Opinion
Cynthia Phillips was hired by San Diego County (County) August 20, 1982, as a deputy sheriff. The probationary period for perma *998 nent appointment as a deputy sheriff is 18 months. She was terminated February 17, 1984, three days before the end of the eighteen-month probationary period. April 20, 1984, Phillips filed a formal request with the County civil service commission (Commission) for a “liberty interest” hearing which was granted. The County’s efforts to enjoin the hearing were denied. Following the hearing, the Commission filed its findings, conclusions and decision. The Commission found the County terminated Phillips for misconduct, the stated reasons stigmatized her, she was entitled to a public statement of the termination reasons and opportunity to refute them. The Commission then concluded the misconduct allegations given as reasons for termination were not supported by the evidence. The Commission did not order Phillips’s reinstatement or award backpay. Phillips’s petition for a writ of mandate to compel the County to reinstate her as a full-time tenured deputy sheriff and to award backpay from the date of termination was denied by the court. 1 She appeals. We affirm.
I
The parties did not lodge with us or with the trial court the record of the administrative proceedings before the Commission. The briefs on appeal do not refer us to the record of the administrative proceedings. The clerk’s transcript includes documents to which both parties refer here and which were presented to the trial court. Our factual statements reflect matters admitted in the pleadings below. These include the full text of the findings, conclusions and proposed decision of Commissioner Clarence W. Boyd, Jr., the hearing officer, and the Commission decision, and in documents found in the clerk’s transcript. In the absence of the administrative record, we assume the evidence adduced before the tribunal supports the Commission findings and decision
(Foster
v.
Civil Service Com.
(1983)
II
The County’s civil service rules spell out the conditions of employment. Appointments from eligible lists to a permanent position as a deputy sheriff are for a probationary period of 18 months (rule 4.2.5(a)). During the probationary period, the appointing authority must investigate the conduct and performance of the employee and make performance appraisals. A
*999
probationer found to be unsatisfactory or incompetent shall be dismissed. A probationer dismissed at any time within the probationary period has no right to appeal to the Commission as to separation or performance appraisal. A probationer who alleges facts showing a violation of a liberty interest is entitled to a hearing before the Commission in accordance with rules, procedures or policies of the Commission or the personnel director (rule 4.2.5(c)). The County Administrative Manual includes liberty interest, item number 0080-04-5, dated August 11, 1983, which explains the meaning of liberty interest and termination of employment during a probationary period. “Lubey v. City and County of San Francisco (1979)
Phillips requested and the Commission granted her a liberty-interest hearing. Commissioner Boyd was the hearing officer and his findings, conclusions and proposed decision were adopted by the Commission as its own. Based on findings of fact, the Commission concluded Phillips was terminated for misconduct, was entitled to the liberty hearing, and was afforded a hearing with opportunity to hear the reasons for her termination and to refute them. The Commission found: “24. On February 17, 1984, Lt. Goodrich wrote a letter recommending Deputy Phillips’ termination as a probationary deputy sheriff.
“25. On February 17, 1984, Lt. Roache of the Sheriff’s personnel section wrote a letter which was delivered to Ms. Phillips, stating as follows:
“■‘Your dismissal while on probation has been recommended by your supervisors based on your continued use of poor judgment with regard to overfamiliarization with both current and past inmates at the Los Colinas Detention Facility. My review of your employment record and the concerns *1000 of your supervisors for maintaining facility security and the professional standards expected of a deputy sheriff causes me to concur with the recommendation that you be separated while on probation effective February 17, 1984.’
“The ‘familiarization with both current and past inmates’ refers to the August 4, 1983 telephone incident (in Finding No. 12) and the incidents involving the receipt of letters and flowers (in Finding No. 16).” The Commission concluded Phillips was not overly familiar with jail inmates and did not use poor judgment in receiving a telephone call, letters and flowers from an inmate, in effect holding the misconduct allegation of her termination had not been proved.
The Commission further concluded: “7. County Administrative Manual Item No. 0080-04-5 authorizes the Commission, in its discretion, to award back-pay in appropriate circumstances. However, it appears that there is a conflict of judicial opinion on the issue of legal entitlement to back-pay in a liberty interest hearing. (Compare, Lubey v. City and County of San Francisco [1979]
Ill
A probationary employee of a public agency may be dismissed without a hearing and without judicially cognizable good cause. Broad discretion reposes in governmental agencies to determine which probationary employees will be retained.
(Lubey
v.
City and County of San Francisco
(1979)
“Where there is such a deprival of a ‘liberty interest’ the employee’s ‘remedy mandated by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is “an opportunity to refute the charge” [and] “to clear his name.” ’
(Codd
v.
Velger, supra,
Absent the administrative record, we are unable to determine whether she sought reinstatement in the course of the liberty hearing or through *1002 other procedures. The Commission’s findings, conclusions and decision do not refer to nor discuss any reinstatement request. On this record we cannot determine whether Phillips processed and exhausted any reinstatement remedy available to her and conclude the issue of her reinstatement was not before the Commission or the trial court and is not cognizable by us. We turn to her contention of entitlement to backpay.
County civil service rules as implemented by regulations of the Commission deny to the Commission the authority to reinstate a terminated probationary employee. However, the Commission “can order back pay from the date of dismissal to the date that the hearing is completed if a hearing was not granted prior to dismissal and if the Commission determines that liberty interest has been violated.”
The record demonstrates both conditions precedent to an award of back-pay were met by Phillips in the course of the liberty hearing. She was terminated without a liberty hearing and the Commission cleared her of the misconduct charges on which her termination was based.
The Commission exercised its discretion to deny backpay for two reasons; (1) a “conflict of judicial opinion on the issue of legal entitlement to backpay in a liberty interest hearing” and (2) Phillips’s interests “are adequately protected by having granted her an opportunity to clear her name.”
IV
The Commission noted a conflict on the issue of legal entitlement to backpay. In
Lubey
v.
City and County of San Francisco, supra,
In
Wilkerson
v.
City of Placentia
(1981)
Codd
v.
Velger, supra,
In Dennis, members of a school board remarked a nontenured teacher’s contract for the ensuing year was not renewed because he had a drinking problem. The court held he was entitled to a liberty hearing to clear his name of the stigma and reversed a lower court award of backpay and reinstatement, pointing out the purpose of the liberty hearing was to clear the teacher’s name and not to recapture his employment or award backpay (id. at p. 344).
We conclude there is no divergence of judicial opinion in the cases cited by the Commission with respect to an award of backpay in a liberty hearing. The hearing resulting in an award of reinstatement and backpay in Lubey was not a liberty hearing. Wilkerson, without analysis, simply followed Lubey. Both Codd and Dennis deny reinstatement and backpay awards in liberty hearings.
V
The Commission’s first reason for denying backpay to Phillips was a conflict in legal authority so to do. As we have pointed out, the cases cited *1004 by the Commission do not demonstrate such conflict. The first reason is thus without legal basis to deny backpay. However, the second reason, Phillips’s “interests are adequately protected by having granted her an opportunity to clear her name,” is in accord with Roth, Paul, Codd and Dennis, i.e., the sole purpose of a liberty hearing is to clear one’s name. Accordingly, the Commission in following applicable federal precedent did not abuse its discretion in denying Phillips an award of backpay.
Judgment affirmed.
Work, Acting P. J., and Todd, J., concurred.
Notes
The petition names the Commission as the respondent arid Sheriff John F. Duffy as real party in interest. Both answered the petition, county counsel on behalf of the Commission and Janet B. Houts as legal adviser for the sheriff.
The cases cited in
Lubey
as support for this liberty hearing requirement denied to the employees there concerned the right to a hearing or to redress for termination or refusal to rehire.
Board of Regents
v.
Roth
(1972)
In
Codd
v.
Velger
(1977)
Lubey's underpinnings are the dicta expressed in its cited cases for the proposition a liberty hearing is required by the Fourteenth Amendment to afford opportunity to a terminated probationer to clear his or her name of stigma attached to misconduct. Those cases denied reinstatement and backpay entitlement.
