Pendley v. Louisiana Division of Administration

303 So. 2d 544, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4053
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 1974
DocketNo. 9984
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 303 So. 2d 544 (Pendley v. Louisiana Division of Administration) 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.

Bluebook
Pendley v. Louisiana Division of Administration, 303 So. 2d 544, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4053 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

SARTAIN, Judge.

Paul W. Pendley (appellant) prosecutes this appeal from a decision of the Civil Service Commission of the State of Louisiana (Commission) upholding his dismissal from employment with the state. We reverse and remand.

On November 6, 1973, the following letter of dismissal was addressed to appellant:

“Mr. Paul W. Pendley
2344 West Contour Drive
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70809
Dear Mr. Pendley:
Pursuant to your conversation with Mr. Roemer and myself on Monday, November 5, 1973, this letter is to advise you that effective at the close of business on Tuesday, November 6, 1973, you will be separated from your duties as State Property Insurance Manager with the Division of Administration.
By your admission to Mr. Roemer and myself, as well as testimony that you gave during the trial of W. W. McDou-gall, you knowingly and willingly accepted $400 of insurance commission kickbacks from John Reed of the Bushnell Agency of Alexandria. Furthermore, by your admission, your previous testimony before a Federal Grand Jury regarding your acceptance of insurance commission kickbacks was in conflict with your testimony given in the recent trial of W. W. McDougall.
We feel that the public knowledge, of your acceptance of insurance commission kickbacks irreparably impairs your effectiveness as a department head of this administration. We also believe that your actions as a State Official constitutes serious abuse of the public trust and confidence which are distinguishing characteristics of the public office that you held. We consider these actions unconscionable, intolerable, and cannot be condoned.
We are sending copies of this letter to the Department of Civil Service Service for their further handling.
Cordially,
Joe A. Terrell
Assistant to the Commissioner
cc Mr. Charles E. Roemer, TI, Commissioner
[546]*546Mr. Harold Forbes, Department of Civil Service
Miss Clara Gartman, Personnel Officer

On November 27, 1973, appellant, through his counsel, appealed to the Commission and cited the following reasons for objecting to his dismissal:

“Mr. Pendley is appealing this dismissal on the following, non-exclusive grounds:
1. The dismissal letter did not comply with the requisites of the Louisiana Constitution in that it did not set forth a fair and clear statement of the misconduct on the part of the employee including time, dates and places of the alleged misconduct.
2. Mr. Pendley was discharged without a hearing and without receiving any oportunity whatsover to present evidence in his own behalf thereby depriving him of constitutionally guaranteed due process of law.
3. Mr. Pendley was discharged by virtue of testimony given in a Court of Law which is an unlawful ground for dismissal under Louisiana law.
4. The conduct of which Mr. Pendley was accused took place four years prior to the dismissal and, accordingly, did not constitute an illegal offense under the applicable Statutes of Limitation under Louisiana Law.
5. The letter of dismissal dated November 6, 1973, contains several opinions on the part of the Dismissing Authority as to the impairment of effectiveness of Mr. Pendley as a Department Head of the Administration with no evidence whatsoever to support these statements of opinions.”

Following a hearing on the appeal the Commission, on April 3, 1974, rendered written reasons, which clearly set forth the facts and their conclusions, to-wit:

“Appellant held a highly responsible position as the State Property Insurance Manager with the Division of Administration. He had occupied this position for a number of years. His duties required him to see that all of the property of the State of Louisiana and its agencies was properly insured. He reviewed all policies, checked the insurance premiums invoiced adjusted any claims falling with the deductibles, and carried out instructions regarding insurance given him by the Commissioner of Administration.
The administration of the insurance program of the State of Louisiana came under federal scrutiny in 1973 and before. A Federal Grand Jury, meeting in Alexandria, called appellant before it to extract testimony from him with regard to certain practices. Subsequently there was a criminal proceeding held in the Federal Court in Alexandria involving an ex-Commissioner of Administration, and appellant was called to testify as a witness in that case. In the course of the trial, as the letter of dismissal here alleges and as appellant concedes, appellant admitted that he had accepted $400 of insurance commissions from John Reed of the Bushnell Agency of Alexandria. He further admitted at the time of the criminal trial and admitted for the purposes of this appeal, that in his testimony before the Federal Grand Jury, he had denied receipt of the same $400.
When the appellant’s court admission, made at the criminal trial in Alexandria, was publicized it came to the attention of his superior, Mr. Charles E. Roemer, II, now' and then Commissioner of Administration, and almost immediately thereafter a letter dated November 3, 1973 was addressed to the appellant advising him of his dismissal from his position as of the close of November 6, 1973.
A timely appeal was taken from the dismissal but the appeal does not deny [547]*547any of the factual allegations contained in the letter of dismissal. The thrust of the appeal is that appellant was an extremely competent State Property Insurance Manager and that the revelation of his receipt of the $400 and of his lack of veracity before the Federal Grand Jury, were not sufficient to outweigh his value to the State as an efficient and experienced manager.
This Commission believes, and so finds, that Mr. Pendley’s effectiveness as a manager of such a large program in which a considerable amount of money is involved has been seriously impaired by the incidents which are referred to and which are conceded to be true.
Appellant testified that he was aware of the fact that insurance commissions, earned by certain local insurance agencies in the State for business written for the State, were often, shared by the record agent with other agents who had not issued the policy or policies. The distribution of portions of the commission was a matter of patronage dictated by the Governor of the State of Louisiana. Aware of this practice and needing some funds himself, appellant conspired with John Reed of the Bushnell Agency, which had done considerable business with the State, to ask the Wright Insurance Agency of Baton Rouge (also an agency that did business with the State of Louisiana) to issue a check of $1100 payable to the Adams Insurance Agency at Pineville, Louisiana. The Wright Agency, believing that the request for the $1100 distribution came from the Governor or from the Commissioner of Administration, issued the check.

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Related

Blake v. Civil Service Commission
310 S.E.2d 472 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1983)
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357 So. 2d 568 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
State v. Burgun
359 N.E.2d 1018 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1976)

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303 So. 2d 544, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendley-v-louisiana-division-of-administration-lactapp-1974.