The Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA), N.J.S.A. 34:19-1 to -8, includes a provision that “the institution of an action [under CEPA] shall be deemed a waiver of the rights and remedies available under any other contract, collective bargaining agreement, State law, rule or regulation or under the common law.” N.J.S.A. 34:19-8. The Merit System Board (Board) held that this provision precludes a career civil service employee who has filed a CEPA action against his employer from appealing to the Board from a disciplinary action that is also one of the grounds of the employee’s CEPA claim. We conclude that a career civil service employee who has filed a CEPA action is not precluded from appealing a disciplinary action to the Board simply because the employee alleges that his employer instituted disciplinary charges against him for the same retaliatory reasons alleged in the CEPA action.
Appellant Robert Scouler is employed by respondent City of Camden (City) in the career civil service position of construction official. On November 24, 1997, the City served Scouler with a preliminary notice of disciplinary action for insubordination, neglect of duty and misuse of public property. The notice indicated that the
While Scouler’s civil service appeal was still pending, he filed an action in the Superior Court against the City and various City officials, alleging that they had retaliated against him, in violation of CEPA, because he had objected to and refused to participate in violations of the Uniform Construction Code and other laws and had reported those violations to the Department of Community Affairs. One of the retaliatory acts alleged in Scouler’s CEPA complaint was the City’s disciplinary action that was the subject of his appeal to the Board.
Subsequently, an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), relying upon N.J.S.A. 34:19-8, issued a recommended initial decision which concluded that “[wjhere ... a civil service employee elects to file a superior court complaint against the appointing authority, citing the CEPA and involving the same or substantially the same issues as are involved in the civil service case, ... [t]he CEPA action is the exclusive means of determination of the parties’ rights and duties and a civil service administrative case involving the same subject matter must be dismissed.” The Board adopted this recommended decision and dismissed Scouler’s appeal of the thirty-day suspension imposed upon him by the City. Scouler appeals the dismissal of his civil service disciplinary appeal, and we now reverse.
In Young v. Schering Corp., 141 N.J. 16,
The civil service disciplinary action instituted by the City against Scouler does not involve a “eause[] of action that require[s] a finding of retaliatory conduct that is actionable under CEPA.” Scouler is a permanent employee in the career civil service.
Furthermore, the CEPA waiver provision does not require the exclusion of evidence of retaliation in a civil service disciplinary hearing. N.J.S.A. 34:19-8 was only intended “to curtail essentially cumulative remedial actions.” Young, supra, 141 N.J. at 27,
We also note that neither N.J.S.A. 34:19-8 nor any other section of CEPA precludes an employee who alleges a retaliatory motive for the institution of a civil service disciplinary charge from subsequently filing a CEPA action. Thus, if the OAL had scheduled a hearing on Scouler’s civil service appeal prior to the expiration of the one-year period for filing a CEPA action, see N.J.S.A. 34:19-5, Scouler could have pursued his civil service appeal, and presented evidence of the City’s alleged retaliatory motive for bringing the disciplinary charges, and then initiated a CEPA action after the civil service appeal was concluded. An employee’s right to appeal a disciplinary charge and present evidence of retaliation in defense of the charge should not turn on the fortuitous circumstance of whether the OAL and Board complete the proceedings in a civil service disciplinary appeal before expiration of the limitations period for filing a CEPA action. Therefore, consistent with the intent of N.J.S.A. 34:19-8 to only “prevent an employee from pursuing both statutory and common-law retaliatory discharge causes of action,” Young, supra, 141 N.J. at 27,
Accordingly, the Board’s decision dismissing Scouler’s appeal is reversed and
Notes
Scouler also alleged that defendants had retaliated against him by undertaking to eliminate his position by "privatizing" his job responsibilities and by a course of "threatening, intimidation, hostile, abusive and humiliating” conduct.
Only a career civil service employee has the right to appeal a disciplinary action to the Board. N.J.S.A. 11A:2-6; N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.1(a).
