The plaintiff, Kirk C. Richardson, had been an officer of the police division of the Omaha Department of Public Safety. By letter dated May 22, 1981, from the acting chief of police, he was ordered suspended and dismissed from employmеnt. Richardson prosecuted an appeal to the personnel board of the City of Omaha, and following a hearing that appeal was denied by a vote of 4 to O. An error proceeding was then prosecuted to the District Court of Douglas County, which affirmed the decision of the personnel board.
On appeal to this court the plaintiff assigns the following errors: (1) That the District Court erred by affirming the decision of the personnel board; (2) That the cоurt erred by holding that the personnel board acted consistently with the law set forth in
Ostler v. City of Omaha,
There is no dispute as to the facts presented to the personnel board. A corporation known as Kitchen Classics was owned and operated by one Trudy Richardson, wife of the plaintiff. The plaintiff was the secretary of this corporation and had some limited involvement in the business. Plaintiff cosigned a Small Business Administration loan which pledged the family home as collateral; he occasionally hauled cabinets from the manufacturers to Omaha; he occasionally helped in running the business; and on occasion he cashed checks paid to the business for kitchen cabinets.
Kitchen Classics began having financial problems in the fall and winter of 1980-81. In January and February of 1981 a Mrs. Juranek and a Mrs. Wilshusen placed orders with Trudy Richardson for kitchen cabinets. Contracts were signed and the cabinets were paid for in advance by check. One check was made out to Kitchen Classics; the other was made out in blank. These checks were eventually endorsed and cashed by Kirk C. Richardson, using his police credentials as identification. He testified that he assumed the checks were in payment of cabinets ordered by these people. Of the funds obtained from these checks, some were delivered to the cabinet factory in Tennessee for cabinets for someone; $700 was converted tо cash for his expenses in going to Tennessee; and $6,000 was taken by Richardson to the county attorney, which he knew was not going to be used to buy cabinets for the customers.
By late February 1981 both Juranek and Wilshusen became concerned about the delivery of their cabinets, and after some investigations they felt their orders would not be delivered. Neither party received her cabinets or her money back. They then filed complaints with the Douglas County attorney’s office and criminal charges were brought against the Richardsons. Kirk was arrested on May 21, 1981, and charged with three counts of theft by deception, a felony, as a result of these transactions. Following a preliminary hearing, he wаs bound over to District Court.
Kirk C. Richardson was suspended on May 21, 1981, and dismissed June 20, 1981, from the Omaha police force for violation of the rules and regulations of the department of public safety, police division, i. e., chapter I, § 1, whiсh reads: “In general this section regulates the conduct of officers and employees of the Police Division while on or off duty, whether in uniform or plain clothes.
“Any act or omission that is not in accord with the general and aсcepted code of moral or ethical conduct is covered by this regulation,’’ and chapter I, §7, which reads: “Any officer or employee whose actions or conduct are such as to cause him to be charged, bound over, indicted, or held to answer for a serious criminal matter, provided such charge is not frivolous and wholly without foundation, shall be subject to disciplinary action.”
Richardson urges his dismissal was improper, claiming the guidelines set forth by this court in Ostler v. City of Omaha, supra, were not followed by the personnel board. The Ostler case dealt with the suspension and demotion of the chief of police, C. Harold Ostler, by the public safety director of the City of Omaha. This аction was appealed to the personnel board, which affirmed the director’s decision. Ostler, by petition in error, claimed, among other things, that the personnel board’s decision was improper under the home rule charter of the City of Omaha, in that the board failed to make sufficient written findings. The District Court agreed, sustained the petition in error, and we affirmed that judgment.
Ostler had been charged with violating various portions of the city code and of the mies and regulations of the department of public safety, police division.
The findings of the board in that case were so indefinite that there was no way to determine which sections of the code and/or mies Ostler actually viоlated. This court said: “The mandate to reduce the findings to writing is a matter of substance. We constme its intention to be to inform the accused of the exact nature of the finding against him. A specific finding is particularly important where, as here, at least a portion of the alleged misconduct is based upon hearsay and alleged remarks appearing in the public press on different occasions. As the district court so well phrased it: ‘The critical events in suit span more than three months, and the evidence, years.’ ... It is one thing to make a finding in the language of the statute, which we have held permissible in interpreting decisions of state
administrative agencies. [Citation omitted.] It is quite a different matter, however, to merely refer to the number of the section of the code which might be violated, without particularizing the nature of the violation when the code requires written findings.”
Id.
at 522-23,
In
County of Lancaster v. State Board of Equalization & Assessment,
We do not have the benefit of the findings made in Ostler. However, we believe that an examination of those made in the instant case will demonstrate their adequacy. The initial order of dismissal originated from the police division of the department of public sаfety, which order notified Richardson of his dismissal effective June 20, 1981, as a result of action taken under chapter I, §§ 1 and 7, of the rules and regulations, which rules were then set out in full. The order then recited in some detail the facts suppоrting such action. This included a specification of a May 21, 1981, arrest as the result of a warrant issued through the county attorney’s office charging three felony counts of theft by deception. It further specified that the warrant resultеd from complaints received in regard to the business practices of Richardson and his wife in the operation of a kitchen cabinet business, and that Richardson had obtained property by deceptive practicеs from Leo J. Juranek, Gary Herse, and Lola Wilshusen, the property of each having a value of over $1,000.
The decision and findings of the personnel board recited the fact of the order of the police division suspending and dismissing Riсhardson effective June 20, 1981, for violations of chapter I, §§ 1 and 7, of the rules and regulations, and then set forth said sections verbatim. The decision concluded with a finding that Richardson “was in violation of Chapter I, Sections 1 and 7 of the Rulеs and Regulations of the Police Division of the Public Safety Department,” and an order that the appeal be denied.
Richardson also seeks to have chapter I, §§ 1 and 7, declared unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, and thereby overturn his dismissal. The language used in chapter I, § 7, is plain and clear. If an officer is charged with a “serious criminal matter,” as long as it is not frivolous, that officer shall be subject to plenary action. While there may be hypothetical situations put to this court under which this regulation may seem vague and overbroad, the facts in this appeal do not present such a case. As previously stated, Richardson was arrested, charged, and bound over on three felony counts of theft by deception. There can be no doubt that this presents a serious criminal matter. Section 7 clearly applies in this case and cannot be sаid to be vague or over-broad on these facts. “The language here challenged conveys sufficiently definite warning as to
the proscribed conduct when measured by common understanding and practices. The Constitution requires no more.”
United States v. Petrillo,
Richardson cites
United States v. Harriss,
Finally, Richardson argues that the charges brought against him are frivolous and therefore are not a proper basis for disciplinary actions against him under § 7.
The standard of review in error proceedings is well established. The court’s review is solely on the record created by the tribunal whose action is being reviewed. If the record shows the tribunal acted within its jurisdiction and its findings are supported by somе competent evidence, its decision must be sustained.
Caniglia v. City of Omaha,
Richardson attempts in a motion to remand to cаll our attention to the fact that the criminal charges filed against him have now been dismissed. It should be sufficient to state that such evidence is not contained in the bill of exceptions and may not be considered by us on appeal. However, we would hasten to add that dismissal of the charges, in and of itself, in view of the record before us, does not permit us to say as a matter of law that the original charges and bindover were “frivolous and wholly without foundation.”
At this time we need not consider the constitutionality of chapter I, § 1, of the rules and regulations of the department of public safety, police division, since § 7 clearly applies in this case and is a sufficient basis on which the personnel board could base its decision.
Affirmed.
