Becker v. Sunset City , 741 Utah Adv. Rep. 5 ( 2013 )


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  •               This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2013 UT 51
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    STEWART BECKER,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    SUNSET CITY,
    Defendant and Appellee.
    No. 20120320
    Filed August 13, 2013
    On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals
    Attorneys:
    Jerald D. Conder, Salt Lake City, for petitioner
    Gary L. Johnson, Zachary E. Peterson, Kallie A. Smith,
    Salt Lake City, Felshaw King, Kaysville, for respondent
    JUSTICE DURHAM authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING,
    JUSTICE PARRISH, and JUSTICE LEE joined.
    JUSTICE DURHAM, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶1     The Sunset City Police Department fired Officer Stewart
    Becker for reporting for duty under the influence of alcohol. The
    Sunset City Board of Appeals and the Utah Court of Appeals
    affirmed the termination decision. We granted certiorari on two
    issues: (1) whether a portable breath test (PBT) result provided
    sufficient evidentiary support to uphold Sunset City’s decision to
    terminate Mr. Becker and (2) whether Utah Code section 34-38-7
    permitted Sunset City to rely on a clause contained in its policy
    manual that allowed it to depart from the manual’s specified
    procedure of testing urine to establish blood alcohol content.
    ¶2     We affirm. The Sunset City Board of Appeals properly
    determined that the PBT result constituted substantial evidence
    supporting Sunset City’s decision to fire Mr. Becker. In addition,
    Utah Code section 34-38-7 does not prohibit Sunset City from relying
    on the PBT because this statute does not apply to government
    employers.
    STEWART BECKER v. SUNSET CITY
    Opinion of the Court
    BACKGROUND
    ¶3     Mr. Becker was employed as a police officer in the Sunset
    City Police Department. On April 1, 2007, Mr. Becker finished a shift
    at 6:00 a.m. and was scheduled to report back for a second shift at
    2:00 p.m. that afternoon. When Mr. Becker arrived for work at 2:00
    p.m., he discussed the shift change with his supervisor, Sergeant
    Bruce Arbogast. Sergeant Arbogast immediately noticed a strong
    odor of alcohol coming from Mr. Becker. Mr. Becker admitted that
    he had consumed approximately five shots of liquor before going to
    bed at 8:00 or 9:00 a.m. that morning. Based on his observations and
    Mr. Becker’s statements, Sergeant Arbogast requested that
    Mr. Becker blow into a PBT. Mr. Becker offered to use his own PBT,
    telling Sergeant Arbogast that he knew it was “pretty accurate.”
    Mr. Becker blew into the PBT, which registered a breath alcohol
    content of .045 grams.
    ¶4     At about the same time, two Utah State troopers arrived to
    update the clock on an intoxilyzer machine located in Sunset City’s
    police headquarters for daylight savings time. The troopers
    approached Mr. Becker to discuss his new police vehicle and
    immediately noticed a strong odor of alcohol coming from him. The
    troopers expressed their concern to Sergeant Arbogast and said they
    were considering performing field sobriety tests on Mr. Becker.
    Sergeant Arbogast told the troopers that he was aware of the
    situation and that he was taking care of it.
    ¶5     Mr. Becker asked Sergeant Arbogast not to inform the chief
    of police, Ken Eborn, about the incident and requested that he be
    allowed to wait in the office until the alcohol in his system dissipated
    to the point that he could resume his duties. Sergeant Arbogast
    declined both requests and called Chief Eborn, who relieved
    Mr. Becker of duty and scheduled a disciplinary meeting for the
    following day.
    ¶6     At the disciplinary meeting, Mr. Becker again admitted to
    using alcohol before coming to work, increasing his estimated
    consumption to between six and eight shots of liquor. Mr. Becker
    stated that he did not dispute the amount of alcohol in his system
    because his PBT was fairly accurate. Instead he asked for leniency.
    Chief Eborn, however, determined that the seriousness of the
    violation warranted termination.
    ¶7    The department issued a termination letter to Mr. Becker,
    which stated: “The decision to terminate has been made as a result
    of you reporting for duty on April 1, 2007 with a Blood Alcohol
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    Opinion of the Court
    Content of .045 in violation of Sunset Police Department Policy and
    Procedure Manual Section 3-03-02.0, 1-01-04.00 and Sunset City
    Policy Manual section 4.2.4 (D).” The Sunset Police Department
    policy manual and Sunset City policy manual referenced in the
    termination letter (collectively, Alcohol Policy) provide that an
    officer shall not “report for duty while under the influence of
    intoxicants.” The Alcohol Policy defines “under the influence” to
    mean “when an employee is affected by drugs or alcohol . . . to the
    extent that it affects his or her ability to perform their job in a safe
    manner. An employee . . . whose tests detect[] a Blood Alcohol
    Content (BAC) of 0.04 or greater, shall be deemed under the
    influence.” The Alcohol Policy also states that being on the job while
    under the influence of alcohol is a serious offense that will usually
    result in termination.
    ¶8      Mr. Becker appealed his termination to the Sunset City
    Board of Appeals. At the hearing before the board of appeals, Sunset
    City presented undisputed testimony that the PBT used by
    Mr. Becker registered a breath alcohol content of .045 grams. One of
    the state troopers who smelled alcohol on Mr. Becker’s breath also
    testified that she believed it would have been dangerous for
    Mr. Becker to drive or respond to any calls. The appeals board
    issued its decision upholding the termination, and the court of
    appeals affirmed. We granted certiorari on two issues: (1) whether
    the PBT result provided sufficient evidentiary support to uphold
    Sunset City’s decision to terminate Mr. Becker and (2) whether Utah
    Code section 34-38-7 permitted Sunset City to rely on a clause
    contained in its policy manual that allowed it to depart from the
    manual’s specified procedure of testing urine to establish blood
    alcohol content. We have jurisdiction under Utah Code section 78A-
    3-102(3)(a).
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶9      In order to arrive at the appropriate standard of review for
    Mr. Becker’s claim that the PBT result was insufficient to support his
    termination, we must track the standard applied in three successive
    levels of review. First, on writ of certiorari we review the opinion of
    the court of appeals for correctness. Prinsburg State Bank v. Abundo,
    
    2012 UT 94
    , ¶ 10, 
    296 P.3d 709
    . Second, in determining whether the
    court of appeals correctly reviewed a lower tribunal’s decisions, we
    assess whether the court of appeals correctly applied the appropriate
    standard of review. Jex v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 
    2013 UT 40
    , ¶ 14, __
    P.3d __. When reviewing a municipal appeal board’s order
    regarding an employee’s termination, the court of appeals is limited
    3
    STEWART BECKER v. SUNSET CITY
    Opinion of the Court
    to determining whether the board “abused its discretion or exceeded
    its authority.” UTAH CODE § 10-3-1106(6)(c). Third, in determining
    whether the municipal appeal board abused its discretion, the court
    of appeals must decide whether the board correctly applied the
    standard governing its review of a termination decision, which is
    “prescribed by the governing body of each municipality by
    ordinance.” Id. § 10-3-1106(7)(a). The relevant Sunset City ordinance
    provides that its “appeals board shall sustain the discharge,
    suspension or transfer [of a city employee] if it is presented
    substantial evidence that cause existed for the discharge, suspension
    or transfer.” SUNSET CITY, UTAH, CITY CODE § 1-15-2(C), available at
    http://www.sterlingcodifiers.com/codebook/index.php?book
    id=575.
    ¶10 Therefore, we must decide whether the board abused its
    discretion in concluding that Mr. Becker’s termination was
    supported by substantial evidence. “A decision is supported by
    substantial evidence if there is a quantum and quality of relevant
    evidence that is adequate to convince a reasonable mind to support
    a conclusion. ” Ivory Homes, Ltd. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 
    2011 UT 54
    , ¶ 11, 
    266 P.3d 751
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶11 Mr. Becker’s second argument that the court of appeals
    misconstrued Utah Code section 34-38-7 is a question of statutory
    interpretation that we review de novo. See Vorher v. Henriod, 
    2013 UT 10
    , ¶ 6, 
    297 P.3d 614
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I. SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE SUPPORTS SUNSET CITY’S
    DECISION TO TERMINATE MR. BECKER
    A. Due Process Constrains the Reasons for Termination
    We May Consider
    ¶12 In determining whether substantial evidence supports
    Sunset City’s termination decision, our first task is to establish which
    reasons for his termination we may properly consider. Sunset City
    argues that regardless of Mr. Becker’s blood alcohol content,
    evidence that Mr. Becker emitted a strong odor of alcohol
    independently justified his termination because interactions with the
    public in this condition would undermine the community’s trust and
    confidence in the police department. While we agree that the
    potential erosion of public trust occasioned by the odor of alcohol on
    Mr. Becker’s breath may have been a proper basis for disciplinary
    action, Sunset City did not notify Mr. Becker that this was one of the
    reasons for his termination. And we may only consider evidence
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    Opinion of the Court
    supporting the reasons for termination stated in the termination
    letter provided to Mr. Becker in determining whether substantial
    evidence supports his termination.
    ¶13 Where state or local law establishes a public employee’s
    right to continued employment absent cause for discharge, that
    employee holds a property interest in continued employment that is
    protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    Goss v. Lopez, 
    419 U.S. 565
    , 573 (1975); Worrall v. Ogden City Fire
    Dep’t, 
    616 P.2d 598
    , 601 (Utah 1980). Qualified public employees are
    entitled to the due process protections of notice and an opportunity
    to be heard regarding the termination of their employment. Goss, 
    419 U.S. at 579
    .
    ¶14 Except for several exclusions not applicable here, Utah has
    granted the procedural protection of a hearing before an appeals
    board to municipal employees seeking review of the termination of
    their employment. UTAH CODE §§ 10-3-1105(1)(a), 10-3-1106(2)(a);
    Pearson v. S. Jordan Emp. Appeals Bd., 
    2009 UT App 204
    , ¶ 10, 
    216 P.3d 996
    . The statutes governing a municipal employee’s appeal from a
    termination decision, however, do not establish permissible causes
    for termination, instead allowing each municipality to define cause
    for an employee’s discharge. UTAH CODE § 10-3-1105(4) (“Nothing
    in this section or Section 10-3-1106 may be construed to limit a
    municipality’s ability to define cause for an employee termination or
    reduction in force.”). Sunset City has adopted an ordinance
    providing that employees entitled to a post-termination hearing may
    only be terminated for cause. SUNSET CITY, UTAH, CITY CODE § 1-15-
    2(C) (“The appeals board shall sustain the discharge, suspension or
    transfer [of a city employee] if it is presented substantial evidence
    that cause existed for the discharge, suspension or transfer.”
    (emphasis added)). The contours of cause for termination (including
    for violations of the Alcohol Policy) are defined in Sunset City’s
    policy manuals.
    ¶15 Because qualified Sunset City employees may only be
    terminated for cause, they have a due process right to a hearing. This
    right is defined by Utah Code section 10-3-1106(3)(b)(ii) to entail a
    post-termination hearing before an appeal board, which shall
    “receive evidence and fully hear and determine the matter which
    relates to the reason for the discharge.” UTAH CODE § 10-3-1106(3)(b)(ii)
    (emphasis added). Consequently, protected municipal employees
    also have a due process right to adequate notice of the reasons for
    their discharge so that they can meaningfully prepare for and
    participate in the municipal appeal board hearing. Fierro v. Park City
    5
    STEWART BECKER v. SUNSET CITY
    Opinion of the Court
    Mun. Corp., 
    2012 UT App 304
    , ¶¶ 18–19, 
    295 P.3d 696
    . Thus, the
    appeal board may consider only evidence related to the grounds for
    discharge for which the employee has received proper notice,
    usually in the form of a termination letter or similar memorandum.
    
    Id.
     ¶¶ 21–22. We may not side-step this due process limitation in
    determining whether a municipal appeal board’s decision is
    supported by substantial evidence.
    ¶16 Here, Sunset City issued a termination letter to Mr. Becker,
    notifying him that “[t]he decision to terminate has been made as a
    result of you reporting for duty on April 1, 2007 with a Blood
    Alcohol Content of .045 in violation of [Sunset City’s Alcohol
    Policy].” In other words, the termination letter notified Mr. Becker
    he was being fired due to his blood alcohol level when he arrived at
    work, which indicated his ability to perform his duties had been
    impaired. While the potential erosion of public trust caused by the
    smell of alcohol on his breath is certainly related to Mr. Becker’s
    blood alcohol level, the termination letter did not adequately notify
    him that this was one of the reasons for his termination. We
    therefore limit our review to a determination of whether substantial
    evidence supports the conclusion that Mr. Becker’s blood alcohol
    content violated Sunset City’s Alcohol Policy.
    B. Substantial Evidence Supports the Conclusion that Mr. Becker
    Was “Under the Influence” of Alcohol, in Violation of the
    Sunset City’s Alcohol Policy
    ¶17 Mr. Becker alleges the PBT result is inadequate to support
    his termination because PBTs do not directly measure blood alcohol
    content. We find, however, that the PBT reading constitutes
    substantial evidence that Mr. Becker’s blood alcohol content was
    high enough to justify his termination under Sunset City’s policies.
    ¶18 Sunset City’s Alcohol Policy allows for the termination of
    a police officer for reporting for duty while “under the influence” of
    alcohol. It further provides that the principal criterion for
    determining when an officer is “under the influence” is whether the
    officer “is affected by drugs or alcohol . . . to the extent that it affects
    his or her ability to perform their job in a safe manner.” The Alcohol
    Policy states that an officer “whose tests detect[] a Blood Alcohol
    Content (BAC) of 0.04 or greater, shall be deemed under the
    influence.” Thus, while a test indicating a blood alcohol content of
    .04 grams or greater conclusively establishes that an individual is
    under the influence of alcohol, it is not the only potentially relevant
    evidence. Other evidence that an officer’s ability to safely perform
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    Opinion of the Court
    job duties is adversely affected by alcohol could also be grounds for
    termination.
    ¶19 Sunset City proffered evidence that Mr. Becker was under
    the influence of alcohol through undisputed testimony that the PBT
    registered Mr. Becker’s breath alcohol content to be .045 grams and
    through evidence that the PBT reading was accurate. Trooper
    McLaughlin testified that PBTs are accurate instruments and that
    they typically generate a reading one or two thousandths lower than
    an intoxilyzer—a larger instrument that tests breath alcohol levels
    and prints the result. The appeals board also heard evidence that the
    particular PBT used by Mr. Becker had been scientifically tested and
    shown to be accurate. When Mr. Becker was terminated, the PBT
    was taken out of service and stored under lock and key. The PBT
    was tested on three separate occasions using a certified solution with
    a known alcohol concentration. On each occasion, technicians
    reported that the PBT was “very accurate” or “dead on.” Moreover,
    Mr. Becker chose the PBT he wished to use, stating that he knew that
    his PBT was “pretty accurate.”
    ¶20 Sunset City also produced evidence that although a PBT
    directly measures breath alcohol content, it also accurately indicates
    an individual’s blood alcohol content.1 A breath alcohol test, such as
    a PBT, “measure[s] a person’s blood alcohol content from a sample
    of the person’s breath.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 215 (9th ed. 2009)
    (defining “breathalyzer”). Utah’s DUI statutes recognize the close
    correspondence between breath alcohol and blood alcohol tests by
    criminalizing the operation of a vehicle with a “blood or breath
    alcohol concentration of .08 grams or greater.”2 UTAH CODE § 41-6a-
    502(1)(a). During the hearing before the appeals board, Sunset City
    provided evidence that a PBT accurately indicates an individual’s
    blood alcohol level through the testimony of Trooper McLaughlin,
    who had been a highway patrol officer for almost ten years and had
    1
    Cf. State v. Manwaring, 
    2011 UT App 443
    , ¶ 28, 
    268 P.3d 201
    (noting that a PBT and subsequent blood tests on an individual
    yielded nearly identical readings).
    2
    Although breath alcohol and blood alcohol are both measured
    in grams, blood tests and breath tests gauge the amount of alcohol
    contained in different volumes so that the two tests produce similar
    results: “Alcohol concentration in the blood shall be based upon
    grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood, and alcohol
    concentration in the breath shall be based upon grams of alcohol per
    210 liters of breath.” UTAH CODE § 41-6a-502(2).
    7
    STEWART BECKER v. SUNSET CITY
    Opinion of the Court
    received specialized training regarding breathalyzers and PBTs.
    Trooper McLaughlin testified that, in fact, PBTs generally produce
    a slightly lower alcohol content reading than a blood test.
    ¶21 We find this evidence to be substantial because it
    constitutes “a quantum and quality of relevant evidence that is
    adequate to convince a reasonable mind” that Mr. Becker reported
    for duty with a blood alcohol content of .04 grams or greater. See
    Ivory Homes, Ltd. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 
    2011 UT 54
    , ¶ 11, 
    266 P.3d 751
     (internal quotation marks omitted). “Substantial evidence is
    more than a mere ‘scintilla’ of evidence and something less than the
    weight of the evidence.” Johnson v. Bd. of Review of Indus. Comm’n,
    
    842 P.2d 910
    , 911 (Utah Ct. App. 1992). In conducting a substantial
    evidence review, we do not “reweigh the evidence” and
    independently choose which inferences we find to be the most
    reasonable. Utah Ass’n of Cntys. v. Tax Comm’n ex rel. Am. Tel. & Tel.
    Co., 
    895 P.2d 819
    , 821 (Utah 1995). “Instead, we defer to [a lower
    tribunal’s] findings because when reasonably conflicting views arise,
    it is the [fact-finder’s] province to draw inferences and resolve these
    conflicts.” 
    Id.
    ¶22 Although a reasonable fact-finder could potentially
    conclude that Mr. Becker’s blood alcohol content was not .04 grams
    or greater because the PBT reading of .045 grams was close to this
    threshold or because PBTs do not directly test blood alcohol content,
    this is not the only reasonable conclusion that could be drawn from
    the evidence. Evidence that the PBT was accurate and that PBTs tend
    to produce a slightly lower reading than a blood alcohol test was
    sufficient to support a conclusion that Mr. Becker’s blood alcohol
    content was high enough that he was “under the influence” as
    defined in Sunset City’s policies. The appeal board properly
    determined that substantial evidence supported Mr. Becker’s
    termination, and we may not disturb this conclusion.3
    II. UTAH CODE SECTION 34-38-7 DOES NOT PROHIBIT
    SUNSET CITY FROM DEVIATING FROM ITS
    URINE TESTING POLICY
    ¶23 Sunset City’s policy manual provides that “Drug/Alcohol
    Testing is an analysis of a urine specimen provided by the
    3
    Our holding, of course, is limited to the application of the
    substantial evidence standard of review to the specific evidence
    presented in this case. We make no broad pronouncements
    regarding the use of PBT evidence in criminal cases or civil cases
    involving a different standard of review or different evidence.
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    Opinion of the Court
    employee.” The manual also indicates, however, that Sunset City
    may deviate from its policies when circumstances require it to do so:
    “The procedures set out below are as complete as Sunset City can
    reasonably make them. However, they are not necessarily all
    inclusive. Sunset City Corporation may vary from the
    rules/procedures listed if, in its opinion, the circumstances require.”
    Sunset City asserts that it did not conduct a urine test because
    Mr. Becker was the only officer scheduled to work on the afternoon
    that he reported for duty while under the influence of alcohol, and
    Sergeant Arbogast needed to cover Mr. Becker’s shift until a
    replacement could be found. According to Sunset City, these
    circumstances required it to deviate from its urine testing procedure
    because if Sergeant Arbogast had taken the time to drive Mr. Becker
    to the hospital to conduct a urine test, the city would have been left
    without any police coverage.
    ¶24 Mr. Becker contends that Utah Code section 34-38-7
    prohibited Sunset City from deviating from its policy manual’s urine
    testing policy. Under section 34-38-7(1), “[t]esting or retesting for the
    presence of drugs or alcohol by an employer shall be carried out
    within the terms of a written policy.”
    ¶25 A review of the definitions applicable to section 34-38-7
    reveals, however, that this statute does not apply to Sunset City.
    Utah Code section 34-38-2 provides: “For purposes of this chapter
    [including section 34-38-7] . . . ‘Employer’ does not include the
    federal or state government, or other local political subdivisions.” As
    a local political subdivision of the state, Sunset City is exempt from
    the requirements imposed by section 34-38-7.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶26 Because substantial evidence supports Mr. Becker’s
    termination, and because Utah Code section 34-38-7 does not apply
    to Sunset City, we affirm.
    9