Stewart v. Office of Student Financial Assistance

757 So. 2d 17, 98 La.App. 1 Cir. 2057, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 3116, 1999 WL 1051907
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 5, 1999
DocketNo. 98 CA 2057
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 757 So. 2d 17 (Stewart v. Office of Student Financial Assistance) 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
Stewart v. Office of Student Financial Assistance, 757 So. 2d 17, 98 La.App. 1 Cir. 2057, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 3116, 1999 WL 1051907 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

|,KUHN, J.

In this appeal, defendant-appellant, the Office of Student Financial Assistance (“OSFA”), challenges the decision of the Civil Service Commission (“the Commission”) ordering that plaintiff-appellee, Fel-tus Stewart, be placed in the position of Customer Services Division Director, paid back wages and given the proper adjustments in the contributions made for her to ■the retirement system. The Commission also awarded Stewart attorney’s fees.

Background

In 1993, after substantial cuts in federal funding, OSFA implemented a layoff plan. Stewart was offered a demotion in status with no' reduction in pay in lieu of either being laid off or displacing a co-worker' in a position of equal status who had less seniority than she did. Because Stewart did not wish to displace her co-worker and in conformity with the request of OSFA Executive Director, Jack Guinn, she agreed to accept the demotion in status with no reduction in pay. By letter dated November 10,1993, Guinn memorialized in writing the verbal agreement he had entered into with Stewart. The letter provides the following relevant statements:

This letter is being written to confirm our verbal agreement concerning your continued employment with this agency.
Your position has been selected for termination in our proposed layoff plan. According to Civil Service rules pertaining to layoff and bumping, you will be offered the position of Higher Education Divisional Director (Position # 127825). This position is being offered on the mutual understanding that you will reject the offer and accept placement into the position of Assistant Higher Education Divisional Director, which will be [19]*19given an interim allocation by Civil Service.
By going through the layoff proceedings, your name will be placed on the Agency Preferred Reemployment List. This list will give you first rights to the position of Higher Education Divisional Director, if one opens up in the future. Your current salary will also remain the same as long as it falls |3within the interim allocation salary range. A voluntary demotion would have resulted in a reduction of salary.

In 1996, the Customer Services Division was created within OSFA. After detailing defendant, Diane Pfeifer, to the Customer Services Division Director position in May 1996 as acting director, Pfeifer was officially hired by Guinn to fill the Customer Services Division vacancy on July 8, 1996.

On August 8, 1996, Stewart appealed OSFA’s decision to hire Pfeifer, alleging entitlement to the Customer Service Division Director position based on the November 10, 1993 letter from Guinn to her. After a public hearing on March 4, 1998, the Commission issued a decision in favor of Stewart. The Commission concluded that OSFA had violated Civil Service Rules 17.24 and 17.25 when it hired Pfeifer. It ordered that Stewart be placed in the position of Customer Services Division Director from April 19, 1996 through October 10, 1997, the date of Stewart’s retirement from state employment. The Commission also ordered OSFA to pay back wages with legal interest and to make all necessary adjustments to the contributions for Stewart to the retirement system. Concluding that OSFA’s actions were unreasonable, the Commission awarded attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,500.00 to Stewart. OSFA perfected this appeal.

On appeal, OSFA raises the following contentions: the Commission erred in (1) granting Stewart relief for having been adversely affected by a violation of Civil Service Rules when the allegations of her appeal averred she had been discriminated against because of her race; (2) finding Rules 17.24 and 17.25 were applicable; (3) concluding OSFA violated Rules 17.24 and 17.25; and (4) awarding attorney’s fees.1

pCivil Service Rules 17.24 and 17.25

At the outset, because the heart of the Commission’s decision is founded on a conclusion that Civil Service Rules 17.24 and [20]*2017.25 were violated, we note the relevant provisions of each.

Civil Service Rule 17.24 provides in relevant part:

(a) A permanent employee who ... is laid off or officially moved out of his regularly assigned position to another position in a different job title ..: shall ... have his name entered on the [agency] 2 preferred reemployment list for:
1. the job he held in the affected agency or department at the time of such layoff or movement into another position....
2. equivalent or lower levels of jobs for which he qualifies in his career field ...; however, an employee who is displaced, as opposed to actually laid off, shall be eligible to be placed on such list only for the jobs down to but not including the GS level to which he was displaced, but shall be eligible for the same job title in the parish from which he is displaced.
(b) During the time a former or otherwise affected employee’s name remains on [an agency] preferred reemployment list, the Director [of the Department of Civil Service] may, upon his own initiative, place such employee’s name on one or more such lists for other equivalent or lower classes of positions for which he qualifies in his career field and other substantially similar classes.
| K(c) The names of laid off or displaced permanent employees on the [agency] preferred reemployment lists shall be ranked in the order of length of State service they had at the time of the layoff. ... The employee with the most State service for a given class and availability shall be given the first offer.
(h) The maximum period during which a former or otherwise affected employee’s name may remain on [an agency] preferred reemployment hst(s) shall be three years from the effective date of the applicable layoff. The Director [of the Department of Civil Service] shall remove the employee’s name from all such lists at the expiration of that period if it has not been previously removed. (Footnote added.)

Civil Service Rule 17.25 provides in pertinent part:

When there is a ... preferred reemployment list for an agency or department affected by a layoff, containing the name of one or more qualified employees available for appointment to a vacant position in the affected agency or department, the vacancy shall be filled only by one of the following means: 1) reinstatement, 2) internal demotion ... or 5) appointment of an eligible from such preferred list.... Except as provided in this rule, appointment from [an agency] preferred reemployment list shall take priority over all other methods of filling vacancies.

With these rules in mind, we address OSFA’s assertions on appeal.

Scope of Appeal to the Commission

OSFA appears to maintain that because Stewart did not specifically cite Civil Service Rules 17.24 and 17.25 in her August 8, 1996 request for appeal to the Commission, it was error for the Commission to issue a decision in favor of Stewart based on its conclusion of law that OSFA had violated those rules. OSFA additionally urges that because Stewart in her written request for appeal to the Commission alleges that “she has been discriminated against by Mr.

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757 So. 2d 17, 98 La.App. 1 Cir. 2057, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 3116, 1999 WL 1051907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-office-of-student-financial-assistance-lactapp-1999.