567 N.E.2d 292 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1989
The judgment appealed from reduced the period of suspension imposed on a city employee in the classified civil service, and awarded him back pay, compensatory damages for breach of contract, and attorney fees. The principal issues on appeal have to do with the relationship of the civil service laws to a labor contract entered into after the effective date of Amended Substitute Senate Bill No. 133 (S.B. No. 133), which established collective bargaining procedures for public employers and public employees. R.C.
Plaintiff-appellee Dennis Cook was discharged on November 1, 1984, by defendant Darrell Maxwell, Director of Safety-Service of the city of Norwood, for insubordination and neglect of duty. Cook was in the classified civil service of Norwood. He was also president and a steward of AFSCME Local 914, and had been on the union team that negotiated, and signed on or about April 16, 1984, a labor contract with the city effective for the calendar year 1984. The contract terms pertinent to the issues on appeal will be set forth below as they become crucial to our decision.
Cook's discharge stemmed from his refusal on October 18, 1984, to accept a work assignment because he insisted on "writing" four grievances during working hours ("on city time"). The discharge order was issued after a complete disciplinary hearing, and on this appeal, Cook does not contest the fact that he was guilty of insubordination and neglect of duty.
Cook appealed the discharge to the Norwood Civil Service Commission, which, after four hearings spanning a four-month period, found Cook to have been insubordinate and neglectful of duty, but modified the discharge to a suspension without pay for a period of seven and one-half months (from October 18, 1984 to June 2, 1985). The city had moved to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that the civil service commission had no jurisdiction over the matter because the labor contract provided grievance procedures up to and including arbitration. The motion was overruled.
Cook initiated an action in the *133
court of common pleas against the Director of Safety-Service and the city by filing a document that combined an appeal from the order of the civil service commission under R.C.
The city appealed, presenting four assignments of error, the specific language of which will be considered later. In brief summary, the city makes two alternative and inconsistent *134 arguments: first, that the court had no jurisdiction over the breach-of-contract claim because the labor contract "called for" arbitration of disputes; and second, that the court erred in holding that the civil service commission's statutory authority to modify a disciplinary order is subject to the terms o the labor contract. The city further argues that the court erred in awarding both double damages for breach of contract and attorney fees in a contract case.
We hold that Cook had no claim for breach of contract. It has been called a "universal rule" that a public employee does not hold his office ex contractu (that is, pursuant to contract in the sense of an agreement or bargain between him and the public), but ex lege (as a matter of law, or pursuant to statute).Fuldauer v. Cleveland (1972),
S.B. No. 133 appears to have enacted "new law" that changes the governance of public-employee discipline. The Act itself does not impair the right and responsibility of a public employer to "suspend, discipline, demote, or discharge" employees, but the public employer may agree otherwise. R.C.
The instant labor contract does not, however, fall within these new provisions. While the union is recognized as the sole and exclusive bargaining representative of all the city's public-works employees, the city expressly reserved the rights to direct the work of its employees and "to suspend or discharge employees for just and proper cause." Further, the grievance procedure does not include final and binding arbitration. Article IX sets forth five steps of grievance procedure, which culminate in an arbitration if the union desires.3 The instant labor contract fails, however, to *135 make the arbitration decision final and binding on the parties. We hold that the labor contract does not control disciplinary procedures under these circumstances.
In sum, the labor contract failed to give rise to any contractual rights (either for Cook or for the city) that prevail over the statutory scheme for the disposition of appeals from disciplinary actions by the city. The civil service commission had jurisdiction of the appeal and was not bound by the labor contract. Accordingly, the trial court erred when it considered the breach-of-contract claim and awarded compensatory damages and attorney fees as "the natural and foreseeable consequence of the wrongful discharge of the plaintiff."
Turning to Cook's appeal from the civil service order, we hold that the trial court's review was erroneous in two respects. In the first place, an appeal to the common pleas court under R.C.
In the second place, the labor contract under scrutiny does not prevail over the civil service statutes, and the provisions for "progressive discipline" do not remove from either the city or the commission the authority to impose such penalty as either might in its discretion deem proper.
We further hold the trial court erred when it awarded Cook back pay of $11,673.76. This award is based on the erroneous proposition that the commission could not suspend Cook for more than one day. We find nothing in R.C.
As amended by Senate Bill No. 102 of the 140th General Assembly (S.B. No. 102), R.C.
The first assignment of error reads:
"The trial court erred in assuming jurisdiction over an action for breach of contract where the contract alleged to have been breached calls for disputes arising thereunder to be resolved by arbitration."
While we agree that the trial court erred in "assuming jurisdiction" over the claim for breach of contract, we do not agree that the reason for the error was that the contract contained provisions for arbitration. Therefore, we overrule the first assignment of error.
The second assignment of error reads:
"The trial court erred in finding that a municipal civil service commission's statutory authority to modify the order of an appointing authority pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
We sustain this assignment of error by reason of our conclusion that the instant labor contract does not supplant or prevail over the provisions of R.C.
The third assignment of error reads:
"The trial court erred in awarding damages in a breach of contract action beyond those damages arising out of the breach, thereby permitting the plaintiff to recover double the amount of his actual damages."
This assignment of error is grounded on the mistaken premises that Cook had a claim for relief for breach of contract and could recover compensatory damages of some nature. He could not. For that reason, we overrule this assignment of error. Cook had no claim for any contract damages.
We sustain the fourth assignment of error, which reads:
"The trial court erred in awarding attorney fees in an action for breach of contract."
We reverse the judgment below in its entirety. We dismiss Cook's claim for breach of contract and his associated demand for compensatory and punitive damages and attorney fees. We remand this case to the court of common pleas for review under R.C.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
DOAN and KLUSMEIER, JJ., concur.
"ARTICLE X — DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURE
"SECTION 1. The principle of progressive discipline shall be followed.
"SECTION 1A. Progressive steps shall be as follows: oral warning, written warning, (1) day, (3) days, (5) days, and then dismissal.
"SECTION 1B. Drunkenness or Dependency will be as follows: oral warning, written warning, (1) day, (3) days, (5) days, enter into a Drug or Alcohol rehabilitation program or dismissal, employee's choice.
"SECTION 2. No employee shall be disciplined (except oral reprimands and failure to qualify at the end of his probationary period) without a hearing by the Director of Public Works. Notice of the reasons for disciplinary action shall be given to the steward at least (2) working days prior to the date of the scheduled hearing. At his hearing the employee shall have the right to be represented by the Union. It is the responsibility of the official hearing the charges to advise the employee of his right to representation before the date of the hearing.
"SECTION 3. An employee may appeal a written reprimand or suspension commencing at Step 2 of the grievance procedure.
"SECTION 4. Written departmental reprimands shall be removed from the employees [sic] personal records after (1) year. All other disciplinary actions shall be removed from the employees [sic] personal record after (3) years provided no suspension or other penalty greater than a written warning has been sustained against an employee in the (3) year period."
The evidence before the commission and the court was that Cook had had only an oral and written warning and had not been suspended for one day prior to the discharge order. The civil service commission did not deem itself bound by the foregoing provisions, but the court gave them full force and effect.
"STEP 5. If the grievance is not satisfactorily settled at Step 4, the Union may within thirty (30) calendar days after the receipt of the Step 4 answer, submit the matter to arbitration. If the parties cannot agree as to the arbitration then the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) shall be contacted for a list of arbitrators. The Union shall strike the first name. Thereafter, each side alternately strikes a name from the list until one remains, (he shall be) [sic]. The fees and expenses of the arbitrator shall be borne equally by the City and the Union. Furthermore, the aggrieved employee, his Steward, Local Union President and any necessary witnesses shall not lose any regular straight time pay for time off the job while attending an arbitration proceeding. In the event a grievance goes to arbitration, the arbitrator shall have jurisdiction and/or [sic] application of the provisions of this Agreement (including disciplinary action to the extent permitted herein) and/or compliance with the provisions of this Agreement, and in reaching his decision the arbitrator shall have no authority to add to or subtract from or modify in any way any of the provisions of this Agreement. The arbitrator shall issue a decision within thirty (30) calendar days after submission of the case to him (unless otherwise agreed to by the parties)." *137