Baltimore City Detention Center v. Michael Foy
No. 3
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND
November 19, 2018
Barbera, C.J.
September Term, 2018; Argued: September 7, 2018
Case No. 24-C-16-000255
Argued: September 7, 2018
BALTIMORE CITY DETENTION CENTER v. MICHAEL FOY
Barbera, C.J., Greene, *Adkins, McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, JJ.
Opinion by Barbera, C.J.
Filed: November 19, 2018
*Adkins, J., now retired, participated in the hearing and conference of this case while an active member of this Court; after being recalled pursuant to the
The ultimate question posed here is whether
I.
The COBR Statutory Scheme
Resolution of the parties’ dispute turns largely on the proper interpretation and application of the COBR‘s disciplinary process, so we begin with some background on the enactment of the COBR and a review of the pertinent statutory framework.
The COBR became effective October 1, 2010. See State Correctional Officers’ Bill of Rights, Ch. 194, 2010 Md. Laws 1425, 1448. Prior to that date, the disciplinary process for state correctional officers was governed by Title 11 of the Maryland Code (1993, 2015 Repl. Vol), State Personnel and Pensions (“SPP“) Article. The intent of the then-new COBR was “to establish exclusive procedures for the investigation and discipline of a correctional officer for alleged misconduct.”
The COBR‘s disciplinary process is straightforward. After receiving a notice of charges recommending termination, a correctional officer has the option to file an appeal with the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services
The hearing board must deliver this report to the “appointing authority of the correctional facility.”
After receiving the hearing board‘s decision, the Commissioner has thirty days to issue a final order.
II.
The Present Case
Lieutenant Michael Foy (“Foy“), Respondent here, sought judicial review of the decision of Acting Commissioner of the Baltimore City Detention Center, John Wolfe (“Commissioner Wolfe“) to terminate him for reasons we next explain.
A. The Underlying Incident
On January 12, 2014, Foy and Sergeant Jeremiah Green (“Green“), both correctional officers at the Baltimore City Detention Center (“BCDC“), Petitioner, were conducting security rounds at the facility. At some point during their rounds, an altercation ensued between Green and an inmate, during which Green struck the inmate in the face. The inmate then charged at Green, but Green restrained him. Although the inmate posed no further threat, Foy stepped on his neck, placing the inmate in need of medical care. After the incident, Foy did not report his use of force. Foy ultimately submitted a report, but he omitted material facts about the incident.
B. The Disciplinary Proceedings
On April 10, 2014, the Department‘s Human Resources Services Division served Foy with a Notice of Disciplinary Charges (“Notice“). The Notice charged Foy with violating twelve Department policies, as enumerated by various statutes, regulations, and
The hearing board conducted a three-day hearing (on September 14, October 5, and October 12, 2015), during which it heard testimony from witnesses called by both BCDC and Foy. On November 16, 2015,4 the hearing board issued a written decision finding Foy guilty of ten of the twelve disciplinary charges. The hearing board recommended that he be transferred to Baltimore City Booking and Intake Center and demoted to Sergeant.
On November 23, 2015, Commissioner Wolfe received the hearing board‘s recommendation and, as authorized by
After the meeting, Commissioner Wolfe learned that the audio recording equipment had failed; consequently, the meeting was not “on the record,” as per
The parties were set to meet again on December 17, 2015, but Commissioner Wolfe canceled without explanation on December 16, 2015. Thereafter, Commissioner Wolfe, with Secretary Moyer‘s approval, issued a final order terminating Foy, effective December 16, 2015.
Foy filed a petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. There, he argued that Commissioner Wolfe violated his rights under the COBR because the Commissioner increased the hearing board‘s recommended punishment without properly recording the penalty increase meeting. Foy requested that the court vacate the termination order and reinstate him with back pay. After a hearing, the court issued an order remanding the case to Commissioner Wolfe to conduct another penalty-increase meeting “so that a complete record of the administrative proceeding is available for . . . [j]udicial [r]eview.”
C. The Appeal
Foy noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. A panel of the Court of Special Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, reversed the circuit court‘s remand order and “reinstate[d] the Hearing Board‘s penalty recommendation as the final administrative action.” Foy, 235 Md. App. at 44.5 The Majority, relying on cases interpreting similar provisions of the LEOBR, concluded that the COBR‘s requirements for increasing the hearing board‘s recommended penalty are mandatory, Hird v. City of Salisbury, 121 Md. App. 496, 504 (1998), and, as such, any failure to satisfy those obligations was incurable after thirty days, VanDevander v. Voorhaar, 136 Md. App. 621, 632 (2001). Foy, 235 Md. App. at 68. The Court of Special Appeals therefore held that the “[f]ailure to comply timely with the requirements of
On March 6, 2018, we issued a writ of certiorari, Baltimore City Det. Ctr. v. Foy, 457 Md. 660 (2018), to analyze the interplay between
III.
Standard of Review
The crux of the issue before us is not whether the merits of Commissioner Wolfe‘s termination order are supported by substantial evidence, but rather whether the penalty-increase process denoted in the COBR is obligatory, and, if so, whether the failure to satisfy one of its steps can be cured retrospectively given the statute‘s time-restrictive language. These are “purely legal question[s]” involving statutory construction, which we review de novo. Coleman v. Anne Arundel Cty. Police Dep‘t, 369 Md. 108, 122 (2002).
The parameters of statutory construction are well defined. Our ultimate objective is to ascertain “the real intention of the Legislature.” Fisher v. E. Corr. Inst., 425 Md. 699, 706 (2012) (quoting In re Gloria H., 410 Md. 562, 579-80 (2009)). We start by looking at the statute‘s plain language, “reading the statute as a whole to ensure that no word . . . is rendered [meaningless].” Lowery v. State, 430 Md. 477, 490 (2013) (quoting Doe v. Montgomery Cty. Bd. of Elections, 406 Md. 697, 712 (2008)). “If the plain language of the statute is . . . unambiguous, the process ends,” Fisher, 425 Md. at 706 (quoting Breslin v. Powell, 421 Md. 266, 287 (2011)), and we “apply the statute as written,” Carven v. State Ret. & Pension Sys. of Md., 416 Md. 389, 407 (2010) (quoting Crofton Convalescent Ctr., Inc. v. Dep‘t of Health & Mental Hygiene, 413 Md. 201, 216 (2010)).
If, however, the statute‘s words are ambiguous, then we utilize additional sources to aid our analysis, including “legislative history, prior case law, statutory purpose and statutory structure.” Fisher, 425 Md. at 707 (citation omitted). “Throughout this process,
IV.
Discussion
While we concur with much of the well-written and thorough Majority opinion of the Court of Special Appeals—specifically regarding the trigger event for initiating the thirty-day timeframe under
A. Trigger for the Thirty-Day Deadline
We start by addressing a matter no longer in dispute, that is, when the thirty-day deadline set forth in
This conclusion is further supported by the fact that only the Commissioner can issue a final order,
B. Obligatory Nature of the Penalty-Increase Process
BCDC and Foy disagree about whether the procedural steps in
BCDC takes a different approach. It highlights the contrast between the language describing the LEOBR‘s penalty-increase process and the COBR‘s analogous provision. The LEOBR states that the head of the law enforcement agency (“the chief“) “may increase the recommended penalty of the hearing board only if the chief personally” satisfies four requirements.
We agree with Foy. The canons of statutory construction lead to the same result under both statutes: the appointing authority must satisfy all the procedural steps before issuing a penalty increase.
We are similarly unconvinced that exclusion of the word “only” has any significance. What matters in statutory construction is not the uniformity of similarly-worded statutes, but rather the plain language of the statute before us. See Fisher, 425 Md. at 706. The plain language of
[T]he appointing authority may increase the recommended penalty of the hearing board if the appointing authority:
(i) reviews the entire record of the proceedings of the hearing board;
(ii) meets with the correctional officer and allows the correctional officer to be heard on the record;
(iii) at least 10 days before the meeting, discloses and provides in writing to the correctional officer any oral or written communication not included in the record of the hearing board on which the decision to consider increasing the penalty is wholly or partly based; and
(iv) states on the record the substantial evidence on which the appointing authority relied to support the increase of the recommended penalty.
(Emphasis added).
Three aspects of this provision illustrate its obligatory nature. First, the legislature‘s use of the word “if” restricts the Commissioner‘s ability to issue a penalty increase until
C. Relationship Between the Obligatory Penalty-Increase Process and the Thirty-Day Deadline
BCDC and Foy additionally dispute whether the thirty-day deadline and the penalty-increase process are interrelated. BCDC asserts that the thirty-day limit for issuing a final order and the penalty-increase process are separate and should not be read together as requiring the Commissioner to complete the penalty-increase process within thirty days. To support this claim, BCDC notes that “[t]he 30-day limit appears in a separate subparagraph . . .
Foy counters that all aspects of the penalty-increase process must be satisfied within thirty days. Foy directs us to the statute‘s structure. He notes that
We again agree with Foy. When reading the COBR, the story it seeks to tell speaks for itself. Its sections flow naturally together. There is no disconnect. Interpreting it requires nothing more than a careful reading.
The legislative history of the COBR further illustrates that the General Assembly intended for the thirty-day deadline to apply to the penalty-increase process. See Morris v. Prince George‘s County, 319 Md. 597, 604 (1990) (stating that with statutory interpretation, “we are not limited to [the] study of the statutory language” in that we can “consult[] legislative history as part of the process of determining the legislative purpose“). The first reading of the bill would have made the hearing board‘s decision final and require
In subsequent amendments, the General Assembly revamped the disciplinary process by adding
We hold, based on the plain language of the COBR and the supporting legislative history, that upon receipt of the hearing board‘s recommendations, the appointing authority has thirty days to render a final disciplinary decision.
D. The Commissioner‘s Compliance with the Penalty-Increase Process
We now turn to whether Commissioner Wolfe complied with
“On the record” is not defined in the statute. See
Commissioner Wolfe‘s post hoc memorandum does not satisfy the requirement that the penalty-increase meeting be conducted “on the record.” The purpose of necessitating a record in administrative proceedings is “not only to inform properly the interested parties of the grounds for the [agency‘s] decision, but also to provide a basis upon which judicial review may be rendered.” Md. Overpak Corp. v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 395 Md. 16, 40 (2006) (citation omitted). The memorandum is scant on details. Regardless, no amount of detail or attempt to recount precisely what occurred at such a meeting complies with the requirement of
E. The Appropriate Remedy
Foy avers that the hearing board‘s recommended sanctions (transfer and demotion) must stand as his final punishment because the window of opportunity for curing the recording defect has now closed. He claims that Commissioner Wolfe acted in bad faith after discovering the defect and therefore forfeited any rights to redo the penalty-increase meeting. We disagree.
We apply administrative law principles when reviewing actions taken pursuant to the COBR. See
We have defined “prejudice” as “anything [that] places the person affected in a more unfavorable or disadvantageous position than he would otherwise have occupied.” Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Shrader, 324 Md. 454, 470 (1991) (quoting Roberto v. Catino, 140 Md. 38, 44 (1922)). Foy fails to satisfy this standard. Recording or no recording, the hearing board found Foy guilty of two charges that in the view of the appointing authority, warrant automatic dismissal. See
Commissioner Wolfe‘s failure to obtain a waiver from Foy and his unexplained cancellation of the rescheduled meeting were not, as Foy contends, actions taken in bad faith. Foy theorizes that, upon discovering the recording defect, Commissioner Wolfe proceeded with the blatant intent to disregard the COBR‘s mandates. That is not what the record indicates. In the absence of any indication to the contrary, we are satisfied that Commissioner Wolfe reasonably believed, especially given the lack of a clear definition for “on the record,” that his memorandum satisfied
In sum, when all the smoke is cleared, Foy‘s claim rests on “a single, technical failure . . . that can easily be cured” with a remand that allows the “Commissioner to hold another meeting with Foy with a properly operating tape recorder.” See Foy, 235 Md. App. at 74 (Eyler, J., dissenting); see also Holiday Spas v. Montgomery Cty. Human Relations Comm‘n, 315 Md. 390, 400 (1989) (“Thus a court can remand . . . [to cure] a procedural error at the administrative level[.]“).
V.
Conclusion
In closing, our holding should not be read to stand for the proposition that the appointing authority has discretion to decide which procedures to abide by when engaging in the penalty-increase process. On the contrary, the statute‘s purpose makes clear that the appointing authority must protect the due process rights of a charged correctional officer by adhering to all the enumerated procedures. Nor should this case be construed by the appointing authority as license to disregard intentionally one or more of the required procedures, as doing so could be grounds for precluding a remand to cure a defect outside the thirty-day timeframe, but that is not before us in this case. Here, we hold, based on the record before us, that the proper remedy for the unforeseen technological glitch, which
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED, WITH THE INSTRUCTION THAT THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY BE AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY RESPONDENT.
Barbera, C.J.
