Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice v. Sean Milner ( 2015 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Chief Judge Huff, Judges Beales and AtLee
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued by teleconference
    VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE
    v.     Record No. 1812-14-2
    SEAN MILNER                                                   MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
    VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE                             JULY 21, 2015
    v.     Record No. 2147-14-2
    SEAN MILNER
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY
    Margaret P. Spencer, Judge Designate
    G. William Norris, Jr., Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General; Rhodes Ritenour, Deputy Attorney General; Ryan
    Spreague Hardy, Assistant Attorney General, on briefs), for
    appellant.
    James B. Thorsen (Thorsen Hart & Allen, LLP, on brief), for
    appellee.
    The Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) appeals a ruling of the Circuit Court of
    Henrico County reversing a decision by a hearing officer in an employee grievance filed by Sean
    Milner (Milner) and granting Milner’s request for relief, which includes reinstatement to his former
    position as Court Services Unit (CSU) Director. DJJ also appeals from a separate order by the
    circuit court awarding Milner attorney’s fees and costs accrued during the proceedings in that court.
    We hold that the hearing officer’s decision was not contrary to law and, accordingly, we reverse the
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    circuit court’s orders granting Milner’s requested reinstatement as CSU Director and awarding him
    attorney’s fees and costs.
    I. BACKGROUND
    This grievance arises from Milner’s reassignment from his former position as Director of the
    CSU for the Henrico County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court (JDR court) to the
    newly created position of Assistant Certification Manager. The CSU provides support services to
    the JDR court. It is not a part of the judicial branch but instead is a part of DJJ, a department in the
    executive branch. Code § 16.1-233. Nonetheless, the CSU is located in the same building as the
    Henrico JDR court, and the JDR court is the “primary customer” of the services rendered by the
    CSU staff. The position of CSU Director, which Milner held, is a statutory creation. Code
    § 16.1-236.1(A). According to that statute, the Director of a particular CSU must be appointed by
    the judges of the JDR court served by that CSU (from a list of names of eligible individuals
    submitted by the Director of DJJ). 
    Id. Meanwhile, the
    “transfer, demotion, or separation” of a CSU
    Director is under the authority of the Director of DJJ, but must be for good cause, after consultation
    with the JDR court judges, and in accordance with the Virginia Personnel Act, including the state
    employee grievance procedure. 
    Id. On March
    21, 2013, five judges of the JDR court, along with a former judge, submitted a
    “no confidence” letter to the Director of DJJ, expressing their loss of confidence in Milner and
    complaining of Milner’s management style and interpersonal relationship skills. A deputy sheriff
    escorted Milner from the courthouse and told him he could not return. Subsequently, DJJ
    conducted an internal investigation of Milner.1 The investigation revealed mixed opinions about
    Milner from CSU staff – along with primarily negative opinions about him from the JDR court
    1
    The final investigative report states that the investigation resulted from complaints of
    staff members, as well as from the JDR court judges, about Milner.
    -2-
    judges. The investigation also found that most CSU staff believed the relationship between the
    CSU and the JDR court was very poor.
    After the investigation was completed, DJJ reassigned Milner from CSU Director to the
    newly created position of Assistant Certification Manager, and the reassignment became final on
    July 12, 2013. Milner had not been aware of the investigation while it took place, and he did not
    receive a copy of the investigative report until July 15, 2013. Milner’s salary and benefits remained
    the same in the new position, and he in fact later received a raise. His supervisory role was greatly
    reduced however, as he had only four employees reporting to him in the chain of command in his
    new position, compared to around fifty when he was CSU Director.
    A. GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
    On July 30, 2013, Milner filed a grievance challenging the reassignment and asking to be
    reinstated as CSU Director. Virginia’s state employee grievance procedure is created by statute, see
    Code § 2.2-3000 et seq., and set out in further detail by policy of the Department of Human
    Resources Management (DHRM) and its sub-agency, the Office of Employment Dispute
    Resolution (EDR). See Office of Emp’t Dispute Resolution, Grievance Procedure Manual (2012);
    Office of Emp’t Dispute Resolution, Rules for Conducting Grievance Hearings (2012). The process
    consists of several stages, beginning with three steps of internal dispute resolution with management
    of the agency that employed the aggrieved employee. Code § 2.2-3003; Grievance Procedure
    Manual §§ 3.1-3.3. If the grievance is not resolved after the third resolution step, the employee can
    then request that his agency head qualify the grievance for a hearing. Code § 2.2-3004(D);
    Grievance Procedure Manual § 4.2. If the agency head does not qualify the grievance for a hearing,
    the employee can appeal the qualification decision to EDR. Code § 2.2-3004(D); Grievance
    Procedure Manual § 4.3.
    -3-
    The Grievance Procedure Manual states that a grievance
    should qualify for a hearing if (i) it claims, and (ii) the facts, taken as
    a whole, raise a sufficient question as to whether an adverse
    employment action has occurred as a result of . . . [i]nformal
    discipline – for example, terminations, transfers, assignments,
    demotions, and suspensions – that . . . are taken primarily for
    disciplinary reasons.
    Grievance Procedure Manual § 4.1(b). The decision of the hearing officer is final except as to
    issues of policy and law. Code § 2.2-3005.1(C). The grievant may seek administrative review of
    the hearing officer’s decision by appealing to EDR, which reviews compliance with grievance
    procedure, and to the Director of DHRM, who reviews the decision for consistency with state or
    agency policy. Grievance Procedure Manual § 7.2. The grievant may also appeal the decision to
    the circuit court to review as to whether the decision is contrary to law. Code § 2.2-3006(B).
    Milner and DJJ did not reach an agreement after going through the three internal
    management dispute resolution steps at DJJ, and the Director of DJJ refused to qualify Milner’s
    grievance for a hearing. Milner appealed this qualification decision to EDR, which issued
    Qualification Ruling Number 2014-3721, qualifying Milner’s grievance for a hearing. EDR stated
    that it had “no basis to disagree with [DJJ’s] assessment that the statutory good cause requirement
    was satisfied,”2 but did find that the facts of Milner’s grievance raised a sufficient question as to
    whether his reassignment was an “adverse employment action” that was taken for disciplinary
    reasons. On this basis, EDR qualified the grievance hearing and defined the issues to be decided by
    the hearing officer as follows:
    Whether the grievant’s reassignment was primarily to punish or
    correct the grievant’s behavior or performance is a factual
    determination that a hearing officer, not this Office, should make. At
    the hearing, the grievant will have the burden of proving that the
    reassignment was adverse and disciplinary. If the hearing officer
    finds that it was, the agency will have the burden of proving that the
    2
    This statement was made in reference to the good cause requirement of Code
    § 16.1-236.1(A) that is necessary for DJJ to transfer, demote, or separate a CSU Director.
    -4-
    action was nevertheless warranted and appropriate. Should the
    hearing officer find that the reassignment was adverse, disciplinary,
    and unwarranted and/or inappropriate, he or she may rescind the
    reassignment . . . .
    Milner’s grievance hearing was held on January 6, 2014, and decided on February 20, 2014.
    The hearing officer’s findings of fact generally reflected positively on Milner, noting that Milner
    “became Director of an ineffective Court Service Unit with numerous human resource problems”
    and that Milner took steps to improve morale, make the CSU more effective, and “put the client
    first.” The findings of fact also suggested that any dissatisfaction with Milner from CSU
    employees, as found by DJJ’s investigation, was because Milner’s managerial improvements “met
    resistance from poorly performing employees.” The hearing officer also found that there was a
    largely dysfunctional relationship between the CSU and the JDR court, as reflected by the
    comments of CSU employees in the investigative report. The findings of fact noted that Milner and
    the Chief Judge of the JDR court frequently clashed and had a very strained relationship.
    Addressing the issues as defined by EDR, the hearing officer first found that Milner’s
    reassignment was an adverse employment action due to the change in responsibilities between the
    two positions and the significant loss of managerial responsibility in Milner’s new role. The hearing
    officer further found, however, that Milner did not establish “that his reassignment was disciplinary
    in nature by [DJJ],” but rather was in response to the JDR court’s actions. Noting that Milner “did
    not engage in any behavior that would support disciplinary action” by DJJ, the hearing officer still
    determined that DJJ had good cause, as required by Code § 16.1-236.1, to reassign Milner because
    the poor relationship between him and the JDR court made it practically impossible for Milner to do
    his job and for the CSU to function properly. The hearing officer did find that the actions taken by
    the JDR court were “disciplinary in nature.” However, because Milner was not an employee of the
    JDR court and the JDR court was not a party to the hearing, the hearing officer determined that he
    did not have jurisdiction to grant Milner any remedy for these actions. Milner then appealed the
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    hearing officer’s decision to EDR and DHRM, which concluded that the decision was consistent
    with grievance procedure and state personnel policy, respectively.
    B. APPEAL TO THE CIRCUIT COURT
    On April 10, 2014, Milner appealed the decisions of the hearing officer, of EDR, and of
    DHRM to the Henrico County Circuit Court. On September 2, 2014, the circuit court ruled in
    Milner’s favor. The circuit court first focused on the hearing officer’s finding that DJJ’s actions
    were not disciplinary in nature, but that the JDR court’s actions were. The court held that, as a
    matter of law, the JDR court could not take disciplinary action against Milner because to do so
    would violate the Separation of Powers doctrine. The court also held that the hearing officer’s
    finding that the JDR court, and not DJJ, acted in a disciplinary manner was contrary to state
    grievance procedures and statutes because this finding would “exempt[] employees assigned to
    work in courthouses with judges from rights and remedies in the code.” These employees, the
    circuit court elaborated, are not among those specifically exempted from the grievance procedure by
    statute.
    In addition, the circuit court found that “the hearing officer’s conclusion that it lacked
    jurisdiction is also contrary to law.” The circuit court noted DJJ’s concession in argument that the
    hearing officer would have had jurisdiction to grant Milner a remedy if the JDR court’s actions were
    discriminatory. Similarly here, the circuit court stated, “if [DJJ’s] employee was subjected to
    adverse employment actions and disciplinary actions by the only employer and Executive Branch
    -6-
    department that could do so as a matter of law,” then the hearing officer had jurisdiction to grant
    Milner relief.3
    Finally, the circuit court determined that the hearing officer’s decision was contrary to Code
    § 16.1-236.1, which explains the requirements that must be met to transfer a CSU Director. The
    court noted that the statute does not authorize the JDR court judges to transfer a CSU Director, but
    instead only allows them to act in an advisory role to the DJJ Director. The circuit court also stated
    that whether “good cause” for the transfer existed, as required under the statute, was improperly
    decided by the hearing officer as a question of fact. Instead, the circuit court determined that the
    existence of good cause, which requires a “legally sufficient ground or reasons” for the transfer, is a
    question of law that should be addressed by the court. The circuit court held that the facts found in
    the hearing, including the finding that Milner “did not engage in any behavior that would support
    disciplinary action,” supported a legal conclusion that DJJ did not have good cause to transfer
    Milner.
    The circuit court entered its order on September 2, 2014, reversing the hearing officer and
    “grant[ing] the Appellant Milner’s request for relief.” On September 5, 2014, Milner moved the
    circuit court to award him attorney’s fees pursuant to Code § 2.2-3006(E), and the court granted his
    motion on November 17, 2014. DJJ’s appeals from the circuit court’s ruling on the merits and from
    the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees were consolidated into this appeal.
    3
    The circuit court next found that the hearing officer had authority to reduce the
    discipline imposed on Milner if it believed that discipline was too severe. This does not appear
    to be challenged on this appeal by either party. The circuit court also noted that there was no
    evidence in the record of an order having been entered by the JDR court that barred Milner from
    entering the courthouse. The parties do not appear to challenge the circuit court’s decision on
    this point.
    -7-
    II. ANALYSIS
    DJJ raises eight assignments of error on appeal. Six of these assignments of error relate to
    the merits of the circuit court’s decision to reverse the hearing officer, while the other two relate to
    the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees to Milner. We discuss these two classes of alleged error
    separately.
    A. MERITS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT’S DECISION
    1. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The state grievance employee procedure limits the scope of review of each body that
    reviews a grievance after it has gone through the agency’s internal resolution steps. This “tripartite
    review procedure” sets forth the following roles: (1) the hearing officer is the finder of fact and
    final authority on factfinding; (2) DHRM (and EDR, which is part of DHRM) 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.” Va. Dep’t of State Police v. Barton, 
    39 Va. App. 439
    , 445, 
    573 S.E.2d 319
    , 322 (2002). The hearing officer’s findings of fact and the administrative determinations of
    compliance with grievance procedure by EDR and personnel policy by DHRM are not subject to
    judicial review. 
    Id. The courts
    are limited to ascertaining compliance with constitutional provisions, statutes,
    regulations, and judicial decisions. Va. Polytechnic Inst. & State Univ. v. Quesenberry, 
    277 Va. 420
    , 429, 
    674 S.E.2d 854
    , 858 (2009). Therefore, any determination made by the circuit court
    that should properly be categorized as an issue of fact, policy, or procedure is outside the scope
    of its review, and the circuit court should instead defer to the determinations of the hearing
    officer and administrative bodies on these issues. The same standard of review that applies in
    the circuit court also applies in this Court. Va. Dep’t of Corr. v. Compton, 
    47 Va. App. 202
    , 219,
    -8-
    
    623 S.E.2d 397
    , 405 (2005). Because the only issues that are actually within the scope of our
    review (and the circuit court’s review) are issues of law, we review these issues de novo. Pound
    v. Dep’t of Game & Inland Fisheries, 
    40 Va. App. 59
    , 64, 
    577 S.E.2d 533
    , 536 (2003).
    2. DISCIPLINARY NATURE OF MILNER’S REASSIGNMENT
    DJJ’s first two assignments of error assert that the circuit court overstepped its limited
    role in determining that Milner’s reassignment was disciplinary, and therefore that the hearing
    could proceed to the issue of whether the reassignment was warranted and appropriate. This
    action, DJJ argues, usurped the roles of DHRM, EDR, and the hearing officer to make
    determinations as to policy, procedure, and factual questions, respectively. We agree that this
    determination was outside the scope of the circuit court’s review.
    As DJJ notes, the grievance procedure is limited in its applicability, and the criteria for a
    grievance to proceed to a full hearing are set out in the Grievance Procedure Manual.
    Specifically, a grievance may qualify for a hearing if the challenged action amounted to informal
    discipline. Grievance Procedure Manual § 4.1(b). It was up to EDR to decide whether Milner’s
    grievance qualified for a hearing under these guidelines, and if it did qualify, what the scope of
    that hearing would be and what preliminary findings the hearing officer would need to make.
    In this case, the hearing officer was to determine whether the reassignment was an
    adverse and disciplinary employment action before moving on to the merits. This definition of
    the issues to be determined by the hearing officer reflected EDR’s interpretation of its own
    guidelines, and was entitled to deference from the circuit court. Further, EDR determined after
    the hearing that the hearing officer’s decision complied with the overall grievance procedure.
    Similarly, DHRM found that the hearing officer’s decision was in compliance with state
    personnel policy. To the extent the circuit court found that the hearing officer’s decision violated
    EDR’s or DHRM’s own guidelines, this was in error because the circuit court’s review was
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    limited to determining whether the grievance was carried out in compliance with the law.
    
    Quesenberry, 277 Va. at 428-29
    , 674 S.E.2d at 858.
    The circuit court also erred to the extent it determined, contrary to the hearing officer’s
    finding, that Milner’s reassignment was disciplinary. First, as noted earlier, EDR defined the
    scope of the hearing – and specifically stated that whether Milner’s reassignment “was primarily
    to punish or correct [Milner’s] behavior or performance is a factual determination that a hearing
    officer, not this Office, should make.” This definition of the issues, including the description of
    disciplinary intent as a question of fact, is entitled to deference from the courts. Furthermore,
    because DJJ was the party that carried out the reassignment of Milner to a different position within
    DJJ, it necessarily follows that the disciplinary nature of the reassignment depended upon whether
    DJJ acted with disciplinary intent. Generally, the determination of a party’s intent is characterized
    as a question of fact. See, e.g., Mason v. Commonwealth, 
    49 Va. App. 39
    , 45, 
    636 S.E.2d 480
    , 483
    (2006) (“‘Whether the required intent exists is generally a question for the trier of fact.’” (quoting
    Crawley v. Commonwealth, 
    25 Va. App. 768
    , 773, 
    492 S.E.2d 503
    , 505 (1997))); Jacobsen v.
    Jacobsen, 
    41 Va. App. 582
    , 589, 
    586 S.E.2d 896
    , 899 (2003) (“‘Intent . . . is a question of fact to be
    determined from the evidence.’” (quoting Hall Bldg. Corp. v. Edwards, 
    142 Va. 209
    , 215, 
    128 S.E. 521
    , 523 (1925))). Here, the hearing officer’s determination that DJJ did not act with disciplinary
    intent was likewise a finding of fact that the circuit court, acting here as an appellate court, had no
    authority to reverse.
    For this reason, we also agree with DJJ’s fourth assignment of error, namely that the circuit
    court erred in reversing the hearing officer’s decision based on the Separation of Powers doctrine.
    This holding by the circuit court appears to be based upon a mischaracterization of the hearing
    officer’s findings. While the hearing officer found that the JDR court’s actions were “disciplinary
    in nature,” the circuit court appeared to interpret this as a finding that the JDR court actually
    - 10 -
    disciplined Milner and was responsible for his reassignment. It then held that this version of events
    constituted a Separation of Powers violation because Milner was an employee of the executive
    branch and the JDR court is a part of the judicial branch.
    This reasoning, however, is flawed. The circuit court was correct to note that the JDR court
    did not have direct authority to discipline Milner, an employee of a different branch of the
    government. This, however, is not what the hearing officer found to have taken place. Although
    the hearing officer noted that the JDR court’s actions were “disciplinary in nature,” there is no
    indication that he found that the JDR court took the actual step of reassigning Milner. In fact, the
    hearing officer’s opinion strongly supports the view that the JDR court did not have authority to do
    so. In addition, as DJJ notes, it is not a constitutional violation for some overlap to exist between
    the functions of the different branches. Taylor v. Worrell Enters., Inc., 
    242 Va. 219
    , 221-22, 
    409 S.E.2d 136
    , 138 (1991). Here, the JDR court acted in a purely advisory role when it issued its
    no-confidence letter, as the ultimate decision of whether to remove Milner from his position rested
    with the Director of DJJ. Furthermore, to the extent the JDR court influenced DJJ’s decision, this
    was permissible, as there was a practical necessity that the JDR court and the CSU Director
    maintain a good – or at least a functional – working relationship.
    3. GOOD CAUSE
    DJJ’s third assignment of error alleges that the circuit court erred in finding that DJJ did not
    have “good cause” to transfer Milner to his new position, as is required under Code
    § 16.1-236.1(A). DJJ urges us to treat the hearing officer’s finding of good cause as a finding of
    fact, in which case, as 
    discussed supra
    , it is entitled to deference from the courts. However, even
    assuming, without deciding, that the existence of good cause is actually a question of law, DJJ has
    presented sufficient evidence to show that it reassigned Milner from CSU Director to Assistant
    Certification Manager for good cause. Although the hearing officer found that Milner did not do
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    anything that was deserving of punishment, DJJ had good reason not to let him remain as CSU
    Director. DJJ did not have any authority to make the JDR court judges change their opinion of
    Milner or to force them to cooperate with him. It also had a legitimate interest in doing what was
    necessary to maintain a working relationship between its employees and the JDR court. DJJ
    determined, within its discretion, that the Henrico CSU could no longer function with Milner as
    Director because, rightly or wrongly, it was impossible for him to do his job as CSU Director.
    In fact, DJJ even took steps to minimize the adverse effect of Milner’s reassignment.
    Milner’s new position provided the same salary and benefits, and he eventually received a raise.
    DJJ offered to keep the investigation report out of Milner’s personnel file, and even offered to let
    him submit a backdated “voluntary transfer request” so that it would not appear that he was forced
    out as CSU Director. Although DJJ could not grant Milner’s request to name him Director of
    another CSU because that appointment required approval by the judges of that court under Code
    § 16.1-236.1(A), it noted that Milner was still welcome to apply for any vacancies in these positions
    or any higher-level positions. These facts, taken as a whole, do not suggest that DJJ reassigned
    Milner arbitrarily or as a form of unwarranted punishment, but instead did so because it found that,
    by the very nature of his position, Milner needed to be reassigned to enable a functional working
    relationship to exist between the Henrico CSU and the JDR court judges.
    4. CONSISTENCY WITH GRIEVANCE STATUTES
    DJJ’s fifth assignment of error challenges the circuit court’s ruling that the hearing officer’s
    decision – specifically its finding that DJJ did not take disciplinary action – was inconsistent with
    grievance procedure as set out by statute. The circuit court asserted that this decision contradicts
    Code §§ 2.2-3001(A), 2.2-3002, and 2.2-3005.1(A) because it left no remedy for Milner, effectively
    exempting him from the protections of the grievance procedure despite not being listed as an
    exempt employee. This reading, however, appears to confuse the fact that Milner did not achieve
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    his desired result with a lack of procedural fairness. The grievance process is a limited statutory
    remedy for state employees, and not every employment action qualifies for a hearing under this
    process. Here, Milner’s grievance went through every procedural step available under statute and
    policy to which he was entitled based on the facts of his case. The administrative bodies responsible
    for interpreting these requirements found that Milner would not be entitled to argue the merits of his
    reassignment, unless he proved that DJJ’s actions were disciplinary, and this interpretation is
    entitled to deference. Just because Milner did not meet his burden does not mean the process he
    went through was unfair.
    Similarly, we also agree with DJJ’s sixth assignment of error – that the circuit court was
    incorrect in finding that the hearing officer’s conclusion that he lacked jurisdiction over the JDR
    court was contrary to law. The circuit court determined that the hearing officer had jurisdiction to
    take the necessary action pursuant to Code § 2.2-3005(C)(7) because Milner was subject to an
    adverse employment action by DJJ that arose from a disciplinary-type action by the JDR court. The
    circuit court also expressed concern that, if the hearing officer did not have jurisdiction over the
    JDR court, then a remedy might not be available in instances where the JDR court acted with
    discriminatory intent.
    Code § 2.2-3005(C)(7), however, limits the hearing officer’s ability to take remedial action
    “as necessary or specified in the grievance procedure.” Therefore, the hearing officer needed to act
    within the limits of the grievance procedure, as interpreted by EDR in its qualification ruling. The
    hearing officer also could not take action against the JDR court for any of its acts, as this was
    outside the scope of the grievance. See Rules for Conducting Grievance Hearings § IV.A. This
    issue is one of policy and procedure, which was properly disposed of at the administrative level, and
    is, consequently, outside the scope of this Court’s review – and the circuit court’s review.
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    In addition, the circuit court’s fears of discrimination are inapplicable in this case because
    Milner never alleged that any of the parties involved acted with discriminatory intent – e.g.,
    discrimination based on race, gender, or national origin. If he had alleged discrimination, other
    remedies may well have been available. For example, under the Grievance Procedure Manual, if
    Milner had alleged discrimination, then the hearing officer would not have even needed to make a
    preliminary finding that Milner’s employer had acted in a disciplinary manner. See Grievance
    Procedure Manual § 4.1(b) (distinguishing between grievances for alleged discrimination and
    grievances for informal disciplinary actions). Other judicial remedies outside of the grievance
    process may also have been available to Milner if he had alleged and shown discrimination.
    B. ATTORNEY’S FEES
    DJJ’s final two assignments of error challenge the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees
    and costs to Milner. Code § 2.2-3006(E) states that a court “shall award reasonable attorney’s fees
    and costs to the employee if the employee substantially prevails on the merits” of his case. Because
    we reverse the ruling of the circuit court on the merits, Milner no longer substantially prevails in this
    matter, and, therefore, he is not entitled to an award of attorney’s fees and costs. Consequently, we
    vacate the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees and costs. We, therefore, need not reach DJJ’s
    other assignment of error arguing voidness on the issue of attorney’s fees. We also likewise deny
    Milner’s request for an award of attorney’s fees incurred in the appeal to this Court.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Viewing this case in accordance with the particular standard of review required for appeals
    of state employee grievances, we find that the hearing officer did not act contrary to law in declining
    to reinstate Sean Milner to his former position as Director of the Court Services Unit for Henrico
    County. Therefore, we find that the circuit court erred in reversing the hearing officer’s decision.
    Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s ruling on the appeal of the hearing officer’s decision,
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    and reinstate the decision of the hearing officer. We also, consequently, reverse and vacate the
    circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees to Milner.
    Reversed.
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