Nicolos v. North Slope Borough

424 P.3d 318
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 2018
Docket7257 S-16428
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 424 P.3d 318 (Nicolos v. North Slope Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicolos v. North Slope Borough, 424 P.3d 318 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

BOLGER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The North Slope Borough discharged employee Tom Donovan Nicolos after he made statements that Borough employees interpreted as threats. Nicolos appeals from the *322 superior court's order approving the Borough Personnel Board's decision affirming his discharge. He claims that his statements did not constitute threats or other misconduct under the Borough's personnel rules and that the Borough failed to conduct an adequate investigation into his alleged misconduct before terminating him. Nicolos also claims that his purportedly threatening statements were manifestations of a disability and that his discharge violated the Americans with Disabilities Act 1 (ADA) and the Alaska Human Rights Act 2 (AHRA). We reject Nicolos's claims of error and affirm the judgment of the superior court approving the Personnel Board's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The First Alleged Threat

Nicolos began working in Utqiagvik (then called Barrow) for the North Slope Borough Department of Public Works in 2013. At some point Nicolos began having thoughts of harming himself and harming others-thoughts that Nicolos would later characterize as "unwelcome." The thoughts persisted, and one day in January 2015 he "woke up feeling the worst that [he] had."

Following advice from his parents, Nicolos went to work and immediately sought out his supervisor, Brittney Toalston, to inform her about his unwelcome thoughts of harm. Meeting in their shared office, Nicolos told Toalston that he "was not in a good place, ... d[id] not want to hurt others, ... did not want to hurt [him]self, and ... did not want to go to jail." Toalston later testified to the Personnel Board that during this conversation Nicolos was "[v]ery agitated, stressed, and really red in the face"-"like he was very fidgety and he had to do something."

Toalston knew from previous conversations with Nicolos that he "ha[d] access to firearms and weapons." As a result, Toalston "became very scared for [her]self and [her] employees." She moreover did not "know how [she and the other employees] were going to act or work with somebody who said something like that." She advised Nicolos to clock out and seek treatment, and she sent her two other subordinates home for the day. She later testified, "[I]f I didn't feel safe in my workplace, then I feel my employees shouldn't be at work either."

B. The Second Alleged Threat

Nicolos left the workplace, as instructed by Toalston, but was unable to obtain immediate treatment in Utqiagvik. He flew to Anchorage that evening, and the next day he had a counseling session at Providence Alaska Medical Center with Mandie Webb, LPC.

After she met with Nicolos, Webb contacted Toalston and two Department employees that day to warn them about Nicolos's "homicidal ideation." The nature of Nicolos's comments to Webb and the content of Webb's disclosure to Toalston and the others are disputed. According to Toalston, Webb told her Nicolos "had expressed ... that he had a list of people that he wanted to hurt either with guns or weapons," that Toalston "was number one on his list," and that "next was [Department employee] Ekatarina Pili and then [former Department employee] Pam Amling." Pili, one of the two other individuals warned by Webb, corroborated Toalston's account. She testified, "[Webb] told us pretty much that ... [Nicolos] had either planned or premeditated to come to the workplace and open fire."

Amling, who also received a warning from Webb, gave a different account. She testified that she "d[id] not remember [Webb] saying anything about a plan to kill anybody" and that instead Webb had informed her that Nicolos had been "having feelings of hurting himself and such." For his part, Nicolos testified that he did not tell Webb he had a plan to kill his supervisor or anyone else. Rather, he told Webb he had been having thoughts -"unwelcome" thoughts-of harming his supervisor. Further he did not know when he made his comments to Webb that she would disclose them to Toalston. Webb did not testify at the Personnel Board hearing. But her notes, introduced at that hearing, state that she "contacted [Nicolos's] supervisor, ... Toalston ..., [about] the homicidal statements made by [Nicolos]." The notes do not mention a hit list or premeditated plan to kill.

*323 C. The Borough's Response To The Alleged Threats

Toalston later testified at the Personnel Board hearing that after receiving the call from Webb about Nicolos's homicidal ideation, she cried and was "in shock." Toalston also testified that she "became sick to [her] stomach" and vomited. Similarly, Pili testified that she was "really kind of distraught and shocked" after receiving Webb's call. She thought there was "a high possibility that [Nicolos] could come to work and do whatever ... [Webb] had said."

On January 14, the same day Webb contacted her, Toalston sent an email to the Borough's human resources and legal departments, her supervisor, and the Director of Public Works summarizing her conversation with Webb. The email stated that Webb had said "she ha[d] a legal obligation to reach out to each of [the warning recipients] to let [them] know that [Nicolos] ha[d] planned and ha[d] wanted to use firearms on all three [employees] in the office." The email further stated:

[Pili] and I will both submit restraining orders on [Nicolos] for fear of our lives.
Please-please let me know if there is anything else we can do. Because right now you have two women ( [Pili] and myself) tearing up with the fact that [Nicolos] has a possibility of coming back to our office....

Toalston later did obtain a protective order against Nicolos. 3

Price Leavitt, a deputy director in the Department and Toalston's supervisor, testified that the Department held an "emergency meeting" to decide how to deal with Nicolos's statements to Toalston and Webb. Leavitt testified that following this meeting, the Department "put security measures into the [Department's] building by putting in special glass around the reception area ... [and] security cameras" and by employing a security guard.

The Department placed Nicolos on investigative leave on January 16. Leavitt was responsible for investigating Nicolos's alleged misconduct. In conducting this investigation, Leavitt talked to Toalston twice, reviewed the Borough's personnel rules, and consulted with the Borough's human resources and legal departments. He did not interview Nicolos or other witnesses.

After he completed his investigation, Leavitt sent Nicolos a "notice of contemplated discharge" on January 29. The notice informed Nicolos of the allegations against him, of the personnel rules that he was alleged to have violated, and that the Borough was contemplating discharging him.

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Bluebook (online)
424 P.3d 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicolos-v-north-slope-borough-alaska-2018.