Moore v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

272 A.2d 283, 1 Pa. Commw. 73, 1970 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 31, 1970
Docket1043
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 272 A.2d 283 (Moore v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 272 A.2d 283, 1 Pa. Commw. 73, 1970 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19 (Pa. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge Barbieri,

Virginia Woodring Moore appeals from the adjudication by a majority of the State Civil Service Commission sustaining the action of the Commissioner of Professional and Occupational Affairs in ordering her [75]*75removal from ber position as Secretary of the State Board of Nurse Examiners. Her threefold contentions before us are (1) that the Commissioner was without authority to order her removal because he is not the appointing authority for the post of Secretary, State Board of Nurse Examiners; (2) that, even if he were, there are no findings of fact supported by substantial and credible evidence to support the order of the Civil Service Commission; and (3) that the dismissal order is defective because it is based upon discrimination or non-merit reasons. As will appear, it will be unnecessary for us to consider appellant’s second and third contentions.

It is basic in the law of this Commonwealth, stemming from Article VI, Section 7 (formerly Section 4), of the Pennsylvania Constitution, that the employe’s superior having the power to appoint to the position has the power of removal. See Suerman v. Hadley, 327 Pa. 190, 199, 193 A. 645, (1937). “Appointing authority” is defined in Section 3 of the Civil Service Act of 1941, as amended, subsection (e),1 as “. . . the officers, board, commission, person or group of persons having power by law to make appointments in the classified service”. (Emphasis added.) That Act also provides in subsection (a) of Section 807, (71 P.S. 741.807) that: “no person in the classified service shall be removed except for just cause . . . [Wjritten notice of removal setting forth the reasons for such action and effective date thereof must be furnished. They shall have ten days from the receipt of such notice to give the appointing authority such written answer as the person removed may desire . . .”; and in subsection (b) that “Charges against any employee in the classified service asking for his removal for a violation of law or for any cause enumerated in the rules may be filed by any [76]*76citizen or taxpayer with the appropriate appointing authority and with the director”. (Emphasis added.)

Section 951.5 of the Civil Service Commission rules provides: “Procedure under Section 951(a) Civil Service Act. The appointing authority will go forward to establish the charge or charges on which the personnel action was based.2 (Emphasis added.)

It follows from all of the above that unless the removal action and the proceedings before the Civil Service Commission were carried out by appellant’s “appointing authority”, the adjudication appealed from cannot be sustained.

Appellant was “elected” by the State Board of Nurse Examiners to serve as Secretary to the Board from a group of five applicants by a vote on September 26, 1957. Approval of the Governor was required so that her appointment was not effective until January 2, 1958. The Board, then part of the Department of Public Instruction, also voted to fix her salary with the approval of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. This was in accordance with Section 418 of the Administrative Code,3 which reads: “The State Board of Nurse Examiners shall consist of the Superintendent of Public Instruction and five members who shall be registered nurses . . . Three members of the Board shall constitute a quorum, and the Board shall select, from among its members, a chairman and shall elect a secretary who need not be a member of the Board . . . [T]he secretary shall receive such reasonable compensation as shall be determined by the Board, with the approAral of the Superintendent of Public Instruction”.

By amendment to the Administrative Code in 1963, the State Board of Nurse Examiners was transferred [77]*77from the Department of Public Instruction and, with many other examining boards, became a part of the Department of State under a new administrative system headed by a “Commissioner of Professional and Occupational Affairs.”4 Under the terms of subsection (b) of Section 810, added by the amending Act of 1963, the Commissioner takes the place of the Superintendent of Public Instruction as an ex officio member of each board, including the State Board of Nurse Examiners. Also in Section 810, the powers of the Commissioner are spelled out. Some of the pertinent subsections concerning his powers read: “(4) To assist any professional and occupational examining board within the department, if, as and when requested by the board; . . . (8) To be responsible for all administrative affairs of each of the professional and occupational examining boards and to coordinate their activities; (9) To perform all the powers and duties relating to professional and occupational examining boards that heretofore were imposed upon the Superintendent or the Department of Public Instruction.”5 (Emphasis added.)

Under Section 812 of the Code, also added by the 1963 amending Act, each examining board retains the powers it had prior to 1963. The pertinent part of this new section reads: “The professional and occupational examining boards within the Department of State, shall, respectively, exercise the rights and powers and perform the duties by law vested in and imposed upon them . . .”. 71 P.S. 279.3.

It is evident from analysis of the Code before and after the amendments of 1963 that the Commissioner of [78]*78Professional and Occupational Affairs is now in the shoes of the Superintendent of the Department of Public Instruction. If the Superintendent was appellant’s appointing authority, the Commissioner now is, and as such would have the power to remove the appellant for just cause. If, however, the powers of the Superintendent and Commissioner are limited to administration over, but without power to appoint, the Secretary to the State Board of Nurse Examiners, the effort to remove the appellant in this case is without legal justification.

Counsel for appellant, recognizing the changes effected by the 1963 amendments, points to the unchanged provision in Section 418 that “the Board . . . shall elect a secretary”, and argues that while the amendments give the Commissioner authority over the administrative affairs of the Board, it grants no appointing power to him so that the Board was and still is the appointing authority.

Counsel for the Civil Service Commission does not question the fact that the Board’s electing power remains unaffected by the amendment, but contends that Section 214 of the Code puts the appointing power in the head of the administrative department in which the Board functions, which was the Superintendent of Instruction before the 1963 amendments and now is the Commissioner of Professional and Occupational Affairs. Section 214 reads: “Except as otherwise provided in this section and in the Civil Service Act, the heads of the several administrative departments . . . and the independent administrative boards and commissions, shall appoint and fix the compensation of such directors . . . secretaries . . . clerks, stenographers, . . .”. 71 P.S. 74. (Emphasis added.)

Appellant argues that the term “secretaries” in Section 214 does not include her post which is in the [79]*79“classified service” under the Civil Service Act,6

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Vaughan v. Commonwealth
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Moore v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
272 A.2d 283 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 A.2d 283, 1 Pa. Commw. 73, 1970 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-commonwealth-of-pennsylvania-pacommwct-1970.