Opinion
John Perea, a Redwood City police officer, appeals from a judgment which denied his petition seeking a writ of mandate to: (1) set aside a decision of the Redwood City Personnel Board suspending him for *941 five days from his duties as a police officer, (2) reimburse him for lost wages and fringe benefits, and (3) expunge the record of the suspension from his personnel records. The petition was submittted for decision upon the administrative record.
On the evening of September 13, 1971, appellant, who was off duty and wearing civilian clothing, was stopped for driving 50 miles per hour in a residential neighborhood. The officer who stopped appellant reprimanded him for speeding but did not issue a citation.
Appellant was subsequently suspended from duty without pay for five days on the ground that the speeding incident was “conduct unbecoming an officer of the Redwood City Police Department,” a ground for discipline specified in section 2 of part II (General Orders) of “Rules and Regulations for the Redwood City Police Department.” The suspension was appealed to the Redwood City Personnel Board. After taking evidence the personnel board recommended that the suspension be upheld; the city manager accepted the recommendation and sustained the suspension.
Appellant’s status, and the nature of the rights claimed by him, form the context in which the case must be considered. The personnel regulations of Redwood City provide that an employee may be dismissed only for cause. The city has thus vested in appellant a fundamental right to continuing employment, free of suspension except for cause.
(Bixby
v.
Pierno
(1971)
Respondents contend that appellant’s right to continued employment is nevertheless not vested, citing
O’Neal
v.
City etc. of San Francisco
(1969)
Appellant contends that there was no substantial evidence to support the personnel board’s determination that appellant had been guilty of “conduct unbecoming an officer.” In actuality, the evidence was uncontradicted that appellant was speeding; appellant’s real claims are that the words “conduct unbecoming an officer” are too vague to define a standard of conduct and that there is no nexus between appellant’s conduct and his fitness to perform his functions as a police officer. In
Morrison
v.
State Board of Education
(1969)
Thus, the test established by
Morrison
requires two determinations: (1) whether the regulation is sufficiently specific to provide fair warning of which conduct is prohibited and which permitted, and (2) whether there exists a relationship or “nexus” between the prohibited conduct and the employee’s fitness to perform the duties required by the position. (See
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court
(1971)
Appellant contends that the court erred in reviewing the personnel board’s findings according to the substantial evidence test; appellant argues that the trial court should have applied independent judgment to the local administrative agency’s findings. The standards applicable to
*943
review of local agency findings by the trial courts were recently announced in
Strumsky
v.
San Diego County Employees Retirement Assn.
(1974)
Appellant contends that reception of evidence of prior misconduct denied him a fair and impartial hearing before the personnel board. The evidence, admitted over appellant’s continuing objection, was an evaluation report from his personnel file, part of the cross-examination of appellant, and testimony of two of appellant’s superiors in the police department. (See
Mattison
v.
City of Signal Hill
(1966)
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to apply independent judgment to the record of the administrative agency hearing, make new findings, and render judgment.
Caldecott, P. J., and Rattigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 8, 1974, and respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 28, 1974.
Notes
For example, Government Code section 11513, subdivision (c), applicable to proceedings under the Administrative Procedure Act, provides: “The hearing need not be conducted according to technical rules relating to evidence and witnesses. Any relevant evidence shall be admitted if it is the sort of evidence on which responsible persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs, regardless of the existence of any common law or statutory rule which might make improper the admission of such evidence over objection in civil actions. . . .”
