Lead Opinion
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 1 Appellant, Joyce Gilchrist, worked for the City of Oklahoma City Police Department as a forensic chemist for many years. Gilchrist was responsible for collecting and analyzing evidence from crime scenes and testifying as to the results in criminal prosecutions. Gilchrist was fired in 2001, in part based on United States District Judge Ralph Thompson’s published opinion in a habeas corpus proceeding, Mitchell v. Ward, 150 F.Supp 2d 1194 (W.D.Okla.1999). The issues before Judge Thompson arose from a criminal matter tried in the District Court of Oklahoma County in which Gilchrist had testified for the prosecution. Based on his analysis of the evidence developed in the habeas corpus matter, Judge Thompson concluded that Gilchrist’s testimony in the criminal trial concerning DNA evidence had been, “without question untrue,”
¶ 2 Judge Thompson’s opinion in Mitchell reveals that the petitioner, Mitchell, had been tried and convicted of forcible rape and murder. Mitchell’s habeas corpus proceeding was based on his claim that he had been denied access to exculpatory evidence. As a result of the seriousness of Mitchell’s claims, Judge Thompson allowed Mitchell to conduct discovery, which produced Gilchrist’s notes regarding her conversations with an FBI chemist regarding the DNA testing by the FBI.
¶ 3 Judge Thompson then granted Mitchell an evidentiary hearing. Gilchrist had testified at the criminal trial that the FBI’s DNA analysis was “inconclusive” as to whether any DNA sample may have matched Mitchell’s DNA. But the FBI chemist testified in the federal habeas corpus hearing that Mitchell’s DNA was not found in the FBI testing and that was the import of his report to Gilchrist. Gilchrist admitted in the federal court hearing that the DNA evidence did, indeed, exclude Mitchell. It was as a result of these revelations that Judge Thompson concluded that Gilchrist’s trial testimony, to the effect that the DNA results were “inconclusive,” was untrue. On appeal from Judge Thompson’s ruling the United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit summarized the effect of Gilchrist’s testimony: “Ms. Gilchrist thus provided the jury with evidence implicating Mr. Mitchell in the sexual assault of the victim which she knew was rendered false and misleading by evidence withheld
¶ 4 Immediately after Oklahoma City police department officials received a copy of Judge Thompson’s opinion in Mitchell in the Fall of 1999, they began an investigation into Gilchrist’s conduct. Although Gilchrist complains that excessive time elapsed from the time of her testimony against Mitchell in 1992 and the hearing, the record reflects that it was Judge Thompson’s 1999 opinion that brought to light the seriousness of Gilchrist’s misconduct and the police department investigation started immediately thereafter. Following its investigation the police department started disciplinary proceedings before the Police Department Review Board. These proceedings were significantly delayed as a result of Gilchrist’s having sought continuances and having filed a federal court lawsuit to prohibit the city from conducting the hearing. Finally, the Police Department Review Board, after fourteen days of hearings and deliberations ending September 12, 2001, terminated Gilchrist’s employment on September 25, 2001.
¶ 5 Gilchrist filed a claim with the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission seeking unemployment benefits; On October 15, 2001 the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission denied Gilchrist’s claim based on the Commission’s conclusion that Gilchrist had been fired for misconduct. On October 25, 2001, Gilchrist appealed to an Appeal Tribunal of the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission. On December 12, 2001 a hearing was held before an Appeal Tribunal hearing officer, who affirmed the Commission’s determination on February 4, 2002. Gilchrist appealed from the Appeal Tribunal’s order and on April 26, 2002 the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission Board of Review affirmed. Gilchrist filed her petition for judicial review in the District Court of Oklahoma County on May 7,2002. The trial court affirmed the opinion of the Board of Review on October 29, 2002 and this appeal ensued.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 6 Title 40 O.S.2001 § 2-610 provides, . In any proceeding under this section the findings of the Board of Review as to the facts, if supported by evidence, shall be conclusive and the jurisdiction of said court shall be confined to questions of law....” This Court’s standard of review on appeal is the same as that of the trial court. Further, the question of what constitutes “misconduct” sufficient to deprive a terminated employee of entitlement to unemployment benefits is a question of law. Nordam v. Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission,
DISCUSSION
¶ 7 Title 40 O.S.2001 § 2-406 provides that an individual shall be disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits if the employee was discharged for “misconduct.”
... conduct evincing such wilful or wanton disregard of an employer’s interests as is found in deliberate violations or disregard of standards of behavior which the employer has the right to expect of his employee, or in carelessness or negligence of such degree or recurrence as to manifest equal culpability, wrongful intent or evil design, or to show an intentional and substantial disregard of the employer’s interests or of the employee’s duties and obligations to his employer. On the other hand mere inefficiency, unsatisfactory conduct, failure in good performance as the result of inability or incapacity, inadvertencies or ordinary negligence in isolated instances, or good faith errors in judgment or discretion are not to be deemed “misconduct” within the meaning of the statute.
¶ 8 In addition to Judge Thompson’s and the 10th Circuit’s Mitchell opinions, the record in the trial court contains the Court of Criminal Appeals’s opinion in McCarty v. State,
¶ 9 We hold that Gilchrist’s conduct in Mitchell, that is knowingly giving false and misleading testimony in a criminal case, constituted “misconduct” sufficient to support the denial of unemployment benefits under § 2-406, as defined in Vester,
¶ 10 The McCarty opinion also reveals “misconduct,” as found by the Appeal Tribunal, the Board of Review, and affirmed by the trial court. Gilchrist had testified in a murder trial that forensic techniques were not sufficiently advanced to allow positive identification of a person through blood typing, secretor status, or hair analysis. The Court of Criminal Appeals, though, held, “We find it inconceivable why Ms. Gilchrist would give such an improper opinion, which she admitted she was not qualified to give.” McCarty,
¶ 11 We hold that Gilchrist’s derelictions “show[ed] an intentional and substantial disregard of the employer’s interests or of the employee’s duties and obligations to [her] employer.” Vester,
Gilchrist had no constitutionally protected right to free speech sufficient to protect her from the consequences of her testimony in the Mitchell or McCarty prosecutions.
¶ 12 Gilchrist cites several opinions, which she claims support her contention that her constitutionally protected right to free speech was violated because she was fired as a result of her testimony in criminal prosecutions.
¶ 13 In stark contrast to any of the cases Gilchrist cites, the record of the testimony in the cases at issue here was carefully considered in post-trial proceedings by courts not
CONCLUSION
¶ 14 The record supports the unanimous holding of the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission, the Appeal Tribunal, the Board of Review, and the trial court that Gilchrist was guilty of “misconduct” in Gilchrist’s job performance, as that word is used in 40 O.S. § 2-406 and was interpreted in Vester v. Board of Review of Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission,
¶ 15 Gilchrist’s civil right to free speech did not serve to insulate her from the consequences of her testimony in the criminal prosecutions at issue here. Her testimony was judicially determined to have been either false and misleading or improper in other ways. Thus, the opinions cited by Gilchrist, see note 3, are inapposite because in none of them had the defendant’s testimony been judicially determined to have been false, misleading, or improper in some other way.
JUDGMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Title 40 O.S.2001 § 2-406 provides:
An individual shall be disqualified for benefits if he has been discharged for misconduct connected with his last work, if so found by the Commission. Disqualification under this section shall continue for the full period of unemploy-menl next ensuing after he has been discharged for misconduct connected with his work and until such individual has become reemployed and has earned wages equal to or in excess of ten (10) times his weekly benefit amount
. Those opinions are: McCarty v. State,
. In support of this proposition Gilchrist cites, among other opinions. Williams v. Hepting,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
¶ 1 The court affirms the denial of unemployment benefits to plaintiff Gilchrist on the grounds that (a) her conduct as a forensic chemist in several criminal prosecutions
¶ 2 I concur in today’s decision and in the court’s pronouncement. I write separately (a) to explain why Gilchrist cannot interpose here her immunity from civil liability as a criminal prosecution witness to prevent the imposition of adverse collateral consequences of her testimonial conduct upon her claim to unemployment benefits and (b) to focus on her argument that judicial denial of governmental benefits was predicated upon a constitutionally impermissible condition.
I
PLAINTIFF APPEARS TO ARGUE THAT HER COMMON-LAW IMMUNITY AS A WITNESS PROTECTS HER FROM GOVERNMENT USE OF HER TESTIMONY TO SHOW MISCONDUCT
¶ 3 Gilchrist appears to rely on and invoke the common-law rule that shields witnesses from civil liability for any harm occasioned
¶ 4 Assuming Gilchrist is not guilty of perjury and taking due notice of her protection as a witness, the immunity she invokes extends no farther than to shield her from civil liability for harm occasioned by the testimony. It cannot be stretched to cover all collateral public-law consequences
The Outer Limit of Witness Immunity
¶ 5 At common law witnesses were immune from suits to recover damages for harm occasioned by testimony given in judicial proceedings.
The Adverse Consequence of Gilchrist’s Breach of Public-Employment Duty To Maintain Scientific Inteyrity In Her Work Performance
¶ 7 While employed as a police department’s forensic chemist, Gilchrist had a duty to maintain scientific integrity in her work. Obedience to this level of performance is exacted by the public-law standards that govern constitutional strictures for guilt determination in criminal prosecutions. That duty’s breach is now advanced as misconduct (in the § 2-406 sense) to defeat her claim for unemployment compensation. Gilchrist’s witness immunity
¶ 8 In short, the denial of unemployment benefits is a sanctioned adverse collateral
II
GILCHRIST APPEARS TO ARGUE THAT THE GOVERNMENT’S USE OF HER TESTIMONY TO SHOW “MISCONDUCT” (IN THE § 2-406 SENSE) OFFENDS THE FIRST AMENDMENT’S FREE-SPEECH CLAUSE PROTECTION AGAINST HAVING HER CLAIM TO UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS BURDENED BY AN UNCONSTITUTIONAL CONDITION
¶ 9 Gilchrist claims that the denial of unemployment benefits based on mere judicial disagreement with the content of her testimony as an expert witness in criminal cases infringes upon her First Amendment right to speak freely. Relying on Worrell v. Henry
¶ 10 The First Amendment is not implicated here. The government’s scrutiny of her testimony for its lack of support in elicited scientific data does not offend the First Amendment’s Free Speech Clause. Much like commercial speech,
¶ 11 Conditioning a public employee’s claim to a governmental benefit on conformity to the norms of scientific integrity in carrying out her day-to-day work duties does not place a constitutionally prohibited burden on its benefit. In sum, the claim-burdening condition of which Gilchrist complains is clearly authorized' — nay, mandated — by this Nation’s highest norms of federal law — its regime of constitutional strictures that govern the process of guilt determination in criminal prosecutions.
. For the criminal cases in controversy, see infra note 14.
. The pertinent terms of 40 O.S.2001 § 2-406 provide:
An individual shall be disqualified for benefits if he has been discharged for misconduct connected with his last work, if so found by the Commission.
(emphasis added).
. Vester v. Board of Review of Oklahoma Employment Security Commission,
. For the criminal cases in controversy, see infra note 14.
. Adverse public-law consequences are all those which constitute the collateral effect of judgments or convictions. For example, nondis-chargeability in bankruptcy is a collateral adverse consequence of a civil judgment based on fraud and deceit or of a judgment for child support. There are many adverse collateral consequences of a felony conviction, such as the loss of right to vote, eligibility for citizenship, national security clearance, as well as licensing and employment-related restrictions, disqualification from military service or from holding public office. The loss of a driver's license is another collateral consequence of some criminal convictions. See in this connection Margaret Colgate Love, Starting Over With A Clean Slate: In Praise Of A Forgotten Section Of The Model Penal Code, 2003 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1705.
. The immunity of parties and witnesses from liability in damages for giving harmful testimony in judicial proceedings was established early in the English common law. See Briscoe v. LaHue,
. Briscoe, supra note 6,
. Hammett v. Hunter,
. Cooper v. Parker-Hughey,
. Kirschstein, supra note 8, at ¶ 19, at 951; see also Selby v. Burgess,
. See, e.g., Imbler v. Pachtman,
. See Stucchio v. Tincher,
. There are various types of immunities — testimonial immunity, immunity from suit (legislative, executive, judicial, or diplomatic), immunity from civil liability, immunity from prosecution, as well as use immunity. Use immunity prohibits the use of compelled testimony or any evidence derived from that testimony against the witness in a criminal prosecution. If evidence is compelled under a grant of immunity and there is a later prosecution, the government has the burden of demonstrating that "the evidence it proposes to use is derived from a legitimate source wholly independent of the compelled testimony.” Kastigar v. United States,
. The Oklahoma Security Commission relied for proof of Gilchrist’s misconduct on the judicial analyses of her testimony in Mitchell v. Ward,
.
. Lytle v. City of Haysville,
. Gilchrist claims that Melton, supra note 16, and Worrell, supra note 15, are applications of the doctrine against placing constitutionally impermissible conditions on one’s right. For this doctrine, she quotes Board of County Commissioners v. Umbehr,
. "Truthful advertising related to lawful activities is entitled to the protections of the First Amendment.” Matter of R.M.J.,
