477 N.E.2d 463 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
This matter is before us on the appeal of Ivan D. Mounts from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County affirming an order of the Ohio Personnel Board of Review which affirmed an order of the Department of Administrative Services refusing to place Mounts in the classification of Institution Deputy Superintendent 1 No. 46561 (deputy superintendent). Mounts asserts the following assignment of error in support of his appeal:
"Where the record indicates that an employee in the classified civil service is performing job duties described by two classification specifications and is substantially performing the job duties in the higher of those specifications the employee is entitled to be classified in the higher of said specifications and it is error on the part of the Personnel Board of Review and the court below to classify the employee in the lower of the two specifications."
The court of common pleas must affirm an order of an administrative agency if the order is supported by probative, substantial and credible evidence (Univ. of Cincinnati v. Conrad
[1980],
Mounts argues that his training of inmates and employees can be considered a program and, indeed, perhaps is a rehabilitative program for the inmates who work under him. However, he concedes that his interpretation of the classification function and rank descriptions would permit the appointment of a large number of deputy superintendents. It is unlikely that such a result was intended. Furthermore, it is not sufficient that the employee perform merely some of the duties of a higher classification to be placed in that classification. In Deist v. Kent State Univ. (May 23, 1978), Franklin App. No. 78AP-28, unreported, we held that, where an employee performs duties that overlap two classifications, the employee must be placed in the higher classification if the employee is performing all of the duties in the higher classification. By his own admission, Mounts was not performing substantially all of the duties of the deputy superintendent classification and cannot be placed in the higher classification by performing some of the duties. The assignment of error is not well-taken, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
STRAUSBAUGH and WHITESIDE, JJ., concur.