The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellants Thomas E. Kelly and Erancis Moran, Captains in the Jersey City Police Department, and the appellants William B. Reilly and Henry E. Grossman, Lieutenants in the Jersey City Police Department, appealed to the Appellate Division from rulings of the Department of Civil Service which granted final certifications of examination lists for the positions of Police Inspector and Police Captain. While the appeals were pending in the Appellate Division we certified them on our own motion. See R. R. 1:10-1 (a).
In August 1960 the Department of Civil Service published notices of proposed promotional tests for the positions of Police Inspector and Police Captain in the Jersey City Police Department. These notices stated that in order to qualify, the applicants must receive a minimum rating of at least 70% in each of the separate written and oral tests. The written examinations were taken by the appellants in December 1960. Each written examination was a multiple choice test, containing 150 questions. The identity of the candidate was indicated on his answer sheet by a secret
After the raw scores of the candidates were computed, distribution sheets were prepared and submitted to Mr. Earrell, the Department’s Chief Examiner and Secretary. See
Flanagan v. Civil Service Department,
29
N. J.
1, 7 (1959). These disclosed how many would pass at any designated cutoff point but did not indicate the identities of the candidates. After consulting with the Director of Examinations and without possessing any knowledge as to identities, Mr. Farrell fixed the cutoff point at 90 correct answers. Under a Department policy which permitted it “to go one raw score point lower than the selected point,” 89 correct answers would suffice. In explaining why he fixed
By setting the cutoff point at 90 rather than 105, the number of those eligible to take the oral examination for inspector in the Jersey City Police Department was increased from 5 to 12 and the number of those eligible for the oral examination for captain was increased from 3 to 7. The oral examinations were conducted before a panel consisting of Charles W. Newns and Theodore 6. Aechione. Mr. Newns was a member of the Philadelphia Police Force for 30 years before retiring in 1954 as Chief Inspector. He has conducted oral police promotional examinations for the New Jersey Department of Civil Service for approximately 10 years and has averaged about 50 examinations a year. He has also conducted oral police examinations in Connecticut and Pennsylvania. Mr. Aechione is a personnel technician on the staff of the Department. • He is a graduate of the Wharton School of Business and the Law School of
The oral examinations of the appellants were in the form of interviews conducted by Mr. Newns in the presence of Mr. Acchione and recorded on tape recorders. The formal instructions issued by the Department stated that the candidates were to be given an overall grade and that in determining this grade, consideration should be given to (1) appearance and speaking ability, (2) manner, (3) comprehension and presentation of ideas, (4) maturity of judgment, (5) interest in law enforcement and allied fields, (6) evidence of supervisory and administrative ability and (7) overall evaluation. Mr. Newns recorded his rating of each candidate and Mr. Acchione placed his initials alongside Mr. Newns’ signature. None of the appellants received a passing grade of 70% in the oral examination. After they were advised that they had failed, the appellants requested that the Civil Service Commission review their oral grades. In due course, the Commission directed that Mr. Earrell examine the tapes and report to the Commission. Mr. Earrell reviewed not only the appellants’ tapes but the tapes of all of the other candidates. He recommended that there should be no changes in the grading and on April 25, 1961 the Commission approved his recommendation.
The Legislature has not sought to prescribe minimum passing grades or precise marking systems but has properly left those matters to the expert judgment of the Commission to be exercised within broad standards embodied in the act. See
R. S.
11:3-1;
N. J. S. A.
11:6-2;
R. S.
11:9-2;
R. S.
11:9-3;
R. S.
11:21-3;
R. S.
11:23-4;
R. S.
11:23-6. The Commission is, of course, not precluded from availing itself of modern testing techniques consistent with the underlying objective of competitive selection based on merit and fitness. See
N. J. Const. art.
7, § 1,
par.
2;
R. S.
11:21-3;
cf. Dowling v.
Brennan, 284
App. Div.
563, 131
N. Y. S. 2d
594, 597 (1954). Mr. Earrell testified that the flexible marking system has been used by the Commis
The appellants do not suggest that there was any discrimination or favoritism or that Mr. Farrell knew anything about the identities of the candidates when he fixed the cutoff point at 90 rather than at 105. They do not question his integrity or good faith but do assert that the Department should be obliged to adhere to its examination notice which stipulated that candidates must receive a minimum rating of at least 70%. They say they properly understood this to mean 105 correct answers out of the 150 questions. The Department disputes this understanding and points to the fact that the notice says nothing about weighing or marking methods. In announcing a minimum rating the Department should be very explicit and thoroirghly informative, thereby avoiding the possibility of misunderstanding by the candidate. See
Davier v. Reavy,
179
Misc.
425, 39
N. Y. S. 2d
269, 272
(Sup. Ct.
1943);
cf. Dowling v. Brennan, supra,
131
N. Y. S. 2d,
at
p.
597;
Hymes v. Schechter, supra,
160
N. E. 2d,
at
p.
629. However, we consider that the appellants suffered no legal prejudice here, for their written answers passed them with scores of 105 or more and they then went on to take the independent oral examinations.
Cf. Abramson v. Commissioner of Education
“The action of the Board was wholly consistent with the letter and spirit of the constitutional provision that appointments in the Civil Service ‘shall be made according to merit and fitness to be ascertained, as far as practicable, by examination which, as far as practicable, shall be competitive.’ Article V, § 6, New York State Constitution. In allowing the 5% credit, the Board adopted a practical method of compensating for the excessive difficulty of the written test. It thus gave candidates who had attained grades of 60% to 64% but who, in the judgment of the Board, were entitled to passing grades, in the written test, an opportunity to go on to demonstrate their merit and fitness in the rest of the examination.” 150 N. Y. S. 2d, at p. 278.
The appellants attack the Commission’s action in permitting a candidate for inspector who was ill at the time of the examination to take a make-up. test. The fact that the candidate was ill is not disputed and the examiner in charge expressed the opinion that the make-up was of “approximately equal difficulty” with the original examination. Substantial considerations precluded delaying the examination because of the candidate’s illness, and if he had not been permitted to take the make-up he would, as a practical matter, have been deprived of the opportunity of competing in normal course for higher rank in his profession. Cf. R. S. 11:10-7; N. J. S. A. 11:22-34. The established practice of the Commission has been to permit make-ups in promotional tests as distinguished from open competitive tests. In applying its practice here, the Commission acted well within its broad discretionary authority. We find nothing of merit in the appellants’ contention that the use of a make-up examination violates the letter or spirit of the constitutional and statutory requirements relating to competitive examinations. Cf. Kaplan, The Law of Civil Service 160-162 (1958).
The Civil Service Act expressly permits the Commission to require that candidates pass written and oral
Although they have great value when properly administered, oral examinations carry with them patent dangers of abuse and error. See
Civil Service Commission v. Frazzini,
132
Colo.
21, 287 P.
2d
433, 441 (1955). In the light of the dangers, the Commission must conscientiously take special care and precautions to insure the goal of selections based exclusively on merit and fitness, but the record is devoid of evidence of default in this regard. All of the oral examinations were fairly conducted in like fashion by a qualified and impartial examiner in the company of a departmental personnel technician and they were
The burden of the appellants’ attack on Mr. Newns’ methods and evaluations seems to rest on the fact that there were many subjective elements in his examinations. Bxxt subjective elements would appear to be inherent in all oral examinations seeking supervisory and personality traits, and their presence may not reasonably be viewed as fatal. See
Stoor v. City of Seattle,
44
Wash. 2d
405, 267
P. 2d
902 (1954);
Almassy v. Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission,
34
Cal. 2d
387, 210
P. 2d
503 (1939);
Application of Pearl,
8
Misc. 2d
712, 169
N. Y. S. 2d
847 (1957), aff’d 5
A. D. 2d
739, 168
N. Y. S. 2d
943 (1957), appeal dismissed 4
N. Y. 2d
905, 151
N. E. 2d
88 (1958). In the
Stoor
case the plaintiffs were lieutenants in the fire department who passed their written but failed their oral examination. The oral examiners graded the candidates on the following stated qualifications: “Voice and speech, ability to present ideas, comprehension of problems, judgment, emotional stability, self-confidence, diplomacy, cooperation, and overall estimate of value.” The candidates attacked the oral examination on the ground that they were graded “upon the subjective impressions made upon the
For affirmance—Chief Justice Weintratjb, and Justices Jacobs, Ebancis, Pbcotok, Hall, Schettino and HaneMAN-7.
Opposed—None.
Notes
A proposed amendment of R. S. 11:9-3, designed to eliminate the Commission’s power to prescribe oral examinations, was introduced in the New Jersey Senate on January 16, 1961. See S. 45. It failed to emerge from Committee.
