Tyson v. Arn

68 So. 2d 526, 259 Ala. 681, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 12, 1953
Docket1 Div. 518
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 So. 2d 526 (Tyson v. Arn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyson v. Arn, 68 So. 2d 526, 259 Ala. 681, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 390 (Ala. 1953).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court, in equity, sustaining a demurrer to the bill of complaint. The bill was filed by Mrs. Myrtice M. Tyson against Messrs. Arn, Moreland and Patterson, members of the Mobile County Personnel Board, and H. T. Pillans as personnel director of said board, to enjoin them from taking any official action which would cause the complainant to lose her civil service rating or to lose her position or office as senior clerk in the office of the register of the Circuit Court, in Equity of Mobile County on account of certain acts charged to her. On September 18, 1951, Pillans, said personnel director, addressed a communication to the complainant calling her attention to the fact of said political activities claimed to have been engaged in by her, as appears from an advertisement published in the Mobile Register, and directing attention to the provisions of section 24(e) and rules 2.2 and 2.3 which prohibit political activity on the part of classified employees, and asking her for immediate explanation of the same. Without having received a communication from her, so far as alleged, said personnel director, on September 20, 1951, addressed another communication to her advising her that he was instructed by the personnel board to notify her that at four P.M. on Friday, September 28, 1951, the board would hold an investigation and hearing as to the reported violation of such statute and rules. In that communication she was directed to appear before the personnel board in connection with the investigation and hearing in order that the board might determine whether or not she had forfeited her position in the classified service by reason of her reported violation of said statute and rules.

The bill does not allege that there was a hearing on September 28, 1951, or that any response was made by complainant to said notices. But on October 30, 1951 she filed the instant bill of complaint in the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Mobile County. The purpose and prayer of said bill are as stated above and the charge is based upon the allegation, in short, that she had participated in a certain political activity in respect to issues to be voted upon in an election held on September 18, 1951.

The bill alleges that participation on her part, as charged to her, was in respect to an election for the imposition of a five mill tax as the “means of obtaining finances necessary for the payment of adequate wages to employees of the city and necessary to provide sanitary and storm sewers, water extensions, improvements and additions to the fire department, and additional recreation facilities, garbage disposal equipment and development of urban thoroughfares for the relief of the congested traffic”. Complainant alleged in her bill that her participation and interest in said election was not in violation of the civil service law of Mobile County, approved September 15, 1939, Local Acts 1939, page 298, as amended by an Act approved September 25, 1947, Local Acts 1947, page 334.

Some of the pertinent features of those acts necessary for consideration are as follows : The appointing authority is not the same as the personnel board and applies to one or more persons who have the power to make appointments to positions of employment in the classified service (section I). The personnel board shall consist of three members selected as there provided. The duties of said board are also there provided, among other things, to select a personnel director and adopt rules and regulations, [683]*683and (7) to consider and act on such matters as may be referred to the board by the director. Section VII. In section VIII the duties of the personnel director are prescribed, among them (10) to make investigation concerning the administration and effect of this act and the rules made thereunder and report such findings and recommendations to the board. Under section IX the board is given power to make rules and regulations and act upon the recommendations of the personnel director to that end. Section XXII gives to the appointing authority the power to dismiss an employee for the good of the service. From such order the employee within ten days may appeal to the board and the board may, after an investigation, prder a public hearing upon notice to and opportunity to be heard by the employee, and if the charges are proved unwarranted order the reinstatement of the employee under such conditions as the board may determine. Charges may be filed by any person and cause a copy to be served upon the employee which charges shall be heard. The findings of fact by the board upon any such appeal or hearing shall be conclusive if supported by any substantial evidence.

Section XXIV, as amended by Act of September 25, 1947, supra, among other things, prohibits any person in the classified service (e) from being a member of any national, state or local committee of a political party, or an officer of a partisan political club, or take any part in the management or affairs of any political party or in any political campaign, except exercise his rights as a citizen privately to express his opinion and to cast his vote. (The other provisions of subsection [e] are omitted because they are not here material.) Under subsection (f) any officer or employee in the classified service who violates any of the foregoing provisions of this section shall forfeit his office or position.

Section XXVI makes it the duty of the board to study all matters touching the enforcement and effect of the Act and the rules and regulations prescribed under it. The board has the power to administer oaths, issue subpoenas and require the attendance of witnesses. It waives all informality in any proceeding by the board.

Section XXXIV provides that orders of the personnel director and personnel board may be enforced by appropriate proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction and that any person directly interested may, within five days, appeal to the Circuit Court of Mobile County from any order of said board by filing notice thereof with it. Upon such appeal the board shall certify to a transcript of the proceeding before it. It is further provided that the findings of fact by said board, contained in such transcript, if supported by substantial evidence adduced before the board after hearing and upon notice to interested parties and after affording them opportunity to be heard, shall be' conclusive on an appeal; and that the issues on such appeal shall be made up rtnder the direction of the court and within thirty days after said transcript is filed, and the trial shall proceed on the evidence contained in the transcript, provided the evidence was taken after notice and opportunity to be heard. It further provides that if upon such appeal the court finds that the ruling, order or action appealed from is unlawful or unreasonable, within the meaning of this Act, it shall have power to vacate and modify the same.

We think it is clear, when the entire Act, as amended, is considered, that the purpose was to confer upon the personnel board the power to determine whether or not any employee in the classified service has been guilty of proscribed conduct, such as' prohibited political activity, as would justify a discharge, of the employee, and that if said board finds an employee guilty of activities defined by section XXIV of the Act it has the power to discharge the employee from the service, and that from the order, of dismissal the employee has the right to appeal within five days to the Circuit Court of Mobile County by simply filing a notice of appeal.

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Related

Hudson v. Sparks
129 So. 2d 664 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1961)
Personnel Board of Mobile County v. City of Mobile
84 So. 2d 365 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1955)
Ex Parte Darnell
76 So. 2d 770 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 So. 2d 526, 259 Ala. 681, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-arn-ala-1953.