Dorsey WEST, Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, MONROE COUNTY, Flоrida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*85 John J. Quinn, Roger McClelland, Key West, for appellant.
Richard G. Payne, Key West, for appellee.
Before PEARSON, KEHOE and SCHWARTZ, JJ.
SCHWARTZ, Judge.
The appellant, Dorsey West, a career employee of Monroe County, was discharged in a manner which the lower court found, and the county concedes, was in violation оf both the requirements of procedural due process and its own duly adopted Personnel regulations. Nevertheless, the trial judge held that West was not entitled to reinstatement and back pay and that the county was required only prospectively to proceed to discharge him in accordance with the constitution and the civil service rules in question. West appeals from the latter conclusion. We hold that the аdmitted fact that he has never been lawfully deprived of employment requires the conclusion that he must be returned to the status he occupied before he was improperly discharged; accordingly, we reversed that aspect of the judgment below.
The record shows that after four years of civil service employment and after an oral "termination" which occurred at a County Commission meeting on Septembеr 6, 1977, West was formally "discharged" by a letter from the director of his department dated the next day, September 7, 1977. The letter stated that the reason for the discharge, which was to be effective September 30, 1977, was "fоr cause in that you have failed to perform the duties required of you and to report time." It is undisputed that the letter's contents did not constitute the "specific reason for discharge" required under § 10.07 of the duly adoрted Personnel Policies of Monroe County, Florida, which provides:
"10.07 DISCHARGE
A discharged employee shall be notified by his supervisor at the time of discharge of the specific reason for discharge. Such notification shall be given to the employee in writing by certified or registered mail within three workdays of the date of discharge."
West sought review of his dismissal in the county's career service council, as provided by the applicable rules. Among other things, he correctly сlaimed before the council that proper notice of the charges against him, if any, had not been given. When the council rejected that argument at the commencement of the hearing, West and his attоrney walked out of the proceedings. The council thereupon proceeded, in his absence, to try and convict West and to rule that he had indeed been dismissed for good cause. It is now agreed, however, that because there was no adequate notice of the charges against him[1] the subsequent hearing on those "charges" was itself not the fair "opportunity to be heard" to which West was constitutionally and statutorily entitled.[2]
After receipt of the council's determination against him, West filed the present action for declaratory and injunctive relief in the Monroe County Circuit Court. The complaint sought a declaration that he had not been validly discharged and *86 an order requiring the county to reinstate him with back pay. The trial court granted the former relief requested and denied the latter. The final order below provided:
"1. The Board of County Commissioners' letter dated September 7, 1977 is defective in that it does not delineate the specific reasons for discharge.
2. The above is based on the case of State ex rel Hawkins v. McCall,158 Fla. 655 ,29 So.2d 739 which requires that the discharged employee, `... must be furnished with a written statement of the jurisdictional grounds upon which he is sought to be discharged, and before trial, must be furnished with a statement of the jurisdictional facts upon which the jurisdictional grounds are based which, taken together, constitutes the charges on which he is to be tried.' In that case, the Court went on to say that, `... the allegation of fact must be sufficiently specific and clear to appraise the accused officer to the extent that he may have a fair opportunity to meet and disprove or to explain the act complained of.'
3. And for the further reason that Defendant gave Plaintiff no notice of pending application for discharge which application was apрroved and granted by Defendant on September 6, 1977 at a hearing of which Plaintiff had no formal notice of the hearing or the purported grounds of discharge.
THEREFORE, It is
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that Defendant's Motion for Final Summary Judgment is hereby denied.
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that Plaintiff's Motion for Final Summary Judgment is partially granted in that:
1. Defendant is hereby ordered to comply with Monroe County Employment Policies and Procedures Section 10.07.
2. Defendant is hereby ordered to prepare a new letter of discharge stating the specific reasons for Plaintiff's discharge.
3. Defendant is not required at this time to reinstate Plaintiff to his position.
4. Defendant is not required at this time to make any payments of back pay to Plaintiff.
5. Defendant is to afford plaintiff an opportunity to appeal their decision to the Career Service Council.
6. Defendant shall have 30 days with which to comply with this Order."
West appealed to this court, raising, of course, only the claim that the remedy ordered by the court that is, in requiring the county only to start again and "do it right this time" was inappropriate and that reinstatement with back pay was required.[3] We concur with this contention.
A long line of Florida сases with which the determination below is in clear conflict has held that a writ of mandamus will issue to compel the reinstatement with back pay of an improperly discharged or demoted governmental employee. E.g., Arnold v. State ex rel. Mallison,
In arguing for the contrary conclusion, the county cites the cases of Arnett v. Kennedy,
*88 Our holding to this effect is supported by Young v. Hutchins, supra, and Davis v. Nuss,
Finally, we point out that to permit the County only now to grant West the rights to which he was entitled all along would, in effect, reward, or at least not punish it for viоlations which have caused serious detriment to its employee. Such a result is unacceptable. To mix not only metaphors, but disciplines: for each wrong, there should be an equal and opposite remеdy. The judgment below does not, but our conclusion does satisfy the requirements of this maxim.
For these reasons, the ruling below that West was erroneously discharged is affirmed, the judgment under review is otherwise reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to issue a mandatory injunction requiring the county forthwith to reinstate West with accrued back pay and emoluments.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Perry v. Sindermann,
[2] Ibid. City of Daytona Beach v. Layne,
[3] The county filed a cross-apрeal which claimed that West was bound by the council's finding that he had been discharged for cause. At oral argument, the cross-appeal was abandoned; the appellee admitted that, since the hearing before the council had not been fairly or validly conducted, its results could not be binding.
[4] Although the county had not raised the issue, we observe that the form of the action chosen by the plaintiff, that is, mandatory injunction rather than mandamus, should not affect the nature of the relief to which he is entitled.
[5] This is generally the scheme adopted in the Monroe County regulations. Because it is admitted that these procedures were not followed in this case and that the appellant was denied due process as a result, we do not now consider whether the regulations themselves pass constitutional muster as to the issue, among others, of the sufficiency of the pretermination rights, if any, granted to the employee. But see Young v. Hutchins,
[6] See also Fuentes v. Shevin,
[7] Again we point out that the regulations themselves do provide for a post-discharge hеaring. In this case, while that hearing may have been timely, see n. 5, supra, it was certainly not fair, and was thus not efficacious in any meaningful way. See nn. 1-2, supra.
[8] Purdy v. Cole,
