162 N.J. Super. 449 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1978
This is an appeal from a final determination of the Civil Service Commission which reversed the recommendation of the hearing officer and dismissed Mr. Herbert’s appeal.
The Department of Civil Service administered two examinations, one written and the other oral, for the position of Supervising Community Program Analyst in the Department of Community Affairs. Appellant passed the written examination and became one of 29 candidates eligible to take the oral examination for the position. The oral examination was administered by five examining teams, each team consisting of a Department examiner and an outside consultant. Although appellant was unable to take the examination on
(1) Whether there was, on the part of Mr. Leonard Miller, the consultant on applicant’s oral examination, a conflict of interest of sufficient magnitude to require invalidation of the oral exam, and
(2) Whether the multi-team method of examining candidates in the oral test was contrary to the holding of Row v. Department of Civil Service, 141 N. J. Super. 463 (App. Div. 1976).
The hearing officer found there was no conflict of interest on the part of Leonard Miller, but also concluded that Box, supra, mandated a single examining team for all candidates and recommended that the oral examination be invalidated and a new exam be ordered.
The matter was then brought before the Civil Service Commission following the filing of exceptions and cross-exceptions to the report and recommendations of the hearing officer. The Commission found there was no conflict of interest, substantially adopting the hearing officer’s findings on this issue, but rejected his conclusion that Box, supra, mandates that all candidates for an oral examination be examined by the same team.
We agree with the determination of the Commission. Neither issue requires detailed comment. The allegation of a conflict of interest is three-pronged: (1) that Miller failed to sign the consultant certification prior to the examination, thus not disclosing that at the time of the examination he had a contract with the Department of Community Affairs’ Division on Aging; ,(2) that Miller had an acquaintance with Thurman Harrison, who was ultimately appointed to the vacant position, and (3) that Miller was acquainted with
A determination by the Civil Service Commission will not be upset unless it is affirmatively shown that it is "arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable, or that it laek[s] fair support in the evidence * * Campbell v. Civil Service Dept., 39 N. J. 556, 562 (1963); Rivell v. Civil Service Comorin, 115 N. J. Super. 64, 72 (App. Div. 1971), certif. den. 59 N. J. 269 (1971). We are satisfied the decision below relating to the allegation of a conflict of interest was supported by substantial evidence in the record, and, upon the facts presented, the Commission’s conclusion was not arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable.
The remaining argument that the multi-team method of examining candidates in the oral test is contrary to the holding of Rox, supra, is also without merit. The marking procedures in this case differ from those employed in Rox. In Rox, the oral examination was based on the subjective analysis of certain characteristics: "(1) interpersonal relations, (2) leadership qualities, (3) contribution of ideas, (4) judgment, and (5) effectiveness of presentation.” 141 N. J. Super, at 466. All candidates were asked identical questions but were not given an individual grade or mark for each answer. One overall grade was given the candidate based
In this case the proofs do not suggest that the Commission fell short of its goal of fair and impartial treatment for all. The testing format is different from that applied in Box. Each testing team was given suggested correct answers and four or five point values assigned to each answer according to an ascending scale of competence. Typically, the range in point values was defined in terms of “thorough understanding” and “detailed discussion” on one end of the scale, and “inability to discuss” and “simplistic analysis” on the other end. Each answer to each question was individually scored.
While it is true that the overall scores given by the Miller team were lower than those given by the other teams, that factor alone does not demonstrate that the teams applied different standards. The nature of the questions and the controlled method of analyzing the answers and assigning values to them established a degree of uniformity which could be applied by all of the examining teams.
In Box we framed the issue as “whether the examination so held was so subjective as to have been noncompetitive and illegal.” Id. at 467. We acknowledged our limited scope of review of Civil Service testing procedures; there will be no judicial intervention unless it is affirmatively shown that the process was “manifestly corrupt, arbitrary, capricious,
To summarize, Box did not hold that all multi-team oral examinations are noncompetitive and therefore illegal. Furthermore, our study of the entire record discloses sufficient credible evidence to support the findings and conclusions of the Commission “since the final score for each examination in the present case was calculated by Civil Service rather than by each examining team and that since each question was graded by awarding points based on a preformulated range of answers which were quantitatively based, the amount of subjective input by the examining teams was carefully controlled and the element of objectivity was sufficiently preserved.” Appellant has failed to affirmatively demonstrate that the examination was patently arbitrary, capricious, corrupt or otherwise illegal. Zicherman v. Civil Service Dep’t, 40 N. J. 347, 351 (1963); Flanagan v. Civil Service Comm’n, 29 N. J. 1, 12 (1959); Artaserse v. Civil Service Dep’t, supra, 37 N. J. Super. at 105.
Affirmed.