Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency v. Schrader

394 N.W.2d 796, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 886
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 24, 1986
DocketC5-85-1356
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 394 N.W.2d 796 (Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency v. Schrader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency v. Schrader, 394 N.W.2d 796, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 886 (Mich. 1986).

Opinions

AMDAHL, Chief Justice.

We granted appellant’s petition for review for the purpose of determining the scope of power of a hearing board proceeding under the Veterans Preference Act, Minn. Stat. § 197.46 (1984). The Court of Appeals held that an ad hoc hearing board proceeding under the Veterans Preference Act had no power, once it found that the employee’s conduct constituted misconduct, to modify the disciplinary sanction proposed by the employer. Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency v. Schrader, 380 N.W.2d 169 (Minn.App.1986). We reverse. We also review the hearing board’s extenuating circumstances findings, and hold that these findings are not supported by substantial evidence on the record. Finally, we establish a procedure and a standard to guide a hearing board proceeding under the Veterans Preference Act.

Philip Schrader, a married man, was hired by Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Association (S.M.M.P.A.) on December 1, 1980, as its director of information. In January of 1981, Mary Ellen Landwehr, a married woman, was hired by S.M.M.P.A. as an information specialist in the information department and she began working with Schrader.

On October 5, 1983, Landwehr met with the executive director of S.M.M.P.A., Pierre Heroux, and told him that Schrader had told her that he loved her and wanted to marry her. Landwehr told Heroux that because Schrader was her boss, she was in a position with which she did not know how to cope. After meeting with Landwehr, Heroux briefly investigated the matter and then confronted Schrader about Land-wehr’s allegations. After Schrader admitted that he had proposed marriage to Land-wehr, he was discharged from his job with S.M.M.P.A.

[799]*799On November 16, 1983, Schrader made a written demand for a hearing pursuant to the Veterans Preference Act, Minn. Stat. § 197.46 (1984). Thereupon, S.M.M.P.A. served Schrader with a statement of charges. Because no established civil service board existed in the area, a three-person hearing board was formed pursuant to the Veterans Preference Act, and the hearing was held on December 20, 1983.

At the hearing, Schrader admitted that on July 14, 1983, he proposed marriage to Landwehr. He testified that her response was that there was a chance. He testified that between July 14 and October 5, 1983, he and Landwehr continued to work together and that on occasion, but infrequently, he would discuss with her his feelings of love for her. Schrader also testified that except for a single incident when he had asked her for a kiss, he had never initiated any physical contact with Landwehr. Schrader testified that during the night of October 4,1983, following S.M.M.P.A.’s annual meeting, he and Landwehr got into an emotional shouting match during which he told her “rather forcefully to get out of my life.”

Mary Ellen Landwehr testified that when Schrader asked her to marry him, she was stunned and, because she did not know what to do, she told him to go on vacation and they would talk about it when he returned. She testified further that during the next 2 months Schrader would often bring up the subject of his love for her; that he required her to accompany him on unnecessary trips of questionable business nature; that he often told her about his marital problems; that he had told his friends that he was in love with her; and that he had once kissed her hand in a restaurant. Landwehr also related that on October 2, 1983, she and her husband had retrieved Schrader from a bar and that while she was driving Schrader to a motel where he could sleep in preparation for the next day’s meeting, he told her that he loved her and wanted to make love with her.

Landwehr testified that by the time of S.M.M.P.A.’s annual meeting, October 3-4, 1983, she had concluded that the situation had to be brought into the open. She testified that on the night of October 4 she told Schrader that she loved her husband and wanted to be left alone and that Schrader told her that she should quit her job and go home and be a mother. Landwehr testified that the next morning she arranged a meeting with Heroux and that at that meeting she told Heroux that she was having a problem with Schrader. She told Heroux that she thought Schrader drank too much; that Schrader had told her that he loved her and wanted to marry her; and that, because Schrader was her boss, she felt powerless.

In February of 1984, the hearing board issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The board found, among other things, that from July 14, 1983, through October 4, 1983, Schrader

did conduct a course of sexual harassment of Mary Ellen Landwehr consisting of a marriage proposal to her and persis-tance in and reiteration of said proposal, of using pretexts to be together with her, and finally of his desire “to make love with her” and ultimately suggesting that if she was to continue [to] reject him as a suitor that she should take herself out of his life and quit her job and return to her family * * * [t]hat [there existed] no extenuation on the part of Landwehr to justify or mitigate Schrader’s conduct * * * [and that] the aforesaid conduct by Schrader is misconduct within the meaning of the Veteran’s Preference Act * *.

The hearing board concluded, however, that under the circumstances, discharge of Schrader was not appropriate and that the appropriate sanction was a 60-day unpaid suspension.

S.M.M.P.A. petitioned the district court to review the decision of the hearing board. On review, the district court noted that there was substantial evidence in the record to support the finding of misconduct. The district court then ordered the [800]*800matter remanded to the hearing board for a clarification of what extenuating circumstances it relied upon in electing to change Schrader’s disciplinary sanction from discharge to a 60-day unpaid suspension.

On December 3, 1984, the hearing board filed its supplemental and amended findings upon remand. The board heard no additional testimony before issuing those findings. The board listed six extenuating circumstances it relied upon in electing to fashion a new remedy. Of principal importance, the board found that Schrader’s conduct did not ripen into “actual sexual harassment” until the October 4, 1983, confrontation; that Landwehr was primarily concerned with Schrader's drinking problems; that Landwehr was not intimidated by Schrader’s marriage proposal or his subsequent conduct; and that “the sexual harassment was not aggravated.”

On June 19, 1985, the district court filed its order affirming the hearing board’s December 3, 1984, supplemental and amended findings. The district court noted that there was nothing wrong with the fact that some of the supplemental and amended findings were inconsistent with the board’s original findings, and it affirmed the board’s February 1984 conclusion that Schrader was still an employee of S.M.M. P.A., subject to a 60-day unpaid suspension.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the district court, holding that once the hearing board found misconduct, the board had no authority to modify the sanction proposed by the employer. This appeal followed.

The question of the scope of power of a hearing board proceeding under the Veterans Preference Act has been before this court before. However, our decisions in those cases have not entirely resolved the matter.

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Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency v. Schrader
394 N.W.2d 796 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
394 N.W.2d 796, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-minnesota-municipal-power-agency-v-schrader-minn-1986.