), (b); the dispute below was a “contested case” within the meaning of §4-166 (2); see §5-242 (b), and Murphy v. Berlin [440]*440Board of Education, supra; and the agency in question was “authorized by law” to determine “contested cases,” within the meaning of § 4-166 (1); see §5-242 (b).

In Murphy the plaintiff sought relief through the UAPA, and we construed the act to be a proper jurisdictional vehicle to countenance such an appeal. The present case presents a different situation, since the plaintiff’s appeal was brought pursuant to the jurisdictional grant under General Statutes § 5-242 (e), and neither party argued the applicability of the UAPA. Studying the act and our decision in Murphy, we conclude that the UAPA was intended to be a uniform guide to all agency action, as the term “agency” is defined in § 4-166 (1). Prior to the enactment of the UAPA, however, there existed separate statutory appellate procedures to be applicable to particular agencies, such as §5-242 (e), which procedures are yet extant. We must construe the UAPA to achieve the purpose intended by the legislature and, where possible, to read the separate, preexisting statutory appellate procedures consistently and in keeping with the UAPA provision governing judicial review, § 4-183.3 Where the preexisting statutes cannot be construed as consistent with the UAPA those statutes are repealed by virtue of § 4-189.4

Beading the UAPA and Murphy we find that the act was designed for two purposes. First, it pro[441]*441vides for uniform standards by which all non-exempted agency action is to be judged; second, it provides a vehicle for judicial review as an alternative to preexisting statutes or in situations in which no appellate review was previously provided. Thus, where a party appeals pursuant to the jurisdictional grant of the UAPA, the agency action is measured by the standards contained within the UAPA. Similarly, where a party relies upon a separate statutory authorization, such as §5-242 (e), for judicial review, the reviewing court must then look to the UAPA to weigh the correctness of the agency action. This conclusion is supported by the application of the UAPA in Murphy. Under the Teachers Tenure Act a separate appellate procedure existed, § 10-151 (f), in language identical to §5-242 (e).

Since the UAPA applied to the proceedings in this case (which were conducted in October, 1973, after the 1973 amendments to the UAPA had gone into effect, viz., Public Acts 1973, No. 73-620, §§ 1-18, effective June 11, 1973), the conduct of these proceedings was subject to the standards of fairness and impartiality articulated in the provisions of that statute, as well as the standards obtaining in the State Personnel Act and in our state and federal constitutions. See State ex rel. Leggett v. Jensen, 318 S.W.2d 353 (Mo.); 2 Am. Jur. 2d 613, Administrative Law, § 711.

[442]*442Under §4-178 (1), as amended, in such proceedings, “[a]ny oral or documentary evidence may be received, but the agency shall, as a matter of policy, provide for the exclusion of irrelevant, immaterial, or unduly repetitious evidence.” As we stated in Murphy, “[t]he standard of relevance which governs the proceedings at an agency hearing is set by the complaint as propounded in the notice of charges provided by the agency.” Murphy v. Berlin Board of Education, supra, 376.

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Bluebook (online)
363 A.2d 103, 168 Conn. 435, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdermott-v-commissioner-of-children-youth-services-conn-1975.