Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Corrections v. Jacoby Garrett ( 2022 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Beales, O’Brien and Fulton
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued by videoconference
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
    v.     Record No. 0456-21-2
    JACOBY GARRETT                                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA                                            MARCH 8, 2022
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
    v.     Record No. 0796-21-2
    JACOBY GARRETT
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Beverly W. Snukals, Judge
    Ryan S. Hardy, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1
    Attorney General; Ronald N. Regnery, Senior Assistant Attorney
    General; Kati K. Dean, Assistant Attorney General, on briefs), for
    appellant.
    Robert J. Allen (ThorsenAllen LLP, on briefs), for appellee.
    These two consolidated appeals arise from a grievance action that Jacoby Garrett
    (“Garrett”) filed against his employer, the Virginia Department of Corrections (“VDOC”). A
    hearing officer upheld VDOC’s decision to terminate Garrett’s employment. Garrett appealed to
    the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond (“circuit court”). The circuit court subsequently
    remanded the case back to the hearing officer to reopen the record in order to consider an issue
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    1
    Jason S. Miyares succeeded Mark R. Herring as Attorney General on January 15, 2022.
    that had not been raised during the earlier proceedings before the hearing officer. After the
    hearing officer engaged in additional factfinding on remand, the hearing officer reversed his
    initial decision and reinstated Garrett to his job. VDOC then appealed to the circuit court, which
    upheld the hearing officer’s reinstatement of Garrett. VDOC now appeals to this Court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Garrett worked for VDOC as a Telecom/Network Coordinator. VDOC’s policies called
    for termination of employment for any employees who tested positive for illegal substances. On
    June 28, 2018, Garrett was selected for a random drug test and was told to report to Human
    Resources in his building. Garrett initially consented to being tested, but he ultimately left the
    Human Resources office and never returned to be tested that day. As a result, on July 17, 2018,
    VDOC issued Garrett a Group III written notice of disciplinary action for failing to submit to the
    testing and terminated his employment.
    On August 6, 2018, Garrett filed a grievance action challenging his termination pursuant
    to the state grievance procedure. He claimed that he did not refuse to submit to the drug test and
    that he did not violate any VDOC policies. In the alternative, he argued that any violation “was
    improperly classified as a Group III violation and should have been a less[e]r violation.”
    Garrett’s case was assigned to a hearing officer, and a hearing was held on October 10, 2018.
    Garrett argued before the hearing officer that VDOC “denied him substantive and procedural due
    process.” After taking evidence and making findings of fact on the issues presented by the
    parties, the hearing officer concluded that the decision to terminate Garrett was “within the
    Agency’s discretion” and upheld Garrett’s termination by VDOC.
    Garrett appealed to the circuit court. In his appeal, Garrett argued that the random drug
    testing policy violated his “right to be free from unlawful search and seizures pursuant to the
    Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” Garrett contended that he did not have a
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    “safety-sensitive” position with VDOC that would make a random drug test appropriate under
    the Fourth Amendment. In response, VDOC argued that Garrett’s failure to raise any Fourth
    Amendment issues to the hearing officer precluded him from raising a Fourth Amendment
    challenge to his termination for the first time on appeal to the circuit court.
    At a hearing held on February 27, 2019, the circuit court judge asked Garrett’s counsel
    why he did not initially raise the Fourth Amendment issue with the hearing officer. Garrett’s
    counsel replied, “Well, it would put us in a position where we would have to put on evidence of
    every conceivable argument that we would possibly use only if we lost.” The circuit court judge
    then stated, “Right, but that argument is your main argument on appeal.” Garrett’s counsel
    replied, “It is the main argument.”
    On April 5, 2019, the circuit court issued an opinion letter concluding that Code
    § 2.2-3006(B) allows for new legal challenges to be raised on appeal challenging a hearing
    officer’s decision. The circuit court relied on Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
    v. Quesenberry, 
    277 Va. 420
    , 429 (2009), for the proposition that the “standard of review
    ‘focuses solely on the question whether the hearing officer’s decision is contradictory to any
    applicable law.’” Consequently, upon finding “there is scant information on the record that is
    relevant” to the Fourth Amendment issue, the circuit court concluded that the case needed to be
    remanded back to the hearing officer to reopen the record and to “develop the factual record as to
    the newly raised argument and to make a decision in light of” the newly raised Fourth
    Amendment argument. The circuit court concluded that Code § 2.2-3006(B) grants the circuit
    courts “the power to remand the matter back to the hearing officer to develop facts on the record
    to allow courts to determine whether the decision itself is contradictory to law.” Consequently,
    on April 5, 2019, the circuit court entered an order (the “order remanding to the hearing officer”)
    directing the hearing officer to make findings of fact on whether Garrett’s “employment with the
    -3-
    Virginia Department of Corrections was a ‘safety-sensitive job’ that qualifies as an exception to
    the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment.”
    On remand, the hearing officer found that Garrett was not employed in a
    “safety-sensitive” position under the Fourth Amendment and, therefore, subsequently reinstated
    Garrett to his position with VDOC. VDOC then appealed that decision to the Office of
    Employment Dispute Resolution at the Virginia Department of Human Resource Management,
    but it “decline[d] to disturb” the hearing officer’s decision. VDOC then appealed to the circuit
    court, which upheld the hearing officer’s decision to reinstate Garrett.
    VDOC then appealed Garrett’s reinstatement to this Court.
    II. ANALYSIS
    In these appeals, VDOC challenges the circuit court’s authority under “Code
    § 2.2-3006(B) to remand the matter back to the Hearing Officer to develop the factual record.”
    VDOC also asserts that the circuit court “erred in considering Appellee’s [Garrett’s] Fourth
    Amendment challenge” because Garrett “failed to preserve the issue by intentionally raising it
    for the first time on appeal to the Circuit Court.” VDOC also challenges the circuit court’s ruling
    under Garrett’s Fourth Amendment rights “because VDOC’s legitimate governmental interest
    outweighed Appellee’s [Garrett’s] privacy interests.” Finally, both VDOC and Garrett assign
    error to the circuit court’s ruling on attorney fees.
    A. The State Grievance Procedure
    “The state employee grievance procedure creates a ‘tripartite review procedure’ setting
    forth the following roles: (1) the hearing officer is the finder of fact and final authority on
    factfinding; (2) DHRM and EDR determine whether the hearing officer’s ruling is in compliance
    with personnel policy and grievance procedure respectively; and (3) the courts determine
    whether the grievance determination is ‘contradictory to law.’” Passaro v. Va. Dep’t of State
    -4-
    Police, 
    67 Va. App. 357
    , 367 (2017) (quoting Va. Dep’t of State Police v. Barton, 
    39 Va. App. 439
    , 445 (2002)). “Pursuant to state employee grievance procedure, a party has a right to
    judicial appellate review of grievance hearing decisions on the grounds that the determinations
    were ‘contradictory to law.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Code § 2.2-3006(B)). “On appeal from a state
    employee grievance decision, courts are bound by the factual findings of the hearing officer and
    may only reverse or modify the decision if it is ‘contradictory to law.’” Osburn v. Va. Dep’t of
    Alcoholic Beverage Control, 
    295 Va. 10
    , 17 (2018). “The appealing party must ‘identify [a]
    constitutional provision, statute, regulation or judicial decision which the [hearing officer’s]
    decision contradicted.’” Quesenberry, 277 Va. at 429 (alterations in original) (quoting Tatum v.
    Va. Dept. of Agric., 
    41 Va. App. 110
    , 122 (2003)). “Questions regarding whether a decision is
    contradictory to law, including the meaning of any underlying statutes, are reviewed de novo.”
    Osburn, 295 Va. at 17.
    As an initial matter, the circuit court clearly sits as an appellate court in state grievance
    proceedings, as Code § 2.2-3006(B) provides that “[w]ithin 30 days of a final decision, a party
    may appeal on the grounds that the determination is contradictory to law by filing a notice of
    appeal with the clerk of the circuit court[.]” (Emphasis added); see also Passaro, 67 Va. App. at
    361 (“The circuit court, sitting as an appellate court, affirmed the decision of the hearing
    officer.”). Code § 2.2-3006(B) further provides that “[w]ithin 30 days of receipt of the grievance
    record, the court, sitting without a jury, shall hear the appeal on the record” and “may affirm the
    decision or may reverse or modify the decision” of the hearing officer. (Emphasis added). Thus,
    the statutory framework governing the state grievance procedure clearly manifests the General
    Assembly’s intent to grant circuit courts appellate jurisdiction over a hearing officer’s
    employment determination under the state grievance procedure.
    -5-
    In this case, Garrett argued on appeal to the circuit court that his Fourth Amendment
    rights were violated, but the circuit court found that there was “scant information” in the record
    before it on appeal that was “relevant to the issue of whether [Garrett’s] employment constituted
    a ‘safety-sensitive’ position” under the Fourth Amendment. As a result, the circuit court directed
    the hearing officer to “develop the factual record” beyond the evidence that was originally
    presented to the hearing officer. Essentially, upon finding that the record on appeal was
    insufficient to decide Garrett’s Fourth Amendment argument, the circuit court remanded the case
    to the hearing officer to reopen the record and make additional findings of fact related to
    Garrett’s Fourth Amendment argument.
    On appeal, it is well-established that “the burden is on the appellant to present to us [the
    appellate court] a sufficient record from which we [the appellate court] can determine whether
    the lower court has erred in the respect complained of.” Justis v. Young, 
    202 Va. 631
    , 632
    (1961); accord Woods v. R.D. Hunt & Son, Inc., 
    207 Va. 281
    , 287 (1966) (“[T]he onus is upon
    the appellant to provide us with a sufficient record from which we can decide whether the trial
    court erred as alleged.” (emphasis in original)); see also McDonald v. Nat’l Enterprises, Inc.,
    
    262 Va. 184
    , 195 (2001) (“As the appellant in this appeal, McDonald has the burden to present a
    sufficient record on which this Court can determine whether the circuit court erred as McDonald
    contends.”); Bunton v. Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 557
    , 561 (1988) (“Bunton has the
    responsibility of providing the record on appeal necessary to enable the reviewing court to
    address the issues. As he has failed in that responsibility, we cannot consider the merits of his
    appeal.”). The appellant bears this burden because, as the Supreme Court of Virginia has
    repeatedly recognized, “on appeal the judgment of the lower court is presumed to be correct.”
    Justis, 
    202 Va. at 632
    ; see also, e.g., Shipman v. Fletcher, 
    91 Va. 473
    , 487 (1895) (“The
    judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is justly entitled to great weight. It is always
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    presumed to be right until the contrary is shown. An appellate court will not overturn it unless
    satisfied that it is wrong. It devolves on the party complaining to show error, and to satisfy the
    appellate court that the judgment or decree complained of is wrong.”); McArter v. Grigsley, 
    84 Va. 159
    , 162 (1887) (noting that “the action of the court below, upon old and well-established
    principles, must be presumed to be right”).
    It is likewise well-established that appellate courts “may act only upon facts contained in
    the record.” Jackson v. Commonwealth, 
    44 Va. App. 218
    , 224 (2004). Thus, “[t]he importance
    of the record is obvious, for it is axiomatic that an appellate court’s review of the case is limited
    to the record on appeal.” Turner v. Commonwealth, 
    2 Va. App. 96
    , 99 (1986); see also, e.g.,
    Wilkins v. Commonwealth, 
    64 Va. App. 711
    , 717 (2015). Consequently, “[a] failure to furnish a
    sufficient record will result in an affirmance of the judgment appealed from.” Woods, 
    207 Va. at 287
    .
    Here, Garrett did not provide a sufficient record to the circuit court so that it could make
    a ruling to determine whether the hearing officer’s decision was contradictory to law under the
    Fourth Amendment. The circuit court judge directly asked Garrett’s counsel, “why wasn’t the
    Fourth Amendment brought up” before the hearing officer. Garrett’s counsel replied, “It would
    put us in a position where we would have to put on evidence of every conceivable argument that
    we would possibly use only if we lost” even though counsel acknowledged that the Fourth
    Amendment argument was “the main argument” on appeal to the circuit court. Furthermore,
    when asked a similar question by this Court during oral argument, Garrett’s counsel candidly
    stated that “certainly if we could go back in time, yes, we would present the Fourth Amendment
    argument at the initial hearing.” Thus, Garrett’s own admissions demonstrate that he engaged in
    a litigation strategy where he presented a portion of his case to the hearing officer and then
    sought to present another different portion of his case to the circuit court when the matter was on
    -7-
    appeal there, which left the circuit court without the necessary record on which to make its ruling
    whether Garrett’s termination was contradictory to law under the Fourth Amendment.2
    The circuit court—sitting as an appellate court—should have limited its review to the
    record then in front of it on appeal. The hearing officer did not make any factual findings on
    whether Garrett’s employment status was in a “safety-sensitive” position as an employee because
    Garrett never raised that issue for the hearing officer’s consideration. 3 If the circuit court could
    not determine from the record before it on appeal whether the hearing officer’s decision was
    contradictory to law, Garrett simply failed to carry his burden of providing a record sufficient to
    enable an appellate court to review his claim of error in the judgment from which he appealed.
    See Woods, 
    207 Va. at 287
    . 4 Consequently, this Court holds that the circuit court erred in its
    decision to remand the case back to the hearing officer so that it could “develop the factual
    record” outside of the scope of the issues presented to the hearing officer in the first hearing and
    so that the hearing officer could make additional factfinding on an issue that was not even in the
    2
    This Court appreciates and values the candor of Garrett’s counsel in his answers during
    oral argument before this Court, as “[s]uch candor by counsel embodies the ethical duties
    expected of a legal advocate and is held in high esteem.” Nimety v. Commonwealth, 
    66 Va. App. 432
    , 436 n.3 (2016).
    3
    In the hearing officer’s initial ruling, he stated, “The employee has the burden of raising
    and establishing any affirmative defenses to discipline and any evidence of mitigating
    circumstances related to discipline. Grievance Procedure Manual (‘GPM’) § 5.8.”
    4
    In state grievance procedure cases, the Supreme Court has recognized that the party
    appealing the hearing officer’s decision properly bears the burden of identifying any applicable
    law in challenging the hearing officer’s decision. See Quesenberry, 277 Va. at 420. This
    Court’s decision today does not preclude an appealing party from raising a constitutional
    provision for the first time on appeal. However, given that the circuit court sits as an appellate
    court and is limited to reviewing the record of the proceedings below, the appellant still bears the
    burden of providing a sufficient record for the circuit court to determine if the hearing officer’s
    decision is contradictory to law under Code § 2.2-3006(B).
    -8-
    record of the grievance proceedings. See Turner, 2 Va. App. at 99.5 Therefore, this Court
    reverses the circuit court’s order remanding to the hearing officer and now remands the case
    back to the circuit court so that it can make a ruling based on the factual findings in the record
    that was first before the circuit court at the time it originally decided to remand the case back to
    the hearing officer.6
    B. Attorney Fees
    Both VDOC and Garrett assign error to the circuit court’s ruling awarding Garrett
    attorney fees. Code § 2.2-3006(E) provides that the circuit court “shall award reasonable
    attorneys’ fees and costs to the employee if the employee substantially prevails on the merits of a
    case.” This Court’s decision today reverses the circuit court’s order affirming the hearing
    officer’s decision to reinstate Garrett. Because the circuit court has now been instructed to
    consider only the evidence in the record that the circuit court had before it at the time of its initial
    5
    A remand back to the hearing officer can be appropriate in certain circumstances. For
    instance, in Passaro, 67 Va. App. at 366, the circuit court remanded the matter back to the
    hearing officer for “further consideration of the testimony offered by Special Agent Wolpert and
    factual determinations, if any, as a result.” The circuit court directed the hearing officer to
    “affirm, reverse or amend his prior ruling, as appropriate.” Id. In that case, “[o]n remand, the
    hearing officer asserted that he fully considered the testimony of all witnesses, including Agent
    Wolpert’s testimony” and “affirmed the original hearing decision.” Id. In our present matter, the
    circuit court remanded the case back to the hearing officer to determine a completely new issue
    of whether Garrett’s “employment with the Virginia Department of Corrections was a
    ‘safety-sensitive job’ that qualifies as an exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth
    Amendment” because “scant information on the record” existed relating to Garrett’s status as a
    “safety-sensitive” employee. The remand in Passaro allowed the hearing officer to further
    consider or reconsider evidence and testimony already in the record—unlike here where the
    circuit court required the hearing officer to engage in new factfinding and “develop the factual
    record” on an issue not contained within the record on appeal of the grievance proceedings.
    6
    As this case is remanded back to the circuit court for a new hearing on the first record
    that was before it, this Court does not decide VDOC’s assignment of error relating to the Fourth
    Amendment ruling by the circuit court. The circuit court is instructed on remand to make a
    ruling on that issue based on the record that the circuit court originally had before it when the
    circuit court had decided to remand the case back to the hearing officer.
    -9-
    ruling in this matter, Garrett has no longer substantially prevailed on the merits of his case, and,
    therefore, we must reverse the circuit court’s ruling awarding attorney fees to Garrett.7
    III. CONCLUSION
    In short, because the circuit court sits as an appellate court in state grievance procedure
    cases, the circuit court cannot engage in any factfinding because the factual findings made by the
    hearing officer are final, and the circuit court can only determine if the hearing officer’s decision
    is contradictory to law, pursuant to the requirements of Code § 2.2-3006(B). See Passaro, 67
    Va. App. at 367. As the circuit court is acting as an appellate court in these cases, the circuit
    court is limited to the record that it has before it on appeal. See Turner, 2 Va. App. at 99 (“The
    importance of the record is obvious, for it is axiomatic that an appellate court’s review of the
    case is limited to the record on appeal.”). In addition, the Supreme Court has determined that,
    for an appealing party, “failure to furnish a sufficient record will result in an affirmance of the
    judgment appealed from.” Woods, 
    207 Va. at 287
    .
    In the present matter, Garrett failed to establish a record on appeal to the circuit court on
    his Fourth Amendment challenge to the hearing officer’s decision. Garrett did not provide any
    factual findings from the hearing officer that his job was not a “safety-sensitive” position under
    the Fourth Amendment. Indeed, the hearing officer decided to uphold the termination of
    Garrett’s employment on other grounds. Garrett did raise the Fourth Amendment challenge
    during his appeal to the circuit court, but his counsel candidly admitted to the circuit court that he
    had intended to raise a Fourth Amendment argument in this matter only if he had lost before the
    hearing officer.
    7
    Of course, if Garrett “substantially prevails” in the hearing that will occur upon remand
    from this Court to the circuit court, then the circuit court would still be required to award him
    attorney fees under Code § 2.2-3006(E).
    - 10 -
    The circuit court stated that there was “scant information on the record” of any evidence
    relating to the Fourth Amendment and, therefore, remanded the case back to the hearing officer
    to determine whether Garrett held a “safety-sensitive” position. However, the circuit court—
    which was sitting as an appellate court here—erred in its decision to remand the case back to the
    hearing officer to reopen the record to engage in new factfinding on an issue on which the
    hearing officer had not made any findings of fact. In short, the circuit court failed to limit its
    review to the record that the circuit court initially had before it on appeal.
    Therefore, for all of these reasons, this Court reverses the circuit court’s order remanding
    to the hearing officer. We now remand the case back to the circuit court to make a ruling on the
    hearing officer’s initial decision to uphold Garrett’s termination based on the record that the
    circuit court had before it at that time. In short, this Court directs the circuit court to make its
    ruling on Garrett’s Fourth Amendment legal arguments based on that record before the circuit
    court had remanded the case back to the hearing officer. This Court also reverses the circuit
    court’s order awarding Garrett attorney fees and also remands this issue so that the circuit court
    can make a ruling on attorney fees based on whether Garrett “substantially prevails,” pursuant to
    Code § 2.2-3006(E), on this remand back to the circuit court.
    Reversed and remanded.
    - 11 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0796212

Filed Date: 3/8/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/8/2022