Sgt. Christopher Thompson v. City of Charleston ( 2020 )


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  •                              STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    Sgt. Christopher Thompson,
    Petitioner Below, Petitioner                                                          FILED
    December 7, 2020
    vs.) No. 19-0483 (Kanawha County 18-P-279)                                         EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    City of Charleston,
    Respondent Below, Respondent
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Petitioner Sgt. Christopher Thompson, by counsel Mark McMillian, appeals the April 22,
    2019, order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County that dismissed his petition for a writ of
    prohibition and writ of mandamus in which he sought to be reinstated to his former position as a
    member of the Charleston Police Department. Respondent City of Charleston (“the City”), by
    counsel Timothy L. Mayo, Jeffrey A. Foster, and Jason A. Proctor, filed a response in support of
    the circuit court’s order. Petitioner submitted a reply.
    This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal
    arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided
    by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record
    presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons,
    a memorandum decision affirming the order of the circuit court is appropriate under Rule 21 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Petitioner was a civil service member of the Charleston Police Department (“CPD”) from
    November 1994 until August 20, 2012. On August 20, 2012, he was removed from his position
    and suspended pending an internal investigation into allegations of dereliction of his duties as a
    patrol division supervisor, the details of which have not been made a part of the appendix record
    and are not relevant to this appeal.
    Over a three-day period in February of 2014, a pre-termination hearing was conducted by
    the Charleston Police Department Conduct Review Hearing Board (“Hearing Board”). See 
    W. Va. Code § 8-14-3
    . On March 3, 2014, the Hearing Board sustained the CPD’s recommended action
    of termination, and petitioner was formally terminated from employment on that date. 1
    According to a sworn affidavit executed by John Teare, Jr., counsel for the Charleston
    1
    The Hearing Board’s decision was not made part of the appendix record.
    1
    Police Civil Service Commission (“Commission”), petitioner contacted him on March 13, 2014,
    regarding his desire to appeal his termination to the Commission. See 
    W. Va. Code § 8
    -14A-5(a).
    The Commission is comprised of three members: one member appointed by the mayor, one
    appointed by the local chamber of commerce, and one appointed by the local fraternal order of
    police. See 
    W. Va. Code § 8-14-7
    (b)(1)-(3). 2 Petitioner delivered a notice of appeal to Mr. Teare
    the next day.
    On March 26, 2014, Mr. Teare had a telephone conference with petitioner’s former
    counsel, Andy Katz, regarding the appeal. Mr. Katz, on behalf of petitioner, waived the
    requirement entitling petitioner to an appeal hearing within ten days of the date of his termination.
    See 
    W. Va. Code § 8-14-20
    . Mr. Katz proposed several appeal hearing dates in May 2014.
    Although petitioner and the Commission agreed upon a hearing date in June of 2014, the hearing
    was continued at the City’s request. By agreement of the parties, the hearing was rescheduled for
    July 8, 2014. The rescheduled hearing was subsequently postponed because petitioner had filed a
    civil action regarding events that overlapped with the issue raised in petitioner’s appeal of his
    termination. According to Mr. Teare’s affidavit, it was determined that the City should be afforded
    the opportunity to review the civil action filed by petitioner “to determine what, if any[,] impact it
    would have on the appeal.”
    The evidentiary hearing was set for September 24 and 25, 2015. However, according to
    Mr. Teare’s affidavit, it was rescheduled “in large part, [due] to [petitioner’s] counsel’s inability
    to make [petitioner’s] expert available for a deposition pre-hearing[,]” a fact that petitioner does
    not challenge. Mr. Teare’s affidavit further stated that, thereafter, “[t]he appeal proceed[ed]
    through multiple status conferences, discovery disputes and missed deadlines for the next several
    years[,]” and included a detailed timeline of petitioner’s appeal recounting the same. Petitioner
    does not dispute the substance of the timeline. 3
    2
    According to Mr. Teare’s affidavit, he served for many years as counsel for the
    Commission and kept the Commission’s official records, “instead of the City Clerk, at the request
    of the Clerk’s Office. . . . [because] [the Clerk] had no room to [store] Civil Service files . . . . I
    maintained the files as requested.” With regard to petitioner’s case, Mr. Teare stated that “[t]he
    communications, scheduling orders and other interlocutory orders have been maintained in my
    offices per longstanding practice”[;] that he was asked by the Commission “to conduct prehearing
    conferences, motion hearings and scheduling matters[,] which he did, and “pre-hearing issue
    orders were made by the undersigned after consultation, discussion and agreement of the voting
    Commissioners before orders were issued and served by the undersigned.” Mr. Teare further stated
    that, “[a]t no time did [he] act without the full authority and knowledge of the Commissioners[,]”
    and that the record of the case “will confirm that some pre-hearing orders were signed by the
    undersigned, some by all Commissioners and some by a single Commissioner.”
    3
    Likewise, in its motion to dismiss petitioner’s petition for extraordinary relief, the City
    recounted in detail, the matter’s protracted procedural history, which petitioner does not dispute.
    Further, in a sworn affidavit, petitioner’s former counsel, Mr. Katz, generally stated that, after the
    July 8, 2014, hearing was rescheduled, “[w]hat followed consisted of various communication
    between [opposing counsel], Mr. Teare and me, involving further scheduling, procedural and
    evidentiary issues . . . .”
    2
    The hearing was eventually rescheduled for January 9, 2017. However, according to Mr.
    Teare’s affidavit, prior thereto, on December 28, 2016, petitioner moved to replace one of the three
    members of the Commission because he wished to call that member as a witness. On January 2,
    2017, petitioner moved to continue the hearing. On January 5, 2017, the Commission was notified
    that petitioner had retained new counsel who was not available for the January 9, 2017, hearing.
    Petitioner’s present counsel began representing petitioner at or around this time.
    On May 1, 2017, the Commission seat appointed by the mayor became vacant. At a pre-
    hearing conference conducted on May 30, 2017, counsel for both petitioner and the City indicated
    that they did not wish to proceed with petitioner’s appeal until the Commission was fully
    comprised of its three members.
    On August 9, 2018, petitioner filed, in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, a petition for
    a writ of prohibition and for a writ of mandamus seeking an order prohibiting the City from taking
    further action with regard to its termination of petitioner from employment and compelling the
    City to restore him to his former position, with all lost wages and benefits, along with reasonable
    attorney’s fees and costs. As grounds for the extraordinary relief, petitioner argued that that he was
    not afforded a timely appeal of his termination from employment, 4 that the Commission has not
    been fully or properly constituted with three members, 5 and that the Commission has not made a
    record of the present case as required by statute. 6
    On September 24, 2018, the City filed a motion to dismiss the petition for a writ of
    prohibition and writ of mandamus pursuant to Rules 12(b)(6) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil
    Procedure, 12(b)(7), and 19, and, alternatively, an answer to the petition.
    Petitioner filed a response in opposition to the City’s motion to dismiss. In conjunction
    therewith, petitioner filed sworn affidavits executed by former Commissioners Lew Tyree and
    James F. Pauley. Mr. Tyree indicated that “[a]t no time during the time I served was [Mr. Teare]
    4
    Notably, petitioner did not argue that his pre-termination hearing before the Hearing
    Board was inadequate or that the Hearing Board’s findings were based upon insufficient evidence,
    and, indeed, a copy of the Hearing Board’s decision was not made a part of the appendix record in
    this appeal.
    5
    Petitioner offers little detail about or support of this argument before this Court. He does
    not specifically assign error to the Court’s treatment of this issue.
    6
    Petitioner alleged that the Commission has violated West Virginia Code 8-14-8, which
    requires that the City recorder “shall be the ex officio clerk of the [Commission]” and West
    Virginia Code 8-14-10(2), which requires the Commission to “[k]eep minutes of its own
    proceedings, and records of its examinations and other official actions[,]” to keep and preserve all
    applicants’ recommendations for ten years, and to keep certain records open to the public.
    Petitioner contends that minutes or hearing transcripts of the Commission were neither made nor
    filed in this action and, further, the procedural orders petitioner’s counsel has received in this case
    “have [not] been lodged with the Clerk for [the] City.”
    3
    authorized to act independent of the Commission or on its behalf[,]” and that, with regard to
    petitioner’s appeal, in September of 2015, Mr. Tyree signed, on behalf of the Commission, an
    order that was prepared and presented by Mr. Teare and that Mr. Tyree believed
    “had been approved by the other two Commissioners. I learned later that it had not
    been discussed or approved by the other[] [Commissioners]. I also have examined
    other orders which Mr. Teare alone signed on behalf of the Commission in that
    case. The matters addressed in those orders were never approved by the
    Commissioners and had not been provided to me during the time I served.”
    Similarly, Mr. Pauley’s affidavit indicated that the matters addressed in orders that were
    signed by Mr. Teare on behalf of the Commission with regard to petitioner’s appeal “were never
    approved by the Commissioners and had not been provided to me during the time I served.”
    Meanwhile, on February 4, 2019, following the City’s mayoral election in November of
    2018, a new Commission member was appointed by the mayor, which resulted in all three seats
    of the Commission being filled. On March 9, 2019, the Commission entered a scheduling notice
    advising that the Commission was ready to convene a hearing on petitioner’s appeal as soon as a
    hearing date could be mutually agreed upon. The notice also directed counsel for petitioner and
    the City to meet and confer to suggest potential hearing dates to the Commission.
    A hearing on the City’s motion to dismiss was conducted before the circuit court on March
    13, 2019. By order entered on April 22, 2019, the court granted the City’s motion and denied
    petitioner’s request for extraordinary relief. The circuit court found the petition to be moot because
    the Commission is duly constituted and ready and able to conduct a hearing of petitioner’s
    termination appeal as soon as a hearing may be scheduled by the parties and that, in fact, the
    Commission has taken steps to proceed with the appeal hearing. The circuit court further found
    that petitioner failed to demonstrate that he has been prejudiced by the delay such that the delay
    has adversely affected his ability to present a defense, that petitioner’s challenge to one of the
    Commission members was procedurally improper in that petitioner failed to follow the procedure
    set forth in West Virginia Code § 8-14-7(k), and that the Commission is an indispensable party to
    the proceedings, pursuant to West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 19, and must be joined. This
    appeal followed.
    We first address petitioner’s assignment of error that the circuit court erred in finding that
    his petition for a writ of mandamus is moot. Our review of the circuit court’s ruling is de novo.
    See Syl. Pt. 1, Harrison Cty. Comm’n v. Harrison Cty. Assessor, 
    222 W. Va. 25
    , 
    658 S.E.2d 555
    (2008) (stating that “[a] de novo standard of review applies to a circuit court’s decision to grant or
    deny a writ of mandamus”).
    A writ of mandamus will not issue unless three elements coexist—(1) the
    existence of a clear right in the petitioner to the relief sought; (2) the existence of a
    legal duty on the part of respondent to do the thing which petitioner seeks to
    compel; and (3) the absence of another adequate remedy. Syl. pt. 2, State ex rel.
    Kucera v. City of Wheeling, 
    153 W.Va. 538
    , 
    170 S.E.2d 367
     (1969).
    4
    Syl. Pt. 1, Hickman v. Epstein, 
    192 W. Va. 42
    , 
    450 S.E.2d 406
     (1994).
    Petitioner is clearly entitled to an appeal hearing before the Commission and he could have
    rightly sought mandamus relief to compel the Commission to hold such a hearing. However,
    petitioner seeks a far more drastic remedy – that is, an order prohibiting the City from taking
    further action on petitioner’s termination from employment and compelling it to restore him to his
    former position, with all lost wages and benefits. This Court has instructed that “[t]he mere delay
    in the disposition or decision of a case does not vitiate the order or judgment. If a decision is unduly
    delayed, a proceeding in mandamus may be instituted to compel a decision but not how to decide.”
    Syl. Pt. 2, Kanawha Valley Transp. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 
    159 W. Va. 88
    , 
    219 S.E.2d 332
    (1975). (Emphasis added). It is undisputed that, on February 4, 2019, the Commission became
    fully constituted with all three members and, on March 9, 2019, it officially advised petitioner that
    it was ready to convene a hearing on his appeal as soon as the parties could agree upon a hearing
    date. The parties were directed to meet and confer to suggest possible hearing dates to the
    Commission. Because the Commission is ready, willing, and able to hear petitioner’s appeal, his
    request for a writ of mandamus is now moot.
    Next, we address petitioner’s assignment of error that the circuit court dismissed the
    petition for a writ of prohibition based upon the incorrect determination that the Commission is an
    indispensable party under Rule 19 of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure. 7 Petitioner
    contends that the delay in his appeal hearing, the result of which has been to his “irreparable
    detriment,” was caused by the fact that the Commission was not fully or properly constituted. He
    argues that because the City has the authority, pursuant to West Virginia Code § 8-14-7(b), to fill
    vacancies in the Commission, the Commission is not an indispensable party. According to
    petitioner, “complete relief can be achieved” by the City in the absence of the Commission. We
    disagree.
    The determination of whether a party is indispensable under the provisions
    of Rule 19(a) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure is in the sound
    7
    West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 19(a) provides:
    (a) Persons to Be Joined If Feasible. A person who is subject to service of process
    shall be joined as a party in the action if (1) in the person's absence complete relief
    cannot be accorded among those already parties, or (2) the person claims an interest
    relating to the subject of the action and is so situated that the disposition of the
    action in the person’s absence may (i) as a practical matter impair or impede the
    person’s ability to protect that interest, or (ii) leave any of the persons already
    parties subject to a substantial risk of incurring double, multiple, or otherwise
    inconsistent obligations by reason of the claimed interest. If the person has not been
    so joined, the court shall order that the person be made a party. If the person should
    join as a plaintiff but refuses to do so, the person may be made a defendant, or, in a
    proper case, an involuntary plaintiff. If the joined party objects to venue and joinder
    of that party would render the venue of the action improper, that party shall be
    dismissed from the action.
    5
    discretion of the trial court. Generally, a court must consider whether: (1) The
    interest of the absent party is distinct and severable; (2) in the absence of such party,
    the court can render justice between the parties before it; (3) the decree made will,
    in the absence of such party, have no injurious effect on the interest of such absent
    party; (4) the final determination will, in the absence of such party, be consistent
    with equity and good conscience, but each case must be considered on the basis of
    its peculiar facts, and the principal limitation on the court’s discretion is whether,
    under the particular facts of each case, absent parties will be adversely affected by
    non-joinder.
    Syl. Pt. 1, Dixon v. Am. Indus. Leasing Co., 
    157 W. Va. 735
    , 
    205 S.E.2d 4
     (1974).
    Throughout the proceedings below and in his brief on appeal, petitioner claims that
    extraordinary relief is warranted based, in part, on allegations that Mr. Teare acted without the
    authority or the approval of the Commission with respect to petitioner’s appeal, including the entry
    of orders rescheduling the appeal hearing, the maintenance of Commission files and records at his
    office, and the resulting absence of filings related to petitioner’s appeal with the City Clerk.
    Petitioner further contends that, during the limited time the Commission had three appointed
    members, all were of the same political party or were ineligible for appointment.
    “Under Rule 19(a) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure a party
    becomes an indispensable party if he has an interest relating to the subject of the
    action and is so situated that the disposition of the action in his absence may as a
    practical matter impair or impede his ability to protect that interest.” Syllabus Point
    1, Pauley v. Gainer, 
    177 W.Va. 464
    , 
    353 S.E.2d 318
     (1986).
    “Generally, all persons who are materially interested in the subject-matter
    involved in a suit, and who will be affected by the result of the proceedings, should
    be made parties thereto, and when the attention of the court is called to the absence
    of any of such interested persons, it should see that they are made parties before
    entering a decree affecting their interests.” Syllabus, Manufacturers’ Light & Heat
    Co. v. Lemasters, 
    91 W.Va. 1
    , 
    112 S.E. 201
     (1922).
    Syl. Pt. 2 and 3, State ex rel. One-Gateway v. Johnson, 
    208 W. Va. 731
    , 
    542 S.E.2d 894
    (2000). We have recognized that “‘[t]here is no precise or universal test to determine when
    a person’s interest is such as to make him an “indispensable” party.’ Dixon v. American
    Industrial Leasing Co., 
    157 W.Va. 735
    , 740, 
    205 S.E.2d 4
    , 7 (1974) (citations omitted).”
    One-Gateway, 208 W. Va. at 735, 
    542 S.E.2d at 898
    . Thus, based upon petitioner’s
    allegations, which clearly concern the Commission’s duties, practices, and procedures,
    both statutory and otherwise, we find that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
    determining that the Commission is an indispensable party to this action and that
    petitioner’s failure to join it as a party warranted dismissal. 8
    8
    Given our conclusion that dismissal of this action was proper under Rule 19, we need not
    consider petitioner’s assignment of error that the circuit court erred in failing to find that the delay
    6
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    ISSUED: December 7, 2020
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice Margaret L. Workman
    Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    in the holding of an appeal hearing before the Commission, and the prejudice attendant thereto,
    entitled him to the requested relief.
    7