199 Conn. 179 | Conn. | 1986
The dispositive issue in this appeal is the scope of a trial court’s authority to enjoin action taken by a civil service commission to comply with an antidiscrimination order issued by a federal court. In 1988, the civil service commission of the city of Bridgeport, after holding a promotion examination, established a list of officers to fill vacancies in the position of sergeant. The list was limited to the names of those officers who had been eligible for promotion prior to October 31,1976, except that it contained as well the names of four minority officers who were allowed to compete for promotion by a federal court order even though they had not been eligible for promotion prior to October 31,1976. After the commission’s announce
This controversy requires us to find an accommodation between state law governing civil service promotions in Bridgeport and federal court rulings arising out of protracted civil rights litigation involving the employment practices of the Bridgeport police department. There is no factual controversy about the source of this conflict between state and federal law.
Under state law, pursuant to an amendment enacted by the state legislature in a special act in 1935, the charter of the city of Bridgeport creates a civil service system providing mandatory procedures for promotions of police department officers to the position of sergeant. 22 Spec. Acts 261, No. 407; Walker v. Jankura, 162 Conn. 482, 489-90, 294 A.2d 536 (1972). Section 9 of the civil service provisions of Bridgeport’s charter,
In 1972, black and hispanic Bridgeport police officers, as well as unsuccessful applicants to the department, instituted a federal court class action challenging the constitutionality of the hiring and promoting practices of the Bridgeport police department. The United States District Court, Newman, J., found that the department had been engaging in racial discrimination and ordered a number of remedial measures including the observance of temporary quotas for hiring and promoting blacks and hispanics. Bridgeport Guardians, Inc. v. Members of the Bridgeport Civil Service Commission, 354 F. Sup. 778 (D. Conn. 1973) (Guardians I). On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the district court’s order as it applied to the hiring and recruitment of new officers. Bridgeport Guardians, Inc. v. Members of the Bridgeport Civil Service Commission, 482 F.2d 1333 (2d Cir. 1973) (Guardians II). It held, however, that the District Court erred in imposing quotas for promotion and that any court-ordered remedial alterations of promotion procedures should apply “irrespective of race or ethnic background.” Id., 1341. On remand, the District Court, in an attempt to ameliorate institutional impediments to the promotion of the minority group members who had been hired under its original order, directed the department to reduce the eligibility requirements for promotion to sergeant and to deviate from § 9 in determining when to hold a new promotion examination for the office of sergeant. Bridgeport Guardians, Inc. v. Mem
In 1976, the sergeant promotion list that had been in force during Guardians III expired. The first vacancy after its expiration occurred on July 2,1976. Thus, the 120 day provision of § 9 required the commission to hold a new examination by October 31,1976. Claiming a shortage of funds, however, the commission did not hold the examination within the 120 day period. Indeed, it scheduled no examination for more than three years. On November 21,1979, the commission announced that it would hold a promotion examination for the position of sergeant on January 26,1980. The announcement stated that only those officers who had been eligible for promotion prior to October 31, 1976, would be allowed to take the examination.
Before the commission could hold the announced examination, several officers filed suit in federal court challenging the examination’s validity as a job-related selection device and obtained an injunction that forced the commission to cancel the examination. See Members of the Bridgeport Housing Authority Police v. Bridgeport, 85 F.R.D. 624 (D. Conn. 1980). In May, 1983, after the parties to Bridgeport Housing Authority Police had agreed upon an examination format, the commission announced that it would hold a sergeant promotion examination in June, 1983, and that any officer who had been eligible for promotion to the rank of sergeant on January 26, 1980, would be eligible to take the examination. A number of officers who had been eligible for promotion prior to October 31,1976, immediately filed appeals with the commission demanding that the commission set October 31,1976, rather than January 26, 1980, as the date of eligibility. The commission denied these appeals, held the examination, and created a new promotion list for the position of sergeant in accordance with its announcement. Upon further protest by the senior officers, however, the commission on November 28, 1983, reconsidered its position and announced that only those officers who had been eligible for promotion on October 31, 1976, and those officers covered by Judge Newman’s clarifi
The officers who had taken the examination and had been disqualified by the commission sought relief in federal court by moving to intervene in the Guardians litigation. The District Court in that case, Daly, J., denied their motion on December 13,1983. They did not appeal the denial of their motion. Instead, on December 15, 1983, they filed the present suit in Connecticut Superior Court, seeking to enjoin the commission from deleting their names from the promotion list. The intervening defendants, candidates whose names remained on the promotion list, successfully moved to intervene in the case.
After a full hearing, the trial court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs. The court enjoined the commission from eliminating the plaintiffs from the promotion list, ordered their promotion on the same basis as all other participants, and prohibited the commission from using race as a criterion for promotion. The court held that the commission had engaged in illegal discrimination by holding the plaintiffs, but not the minority group members, to the requirement of eligibility for promotion on October 31,1976. The court acknowledged that Judge Newman’s clarification order purported to extend only to “[mjinority group members hired pursuant to [Guardians 7] . . . .” It concluded nonetheless that it should interpret Judge Newman’s order in light of the requirement enunciated by the Second Circuit in Guardians II “that there be no discrimination as to eligibility which would result in a promotional preference for minority policemen.” Adopting this view, the trial court construed Judge Newman’s clarification as an order making all police officers, regardless of their race, eligible for the examination and promotion if they had in-grade service of one year as
On appeal, the intervening defendants claim that the trial court erroneously (1) construed Judge Newman’s clarifying order, (2) concluded that the commission had engaged in illegal discrimination, and (3) issued an injunction when money damages would have sufficed to remedy any harm suffered by the plaintiffs. In light of our disposition of this case, we need not specifically address the latter two issues.
Our threshold inquiry concerns the propriety of the trial court’s decision to construe, and to enforce its construction of, a federal court order. By including on the promotion list certain minority group members who had not been otherwise eligible for promotion on October 31, 1976, the civil service commission was attempting to comply with a federal court order. The plaintiffs’ challenge to the legality of the commission’s special treatment of the minority group members constituted, in effect, a collateral attack on the federal court order. The trial court provided a receptive forum for such an attack. In rejecting a literal interpretation of Judge Newman’s clarifying order and instead recasting the order to comport with its own interpretation of Guardians II, the trial court in effect modified Judge Newman’s clarifying order.
Collateral attacks on judgments of courts of coordinate jurisdiction are disfavored in this state. See Department of Health Services v. CHRO, 198 Conn. 479, 487-89, 503 A.2d 1151 (1986); Cologne v. Westfarms Associates, 197 Conn. 141, 147, 496 A.2d 476 (1985). In the interests of finality and judicial economy, challenges to a court order should be brought to the court that issued the order or to an appellate court of proper
In this case, if the plaintiffs wished to question the meaning of Judge Newman’s clarifying order, the propriety of the civil service commission’s compliance with the order, the applicability of the order to new circumstances, or the legality of the order itself, the appropriate forum for their pursuit of these complaints was the Federal District Court that continued to retain jurisdiction over the Guardians litigation. See Guardians I, supra, 800. That forum was not definitively foreclosed to them by the District Court’s denial of their motion to intervene in that litigation, since they elected not to appeal that denial to the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Where a federal court that has issued an order denies a prospective intervenor’s motion to enter the case to challenge the validity or application of that order, we will not allow the unsuccessful intervenor to mount such a challenge in our courts. See Gregory v. County of LaSalle, 40 Ill. 2d 417, 422, 240 N.E.2d 609 (1968).
The trial court was therefore in error in its conclusion that the plaintiffs had been denied their constitutional rights to equal protection by the commission’s decision to comply with Judge Newman’s order in determining the class of officers eligible to take the promotion examination. As an alternate basis for upholding the trial court’s judgment, the plaintiffs urge us to hold that the commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously in its selection of an eligibility date and in its belated reversal of its ruling on eligibility standards. This argument is not premised on racial discrimination, but evidences instead a dispute between senior and junior members of the Bridgeport police department. We
The commission’s decision to exclude officers who had not been eligible for promotion prior to October 31, 1976, represented an attempt by the commission to satisfy Judge Newman’s clarification order in light of the requirements of Bridgeport civil service law. Had the examination been held in 1976 as required by law, the eligibility date would have been October 31,1976. Had the examination been held in 1980 as contemplated by Judge Newman’s clarification order, the eligibility date would have been October 31, 1976. Thus, in setting October 31,1976, as the date of eligibility for the 1983 examination, the commission could reasonably have been trying to recreate the circumstances that had prevailed at the times that the examination should have been held.
Similarly, the commission did not act improperly in reestablishing the 1976 eligibility date after it had already held the test and announced the results using an eligibility date of January 26, 1980. The record indicates that the commission originally chose the 1980 eligibility date because it assumed that Judge Newman’s clarification order so required. After considering the matter further, the commission apparently
The plaintiffs claim that civil service commissions may not alter eligibility rules for a promotion examination after the commission knows the results of the examination. The cases cited by the plaintiff in support of this proposition deal with alterations instituted by civil service commissions that were discretionary in nature. See Local 773 v. Bristol, 39 Conn. Sup. 1, 6-8, 463 A.2d 628 (1983); People ex rel. Gaynor v. Board of Fire Commissioners, 14 Ill. App. 2d 329, 144 N.E.2d 763 (1957). In this case, where the commission was attempting to amend its previous decision to comport with its interpretation of a mandatory court order, its selection of a new eligibility date after the examination had taken place was permissible. See People ex rel. Gaynor v. Board of Fire Commissioners, supra, 336 (distinguishing between the commission’s attempt to correct a misinterpretation of law or fact and its attempt to implement new policy); State ex rel. Dunn v. Elliott, 6 Wash. 2d 426, 432-34, 107 P.2d 915 (1940). The plaintiffs presented no evidence at trial indicating that bad faith motivated the commission’s alteration of the eligibility date. They do not contend that they relied to their detriment upon the commission’s establishment of the original eligibility date. In light of these circumstances, we cannot conclude that the commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously in changing the eligibility date to October 31, 1976.
Because the trial court’s injunction interfered with the civil service commission’s attempted compliance with Judge Newman’s clarifying order, we vacate the trial court’s order. The commission may proceed with its efforts to satisfy the federal decree.
There is error, and the judgment of the trial court is vacated.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Two of the intervening defendants, Officers Kenneth Dolan and David Jaundrill, characterize themselves as appellees because they ask this court to hold that the Bridgeport police department may not take race into account in promoting officers to the position of sergeant.
“[Civil Service Provisions of Charter of the City of Bridgeport] Section 9. The personnel director shall, from time to time, as conditions warrant, hold tests for the purpose of establishing employment lists for the various positions in the competitive division of the classified service. Such tests shall be public, competitive and open to all persons who may be lawfully appointed to any position within the class for which such examinations are held with limitations specified in the rules of the commission as to residence, age, health, habits, moral character and prerequisite qualifi
“Within one calendar year from the date of passage of this act, the personnel director shall hold tests for the purpose of establishing employment lists for all classes which are allocated to the non-competitive division of the classified service and for which no re-employment list or employment list exists at the time of the passage of this act. When an employment list for any class in the non-competitive division of the classified service expires, the personnel director, within one hundred and twenty days of the date such employment list expired, [shall] hold examinations for the purpose of establishing an employment list for such class.”
Officers were eligible for promotion prior to October 31,1976, if they had served satisfactorily as police officers for one year prior to October 31, 1976.
Judge Newman wrote:
“The court hereby clarifies its prior order herein as follows:
“Minority group members hired pursuant to the order of this Court are and shall be considered eligible to take promotional examinations if, as of the date of the announcement of the promotional examination, they have served as police officers for a period of one year. Such persons are and shall be required to fulfill any other valid prerequisites for eligibility to compete for departmental promotions.”
The plaintiffs had a full opportunity to present relevant evidence to the trial court but did not directly avail themselves of the opportunity to pursue this argument. Consequently, the trial court did not expressly rule on this issue. The plaintiffs introduced testimony suggesting that other options were available to the commission. They did not offer evidence showing that the commission’s decision was arbitrary or capricious. Although the plaintiffs raised this issue in their amended complaint, their argument at trial focused on the discriminatory nature of the commission’s action.
Since the plaintiffs do not accuse the commission of intentionally postponing the examination in order to favor certain candidates for promotion, they cannot claim that the delay in holding the examination constituted a violation of our holding in Walker v. Jankura, 162 Conn. 482, 294 A.2d 536 (1972).
After the trial court issued its injunction, a group of intervening defendants moved that the court stay the operation of its injunction pending their