This case is before the Court on the narrow issue of whether the Circuit Court of Kanawha County erred in holding that the notice to a civil service employee as to the grounds of his dismissal was legally insufficient. We affirm.
The notice was sent pursuant to Article XI, Section 2 of the Rules and Regulations of the State Civil Service System, which requires “notice in writing ... stating specific reasons therefore” on dismissal of a covered employee.
1
It is obvious that due process procedures, even in the absence of a statute or regulation, would require
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the State to give adequate notice of the reasons for dismissal of a classified employee before it took such drastic action.
See, Arnett v. Kennedy,
The notice of dismissal is not adequate. 2 It does not identify the particular travel expense records, the dates of the incidents, or state why the records are claimed to be false.
We are cited
Thurmond v.
Steele, _ W. Va. _,
Another case which bears on the point is
Yates v. Civil Service Commission,
Guine v. Civil Service Commission,
Other courts, in considering the adequacy of a notice dismissing a public employee under regulations analogous to those in this case, have generally required that the notice have some factual specificity. In the rather similar case of
Thornberry v. Civil Service Commission,
In
Hays v. Louisiana Wild Life and Fisheries Commission,
It is impractical to define a detailed set of standards which must be met in order to constitute sufficient notice. The myriad occasions that may give rise to the *766 discharge of an employee do not lend themselves to precise categorization. Generally, however, notice will be adequate if it sets out sufficient facts about the alleged misconduct so that its details are known with some particularity. Where an act of misconduct is asserted it should be identified by date, specific or approximate, unless its characteristics are so singular that there is no reasonable doubt when it occurred. If the act of misconduct involves persons or property, these must be identified to the extent that the accused employee will have no reasonable doubt as to the identity of the persons or property involved.
Ultimately, the sufficiency of the notice depends not on the rote following of some standard, but on whether the employee was informed with reasonable certainty and precision of the cause of his removal.
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
Parallel language, except for the word “specific”, is found in W. Va. Code, 29-6-11(11) (1977), and is identical to the former provision found in W. Va. Code, 29-6-8(11) (1976).
“In accordance with the regulations of the West Virginia Civil Service System, I hereby inform you that effective July 15, 1975, you are hereby dismissed from the position of Division Director with the West Virginia Department of Labor.
“Specifically, your dismissal is the result of your falsifying state travel expense records which led to your suspension on January 25, 1974. This information has been made available for my thorough review by the Purchasing, Practices and Procedures Commission. I consider your actions as documented in the report to be gross misconduct which dictates that your dismissal be immediate and final.”
