The St. Louis Police Leadership Organization v. St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 2015
DocketED101377
StatusPublished

This text of The St. Louis Police Leadership Organization v. St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners (The St. Louis Police Leadership Organization v. St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The St. Louis Police Leadership Organization v. St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Iu the Missourt Court of Appeals Eastern District

DIVISION ONE THE ST. LOUIS POLICE LEADERSHIP ) No. ED101377 ORGANIZATION, ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Appellant, ) of the City of St. Louis ) VS, ) Honorable David Dowd ) ST. LOUIS BOARD OF POLICE ) COMMISSIONERS, et al., } ) Respondents. ) Filed: July 7, 2015

At the heart of this matter is a collective-bargaining dispute involving the St. Louis Police Metropolitan Police Department. Importantly, this dispute was pending when control of the police department transferred from the St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners to the City of St. Louis. We hold that the dispute between the between the parties is moot, and therefore dismiss the appeal.

Factual and Procedural Background

In 2011, the St. Louis Police Leadership Organization, a labor organization, sought recognition as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative for two separate, proposed bargaining units: one comprised of commissioned officers of the St. Louis Police Department holding the rank of Lt. Colonel, Major, Captain, and Lieutenant (the “Command Staff’ unit), and

the other comprised of commissioned officers from the department holding the rank of Sergeant.

At the time, control and operation of the police department rested with the St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners.

The Board denied both requests, one in whole, the other in part. The Board declined to recognize the proposed Command Staff bargaining unit, finding such unit inappropriate because the positions at issue involved a high degree of supervisory authority, required confidentiality, and were integral to the decision-making process of the department,’ The Board did not outright deny the proposed Sergeants’ unit, but instead elected to exclude various Sergeant positions from the proposed unit because those positions involved high degrees of supervisory, managerial, and/or confidential work.2 The Board made its determinations pursuant to Rule 13, a rule promulgated by the Board following the Missouri Supreme Court’s decision in Jndependence- Nat'l Educ. Ass'n vy. Independence Sch. Dist,, 223 $,W.3d 131 (Mo, bane 2007).7 The rule set

forth a written framework for the Board to engage in the collective-bargaining process with its

' Specifically, the Board found the proposed unit inappropriate because the positions: . involve a high degree of supervisory authority, require confidentiality and are integral to the

internal and external decision-making process for the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department,

In addition, the inclusion of [those] positions in a collective bargaining unit would create an

irreconcilable conflict of interest within the Department, * The Board found that while Sergeants in general monitor, supervise, and train subordinate officers, within the rank of Sergeant, various positions and assignments involved higher degrees of supervisory, managerial and/or confidential work than others. In particular, the Board found that Sergeants assigned to certain identified positions were regularly involved with the formulation and/or implementation of the department’s policies, had a high level of supervisory authority, and regularly had access to and work with information regarding the department’s labor and personnel matters. The Board found that the Sergeants in these positions would more appropriately represent the employer in the collective bargaining process due to the supervisory, managerial and confidential nature of the positions, and thus concluded that their inclusion in the proposed bargaining unit would create a conflict of interest. The Board therefore elected to exclude the various positions from propesed bargaining unit. Specifically, as stated in its letter to the organization, the Board elected to exclude:

Sergeants assigned to Human Resources, Legal, the Police Board and those Sergeants in

confidential positions (including the Chief’s Office and under the command of any Lieutenant

Colonel), Therefore, Sergeants assigned to the Chief's Office, the Board of Police Commissioners,

the Human Resources Department, Internal Affairs Department, and the Legal Division are

exchided from the bargaining unit. This includes Sergeants in the following assignments:

Auxiliary Services, Bureau of Community Policing, Community Outreach, Criminal Investigation

and Support, Human Resources, Intelligence Division, Internal Affairs, Professional Standards. * The Missouri Supreme Court in dependence addressed the question of a public employer’s responsibility to collectively bargain with public employees, such as police officers, who are otherwise excluded by Missouri public- sector labor law. The Court held that the provision in Missouri Constitution’s bill of rights, Article I, Section 29, guaranteeing “employees” the “right to organize and to bargain collectively” applied to public employees as well as private-sector employees. /dependence, 223 S.W.3d at 139.

police officers, including a framework for the establishment and recognition of appropriate bargaining units.

The labor organization initiated a declaratory-judgment action alleging that the Board’s decisions violated the Board’s obligation under Article I, Section 29 of the Missouri Constitution and the Missouri Supreme Court’s mandate in Jndependence, to create a reasonable framework to allow the officers to exercise their right to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing. In the organization’s view, the Missouri Constitution and Missouri Supreme Court precedent grant all public employees — not just some ~ the right to collectively bargain by and through representatives of their own choosing, regardless of whether their positions require a high degree of supervisory authority, confidentiality, or are integral to the internal and external decision-making process, or the belief that their inclusion in a bargaining unit would create an irreconcilable conflict of interest with the department. The labor organization requested the circuit court conduct its own hearing to review the issues and determine the facts, including, but not limited to: (1) a sufficient showing of interest by the commissioned officers holding the rank of Lt. Colonel, Captain, and Lieutenant to appoint the St. Louis Police Leadership Organization as their exclusive bargaining representative; (2) the appropriate scope of the bargaining unit that would include Lt. Colonels, Captains, and Lieutenants; (3) the appropriate scope of the bargaining unit that would include only Sergeants; (4) whether certain Sergeants should be excluded from the bargaining unit; (5) the framework the Board must establish with respect to its recognition of an appropriate bargaining unit; and (6) any and all other issues the court deemed just and necessary under the facts and circumstances of the case.

On September 1, 2013, while the action was pending in the circuit court and the parties

were still briefing their respective positions, control of the St. Louis Police Department changed

from the Board to the City of St. Louis. Three months later, the circuit court heard oral arguments. During that hearing, the circuit court itself raised the issue of the change and inquired how dissolution of the Board impacted the case. Counsel for the labor organization argued that the city ordinance effecting the change spoke for itself, and that by that ordinance, the City had accepted the obligation for the consequences of the application of Rule 13."

Counsel for the Board, who was in private practice and was retained by the Board to represent its

* City of St. Louis Ordinance 694, cited by the labor organization, provides: BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY OF ST.

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