Pailet v. OFFICE OF HEALTH SERVICES, ETC.
This text of 387 So. 2d 1274 (Pailet v. OFFICE OF HEALTH SERVICES, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Roger v. PAILET
v.
OFFICE OF HEALTH SERVICES AND ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN RESOURCES.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Julian Murray, Murray, Murray, Ellis, Braden, & Landry, New Orleans, for appellant.
Frank H. Perez and Joseph A. Donchess, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before EDWARDS, LEAR and WATKINS, JJ.
EDWARDS, Judge.
Plaintiff, Roger V. Pailet, appeals a Louisiana State Civil Service Commission decision dismissing as untimely his appeal of a suspension by the Office of Health Services and Environmental Quality, Department of Health and Human Resources. We reverse.
Pailet, the Public Health Program Administrator for Jefferson Parish, was indefinitely suspended without pay but for a period not to exceed ninety days on November 8, 1978, by letter from J. T. Hamrick, M.D., Acting Assistant Secretary and Director of Local Health Services, Department of Health and Human Resources, hereinafter DHHR.
*1275 On November 22, 1978, pursuant to Civil Service Rule 12.2(a),[1] Pailet was mailed detailed written reasons for his suspension. Those reasons, which plaintiff received on November 25, included:
1. repeated and extensive lateness for work;
2. repeated and intentional falsification of work records;
3. fraudulent acceptance of pay for work not done;
4. intentional falsification of travel vouchers;
5. administrative intimidation of personnel;
6. inciting personnel to violence;
7. permitting unofficial overtime/compensatory time in contravention of specific directives;
8. continuing insurance coverage on inoperative vehicles;
9. negligently allowing the destruction of public property.
The final two charges were made based on information discovered after plaintiff's suspension. In addition, Pailet was
"expressly advised that there may well be additional allegations, charges and/or disciplinary action brought against you as a result of our continuing and extensive investigation. Nevertheless, as required by the Civil Service Rules, we are furnishing you in this letter with as much details as we presently have, which form the basis of and requires that your suspension without pay continue for the duration of the investigation. Additional time is needed to complete the investigation and reach a final determination in your case."
On December 19, 1978, plaintiff appealed his suspension to the Civil Service Commission, hereinafter CSC.
DHHR filed a Motion for Summary Disposition of Appeal on February 22, 1979. The gravamen of DHHR's motion was that plaintiff had failed to comply with Civil Service Rule 13.12(a).[2]
At the CSC hearing on the motion, counsel for plaintiff contended that the appeal was indeed timely inasmuch as it was filed less than thirty days after plaintiff received the written reasons for his suspension. Counsel urged that the thirty days for appeal permitted by Civil Service Rule 13.12(a) only commenced to run on November 25, 1978, and not on November 8, because until November 25, plaintiff had no grounds on which to prepare an appeal. This argument availed nothing since on April 12, 1979, the CSC issues its opinion granting DHHR's motion for summary disposition and dismissing plaintiff's appeal of his suspension.
Plaintiff filed an application for appeal to the Court of Appeal, First Circuit, on May 11, 1979. Three days later, and resulting from an extensive discussion of the matter by CSC members together with general counsel, the CSC issued ex proprio motu an "Amended Opinion." The judgment of April 12, 1979, was reversed and DHHR's *1276 motion for summary disposition was denied. Plaintiff, therefore, voluntarily withdrew his application for appeal on the ground there was no need for one, issue having been decided in his favor.
On May 30, 1979, DHHR sought supervisory writs from the First Circuit. Certiorari was granted and, on August 22, 1979, based on an interpretation of Civil Service Rules 13.14(e) and 13.33(b),[3] the "Amended Opinion" of May 14,1979, was annulled and the judgment of April 12, 1979, was reinstated. Pailet v. Office of Health Services and Environmental Quality, Department of Health and Human Resources, No. 12,917 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1979).
Plaintiff, through counsel, refiled his appeal to the First Circuit Court of Appeal on August 27, 1979. By letter dated September 6, 1979, R. Gray Sexton, General Counsel to the CSC, notified plaintiff's counsel that the CSC considered this appeal timely and was preparing a transcript for the Court of Appeal.
Notwithstanding these developments, on September 28, 1979, DHHR filed a Motion to Dismiss Unlodged Appeal. DHHR contended that since the April 12, 1979, judgment had been declared to be the final decision of the CSC, and since no timely appeal from that judgment remained extant, the unlodged appeal sought to be reinstated on August 27 should be dismissed. This argument was rejected and the motion to dismiss denied on the ground that the original granting of the motion for summary disposition did not become final until reinstated by this court on August 22,1979. Pailet v. Office of Health Services and Environmental Quality, Dept. of Health and Human Resources, 379 So.2d 266 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1979). DHHR's request for a rehearing was denied on December 27,1979, and the Louisiana Supreme Court denied writs on February 15, 1980. 380 So.2d 102.
In its present posture, this case presents a single issue-whether Pailet's appeal to the CSC from his suspension of November 8, 1979, was timely or not.
DHHR urges that plaintiff's thirty day period for appeal began to run with his notice of suspension on November 8, 1978. Pailet maintains that it began on November 25, 1978, when he received the reasons for suspension. Since we have been unable to find any cases on point, the issue appears to be res nova.
For several reasons, we find Pailet's thirty-day delay for appeal began on November 25, 1978, and that his original appeal was therefore timely.
Civil Service Rule 12.3[4] contains the procedure for all adverse actions for cause, *1277 except suspensions. The rule clearly aims to provide all those who have suffered from adverse determinations thirty days to prepare their appeal. Even though Rule 12.2, supra, provides a separate procedure for suspensions, nothing indicates that those suffering suspensions, a penalty less drastic than removal, should have a lesser time to appeal than those merely being reprimanded. It is obvious that the separate procedure for suspensions is to provide supervisors with a vehicle for on-the-spot, rather than carefully considered, disciplinary decisions. The delay of fifteen days for providing written reasons which Rule 12.2 allows is not meant to slice a suspended employee's appeal time in half but to give a suspending authority time to fully explain his actions.
In Powell v. City of Winnfield Fire and Police Civil Service Board, 370 So.2d 109 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1979), the court stated that the purpose of provisions requiring reasons to be given to adversely affected employees
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