Opinion
The City of Mountain View (City) appeals from the trial court’s judgment on a writ of administrative mandate brought by Timothy Deegan (Deegan), a terminated water utility worker. After internal appeals, City’s appeals board recommended termination of Deegan’s employment based on a 1994 reckless driving incident, but came to a split decision regarding the discipline to be imposed for earlier rule violations. The trial court found that Deegan had committed the misconduct and that he had violated City’s personnel rules and regulations, but that the disciplinary action taken—termination—had been excessive, constituting an abuse of discretion. City assigns error primarily in thе standard of review used by the trial court. For the reasons stated below, we reverse.
Statement of Facts
We are bound by the trial court’s factual findings as long as they are supported by substantial evidence. We indulge every reasonable inference and presumption in favor of the trial court’s findings.
(Barber
v.
Long Beach Civil Service Com.
(1996)
Deegan committed some minor transgressions before the two major incidents which led to his termination. In 1993 he was working for City as a Water Utility Worker IIL On May 21, 1993, Deegan was seen at work on a public street not wearing an orange safety vest, in violation of Cal-OSHA (California Occupational Safety and Health Administration)
On June 15, 1993, Deegan failed to call in a water main shutdown at Bryant and Richmont. This omission created a public safety hazard. Also, during the summer of 1993, some temporary paving repairs had to be made twice on a project under Deegan’s supervision because the work—vouched for by Deegan—had not been properly completed. These omissions were found to be a violation of section 7.04(7) of the City’s personnel rules (refusal or failure to perform work assigned).
On July 13, 1993, Deegan’s immediate supervisor, Karl Kraft, met with Deegan to discuss problems with his job performance, including his failure to follow safety rules, abandoning a jobsite in order to go jogging, repeated tardiness, failure to use time/materials effectively, disrespectful treatment of coworkers, problems with honesty, integrity, accepting feedback and following policies and procedures. During that meeting, Deegan retorted to his supervisor that he was “blowing smoke” and went on to refer to his senior department manager (Bob Lillard) as “fucking Lillard.” This behavior was later cited as a viоlation of section 7.04(11) of the City’s personnel rules, (disobedience or insubordination to proper authority). Abusive, disrespectful and threatening behavior towards coworkers had been noted as an issue for Deegan in the past.
The Performing Arts Incident on August 3, 1993
On August 3; 1993, between 11:45 in the morning and 12 noon, Deegan arrived at the loading area behind City’s center for the performing arts intending to play basketball during his half-hour lunch break. The paved area had been fitted with a movable basketball backboard and removable net, for occasional and casual recreational use by various City employees. The backboard was to be used, if at all, only on an as-available basis whenever the loading area was not being used for the ongoing operations of the performing arts center. The basketball rim and net were stored in a nearby employees’ locker room along with a stepladder to facilitate installation.
On this day, TheatreWorks, a private production company, was renting the theater facility for an upcoming production and was loading stage equipment from the loading zone. According to Deegan’s companion Phil Lanides, they asked someone to move his car and the man replied, “You f—ing city people. Why don’t you just leave us alone.” Then Deegan went into the perfоrming arts center and approached Dan Wadleigh (Wadleigh), the technical director of TheatreWorks. Deegan shouted to Wadleigh that his people would have to “move their fuckin’ cars or they’ll have them moved.” Deegan also said: “This happens every time you fuckin’ people come in here and we are sick of it.”
Wadleigh and Ann Quirion (Quirion), an hourly employee for City working at the center, went upstairs to notify Terri Cranmer (Cranmer), the technical services director for the center. Quirion told Cranmer that Deegan was “cursing up a storm” and that she felt personally harassed by him. Quirion had experienced similar encounters with Deegan in the past.
Cranmer came downstairs and told Deegan she would not interfere with the center’s operations merely to accommodate his basketball game. Deegan replied, “You just don’t get it, do you? You can’t park back there.” Cranmer explained to him that City rented the facility to outside organizations and that TheatreWorks was entitled to use the loading and unloading area. To this Deegan responded: “I’m going to post it back here and have all the cars towed. You really don’t get it, it says, ‘No parking in the loading zone.’ ” Deegan again repeated his threat to have all the cars towed, however, he had no authority whatsоever to post or enforce parking regulations or to regulate the use of the center. Deegan returned to work, late.
Deegan argued and the trial court found that this incident occurred while he was off duty. The City agency found Deegan to have committed conduct or behavior not becoming an employee and offensive treatment of the public or fellow employees (§ 7.04(1) and (10) of the City’s personnel rules).
On September 20, 1993, following its investigation of Cranmer’s complaint, and after a predisciplinary hearing, City served Deegan with a Skelly 1 notice, advising of its intention to take disciplinary action in the form of a temporary suspension, demotion to Water Utility Worker I and removal from City’s voluntary duty program. The Skelly notice cited as grounds for discipline the performing arts center incident, as well as a perceived pattern of prior similar incidents involving alleged abusive treatment of coworkers, supervisors, management and the general public, along with some performance problems.
Deegan took an informal appeal, and the personnel officer recommended that the discipline be mitigated slightly, by demotion to Water Utility Worker II, rather than Water Utility Worker I. The officer concluded by saying that if Deegan’s abusive behavior or performance problems continued, he would be subject to further discipline, including termination.
Following this informal appeal, Deegan was advised of his right to take a formal appeal, with evidentiary hearings before a full appeals board. While his formal appeal was pending, Deegan recklessly drove a five-ton City truck, the misconduct lеading to his termination.
March 3, 1994, Reckless Driving Incident
About 7:00 a.m. on March 3, 1994, while on duty driving a 10,000-pound City dump truck, Deegan was westbound on Highway 237 approaching the Whisman Road exit. He was driving in the far right lane, and appeared to be about to exit the highway. Suddenly he crossed over the solid white lines marking the exit without warning or any turn signal, and crossed in front of a Geo Metro, driven by Mrs. Cidalia Anderson (Anderson), a citizen. A near-collision occurred.
When Anderson honked her horn at Deegan, he suddenly slammed on the brakes of the City truck, coming to a complete stop—without apparent reason—in the middle of Highway 237, while nearby traffic continued to move at 55 miles per hour. Shaken, Anderson barely missed having her small car go underneath the City truck. She immediately called City to complain. In her subsequent letter to City she said: “As if all that wasn’t bad enough, the driver then had the audacity to give me the finger and laugh at the situation. I didn’t find what happened to be the least bit amusing; if anything it angered me that someone who works for the city, in a city truck, would have the nerve to do that. I am just glad that no one got hurt. flO I’m truly disappointed with his behavior and hope that the City of Mt. View doesn’t normally hire that type of person. I understand that we all have bad days, but that is not a good reason to try and cause an accident.”
Anderson was not the only citizen to make a complaint. Another citizеn, Tom Czamik (Czamik) also observed the same near-collision and independently complained to City. He corroborated Anderson’s account of the incident and he also wrote a letter. Both witnesses reported that Deegan had made an abrupt lane change without signaling, and then had abruptly braked for no apparent reason, after Anderson honked her hom. Czamik also observed that Deegan had laughed at Anderson and had “flipped [her] off’ yelling obscenities at her as she passed by.
Deegan had been verbally cautioned in 1992 after an anonymous caller complained
Deegan’s Second Informal and Formal Appeal
City initiated a second Skelly proceeding, this time on a notice of intent to terminate. The two Skelly proceedings were consolidated. After predisciplinary hearings and informal appeals had been exhausted, Deegan initiated a formal appeal to the appeals board (Board).
The composition of the Board was specified by regulation to include two representatives selected by Deegan and two appointed by City, along with a nonvoting member from the State Department of Industrial Relations, Conciliation and Mediation Service. Both sides were represented by counsel throughout. The Board’s hearings spanned seven days of testimony and evidentiary examination, including arguments of counsel, and one day’s deliberation. The Board found with respect to the performing arts center incident, that Deegan had used improper language and had shouted at a member of the public and the staff of the center and that he threatened to take action for which he had no legal authority (conduct not becoming a City employee and offensive treatment of the public or fellow employees [violations of § 7.04(1) and (10) of thе City’s personnel rules]); 2) that Deegan was insubordinate, that he had failed to perform assigned work, and that he had violated safety rules—incidents occurring during May, June and July of 1993; and 3) as to the March 3, 1994, reckless driving incident, that Deegan had engaged in conduct not becoming an employee by driving unsafely and by yelling obscenities at a member of the public and by making an obscene gesture, and that Deegan had misused City property by endangering a City vehicle in the course of hazardous driving.
The Board members found that Deegan had committed all the misconduct alleged, but they were not unanimous on the penalty. As to the performing arts center incident, two of four Board members believed that the discipline of ten days’ suspension, demotion and suspension from the City’s duty program was not appropriate. As to the penalty of termination for the reckless driving incident, three of four Board members felt it was appropriate.
The Board’s findings and recommendations were transmitted to City Manager Kevin Duggan, who on August 11, 1995, issued an order which effectuated Deegan’s termination and also imposed the suspension, demotion and removal from the duty program, although the Board had been unable to reach a decision on that question.
The Superior Court’s Findings
The trial court found that City established by a preponderance of the evidencе that Deegan had committed the misconduct as alleged and found by the Board, that is, the reckless driving incident and the performing arts center incident. The trial court disagreed, however, with City’s penalty determinations. With respect to the performing arts center incident, the trial court held that since Deegan’s conduct occurred while he was off duty, and because there was no legal nexus between his job in the water department and the incident, that City was without authority to discipline him. With respect to the penalty of termination for the reckless driving incident, the trial court held that City had abused its discretion. The court reasoned that it was the first time that Deegan had engaged in such conduct, that although the potential for harm was great, no one was harmed, and that such conduct was unlikely to reoccur in the future.
Discussion
A. Standard of Review
The applicable standards of review at the superior court and appellate court levels differ depending upon which issues are under review. With respect to culpability, i.e., whether Deegan in fact committed the misconduct alleged, the superior court has extensive powers of review. The trial court examines whether the decision of the Administrative Board is supported by the findings and whether the findings are supported by
Here the trial court exercised its independent judgment and found that Deegan had committed the misconduct alleged against him. Because there were factual and evidentiary conflicts, the superior court’s determination of culpability is conclusive and binding on the reviewing сourt. On appeal, we review the record to determine whether substantial evidence supports the trial court’s conclusions, and we resolve all conflicts and indulge all reasonable inferences in favor of the prevailing party.
(Barber, supra,
With respect to the question of penalty, the superior court’s powers of review are quite limited, and are exercised only with great deference to the administrative agency’s findings.
(Cummings
v.
Civil Service Com.
(1995)
B. Culpability
We reiterate that on a petition for writ of administrative mandate, when the superior court has reviewed the evidence and made findings, the role of the appellate court is limited. This limited scope of rеview requires the appellate court to sustain the superior court’s findings if substantial evidence supports them. In reviewing the evidence we resolve all conflicts in favor of the party prevailing in the superior court and give that party the benefit of every reasonable inference. “When more than one inference can be reasonably deduced from the facts, the appellate court cannot substitute its deductions for those of the superior court. [Citation.]”
(Pasadena Unified Sch. Dist.
v.
Commission on Professional Competence
(1977)
Our review of the record discloses overwhelming evidence supporting the findings of culpability. Also, the findings of culpability by the superior court are clearly cоnclusive upon this court.
C. Penalty
Having concluded that Deegan in fact committed all the offenses alleged against him, the superior court was then required to uphold City’s punishment if there was any reasonable basis for sustaining it.
(Kazensky
v.
City of Merced
(1998)
The appеllate court uses the same standard as the superior court, reviewing the agency’s penalty for manifest abuse of discretion.
(West Valley-Mission Community College Dist.
v.
Concepcion, supra,
The recent case of
Kazensky, supra,
The city placed a hidden video camera in the shop and it ran from 4:30 p.m. to the end of the swing shift on each of 21 days during a month. Thеre was no videotape of anyone vandalizing city vehicles, but it did record that the three swing shift employees routinely took breaks longer than their two authorized fifteen-minute breaks and the thirty-minute lunch breaks per shift. Milleur was recorded engaging in other misconduct, such as looking through other employees’ mail, making copies of their papers, opening sealed envelopes and looking at the contents, etc. (Kazensky, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at p. 50.) One day both Kazensky and Milleur attended a union meeting held at the shop for an hour and one-half. When their boss noticed items on his desk in a different order, he had the hidden camera installed in his office, and it cаptured Milleur entering his office and looking at papers on his desk for several minutes. (Ibid.)
In discussing the standard of review; the
Kazensky
court noted that imposition of the appropriate penalty for misconduct is left to the sound discretion of the agency involved.
(Kazensky, supra,
In
Kazensky,
the superior court found that the city abused its discretion in terminating Kazensky and Milleur.
(Kazensky, supra,
The appellate court commented that Kazensky violated a city policy by punching out for Milleur, clearly a dishonest act. (
We now review whether the City manifestly abused its discretion in suspending Deegan for the performing arts center incident. The evidence showed that Deegan was rude and abusive to members of the public and members of the staff of the performing arts center. The evidence also showed that this was not the first time that Deegan got into altercations with users of the performing arts center; the TheatreWorks’ personnel who interacted with Deegan reported to the staff that this was the same man they had had trouble with before. The evidence also showed that Deegan misrepresented his authority; he told Terri Cranmer of the center that he would have the parked cars towed, and he had no authority to order towing. Such a misrepresentation of authority has been found to be grounds for termination in other cases. (See
Cummings, supra,
The evidence also demonstrated that this was but one in a series of incidents during which Deegan was rude to members of the public or other City workers. Clearly, the City water department has an interest in having employees who are able to interact with other employees and the public civilly, if not pleasantly. Deegan’s insistence that his need for recreation take precedence over the normal operations of a City department and his interference with that department’s contract with a private company, TheatreWorks, constitute failures of good behavior. Temporary suspension for this incident may have been calculated to encourage Deegan to modify his behavior. On the record before us, we find that City did not abuse its discretion in selecting the penalty of suspension, demotion, and suspension from the City’s duty program.
The trial court, in reviewing the penalty, decided that City was without authority to discipline Deegan for his off-duty conduct. The trial court applied Government Code
Cases applying this statute relating to state workers have determined that a two-pronged test must be satisfied: 1) the misbehavior must cause discredit to the agency; and 2) there must be a rational relationship between the misconduct and the person’s employment.
(Vielehr
v.
State Personnel Bd.
(1973)
It is in this respect that the trial court erred. The trial court agreed with City that the misconduct at the performing arts center had occurred. The trial court did not, however, respect the City’s determination that this conduct reflected badly on City and interfered with the public service. The City’s determination of the penalty of suspension will be upheld on appeal.
With respect to the ruling on the termination of Deegan for the reckless driving incident, the same standard Of review applies. The evidence showed that Deegan had previously been reprimanded for reckless driving. (Although it was unusual that the previous reprimand had been based on an anonymous tip, that circumstance does not go to the substance of the matter.) While the Board had found that Deegan had been subject to unusually close supervision, it found the same played no part in the misconduct leading to termination. The trial court disregarded this finding and decided that the pressure Deegan had been under contributed to his extremely reckless driving. Here, Deegan engaged in reckless and dangerous conduct while operating a City vehicle. He had previously been reprimanded for reckless driving. He intentionally terrorized a citizen and placеd her in danger. He then humiliated her by laughing at her, making an obscene gesture, and yelling obscenities. All of this occurred on a public highway, witnessed by other citizens.
While the trial court distinguished
Hankla
v.
Long Beach Civil Service Com.
(1995)
The facts were that Neil Cramer (Cramer) was driving down the street and suddenly a child riding a bicycle fell into his path. Cramer looked in his side mirror and swerved into the adjoining traffic lane on the left to avoid striking the fallen child. He did not see a car there. (
Although Ice saw both of Cramer’s hands on the wheel (so he knew Cramer was not holding a weapon) Ice tried to catch up with him by flooring the accelerator. As he did so, the seat which had a loose bracket jerked as the car lurched forward, bringing Ice’s gun hand up. Ice tried to engage the gun’s safety mechanism while his finger was on the trigger and the gun was pointed toward Cramer. Ice pulled the trigger accidentally and the gun discharged piercing Cramer’s left shoulder and lodging in his chest one inch from his heart and one and one-half inches from his aorta. If the bullet had not been deflected by a rib, it would have pierced his heart or aorta and killed him. Cramer then attempted to avoid Ice, since he believed Ice was going to shoot his daughter and his girlfriend, the passengers in the car. Ice never identified himself as a police officer, or apologized, or said that he wanted to help after he had shot Cramer. (
The Hankla court noted that in reviewing public employee discipline cases, the court considers the extent to which the employee’s conduct resulted in, or if repeated is likely to result in, harm to the public service. Other relevant factors are the circumstances surrounding the misconduct and the likelihood of its recurrence. (34 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1222-1223.) “The public is entitled to protection from unprofessional employees whose conduct places people at risk of injury and the government at risk of incurring liability.” (Id. at p. 1223.)
The commission found that Ice unnecessarily engaged in a traffic dispute, that rather than taking evasive action he escalated the dispute, and that he negligently discharged his weapon and wounded Cramer. (Hankla, supra, 34 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1224-1225.) The appellate court parted company with the commission in assessing the import of this conduct. (Id. at p. 1225.) “It hardly takes an expert to conclude that a reasonable person would not attempt to engage the safety on a hair trigger gun while the gun is pointed at people and while simultaneously flooring the accelerator of a surging vehicle with a loose seat bracket.” (Id. at pp. 1225-1226.) The court concluded: “Forcing the police department to retain an officer who is unable to handle competently either his emotions or his gun poses too great a threat of harm to the public service to be countenanced.” (Id. at p. 1226.)
The differences between Hankla and this case are differences without distinctions. In Hankla the traffic dispute was more protracted. In Hankla the potential for harm blossomed into actual harm, while in this case, injury or death was miraculously avoided by the quick thinking and quick driving of the citizen Anderson. This incident involving Deegan was shorter, but the exchange of physical and verbal obscenities was similar. We paraphrase Hankla’. Forcing City to retain a water worker who is unable to handle competently either his emotions or his five-ton dump truck poses too great a threat of harm to the public service to be countenanced.
Looking to the test enunciated in the seminal case of
Skelly
v.
State Personnel Bd., supra,
Disposition
The judgment of the superior court is reversed. The case is remanded to the superior court, and the superior court is directed to deny Deegan’s
petition for writ of administrative mandate and to enter a new judgment in favor of City. Costs are awarded to City.
Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P. J., and Mihara, J., concurred.
Notes
(See
Skelly
v.
State Personnel Bd.
(1975)
Government Code section 19572 provides: “Each of the following constitutes cause for discipline of an employee, . . : [i] . . . ffl] (t) Other failure of good behavior either during or outside duty hours which is of such a nature that it causes discredit to the appointing authority or the person’s employment.”
