Stamps v. Jefferson Parish Administration

30 So. 3d 19, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 443, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2024, 2009 WL 4640630
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2009
Docket09-CA-443
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 So. 3d 19 (Stamps v. Jefferson Parish 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
Stamps v. Jefferson Parish Administration, 30 So. 3d 19, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 443, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2024, 2009 WL 4640630 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

MARC E. JOHNSON, Judge.

| .¿The Plaintiffs, Michael Stamps, Glenn Miller, Michael Chauvin, Billie Hartline and Randolph Doucet, appeal their suspensions without pay for violating the Jefferson Parish Workplace Harassment Policy, No. 2.02 (the harassment policy). 1

The Plaintiffs were suspended in November of 2007 as a result of displaying certain items in the office of the Jefferson Parish Department of Public Works-Sewerage (the Department) that were alleged to be of such a nature as to harass, harm, or offend the public and/or other employees. The items displayed were:

1)A large white rope with a knot and a running loop (rope).
2) A black whip (whip).
3) A sign that read: “Bill’s Whipping Post” (sign).
4) A dart board with a picture of a man holding a large yellow fin tuna.
5) A kicking device which was operated by pulling a rope which had a loop at the end of the rope.

Each of the Plaintiffs worked for the Parish of Jefferson in some capacity for over 20 years. During a period from six to fifteen years, the objectionable items were on display in the Department’s office. All of the Plaintiffs were aware that |sthe items were plainly visible to anyone who entered, and all were in supervisory positions during all or part of that time period. 2

In addition, the objects remained on display throughout a period of exacerbated racial tensions in Louisiana resulting from an incident in which three nooses were hung from a tree outside a high school in Jena, Louisiana. The Jena incident was the focus of national media attention during the summer and fall of 2007. Nevertheless, none of the Plaintiffs took any steps to have the objects in the Department removed.

None of the items in question were owned and/or placed in the office by any of the Plaintiffs. Although the office was visited over the years by other Jefferson Parish employees, supervisors, members of *22 the administration, and the public, no one was instructed to remove the items from the workplace, no one ever complained about any of the items, and no one was warned that any of the respective items may be considered to be offensive by either a Jefferson Parish employee or member of the public.

In November of 2007, Terrance Lee filed a civil rights complaint of racial discrimination with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) regarding the five objects displayed in the Department. Lee had worked around the items and was aware of them existence for a number of years. In addition, Lee often filed grievances and/or complaints, and he took pictures of the items eighteen months prior to making his first complaint. He lodged the complaint after he was disciplined for other reasons.

|4The Jefferson Parish Administration and the Jefferson Parish Department of Human Resource Management first learned that the five objects were on display in the Department’s office on November 7, 2007 following the complaint made by Lee. At that time, the Parish Administration immediately ordered the objects to be removed.

On November 13, 2007, the Parish President appointed Tim Whitmer, Chief Administrative Assistant, to investigate the complaint filed by Lee and to serve as the Appointing Authority in regard to any disciplinary actions that needed to be taken as a result of Lee’s complaints of racial discrimination in the Department. Whit-mer asked the Chief Administrative Assistant, Darryl Ward, an African-American, to conduct the investigation. He commenced by going to the location where the objects were located, and later interviewing fifty-two past and present employees of the Department.

After the completion of that investigation and after conducting a pre-disciplinary hearing with each Plaintiff, Whitmer issued a Letter of Discipline (LOD) to the Plaintiffs. Whitmer found that the Plaintiffs ■violated the harassment policy and the Jefferson Parish Employee Regulations of Conduct (ROC). He found that the Plaintiffs, inter alia, allowed the five objects to remain on display for an extended period of time; failed to take appropriate steps to either remove the objects, or have the objects removed; failed to assist in the maintenance of a work place free of harassment; and failed to take appropriate steps to remove the open display of objects which could serve to offend and harass other employees.

Stamps, Hartline, and Miller were each suspended for thirty days without pay. Chauvin and Doucet were each suspended for twenty days without pay.

The Plaintiffs subsequently filed appeals with the Jefferson Parish Personnel Board (JPPB). The Personnel Board appointed a hearing officer to conduct the 1.¡¡hearings on the appeals. The Hearing Officer consolidated the appeals. He heard the appeals on five different days beginning in June of 2008 and ending in November of 2008.

On January 13, 2009, the Hearing Officer issued decisions reducing the suspensions. He found that the objects “were inappropriate to a workplace environment and should not have been in a Jefferson Parish Office, especially the darts, for the dart board.” The Hearing Officer found that all five Plaintiffs violated ROC. However, the Hearing Officer determined that “no harassment was intended and in fact, none occurred,” and as a result, the Hearing Officer determined that the Plaintiffs did not violate the Parish’s workplace harassment policy. Consequently, the Hearing Office reduced Hartline’s suspen *23 sion from thirty to twenty days, Stamp’s and Miller’s suspensions were reduced from thirty to fifteen days, Doucet’s suspension was reduced from twenty to ten days, and Chauvin’s suspension was reduced from twenty to five days.

The Appointing Authority then appealed to the Jefferson Parish Personnel Board (JPPB) which issued a judgment on February 26, 2009. The JPPB reversed the decisions of the Hearing Officer, and reinstated the Appointing Authority’s suspensions. The JPPB stated in its ruling, “After reviewing the hearing transcripts, pleadings and the record, the Board has reached a unanimous decision in this matter that the Appellants violated the Jefferson Parish Workplace Harassment Policy as written, no intent being required, and the penalties imposed albeit harsh, are within the discretion of the Appointing Authority.”

The issues on appeal are whether the JPPB committed manifest error by reversing the decisions of the Hearing Officer; in failing to rescind the suspensions, substituting the suspensions with an appropriate letter of warning; and in failing to award the Plaintiffs back pay, attorney’s fees and costs. The Plaintiffs also assert 16that the JPPB erred by accepting or considering certain documents provided by the Hearing Officer with the Application for Review of the Hearing Officer’s decision that had not been introduced into the record, contrary to the JPPB Rules of Appeal Procedure and other applicable law.

The Plaintiffs first contend that the JPPB was manifestly erroneous in sustaining the suspensions.

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30 So. 3d 19, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 443, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2024, 2009 WL 4640630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamps-v-jefferson-parish-administration-lactapp-2009.