The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Civil Service Act (N.J.S.A. 11A:1-1 through :12 — 6) and its implementing regulations (N.J.A.C. 4A:4-1.1 through -7.12) provide generally that an appointing authority must select one of the three highest scoring eligible candidates from an open competitive or promotional examination. This provision is commonly known as the “rule of three” and is intended to guaranty the appointing authority an opportunity to exercise limited discretion in the selection and promotion of public employees. Although the appointing authority is not required to appoint or promote the highest scoring candidate, it must provide the Department of Personnel (DOP) with a statement of reasons
The facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff is a labor union representing inspectors, examiners and safety specialists employed by the Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV). A member of the union, employed by the DMV, was eligible for promotion to a supervisory position. He was ranked thirty-sixth on the promotional certification issued by the DOP on May 29, 1990. The promotional certification involved thirty-six available positions and over one hundred interested eligibles. On August 10, 1990, the employee was notified by the DMV that another candidate had been selected, this despite the fact that he was the highest ranking eligible interested in that position. In response to the employee’s request for an explanation, the DMV noted that the individual who had been promoted was one of the three highest ranking eligibles on the promotional examination. The DMV subsequently declined plaintiff’s request for a further explanation of the reasons for not selecting the named employee. No administrative appeal of the promotional certification was filed by the employee or plaintiff.
Instead, plaintiff instituted an action in the Law Division, seeking a declaratory judgment that all employees were entitled to a statement of reasons when not selected for promotion under the “rule of three.” While conceding that the Civil Service Act and the applicable regulations did not require the disclosure of this information, plaintiff invited the court to exercise its sweeping constitutional authority to review administrative actions and compel the DMV and the DOP to apprise unsuccessful candidates of the reasons why they were not promoted. The Law Division declined and granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
At the outset, we question whether the Law Division had jurisdiction to decide the dispute. Ordinarily, review of both the quasi-judicial and regulatory actions of state adminis
We find no basis to compel an appointing authority, as a matter of course, to apprise an unsuccessful candidate of its reasons for promoting a lower ranking eligible individual. Although full disclosure might well be the preferable policy, we discern no jurisprudential principle which permits us to inter
In reaching this conclusion, we find the legislative and administrative history enlightening. The “rule of three” has long been the law in New Jersey. See L. 1930, c. 176, § 24, at 620. As we mentioned earlier, the rule permits an appointing authority to select one of the three highest scoring candidates from an open competitive examination. Prior to its repeal and the simultaneous enactment of the present civil service laws, N.J.S.A. 11:10-6.1 required an appointing authority to maintain in its personnel record a statement of reasons whenever it appointed or promoted an individual having a lower score than another eligible candidate. L. 1974, c. 160, § 3 at 652-54. The statute also permitted any person denied an appointment to submit facts for review by the Civil Service Commission. Ibid. An implementing regulation required the appointing authority to file with the Department of Civil Service a “statement of [its] reasons for non-selection of the higher ranking eligibles,” and to “notify all interested eligibles of the certification results.” N.J.A.C. 4:1-12.18. (repealed by R. 1988 d. 259 (1988)). N.J.S.A. 11:10-6.1 was not re-enacted when the Legislature adopted the Civil Service Act in 1986. In a somewhat similar vein, portions of the older regulation were not repromulgated. Although the current regulation retains the mandate that the appointing authority advise the DOP of its reasons for not selecting a higher ranking eligible, it does not require that other eligibles be notified of the certification results. N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8(b). That this omission is not merely an oversight is apparent when N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8 is compared with N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.7(b)l which expressly requires an appointing authority to provide an eligible whose name has been removed from the list “with copies of all materials sent to the [DOP].”
Although the history we have recounted is hardly dispositive, it discloses a general legislative design to confer substantial discretion on the DOP in administering the civil service laws and “implementpng] a comprehensive personnel management
In support of its position, plaintiff places principal reliance on Donaldson v. Bd. of Ed. of No. Wildwood, 65 N.J. 236,
In a variety of legal contexts and factual settings, the Court has applied the policies enunciated in Donaldson and Monks and has held that administrative agencies must “articulate the standards and principles ... governing] their discretionary decisions in as much detail as possible.” Noble Oil Co. v. DEP, 123 N.J. 474, 476,
The question before us is whether these policy objectives would be appreciably advanced by requiring an appointing authority to apprise an unsuccessful candidate of the reasons for promoting a lower scoring eligible employee. The issue must be considered in the context of N.J.A.C. 4A:4-4.8(b), which, as we noted earlier, requires the appointing authority to advise the DOP of its reasons for not selecting a higher ranking eligible candidate. This regulation guards against favoritism and arbitrary actions by an appointing authority and facilitates administrative review by the DOP.
While conceding that a statement of reasons might disclose correctable deficiencies, the DOP asserts that countervailing policies militate against disclosure. Donaldson involved the termination of a teacher’s employment by non-renewal of a contract and Monks pertained to the denial of a prisoner’s application for parole. Each situation involved a one-on-one decision. By contrast, promotional decisions often involve a balancing of the interests of several employees, their supervisors and management policy. Management decisions on promotions in the context of the “rule of three” require the comparison of individual abilities, talents and other personality factors. The DOP asserts that because an unsuccessful candidate will often be under the supervision of the individual selected for promotion, disclosure of the reasons for management’s personnel decisions might well generate antagonism and
Faced with these competing arguments, we cannot fairly say, as did our Supreme Court in Donaldson and Monks, that “fairness and rightness” clearly dictate the granting of an unsuccessful candidate’s request for a statement of reasons why he was not promoted over another eligible employee. We cannot and do not concern ourselves with the wisdom of the administrative policy challenged here. In that respect, we are mindful of the deference we are rightfully obliged to accord administrative agencies in the performance of their delegated duties. Where, as here, the Legislature has entrusted an administrative agency with the responsibility of selecting the means of achieving the statutory policy, the relation or nexus between the remedy and the goal sought to be accomplished is peculiarly a matter for administrative competence. We are not free to substitute our judgment for that of the administrative agency charged with the responsibility of executing a policy initiated by the Legislature.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Law Division is affirmed.
