Pittman v. City of Tulsa ex rel. LaFortune

1979 OK CIV APP 3, 591 P.2d 339, 1979 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 23, 1979
DocketNo. 51346
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1979 OK CIV APP 3 (Pittman v. City of Tulsa ex rel. LaFortune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittman v. City of Tulsa ex rel. LaFortune, 1979 OK CIV APP 3, 591 P.2d 339, 1979 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 95 (Okla. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

Appellee Pittman, a civil servant of appellant city of Tulsa, was fired by the presiding judge of the municipal court. He appealed to the civil service commission, and, after a hearing, it revoked the discharge and ordered the employee suspended from performing his municipal duties for six months without pay. Pittman appealed again — this time to the district court. After reviewing the record, the judge reversed the commission’s decision without remanding the matter back to that body for a new hearing.1 City assails this judgment as be[341]*341ing an exercise of power that the court did not have. We agree and reverse.

I

In his appeal to the district court, employee Pittman alleged that he was in charge of the Warrant Division of the Municipal Court Clerk’s Office and his tenure was protected by the City of Tulsa’s Civil Service Act. On September 4, 1976, Pittman received a letter dated September 1, signed by the municipal judge and the court clerk, and stating that he, Pittman, was dismissed as of September 1 because of (1) his past conduct record, (2) his failure to heed past disciplinary warnings, and (3) his being charged with the crimes of public drunkenness and assault on a police officer on August 31, 1976.

Pittman requested a hearing before the civil service commission and one was held on October 6 and 14, 1976 during which sworn testimony was presented, stipulations were made, and documentary evidence was submitted. The commission vacated the permanent termination and suspended appellant as an employee for six months. Pittman thought the lighter punishment still too harsh and lodged an appeal in the district court as authorized by law.

According to his journal entry, the district judge reviewed the file which contained a true copy “of all instruments and papers comprising the proceedings . before the Civil Service Commission . and . . heard the arguments of counsel” before finding that the commission “committed error in the reception of illegally obtained evidence and that, therefore, [its] decision should be reversed because the Court cannot determine whether such evidence was the basis for such decision.” And the court consequently reversed the commission’s decision at the cost of the city.

II

In support of its appeal to this court, city argues that the reversal was wrong because (1) the trial court was without a transcript of the testimonial evidence heard by the commission; (2) it was based upon a presumption that the commission may have been influenced by certain evidence alleged to have been illegally obtained, and (3) the commission’s decision was based on ample competent evidence.

The first contention is without merit. Access to the district court was afforded Pittman by 12 O.S.1971 § 951. In re White, Okl., 355 P.2d 404 (1960). That statute, according to White, vests appellate jurisdiction in the district court to review the commission’s decision, and that jurisdiction is invoked when an appeal is “perfected by filing in the district court a full and complete transcript of the proceedings had before the . . . [commission] including a transcript of the evidence.” If such an appeal is perfected “the district court is limited to determinations (sic) whether an error of law was committed in the hearing and whether or not findings are supported by the evidence introduced.”2

Pittman acknowledges the requisites of White but says the record before the district court in this case “was a sufficient transcript of the proceedings” even though it does not include a transcript of the testimony heard by the commission. He refers to Robbins v. Oklahoma Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, Okl., 461 P.2d 610 (1969) as authority for the rule that certification of a transcript by a court reporter is not essential to perfect a § 951 appeal. This, of course, is exactly what Robbins holds. Such knowledge, however, profits us little be[342]*342cause here, unlike Robbins, there is no transcript of testimony at all, and certainly none certified by a commission official.

Finally, Pittman strongly condemns a rule which would require a recently discharged employee to hire a court reporter to transcribe all the testimony heard by the commission before he can appeal. Perhaps he has a point, but we are unaware of a case imposing such a requirement. To the contrary, Robbins, the one case cited by Pittman in support of his position, suggests that a transcript of proceedings before various boards and agencies need not be prepared, nor its correctness certified to, by a court reporter; and that certification by the agency’s reporter and secretary is sufficient.

The record discloses that Pittman lodged his appeal in the district court simply by filing a petition in error October 25, 1976— some eleven days after the commission handed down its decision. Apparently, no attempt was ever made by Pittman to obtain or file a transcript of either the commission proceedings or the adduced testimony.

In its answer, city challenged the court’s jurisdiction on the ground that no transcript of the proceedings accompanied the petition and in the alternative pleaded that the commission action was not founded on an error of law nor was it unsupported by sufficient evidence. To demonstrate the accuracy of its allegations, city attached a copy of the commission’s minutes of its proceedings on October 6 and 14, 1976, a copy of that portion of the city charter establishing and empowering the commission, a copy of city’s procedural manual relating to disciplinary actions, and a copy of the various exhibits offered to the commission by the parties. These exhibits included the following: correspondence between city officials and Pittman; a copy of a medical report; a copy of a 1974 city D.W.I. charge against Pittman and of instruments showing its disposition; a copy of what was designated “Intelligence Memorandum” dated April 11, 1973 containing a transcription of a telephone conversation between Pittman and a county prisoner as “overheard” by a Tulsa County Deputy Sheriff; a copy of a police department internal intelligence report detailing results of an investigation growing out of the “overheard” telephone conversation; a copy of an arrest report dated August 28, 1976 detailing the officers’ experience with Pittman shortly after midnight when they “found him passed out in an apparent state of intoxication on the parking lot” of an eastside club — The Twentieth Century Electric Company — and charging Pittman with public drunkenness, interfering with an officer, and assaulting a police officer; a copy of various mug shots, a copy of a county D.W.I. charge dated August 2, 1969 and later reduced to reckless driving; a copy of an information against Pittman dated September 1,1976 accusing him of being drunk in a public place and committing an assault and battery upon a police officer together with other papers relating to the two charges.

Though in its literal sense, White appears to make the filing of a transcript of the proceedings a jurisdictional requirement, we think a common sense construction of the case invites us to consider it in context of its facts and the times and construe it in a manner reasonable enough to avoid absurdity, deprivation of appeal rights, and violation of the probable intendment of the high court. First off, we do not believe White

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1987 OK CIV APP 91 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1987)

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1979 OK CIV APP 3, 591 P.2d 339, 1979 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittman-v-city-of-tulsa-ex-rel-lafortune-oklacivapp-1979.