DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT, Appellant, v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC EMPLOYEE RELATIONS BOARD, Appellee, and Fraternal Order of Police Metropolitan Police Department Labor Committee, Intervenor.
No. 14-CV-846.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Argued Jan. 15, 2016. Decided Aug. 4, 2016.
Before FISHER and BECKWITH, Associate Judges, and STEADMAN, Senior Judge.
Donna M. Murasky, Senior Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor General, and Loren L. AliKhan, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellant. Geoffrey H. Simpson, Washington, DC, with whom Bruce A. Fredrickson and Cedar P. Carlton were on the brief, for appellee. Marc L. Wilhite, Washington, DC, for intervenor.
The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) proposed to terminate the employment of an officer because of off-duty misconduct. However, an adverse action panel (AAP), after a hearing, recommended a penalty of only a thirty-day suspension. The issue before us is whether the MPD was nonetheless free to reject that recommendation of the AAP and instead to terminate the officer‘s employment. The District of Columbia Public Employee Relations Board (PERB) ruled that the MPD could not do so. We conclude that this was a reasonable interpretation of the controlling regulations and therefore affirm the order on appeal.
I. Statement of Facts
MPD Officer Crystal Dunkins was charged in Maryland with several crimes for abusing her two children. She pleaded guilty to one count of confining an unattended child in exchange for a sentence of five years of probation and the state dropping the remaining charges. Reviewing these developments, MPD, through then Assistant Chief of Police Shannon P. Cockett, issued a Notice of Proposed Adverse Action, charging Officer Dunkins with conduct unbecoming an officer and conduct constituting a crime. The proposed penalty was termination.
Officer Dunkins requested a Departmental Hearing before an AAP. The AAP found her guilty of the MPD charges but recommended a thirty-day suspension as the appropriate penalty instead of termination. Assistant Chief Cockett found AAP‘s recommendation “inconsistent with the misconduct,” and imposed the original proposed adverse action of termination.
Officer Dunkins unsuccessfully appealed her termination to the Chief of Police, and then initiated arbitration proceedings, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement, to review, inter alia, whether “the [Assistant Chief of Police] had the authority to impose the penalty proposed in the Notice rather than the [AAP‘s] recommendation[.]” The arbitrator ruled that 6-A DCMR § 1001.5, 18 D.C.Reg. 417 (Feb. 7, 1972) (§ 1001.5) was the controlling regulation and that, under the plain language of that regulation, MPD could only impose a penalty of thirty days’ suspension.1
On appeal by MPD, the PERB affirmed the arbitrator‘s decision. It agreed that § 1001.5 was the controlling regulation and rejected MPD‘s arguments to the contrary. MPD then appealed to the Superior Court, which affirmed the PERB decision, and in turn MPD appeals to us.2
II. Application of § 1001.5
We begin with an iteration of our well-established standard of review when addressing challenges to PERB rulings.3
Prior to January 1, 1980, disciplinary actions involving police officers were governed by a 1906 Act of Congress that established trial boards to adjudicate such proceedings, now codified, as amended, as
In 1979, the Council of the District of Columbia enacted the Comprehensive Merit Personnel Act, generally covering the entire field of employment by the District of Columbia.
The key regulation relating to the issue before us is 6-B DCMR § 1601.5(a), 53 D.C.Reg. 3974, 3974 (May 12, 2006), which provides as follows:
Any procedures for handling corrective or adverse actions involving uniformed members of the Metropolitan Police Department, or of the Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department (FEMSD) at the rank of Captain or below provided for by law, or by regulations of the respective departments in effect on the effective date of these regulations, including but not limited to procedures involving trial boards, shall take precedence over the provisions of this chapter to the extent that there is a difference.
The PERB reasoned that this provision preserved the effectiveness of § 1001.56 and ruled that it applied to this case, thereby barring the imposition of any penalty greater than that recommended by the AAP.
MPD‘s challenge to the PERB‘s reliance on § 1601.5(a) as incorporating the old § 1001.5 is based on the fact that § 1601.5(a) only applies to “procedures.” MPD argues that § 1001.5 is a substantive provision, not one relating to a “procedure.” It analogizes § 1001.5 to a provision governing a sentence that may be imposed in a criminal case, or a cap on damages in a civil case.7
While the argument of MPD is not without some force, it does not carry the day in light of our standard of review. The word “procedures” can have an expansive meaning, and nothing in § 1601.5(a) suggests that the intent was a sharply limited one. MPD points out that the title of § 1001.1 is “Investigation and Findings” as opposed to § 1000, which is titled “Rules of Procedure.” However, Chapter A10 of Title 6 (of which both are subsections) is headed generally “Disciplinary Procedures,” and indeed, the MPD General Order which the MPD claims is controlling is itself headed “Disciplinary Procedures and Processes.” See supra note 7; cf. Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 549 (1974) (“[R]epeals by implica-
III. Section 1613.1
At the end of its order, having ruled that § 1001.5 controls this appeal, the PERB added a statement that even if § 1001.5 were not applicable, the comparable provision in the applicable regulation, 6-B DCMR § 1613.1 & .2, 47 D.C.Reg. 7094, 7103 (Sept. 1, 2000), would lead to the same result. Those provisions read:
1613.1 The deciding official, after considering the employee‘s response and the report and recommendation of the hearing officer pursuant to § 1612, when applicable, shall issue a final decision.
1613.2 The deciding official shall either sustain the penalty proposed, reduce it, remand the action with instruction for further consideration, or dismiss the action with or without prejudice, but in no event shall he or she increase the penalty.
The PERB simply said: “Thus, § 1613.2 precludes a deciding official from increasing the penalty recommended by a hearing officer by whatever name.” But it then immediately added: “If § 1613.2 did not preclude increasing the penalty, then § 1001.5 would supersede it and still preclude the assistant chief from increasing the penalty.” Thus, it is clear that the eventual controlling ruling relates to the continued application of § 1001.5.
Nonetheless, MPD would have us rule on the validity of the PERB interpretation of § 1613.2. MPD focuses on the language “penalty proposed.” It asserts that this phrase refers to the penalty originally proposed — in this case, termination — rather than the penalty recommended by the AAP. It asserts that this meaning of “penalty proposed” was definitively established by our decision in Hutchinson v. District of Columbia Office of Emp. Appeals, 710 A.2d 227 (D.C.1998).
In Hutchinson, a deputy fire chief proposed that Hutchinson, an employee of the District of Columbia Fire Department, be removed for inefficiency. Id. at 229. Another deputy fire chief, serving as a “disinterested designee,” recommended a ninety-day suspension. Nonetheless, the Fire Chief opted to remove Hutchinson. Hutchinson exercised his right to appeal to the Office of Employee Appeals (OEA) under
Among other things, Hutchinson challenged the imposition of termination rather than the ninety-day suspension recommended by the disinterested designee. We noted that his argument turned on the interpretation of D.C. Personnel Regs.
On its face, therefore, the PERB‘s summary interpretation of § 1613.2 runs counter to that of the OEA upheld by us in Hutchinson. But in Hutchinson, as presented to us, the interpretation of the relevant section was conclusive to the appeal. That is not true here. Hutchinson involved a Fire Department employee, not an employee of the MPD; and there is no suggestion in that opinion that the Fire Department had a pre-existing provision comparable to § 1001.5, which was a regulation pertaining purely to the MPD. Nor is there any compelling reason why the interpretation by the OEA, acting within its statutory authority, should be favored over that of the PERB, also acting within its statutory authority to review arbitration decisions.
In this posture, we see no reason to reach out to decide an issue not squarely presented to us in this appeal. If we were to review the PERB interpretation, we would want to do so in a context where the PERB addressed the issue as determinative and engaged in an analysis of its interpretation of § 1613.2 and considered carefully our decision in Hutchinson and the interpretation of that section by OEA. None of that is presented here.11
IV. Conclusion
In sum, we see no basis to hold that the PERB‘s affirmance of the arbitral award, applying § 1001.5 as a procedural rule via § 1601.5(a), was rationally indefensible. Drivers, supra, 631 A.2d at 1216. The PERB order is, therefore,
Affirmed.
