Sabrina Farace v. City of Pineville

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 2019
DocketCA-0018-0515
StatusUnknown

This text of Sabrina Farace v. City of Pineville (Sabrina Farace v. City of Pineville) 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
Sabrina Farace v. City of Pineville, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

18-515

SABRINA FARACE

VERSUS

CITY OF PINEVILLE

**********

APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 260,789 HONORABLE MONIQUE RAULS, DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

COOKS, judge, dissents and assigns reasons

AFFIRMED. C. Theodore Alpaugh, III Guste, Barnett, Schlesinger, Henderson & Alpaugh, L.L.P. 639 Loyola Avenue, Suite 2500 New Orleans, LA 70113 (504) 529-4141 COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT: Sabrina Farace

Mark F. Vilar Aaron L. Green 1450 Dorchester Drive P.O. Box 12730 Alexandria, LA 71315-2730 (318) 442-9533 COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: City of Pineville

2 GREMILLION, Judge.

Appellant, Sabrina Farace, an employee of the Pineville Police Department,

appeals the judgment of the trial court affirming the decision of the Pineville

Municipal Fire and Police Civil Service Board (hereafter Board) to uphold her

involuntary discharge that occurred on November 10, 2016. For the following

reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At the pertinent time in question, Ms. Farace had been employed as a police

officer with the Pineville Police Department for approximately seven years. The

record established Ms. Farace was on authorized sick leave from October 26, 2016

through November 8, 2016 (“Excuse 1”). She was designated to return to her job on

November 9, 2016. Ms. Farace did not return to work that day, but instead saw her

physician, Dr. Charlotte Merrill, at 8:00 a.m. that morning. Ms. Farace maintained

Dr. Merrill continued her sick leave through November 22, 2016 (“Excuse 2”). Dr.

Merrill testified that, after seeing Ms. Farace on November 9, she “decided the best

thing for [Ms. Farace] would be to take an extension and have a two week excuse.”

Dr. Merrill testified that she handed Excuse 2 to Ms. Farace, who then told Dr.

Merrill she was “going right now to hand this in.” There was a dispute as to when

the City received Excuse 2.

Ms. Farace contends that she contacted Ms. Tammie Connella, the secretary

to Pineville Police Chief Don Weatherford, the two met in the side parking lot of the

police station, and she handed Excuse 2 to Ms. Connella. This was disputed by the

City of Pineville, which claims that it did not received Excuse 2 on November 9,

2016. It is not disputed that Ms. Farace previously handed Ms. Connella Excuse 1,

but Ms. Connella testified that she never received Excuse 2 from Ms. Farace.

3 Ms. Farace was called by Deputy Chief of Operations James Rachal to the

Pineville Police Department on November 10, 2016. Deputy Chief Rachal informed

Ms. Farace that her failure to report on November 9, 2016 constituted a resignation

in accordance with Rule XII, Section P of the Pineville Municipal Fire and Police

Civil Service Board. Ms. Farace did not voice any objection or allege any basis

existed to extend her sick leave but signed the resignation notice and left the

premises. Later that day, a Personal Action Form was submitted to the City, and the

Board processed her resignation.

According to Ms. Farace, following the November 10 meeting, she then went

immediately to see Dr. Merrill, who wrote a letter to Chief Weatherford explaining

that Ms. Farace had not been released to return to work on November 9, 2016 and

was still on sick leave. Dr. Merrill described Ms. Farace as being “very distraught,”

and Ms. Farace told Dr. Merrill she had been “fired.”

Dr. Merrill testified that her office attempted to fax the letter to Chief

Weatherford that day; however, the time stamp from the chief’s fax machine shows

it was received on November 15, 2016. Dr. Merrill testified she could not explain

why the fax was not received until November 15, 2016, but maintained that she sent

it on November 10, 2016, and received “verification on our end” in the form of a

message on her fax machine.

Chief Weatherford testified that on November 9, 2016, he was contacted by

the sergeant running the morning shift to ask why Ms. Farace had not reported for

her shift. Chief Weatherford asked Ms. Connella whether there were any other

excuses to extend Ms. Farace’s leave but was told there were none. According to

Chief Weatherford, the department waited the entire day to see if Ms. Farace would

contact them to explain why she had not appeared for her shift. Chief Weatherford

4 acknowledged that no attempt was made by the City to contact Ms. Farace to

determine why she had not appeared for work.

Deputy Chief Rachal testified he called Ms. Farace into his office on

November 10, 2016 and gave her the “resignation” letter with instructions to sign.

He stated Ms. Farace did not, at any point during the time she was in his office,

mention anything about a doctor’s note extending her sick leave. Deputy Chief

Rachal did acknowledge that Ms. Farace asked about her gun that had previously

been taken from her. He testified that Ms. Farace was in his office no more than five

minutes.

Ms. Farace testified she turned in Excuse 2 on November 9, 2016. She stated

she “physically put it into [Tammie Connella’s] hands” when she met her in the side

lot of the police station. Ms. Farace stated when she turned in Excuse 1, she did so

inside the police station. The City presented printouts of Facebook Messenger

messages between Tammie Connella and Ms. Farace about meeting in the side lot

to hand over a doctor’s slip. These messages were exchanged on October 31, 2016,

which was the date the Excuse 1 was stamped as received. Ms. Farace maintained

in her testimony the only time she handed in a doctor’s slip to Tammie Connella in

the side lot was on November 9, 2016.

Ms. Farace testified she was called in to the police department on November

10, 2016. She testified as follows concerning that meeting:

A. [Deputy Chief Rachal] called and told me that he had some paperwork for me to sign and I came up to the Police Department to sign paperwork and when I went into his office[,] he had the resignation letter and stuff. He told me he said, you can read over it and sign. I read over it quickly and signed and gave it to him and walked out.

Q. Now, you heard him testify that you didn’t mention anything about the doctor or the return to work slip, why didn’t you say anything about that?

A. I don’t know why he didn’t.

5 Q. You mean, why you didn’t?

A. Why I didn’t?

Q. Yes, why you didn’t say anything to him?

A. At the time, I mean, I didn’t feel as if I had a choice or an argument in this – the case with him telling me to sign a resignation form that I did not tell anyone that I was going to resign or had no intentions of resigning.

Q. Okay. What did you do after that?

A. I went to the doctor’s office to try and figure out what the deal was with doctor’s excuse.

Q. And the doctor wrote the letter attached to this fax labeled as F-3, letter dated November 10th, 2016?

A. Yes.
Q. Were you there when she faxed it to the Police Department?

Q.

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Sabrina Farace v. City of Pineville, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabrina-farace-v-city-of-pineville-lactapp-2019.