Court Opinion

ID: 4446101
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-10-11 13:15:15.531702+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:53:18.446200
License: Public Domain

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
                           SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Simona Southall,                                                                   FILED
Petitioner                                                                     October 11, 2019
                                                                                EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
                                                                                SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
vs) No. 18-0931 (Kanawha County 18-AA-220)                                          OF WEST VIRGINIA

West Virginia Division of Corrections,
Respondent

                               MEMORANDUM DECISION

       Petitioner Simona Southall, by counsel Alan L. Pritt, appeals the order of the Circuit Court
of Kanawha County, entered on September 20, 2018, that reversed the May 30, 2018, decision of
the West Virginia Public Employees Grievance Board, favorable to Ms. Southall, after Ms.
Southall was terminated from her position as a parole officer. Respondent West Virginia Division
of Corrections appears by counsel Patrick Morrisey and Briana J. Marino.

       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.

        Ms. Southall was a highly-regarded parole officer with the West Virginia Division of
Corrections (“the division”), with the distinction of having been nominated regionally by her
supervisor for the “employee of the year” award. In June of 2017, federal agents executed a search
warrant on the home she had long shared with her boyfriend, Jonathan Brockman, and where the
pair was raising a child. Agents seized a shocking amount of suspect material from the home,
including nearly forty pounds of marijuana, more than 130 grams of oxycodone, a money-counting
machine, eleven firearms, and more than $182,000. Mr. Brockman ultimately was indicted, along
with twenty-two other individuals, on federal drug charges. To date, it appears that Ms. Southall
is unindicted.

        Immediately after the raid on the shared home, Ms. Southall reported the search to her
supervisor, and he, in turn, filed his own report. The division placed Ms. Southall on a non-
disciplinary, unpaid, ninety-day suspension, pending further inquiry. Prior to the expiration of the
suspension, the division terminated Ms. Southall’s employment. Before the termination, Ms.
Southall filed a grievance with the West Virginia Public Employees Grievance Board (“the
grievance board”) challenging the suspension and seeking back pay, and upon termination she

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filed a second grievance challenging that decision. The grievances were consolidated and, after
referring the matters to an administrative law judge for hearings and a recommended decision, the
grievance board ordered Ms. Southall reinstated with an award of back pay. The division appealed
the grievance board’s final order to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, which reversed the
grievance board decision by order entered on September 20, 2018.

        The circuit court explained that the findings and conclusions adopted by the grievance
board were unworthy of deference because “reasonable minds cannot differ on the issue of whether
[Ms.] Southall’s actions, or inactions, created an appearance of impropriety that adversely reflected
on the integrity of [Ms. Southall], her position, and the Division of Corrections.” Ms. Southall does
not assign particular error to the circuit court’s order, but generally presents the question of whether
the circuit court erred in its reversal. Employing the same standard as that by which the circuit
court reviewed the grievance board decision1 (see syllabus point 1, Martin v. Barbour Cty. Bd. of
Educ., 228 W. Va. 238, 719 S.E.2d 406 (2011)), we find that the circuit court correctly found that
the grievance board decision is contrary to law and Ms. Southall was discharged for good cause.

        A termination is effected for good cause when occasioned upon “misconduct of a
substantial nature directly affecting the rights and interest of the public, rather than upon trivial or
inconsequential matters, or mere technical violations of statute or official duty without wrongful
intention.” Syl. Pt. 1, in part, Oakes v. W. Va. Dep’t of Fin. & Admin., 164 W. Va. 384, 264 S.E.2d
151 (1980). In the context of public safety, “circumstances which have been considered just cause
[for dismissal] are involvement in activity which casts aspersions or doubt on a law enforcement
officer’s honesty and integrity and which directly affects the public’s rights and interests.” State
ex rel. Ashley v. Civil Svc. Comm’n, 183 W. Va. 364, 368, 395 S.E.2d 787, 791 (1990). Consistent
with this expectation of integrity in protective services, the division, in its policy directives manual,
describes conduct required of its officers as that, “both on and off duty[, which] will not discredit
either themselves, other employees, or the [d]ivision” and further “creates and maintains respect”
for the division. Employees are pointedly directed to avoid any action which might “affect[]
adversely the confidence in the public integrity” of the division.

       Ms. Southall’s involvement with the activity in her home, while not fully known, is
unacceptable under the standards described above. Special Agent Jennifer Wilson, a Federal
Bureau of Investigations drug task force coordinator, testified at Ms. Southall’s grievance hearing
and described the search of the home and the seized contraband. Through Agent Wilson’s

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            Circuit courts are instructed:

                Grievance rulings involve a combination of both deferential and plenary
        review. Since a reviewing court is obligated to give deference to factual findings
        rendered by an administrative law judge, a circuit court is not permitted to substitute
        its judgment for that of the hearing examiner with regard to factual determinations.
        Credibility determinations made by an administrative law judge are similarly
        entitled to deference. Plenary review is conducted as to the conclusions of law and
        application of law to the facts, which are reviewed de novo.

Syl. Pt. 1, Cahill v. Mercer Cty. Bd. of Educ., 208 W. Va. 177, 539 S.E.2d 437 (2000).
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testimony, the division submitted numerous photographs taken during the raid showing the
placement of seized items in the home. Notably, a pungent bag of marijuana was found in a shed
behind the home, a “bale” of marijuana was found under a deck on the back of the home, and pills
were found in a bathrobe in the master bath and in tins and bags in the kitchen. Agents found
“bundles of money, multiple places in the bedroom,” primarily in ten-dollar and twenty-dollar
denominations. A utility room housed a money-counting machine and a weapon on a tripod that
possibly pointed out a window. Searchers collected additional firearms throughout the home, from
spots that included the top of the microwave oven and the refrigerator. A substance used for
“cutting” heroin was found in a child’s play area, and the search of that area also bore a half-gallon
bag of marijuana and scale. Agent Wilson described the home as “a textbook location of a drug
dealer” and concluded that no one—particularly someone with law enforcement training—could
live in the home unaware of the illegal drug trafficking conducted there. Moreover, Agent Wilson
testified that the raid on the shared home was conducted in the investigation of a long-term and
substantial criminal enterprise, and that Mr. Brockman was well-known in the community for
illegal drug activity.

          Subsequent to Agent Wilson’s testimony, Ms. Southall’s supervisors testified that the
seizure undermined Ms. Southall’s credibility, judgment, and ability to perform the essential
functions of her job. We believe that the supervisors’ statements espouse the practical
considerations here, and we thus find that the application of the law leads only to the conclusion
that Ms. Southall, at a minimum, either willfully or incompetently ignored substantial evidence of
drug trafficking occurring under her nose, in the home in which she and Mr. Brockman raised a
child. Ms. Southall’s “involvement . . . casts aspersions or doubt on [her] honesty and integrity and
. . . directly affects the public’s rights and interests.” Ashley, 183 W. Va. at 368, 395 S.E.2d at 791.
The circuit court skillfully undertook this analysis, found that the grievance board decision was
contrary to law, and concluded that Ms. Southall was terminated for good cause. We find no error.

       For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.

                                                                                             Affirmed.

ISSUED: October 11, 2019

CONCURRED IN BY:

Chief Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
Justice Margaret L. Workman
Justice Tim Armstead
Justice Evan H. Jenkins

DISSENTING:

Justice John A. Hutchison

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