Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice v. Sean Milner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 21, 2015
Docket2147142
StatusUnpublished

This text of Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice v. Sean Milner (Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice v. Sean Milner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice v. Sean Milner, (Va. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Huff, Judges Beales and AtLee UNPUBLISHED

Argued by teleconference

VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE

v. Record No. 1812-14-2

SEAN MILNER MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE JULY 21, 2015

v. Record No. 2147-14-2

SEAN MILNER

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Margaret P. Spencer, Judge Designate

G. William Norris, Jr., Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General; Rhodes Ritenour, Deputy Attorney General; Ryan Spreague Hardy, Assistant Attorney General, on briefs), for appellant.

James B. Thorsen (Thorsen Hart & Allen, LLP, on brief), for appellee.

The Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) appeals a ruling of the Circuit Court of

Henrico County reversing a decision by a hearing officer in an employee grievance filed by Sean

Milner (Milner) and granting Milner’s request for relief, which includes reinstatement to his former

position as Court Services Unit (CSU) Director. DJJ also appeals from a separate order by the

circuit court awarding Milner attorney’s fees and costs accrued during the proceedings in that court.

We hold that the hearing officer’s decision was not contrary to law and, accordingly, we reverse the

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. circuit court’s orders granting Milner’s requested reinstatement as CSU Director and awarding him

attorney’s fees and costs.

I. BACKGROUND

This grievance arises from Milner’s reassignment from his former position as Director of the

CSU for the Henrico County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (JDR court) to the

newly created position of Assistant Certification Manager. The CSU provides support services to

the JDR court. It is not a part of the judicial branch but instead is a part of DJJ, a department in the

executive branch. Code § 16.1-233. Nonetheless, the CSU is located in the same building as the

Henrico JDR court, and the JDR court is the “primary customer” of the services rendered by the

CSU staff. The position of CSU Director, which Milner held, is a statutory creation. Code

§ 16.1-236.1(A). According to that statute, the Director of a particular CSU must be appointed by

the judges of the JDR court served by that CSU (from a list of names of eligible individuals

submitted by the Director of DJJ). Id. Meanwhile, the “transfer, demotion, or separation” of a CSU

Director is under the authority of the Director of DJJ, but must be for good cause, after consultation

with the JDR court judges, and in accordance with the Virginia Personnel Act, including the state

employee grievance procedure. Id.

On March 21, 2013, five judges of the JDR court, along with a former judge, submitted a

“no confidence” letter to the Director of DJJ, expressing their loss of confidence in Milner and

complaining of Milner’s management style and interpersonal relationship skills. A deputy sheriff

escorted Milner from the courthouse and told him he could not return. Subsequently, DJJ

conducted an internal investigation of Milner.1 The investigation revealed mixed opinions about

Milner from CSU staff – along with primarily negative opinions about him from the JDR court

1 The final investigative report states that the investigation resulted from complaints of staff members, as well as from the JDR court judges, about Milner. -2- judges. The investigation also found that most CSU staff believed the relationship between the

CSU and the JDR court was very poor.

After the investigation was completed, DJJ reassigned Milner from CSU Director to the

newly created position of Assistant Certification Manager, and the reassignment became final on

July 12, 2013. Milner had not been aware of the investigation while it took place, and he did not

receive a copy of the investigative report until July 15, 2013. Milner’s salary and benefits remained

the same in the new position, and he in fact later received a raise. His supervisory role was greatly

reduced however, as he had only four employees reporting to him in the chain of command in his

new position, compared to around fifty when he was CSU Director.

A. GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE

On July 30, 2013, Milner filed a grievance challenging the reassignment and asking to be

reinstated as CSU Director. Virginia’s state employee grievance procedure is created by statute, see

Code § 2.2-3000 et seq., and set out in further detail by policy of the Department of Human

Resources Management (DHRM) and its sub-agency, the Office of Employment Dispute

Resolution (EDR). See Office of Emp’t Dispute Resolution, Grievance Procedure Manual (2012);

Office of Emp’t Dispute Resolution, Rules for Conducting Grievance Hearings (2012). The process

consists of several stages, beginning with three steps of internal dispute resolution with management

of the agency that employed the aggrieved employee. Code § 2.2-3003; Grievance Procedure

Manual §§ 3.1-3.3. If the grievance is not resolved after the third resolution step, the employee can

then request that his agency head qualify the grievance for a hearing. Code § 2.2-3004(D);

Grievance Procedure Manual § 4.2. If the agency head does not qualify the grievance for a hearing,

the employee can appeal the qualification decision to EDR. Code § 2.2-3004(D); Grievance

Procedure Manual § 4.3.

-3- The Grievance Procedure Manual states that a grievance

should qualify for a hearing if (i) it claims, and (ii) the facts, taken as a whole, raise a sufficient question as to whether an adverse employment action has occurred as a result of . . . [i]nformal discipline – for example, terminations, transfers, assignments, demotions, and suspensions – that . . . are taken primarily for disciplinary reasons.

Grievance Procedure Manual § 4.1(b). The decision of the hearing officer is final except as to

issues of policy and law. Code § 2.2-3005.1(C). The grievant may seek administrative review of

the hearing officer’s decision by appealing to EDR, which reviews compliance with grievance

procedure, and to the Director of DHRM, who reviews the decision for consistency with state or

agency policy. Grievance Procedure Manual § 7.2. The grievant may also appeal the decision to

the circuit court to review as to whether the decision is contrary to law. Code § 2.2-3006(B).

Milner and DJJ did not reach an agreement after going through the three internal

management dispute resolution steps at DJJ, and the Director of DJJ refused to qualify Milner’s

grievance for a hearing. Milner appealed this qualification decision to EDR, which issued

Qualification Ruling Number 2014-3721, qualifying Milner’s grievance for a hearing. EDR stated

that it had “no basis to disagree with [DJJ’s] assessment that the statutory good cause requirement

was satisfied,”2 but did find that the facts of Milner’s grievance raised a sufficient question as to

whether his reassignment was an “adverse employment action” that was taken for disciplinary

reasons. On this basis, EDR qualified the grievance hearing and defined the issues to be decided by

the hearing officer as follows:

Whether the grievant’s reassignment was primarily to punish or correct the grievant’s behavior or performance is a factual determination that a hearing officer, not this Office, should make.

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