Patton v. City of Grand Prairie

01/09/1985 App for WOE / Disposed GRANTED 03/13/1985 Supreme Court opinion issued CREV/REMTC

This appeal arises under the Firemen's and Policemen's Civil Service Law, TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 1269m (Vernon Supp. 1983). Appellant, Alan T. Patton, was indefinitely suspended by the chief of police of appellee, City of Grand Prairie, Texas, and appealed to the appellee, Grand Prairie Civil Service Commission. The Commission reinstated Patton but ordered a disciplinary suspension of ten days without pay which Patton appealed to the district court. The trial court dismissed for want of jurisdiction. We conclude that Patton's disciplinary suspension is not subject to judicial review. Accordingly, we affirm.

The issue of whether the district court has jurisdiction hinges on an interpretation of article 1269m, as it stood at the time this action arose. If section sixteen of the Act, which concerned indefinite suspensions, controls then section eighteen provided for an appeal of a Commission order to the district court. Section sixteen stated, in pertinent part:

[T]he Chief or Head of the . . . Police Department . . . shall have the power to suspend indefinitely any officer or employee . . . but in every case [he] shall . . . file a written statement with the Commission, giving the reasons for such suspension, and immediately furnish a copy thereof to the officer or employee affected by such act. . . . Said order . . . shall inform the employee that he has ten (10) days . . . to file a written appeal with the Commission. The Commission shall hold a hearing and render a decision in writing within thirty (30) days after it receives said notice of appeal. Said decision shall state whether or not the suspended officer or employee shall be permanently or temporarily dismissed . . . or be restored to his former position or status. . . . (emphasis added).

If section twenty controls, however, no right to an appeal to the district court existed. Section twenty, which dealt with disciplinary suspensions, that is, those of 15 days or less in duration, stated, principally:

The head of either the Fire or Police Department shall have the power to suspend any officer or employee under his jurisdiction or supervision for disciplinary purposes, for reasonable periods, not to exceed fifteen (15) days; provided, that in every such case, the department head shall file with the Commission within one hundred and twenty (120) hours, a written statement of action, and the Commission shall, upon appeal from the suspended officer or employee, hold a

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public hearing under Section 17 of this Act. The Commission shall determine whether just cause exists therefor.

Although the suspension originated as indefinite, we decline to treat it as forever indefinite regardless of action by the Commission. After a public hearing, the Commission entered an order reducing appellant's indefinite suspension to a ten-day suspension without pay. We conclude that it makes no difference that the matter reached the Commission as an indefinite suspension by the police chief. What is important is the ultimate sanction imposed by the last word of the employer. The city's last word in the present case was suspension for ten days without pay. This construction of article 1269m applies an even handed treatment to all police and firemen given disciplinary suspension by final city action regardless of the initial sanction imposed by the chief or head of the department. Consequently, since Patton's ultimate suspension by the city was for less than fifteen days, we hold that the sanction imposed by the city thereby became a disciplinary suspension within the terms and meaning of section twenty of the Act. Thus, we conclude that section twenty of the Act controls.

Section twenty pertains only to disciplinary suspension actions. A disciplinary suspension (a suspension for a period not in excess of fifteen days) is not subject to judicial review. Firemen's and Policemen's Civil Service Commission of the City of Fort Worth v. Blanchard, 582 S.W.2d 778, 779 (Tex. 1979). It is well settled law in this state that if the Act does not provide for an appeal from an order of the Commission, then the administrative action of the Commission is final and the courts have no jurisdiction to hear an appeal unless the administrative action complained of violates a constitutional provision. City of Wichita Falls v. Harris, 532 S.W.2d 653, 659-60 (Tex.Civ.App. — Fort Worth 1975, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Patton asserts no constitutional deprivation.

Patton argues that the 1977 amendment to section eighteen of the Act and the 1979 amendment to section twenty of the Act provide for judicial review of disciplinary suspensions. The language of section eighteen, as so amended, relied on by Patton, reads:

In the event any Fireman or Policeman is dissatisfied with any decision of the Commission, he may, within ten (10) days after the rendition of such final decision, file a petition in the District Court, asking that the decision be set aside, and such case shall be tried de novo.

The language of section twenty, as so amended, relied on by Patton reads:

The Commission shall, upon appeal from the suspended officer or employee, hold a public hearing under Section 17 of this Act. The Commission shall determine whether just cause exists therefor.

We find no provision for judicial review of disciplinary suspensions in either amendment. Therefore, since section twenty contains no language permitting an appeal to the district court, we decline to follow the majority's holding to the contrary in City of Laredo v. Solis, 665 S.W.2d 523 (Tex.App. — San Antonio 1983, no writ), seeking to avoid the Supreme Court's holding in Blanchard. Rather, we adopt Justice Butts' minority view that "[h]ad the Legislature intended to open up the panoply of appellate procedure to employees disciplined under the provisions of § 20 it would have enacted a plain amendment so stating." 665 S.W.2d at 529.

Accordingly, we hold that the administrative action of the Commission is final and that the district court had no jurisdiction to hear Patton's appeal of the Commission's order. It follows, and we so hold, that the trial court did not err in dismissing for want of jurisdiction.

Affirmed.