Breeden v. State Personnel Board
Breeden v. State Personnel Board
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I dissent from the part of the opinion construing Section 110.09.
Opinion of the Court
The petition for writ of certiorari in this-case is addressed to a ruling of the State Personnel Board [hereafter called the-board],
The Council decided, upon appeal by-petitioners after their discharge by the State Road Department for “conduct unbecoming a public employee,”
Within the time limited by agency regulations the Road Department, in order to obtain a transcript, requested and was granted an extension of time for filing a petition for review with the Board. The Department’s petition was filed on August 18, 1961, and on August 29 the Board voted unanimously in favor of a motion to grant the review, setting oral argument for September S, 1961. At a meeting of the Board on October 3 the vote of the six members in attendance was equally divided ■upon a motion that the Merit Council’s decisions be reversed, and the chairman announced that the motion failed. At a subsequent meeting the minutes of October .3 were corrected by a duly carried motion to ■omit a conclusion, based on the action above ■detailed, that “the decisions of the Merit 'System Council * * * stand as final pursuant to the provisions of Section 110.09, Florida Statutes.” At a meeting on November 14 a motion to reject the Council’s decisions was presented and passed by the Board, and the discharges by the Department were in each case affirmed.
Upon certiorari in this Court the inquiry is whether the Board in this proceeding departed from the essential requirements of law in rejecting the decision of the Merit System Council. Petitioners contend at the outset that the Board’s power of review may be invoked only by a discharged employee and not by an employer such as the Department aggrieved by the Merit Council’s reinstatement action, under the following statutory provision:
"110.09 Suspensions, reductions, demotions, discharges, layoffs, and transfers.—
“(1) * * * the decision of the merit system council shall be final; except that in the case of a discharged employee, the personnel board by an affirmative vote of a majority thereof, may in its own discretion and after notice to all parties, within thirty days of the filing of the decision of the merit system council, review the same and accept, refect or alter such decision.
[Emphasis supplied.]
“(2) The state personnel board may order the reinstatement of an employee, with or without back pay, which order shall be binding on the agency concerned. The action of the board shall be in writing. * * * ”
The language employed does not in its literal terms restrict the Board’s power to a review upon petition by the discharged employee, nor does the statute otherwise indicate that such is its necessary intent. Specific provision for order of reinstatement by the Board merely clarifies the extent of the Board’s authority to act directly in overriding the decision of both employer and Council when necessary, while in the review of Council decisions favorable to the employee the authority of the Board need be no broader than to affirm, reject or alter the Council’s decision, operating only indirectly upon the employer.
The limitation of the Board’s power to a review “in the case of a discharged employee” is apparently intended to exclude review in the case of other matters covered by this section, i. e. “suspensions, reductions, demotions * * * layoffs, and transfers,” and the words “in the case of” are plainly not equivalent to “upon the petition of.” Consistent with our conclusion are regulations of the Board in aid of the statute, relating to appeals from Council rulings “on the question of the discharge” of an employee and providing for a petition “by the moving party.”
Petitioners next contend that the failure of the initial motion for rejection of the Council’s decision, by an equally divided vote of Board members present, constituted an affirmative and final dis
The final issue concerns the propriety of the Board’s reversal of the Council on the merits of the case. The effect of the Board’s decision was to sustain the Department’s discharge of the petitioners for conduct unbecoming a public employee.
Certiorari denied.
. F.S. Sec. 110.02(1), F.S.A., provides:
“(1) There is hereby created the state personnel board which shall consist of the governor, who shall be the chairman, the secretary of state, the comptroller, the commissioner of agriculture, the attorney general, the superintendent of public instruction, and the treasurer.”'
. F.S. Sec. 110.09(1), F.S.A.
. Section 110.09(1), F.S., providing for discharge on grounds of “misconduct, insubordination, inefficiency, habitual drunkenness, inability to perform the duties of the position in which employed, willful violation of the provisions of the rules prescribed by the state personnel board, conduct unbecoming a public employee, conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude, or any other just cause.”
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Max L. BREEDEN, Wilson D. Cline, Caleb W. Green and Lester H. Nevilie, Sr. v. The STATE PERSONNEL BOARD
- Status
- Published