Volz v. Civil Service Commission

206 A.2d 758, 86 N.J. Super. 268
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 19, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 A.2d 758 (Volz v. Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volz v. Civil Service Commission, 206 A.2d 758, 86 N.J. Super. 268 (N.J. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

86 N.J. Super. 268 (1965)
206 A.2d 758

HORACE S. VOLZ, WILLIAM F. MULLIGAN, MURIEL A. CROWLEY, JOHN A. BOLGER, EDWARD C. ZIRKEL, ARTHUR L. BERKE, APPELLANTS,
v.
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION, RESPONDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued December 21, 1964.
Decided January 19, 1965.

*270 Before Judges CONFORD, KILKENNY and LEWIS.

*271 Mr. Thomas E. Durkin, Jr. argued the cause for appellants (Mr. John J. Cleary, on the brief).

Mrs. Marilyn Loftus Schauer, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Mr. Arthur J. Sills, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney).

The opinion of the court was delivered by KILKENNY, J.A.D.

Appellants are probation officers in the Essex County probation department. They appeal under R.R. 4:88-8 from final decisions of the Civil Service Commission, which made and declared them ineligible to take either the promotional or open competitive examination for the position of Chief Probation Officer of Essex County. They contend that the Commission acted arbitrarily and unreasonably in setting up the eligibility requirements for each of these examinations, in calling for an open competitive examination, and in failing to give them a formal hearing.

We dispose of the last claim of error first. The Commission denied a formal hearing because it felt that the controlling facts were a matter of record and not in dispute. On their appeal to this court, appellants have indicated in affidavits and in their argument the proofs which they would have laid before the Commission, if a formal hearing had been allowed. We are treating the matter before us as though the evidentiary facts set forth in these affidavits had been testified to before the Commission and the Commission's rulings had remained unchanged. In fact, the Commission has filed with us a written stipulation in which it admits the facts stated by appellants, except where they are contradicted by the record, but without conceding their relevancy or materiality as to the legal issues involved. With that understanding, the lack of a formal hearing before the Commission is not deemed to be prejudicial.

These, then, are the basic facts. A vacancy occurred in the position of Chief Probation Officer of Essex County. The Civil Service Commission decided to hold a promotional examination *272 to fill the vacancy. It limited the persons eligible to take this examination to those in the next lower class, namely, Assistant Chief Probation Officers of Essex County who had served in that position for at least 12 months. There were only two persons so eligible. One of them was not interested because he was on the verge of retirement. Hence, only one filed an application to take the promotional examination. These facts were reported by the Commission to the judges of the Essex County Court, the appointing authority. The judges expressed a desire to have a list of at least three candidates for the appointment.

Instead of opening up the list of eligibles for the promotional examination to Essex County probation officers in a class or classes lower than that of Assistant Chief Probation Officer, the Commission, at the request of the judges of the Essex County Court, decided to hold an open competitive examination for the position, in addition to the promotional examination in which latter there was only the one interested, eligible applicant. Eligibility requirements to take the open competitive examination were formulated by the Commission, in collaboration with Judge Crane of the Essex County Court, representing the judges of that court as the appointing authority, and Dr. Lovell Bixby, consultant on probation in the Administrative Office of the Courts.

These eligibility requirements were as follows:

"(1) a Master's degree in Sociology with a major in Criminology and/or Penology;

(2) eight years of progressively responsible experience in probation or parole work, four years of which shall have been in a capacity involving the broad administrative responsibility for planning and directing the activities of a large probation or parole agency;

(3) for those applicants who possessed a Bachelor's degree, but not a Master's degree, two additional years of administrative experience of the type outlined above might be accepted in lieu thereof."

The open competitive examination could be taken by any citizen of the United States possessing those qualifications.

*273 None of the appellants was eligible to take the open competitive examination. All of them, except Edward C. Zirkel, filed applications to take the open examination, but in each instance the application was rejected by the Commission, either because the applicant lacked the educational qualification or because he was wanting in the required job experience. Thus, Volz was ineligible because he was deficient in the experience requirement by one year and eleven months, and he also lacked a Master's degree in Sociology with a major in Criminology or Penology. The other four also failed to meet the educational requirement, since none had the necessary master's degree, and lacked the experience qualification. When these five applicants received notices of ineligibility from the Commission, they filed notices of appeal to the Commission, in which they challenged (1) the conducting of the open competitive examination, and (2) the determination of their ineligibility to compete in the examination. The Commission dismissed their appeals without a formal hearing because the applications of the five applicants showed on their face a lack of the required qualifications, and the sixth appellant, Zirkel, had not even applied to take the examination.

The promotional and open competitive examinations were similar and given at the same time, with the understanding that the resulting promotion list would take precedence over the resulting open competitive list. Mr. Nulty, the sole candidate who took the promotional examination, failed. Five eligible persons took the open competitive examination. The Commission certified to the judges of the Essex County Court a list of three persons eligible for appointment. None of them resided in New Jersey. The number 1 eligible so certified, Lawrence C. Larsen, was appointed by the judges of the Essex County Court, effective December 1, 1964. He has been performing the duties of Chief Probation Officer of Essex County since that time.

Appellants' basic contention is that the Commission had no right to conduct an open competitive examination for this position without first holding a promotional examination open *274 to probation officers below the classification of Assistant Chief Probation Officer, especially when there were only two persons in the last mentioned class and there were others, like themselves, in lower classes who had sufficient education and experience to qualify for the position.

Each of the appellants had a good educational background and many years of experience as a probation officer, even though each was not in the specified classification to take the promotional examination or possessed of the required educational and experience background to qualify for the open competitive examination. Volz had received a B.S. in Education in 1930, and an M.A. in Educational Sociology in 1934. He had been a probation officer 24 years and during that time he had been a principal probation officer for 8 years in charge of a division comprising 18 officers.

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Related

In re Critchlow
493 A.2d 66 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1985)
McGarrity v. Dept. of Civil Service
357 A.2d 20 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1975)

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