Portland Public School District No. 1J v. Portland Custodian Civil Service Board

108 P.3d 63, 198 Or. App. 11, 176 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2997, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 2, 2005
Docket0302-01196; A122865
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 108 P.3d 63 (Portland Public School District No. 1J v. Portland Custodian Civil Service Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Public School District No. 1J v. Portland Custodian Civil Service Board, 108 P.3d 63, 198 Or. App. 11, 176 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2997, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 226 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

BREWER, C. J.

Our decision in this case is largely controlled by Scherzinger v. Portland Custodians Civil Serv. Bd., 196 Or App 384, 103 P3d 1122 (2004) (Scherzinger II). We write only to address two additional arguments that the defendant custodians make in this case. In both arguments, defendants assert that a decision by the Employment Relations Board (ERB), approving Portland Public School District’s (plaintiffs) proposal to privatize its custodial workforce, does not preclude the Custodian Civil Service Board (board) from investigating plaintiffs implementation of that proposal. The trial court rejected those arguments, and we affirm.

This is the third case that we have decided involving plaintiffs proposal to ehminate its in-house custodial positions and contract out its custodial work.1 In the first case, the union that represented all the custodians then in plaintiffs employ sought a declaratory ruling from ERB that “the contracting out of custodial services by [plaintiff] is a prohibited subject of bargaining, and that [the Custodian Civil Service Law (CCSL)] prohibits [plaintiff! from terminating its custodial employees and contracting out its custodial services.” ERB decided that plaintiffs proposal would not require a violation of the CCSL and therefore was not a prohibited subject of bargaining. We affirmed that ruling in Walter v. Scherzinger (A118491), 193 Or App 355, 89 P3d 1265, rev allowed, 337 Or 547 (2004) (Scherzinger I).

Plaintiff implemented its proposal by sending layoff notices, in three rounds, to custodians then in its employ. The first round of layoff notices gave rise to our second decision. Scherzinger II, 196 Or App 384. In that case, a group of custodians who lost their jobs (the Scherzinger II custodians) asked the board to investigate their “dismissals”2 and reinstate them pursuant to ORS 242.620 and ORS 242.630.

[16]*16Those statutes authorize the board to investigate dismissals and reinstate any custodian whom it determines was dismissed because of political or religious reasons or reasons of age as described in ORS chapter 659A, or because of a decision that was not made in good faith for the purpose of improving public service. The board determined that the Scherzinger II custodians had been dismissed in bad faith in violation of the CCSL and ordered plaintiff to reinstate them. In response, plaintiff sought a writ of review in circuit court. That court annulled the reinstatement order on issue preclusion grounds, and we affirmed the annulment in Scherzinger II.

This case involves another group of custodians who received layoff notices. They, too, asked the board to investigate their dismissals pursuant to ORS 242.620. The board commenced an investigation and issued several subpoenas to plaintiff to advance that task. In response, plaintiff brought this action against the board and defendants, seeking a declaratory judgment that the board has no authority to investigate plaintiffs elimination of its in-house custodial positions. Plaintiff also sought an injunction to prevent the board from conducting such an investigation. As in Scherzinger II, the trial court here decided, on summary judgment, that ERB’s decision precluded the board from investigating whether plaintiff dismissed defendants in violation of the CCSL requirement that dismissals be made in good faith for the purpose of improving public service. ORS 242.620.

On appeal, most of defendants’ arguments mirror those made by the custodians in Scherzinger II. We reject those without discussion. However, defendants raise two new arguments about why issue preclusion should not apply here. In both arguments, defendants assert that the issue in this case is not identical to the one before ERB. See Nelson v. Emerald People’s Utility Dist., 318 Or 99, 104, 862 P2d 1293 (1993) (one requirement of issue preclusion is that the issue in the two proceedings be identical). Whether the issues are identical is a question of law that we review for legal error.

First, defendants argue that the issue in this case is not the same issue that ERB decided because ERB decided [17]*17only that a proposed layoff would not violate the CCSL but did not decide that a termination would likewise comply with the statute. In support of that argument, defendants assert that we incorrectly concluded in Scherzinger II that we did not need to decide whether the Scherzinger II custodians were laid off or terminated. See Scherzinger II, 196 Or App at 387 n 1 (“The parties disagree as to whether the custodians were dismissed or laid off from employment. Because we decide this appeal on other grounds, we need not resolve that dispute.”). Second, defendants argue that our reasoning in Scherzinger II does not apply here because this case involves the board’s statutory authority to investigate the dismissals, whereas Scherzinger II involved the board’s authority to order the custodians’ reinstatement.

We first address defendants’ argument that issue preclusion does not apply here because ERB decided only that a layoff would not violate the CCSL, not that a termination would likewise comply with the statute. We note at the outset that the Scherzinger II custodians did not raise the layoff versus dismissal argument in the context of issue preclusion. Instead, their issue preclusion argument was as follows: The issue before ERB was whether contracting out custodial work would violate the CCSL, and the issue before the board was whether dismissing the custodians violated the CCSL, so the two issues were not identical. Id. at 394. However, the Scherzinger II custodians did make a termination versus layoff argument, but they did so in a different context. The trial court in Scherzinger held that, even if issue preclusion did not apply, the board lacked statutory authority to reinstate the custodians because they were not “dismissed” within the meaning of the CCSL. In response to that alternative holding, the Scherzinger II custodians argued that they were dismissed and not laid off. Because we decided Scherzinger II based on issue preclusion, there was no need to address that alternative argument. Thus, our footnote was not, as defendants here maintain, incorrect.

In this case, defendants do raise the dismissal versus layoff issue in the context of issue preclusion. Essentially, they argue that, although the board may be precluded from investigating a layoff, it is not precluded from investigating a termination, which this was. They assert that ERB approved [18]*18a proposal to lay off the custodial staff. Defendants further assert that they were not laid off, as contemplated by that proposal, but instead were unlawfully terminated. As evidence that they were terminated, defendants point to a fact not in evidence before ERB — that plaintiff has extended its contract with its private custodial workforce, making it unlikely that defendants will be rehired.

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Related

Scherzinger v. Portland Custodians Civil Service Board
149 P.3d 142 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2006)
McWilliams v. Portland Public School District, No. 1J
181 F. App'x 684 (Ninth Circuit, 2006)
Portland Public Sch. v. Portland Custodian
108 P.3d 63 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
108 P.3d 63, 198 Or. App. 11, 176 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2997, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-public-school-district-no-1j-v-portland-custodian-civil-service-orctapp-2005.