IN THE MATTER OF C.E., POLICE OFFICER, (S9999R), ELIZABETH (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION) ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                              NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1016-18T2
    IN THE MATTER OF C.E.,
    POLICE OFFICER (S9999R),
    ELIZABETH
    __________________________
    Argued telephonically March 18, 2020 –
    Decided June 5, 2020
    Before Judges Koblitz, Whipple, and Mawla.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Civil Service
    Commission, Docket No. 2017-677.
    Stephen B. Hunter argued the cause for appellant C.E.
    (Detzky, Hunter & DeFillippo, LLC, attorneys; Stephen
    B. Hunter, of counsel and on the brief).
    Robert J. Lenahan, Jr., Special Counsel, City of
    Elizabeth Department of Law, argued the cause for
    respondent City of Elizabeth.
    Dominic L. Giova, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent New Jersey Civil Service
    Commission (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General,
    attorney; Donna Arons, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel; Dominic L. Giova, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    C.E.1, appeals from a September 21, 2018 Final Administrative Action of
    the New Jersey Civil Service Commission (Commission) ordering his name be
    removed from the municipal police officer eligibility list, after he was deemed
    unfit to perform the duties of the position by the City of Elizabeth. We affirm.
    C.E. passed the Civil Service Examination for the position of police
    officer and applied for employment with the City. C.E. worked as an emergency
    medical technician (EMT) for approximately fifteen years with various agencies
    including, the Elizabeth Fire Department Ambulance Service Bureau
    (EFDASB), Avenel First Aid Squad, Valley Hospital, and North Bergen EMS.
    Upon completion of his background check, he was offered a job and accepted it.
    C.E.'s background investigation highlighted certain behaviors over the
    course of his employment. While working for EFDASB, C.E. was charged with
    and pled guilty to "yelling at and using profanities towards a co-worker and
    [making] inappropriate comments to a patient." C.E. was terminated from North
    Bergen EMS after being charged with incompetency, insubordination, neglect
    of duty, misuse of public property, including motor vehicles and other sufficient
    1
    We utilize initials throughout. See N.J.A.C. 4A:4-6.5(b)(2) ("Information
    obtained . . . regarding the medical condition or history of an employee shall be
    collected and maintained on separate forms and in separate medical files and
    treated as a confidential medical record. . . .").
    A-1016-18T2
    2
    cause. The record check also revealed C.E.'s driving record included six motor
    vehicle accidents and five license suspensions.
    The City referred C.E. for a pre-employment psychological evaluation
    that was conducted on June 16, 2016, by Dr. Betty C. McLendon, Psy.D. Dr.
    McLendon conducted a six-hour test using several metrics, including the Inwald
    Personality Inventory test. In September 2016, Dr. McLendon issued a report
    finding C.E. was a person "who presented with a history and pattern of
    maladaptive functioning and adjustment problems." Dr. McLendon also found
    that C.E. demonstrated "limited insights, poor judgment and a record of
    behaviors that reflected emotional instability across multiple domains of his
    life." Dr. McLendon further opined that C.E.'s "inability to adhere to standards
    and to maintain proper professional decorum has been documented and further
    supports his unsuitability for a public service position."
    After reviewing Dr. McLendon's report, the City notified C.E. that his
    name had been removed from its hiring authority's eligibility list. C.E. appealed
    the City's decision to the Medical Review Panel (Panel) pursuant to N.J.A.C.
    4A:4-6.5. In support of his appeal, C.E. testified and submitted two independent
    psychological reports, one from Dr. John Aylward, Ed.D, and another from Dr.
    Nicole J. Rafanello, Ph.D, which both presented opinions C.E. was
    A-1016-18T2
    3
    psychologically fit for the position of a municipal police officer. C.E. also
    submitted various letters of recommendation primarily from his supervisors and
    colleagues.
    On December 11, 2017, the Panel, after considering C.E.'s submitted
    materials, his appearance before the panel, and Dr. McLendon's initial
    evaluation, recommended the City uphold his removal from the eligibility list.
    The Panel was particularly concerned with C.E.'s reported problems at work as
    well as his driving record. The Panel noted:
    Despite the fact that he was injured just prior to his use
    of profanity, his judgment in that incident was poor.
    Though he stated that he did not direct any of the
    profanity towards the patient who was being
    transported, the official report from the incident that
    noted [C.E.] made inappropriate comments to the
    patient. [C.E.] pled guilty to the charge against him in
    that incident. . . . [H]e used an ambulance to push a
    disabled motor vehicle off a highway and allegedly
    failed to respond in a timely manner to a dispatch on a
    "priority call". . . . [C.E.] has had his driver's license
    suspended five times. That pattern of not following
    rules is not consistent with the behavior expected of a
    police officer. The number of incidents, some of which
    are in the recent past, . . . led the panel to find [C.E.] is
    not suited for work as a police officer.
    The Panel considered the opinions of the evaluators, concluded Dr.
    McLendon's recommendation was sufficiently supported by the record, found
    A-1016-18T2
    4
    C.E. was mentally unfit to fulfill the duties of the position, and recommended
    the hiring authority keep his name off the eligibility list.
    C.E. filed exceptions to the Panel's recommendation, and on September
    21, 2018, the Commission issued an order upholding the Panel's decision. The
    Commission noted:
    While perhaps lacking any specific mental pathology,
    the Commission finds that the incidents such as yelling
    at a co-worker, directing profanity at a patient he was
    transporting, and failing to respond to a dispatch . . . are
    clearly reflective of an individual of questionable
    judgment and impulse control . . . .
    The Commission added C.E.'s psychological traits and behavioral history,
    identified by the Panel, "clearly adversely relate to effective performance as a
    Police Officer" and ordered that his name be removed from the eligibility list.
    This appeal followed.
    On appeal, C.E. argues the Commission's decision to remove his name
    from the eligibility list was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable because: 1)
    the Commission failed to refer to C.E.'s exemplary career as an EMT; 2) the
    Commission ignored the findings of the City's Background Investigation Unit
    who concluded that C.E. was a qualified candidate for the position; and 3) the
    Commission did not comply with the required legal standards in the State's
    psychological examination cases.
    A-1016-18T2
    5
    Our review of the Commission's decisions is limited. See In re Stallworth,
    
    208 N.J. 182
    , 194 (2011). We accord a strong presumption of reasonableness to
    agency determinations. In re Carroll, 
    339 N.J. Super. 429
    , 437 (App. Div. 2001).
    We "may not substitute [our] own judgment for the agency's, even though [we]
    might have reached a different result." 
    Stallworth, 208 N.J. at 194
    (quoting In
    re Carter, 
    191 N.J. 474
    , 483 (2007)). "This is particularly true when the issue
    under review is directed to the agency's special 'expertise and superior
    knowledge of a particular field.'"
    Id. at 195
    (quoting In re Herrmann, 
    192 N.J. 19
    , 28 (2007)).
    "In order to reverse an agency's judgment, [we] must find the agency's
    decision to be 'arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable, or . . . not supported by
    substantial credible evidence in the record as a whole.'"
    Id. at 194
    (quoting
    Henry v. Rahway State Prison, 
    81 N.J. 571
    , 579-80 (1980)). While an agency's
    interpretation of statutes and regulations within its enforcing responsibility are
    ordinarily entitled to our deference, E.S. v. Div. of Med. Assistance & Health
    Servs., 
    412 N.J. Super. 340
    , 355 (App. Div. 2010), "we are not bound by the
    agency's legal opinions," which we review de novo, A.B. v. Div. of Med.
    Assistance & Health Servs., 
    407 N.J. Super. 330
    , 340 (App. Div. 2009) (citation
    omitted).
    A-1016-18T2
    6
    We reject C.E.'s arguments. C.E.'s reliance on In re Vey, 
    124 N.J. 534
    (1991) (Vey I) and In re Vey, 
    135 N.J. 306
    (1994) (Vey II) for the proposition
    that the Commission failed to comply with the required legal standards is
    misplaced. In Vey I, a seasonal police officer was removed from a township's
    eligibility list for a position as a full-time officer after her psychological
    evaluation indicated she was "more likely than the average person to become
    emotional or frustrated; impulsive and suspicious; and assertive and bold, with
    the suggestion of likely conflict between herself and supervisory 
    personnel." 124 N.J. at 536-38
    . There the evaluator concluded: "[W]hile [the candidate] has
    many strengths, her potential for functioning well in the long term . . . as a police
    officer are below average."
    Id. at 537.
    The Court remanded the matter to the agency so that it could relate its
    findings in the case to the statutory qualifications of the position.
    Id. at 543-44.
    The Court noted that while the evaluators found the candidate to have below-
    average potential because, in part, they believed her "boldness" and
    "suspiciousness" could pose problems between the candidate and her
    supervisors, it was not readily apparent how being "bold" or "suspicious"
    contributes to a candidate's unfitness to be a police officer.
    Id. at 543.
    The
    Court held: "If a trait is to be deemed disqualifying to the extent that it
    A-1016-18T2
    7
    demonstrates psychological unfitness, there must be evidence in the record of
    both the trait itself and the trait's correlation with the standard of psychological
    unfitness."
    Id. at 544.
    In Vey 
    II, 135 N.J. at 307
    , the Court determined the agency complied with
    terms of the remand and noted the candidate's negative test results were
    consistent with "the observed negative trend in [her] behavior and work
    performance."
    Id. at 308
    (citation omitted). The Court recognized that society
    relies on police officers to carry out responsibilities that are "simultaneously
    weighty, sensitive, and fraught with dangerous consequences to themselves,
    other police officers, and the public."
    Ibid. The Court found
    the agency's
    decision was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable in finding an applicant
    unfit for the position when, that applicant is "impulsive," "manipulative," "easily
    frustrated," "suspicious," and "assertive and bold with advisory personnel. . . ."
    Id. at 308
    -09.
    Based on our review we conclude, the Commission complied with the
    mandates of Vey I and Vey II as its final decision identifies C.E.'s disqualifying
    traits, there is sufficient credible evidence in the record of the traits ' existence,
    and there is a correlation with the traits and the standard of psychological
    unfitness. Like in Vey II, where the Court affirmed the agency's determination
    A-1016-18T2
    8
    that an applicant was unfit because both her work performance and
    psychological test results suggested she would not be an effective officer, C.E.'s
    behavioral record and psychological evaluation can be considered to lead to the
    same conclusion.
    We also reject C.E.'s contention the Commission ignored the positive
    aspects of his profile, such as his career as an EMT and the independent
    psychological examinations of Dr. Rafanello and Dr. Aylward. The Panel's
    recommendation, which the Commission adopted, clearly evaluated each of the
    psychological examinations and nonetheless found, on balance, the negative
    traits rendered C.E. mentally unfit for the position. In addition, the Commission,
    in its final decision, stated it was unpersuaded by C.E.'s exception, that his EMT
    experience along with his letters of recommendation made him suitable to be a
    police officer.
    While we recognize C.E.'s longstanding career as an EMT, we do not
    substitute our own opinion for the agency's, even if we would have reached a
    different result, when there is sufficient credible evidence to support the
    agency's decision. Based on our review of the record and well-established legal
    principles, we conclude the Commission's decision was not arbitrary,
    A-1016-18T2
    9
    unreasonable, or capricious and was supported by sufficient credible evidence
    in the record.
    Affirmed.
    A-1016-18T2
    10