Court Opinion

ID: 1070887
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 19:39:51.226408+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:36:20.158398
License: Public Domain

METROPOLITAN NASHVILLE FIREFIGHTERS               )
ASSOCIATION LOCAL 763 and                         )
B.R. HALL, JR.,                                   )
                                                  )
                         Plaintiffs/Appellants,   )
                                                  )
vs.                                               )   Appeal No.
                                                  )   01A01-9701-CH-00019
                                                  )
THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT                       )
OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY,                 )   Davidson Chancery
TENNESSEE, F. CLAY BAILEY, in his capacity        )   94-1510-I
as Chairman of the Civil Service Commission,      )
and JOHN W. LYNCH, in his capacity as             )
Personnel Director,                               )
                                                  )
                         Defendants/Appellees.    )

               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          MIDDLE SECTION

       APPEAL FROM THE DAVISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
                   AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

                 HONORABLE IRVIN H. KILCREASE, JR.

Michael J. Passino
Christopher M. Minton
LASSITER, TIDWELL & HILDERBRAND
213 Fifth Avenue North
Nashville, TN. 37219
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANTS

William Michael Safley
Department of Law
204 Metropolitan Courthouse
Nashville, TN. 37201
ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

                                AFFIRMED

                         WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE

CONCURS:

HENRY F. TODD
PRESIDING JUDGE, MIDDLE SECTION

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
METROPOLITAN NASHVILLE FIREFIGHTERS                          )
ASSOCIATION LOCAL 763 and                                    )
B.R. HALL, JR.,                                              )
                                                             )
                              Plaintiffs/Appellants,         )
                                                             )
vs.                                                          ) Appeal No.
                                                             ) 01A01-9701-CH-00019
                                                             )
THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT                                  )
OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY,                            )
TENNESSEE, F. CLAY BAILEY, in his capacity                   )
as Chairman of the Civil Service Commission,                 )
and JOHN W. LYNCH, in his capacity as                        )
Personnel Director,                                          )
                                                             )
                              Defendants/Appellees.          )

                                   OPINION

       This case is before the Court on appeal from the Chancery Court of Davidson

County, Tennessee wherein a Motion for Summary Judgement made by the Defendants

was sustained by the Chancellor.

       The issue to be resolved is the validity of the appointment by Mayor Phil

Bredesen of Norman “Buck” Dozier as Metropolitan Fire Chief and the approval thereof

by the Civil Service Commission of Metropolitan Nashville.

       The case is before the Court for the second time. Plaintiffs filed an action against

Defendants seeking Declaratory Judgement on May 18, 1994 asserting the nullity of the

Dozier appointment. The Chancellor dismissed the Declaratory Judgement action under

Rule 12 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure asserting that the Metropolitan

Government action was administrative and the proper remedy was certiorari, under

T.C.A. §27-9-102. The Western Section of the Court of Appeals sitting at Nashville

reversed this decision on June 5, 1995 holding:

              “In our opinion, the rewriting of the qualifications for the office of Fire
              Chief of the Metro Fire Department amounted to legislative action on the
              part of the CSC, not administrative or quasi-judicial action. Plaintiffs were
              correct in seeking relief through declaratory judgment and the issues raised

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               by plaintiffs in their complaint should be considered and resolved in
               accordance with this procedure. Accordingly, the decree of the chancellor
               dismissing plaintiff's complaint is reversed.”

                                Davidson Chancery No. C.A. No. 01A01-9410-CH-00487

       Ample discovery was thereafter taken and both parties filed properly supported

Motions for Summary Judgement.

       On November 12, 1996, the Chancellor sustained the Motion for Summary

Judgement filed by the Defendants stating his reasons as follows:

               “The Civil Service Commission of the Metropolitan Government of
               Nashville and Davidson County did not violate the Metropolitan Charter
               when the Commission changed the job description for the position of Fire
               Chief. The wording of the Charter requires the Fire Chief to be ‘especially
               qualified for the position by training and experience.’ (Metropolitan
               Charter, Section 8.304) The Commission interpreted this provision to
               mean ‘especially qualified’ in management and administration. The
               Charter does not require the Fire Chief to be especially qualified in fire
               fighting, fire fighting administration, or have prior experience in the
               Metropolitan Fire Department as contended by the Plaintiffs.

                The approval of the appointment of Norman ‘Buck’ Dozier to the position
                of Fire Chief does not violate the Metropolitan Charter. The Charter does
                not require prior fire fighting training or experience in order to be qualified
                for the position of Fire Chief. The Charter requires the Fire Chief to be
                ‘especially qualified for the position by training and experience’ based
                upon qualifications prescribed by the Civil Service Commission. The
                Metropolitan Civil Service Commission determined the proper
                qualifications for the position are a college degree and ten years of
                increasing responsible experience in management or administration.
                Norman ‘Buck’ Dozier met these qualifications.

                The transfer of Norman ‘Buck’ Dozier from the Mayor’s Office to the
                Metropolitan Fire Department does not violate the Metropolitan Charter.
                Norman ‘Buck’ Dozier meets all the entrance requirements for the position
                of Fire Chief established by the Charter and the Civil Service Commission
                of the Metropolitan Government.”

        In 1947, the General Assembly enacted the Nashville City Charter. This Charter

established a Department of Fire and provided that Nashville’s Mayor should appoint a

chief of the Fire Department and that “ . . .a vacancy in the office of Chief of the Fire

Department shall be filled from the Department by appointment of the Mayor, pursuant to

the Civil Service provisions of this Charter. . . .”

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       This provision remained in effect until the Nashville Metropolitan Government

Charter was ratified by the people of Davidson County on June 28, 1962.

       The ratified Metropolitan Government Charter became effective April 1, 1963 and

the incumbent City of Nashville Fire Chief John Ragsdale became Metro’s first Fire

Chief. The Metro Charter provision controlling the appointment of a Director of the Fire

Department was contained in Section 8.304, providing in part as follows:

               “A permanent vacancy in the office of director shall be filled by
               appointment of the mayor, subject to the civil service provisions of this
               Charter and subject to qualifications to be prescribed by the civil service
               commission designed to secure a person especially qualified for the
               position by training and experience.”

       Section 20.08 of the Metropolitan Charter also provided in part:

             “(g) Director of Deparment of Fire. The person holding the position of
             chief of the fire department of the City of Nashville on the effective date of
             this Charter, and having civil service status as such, is hereby appointed and
             designated as the first director of the department of fire.”

       In subsequent actions, the Metropolitan Civil Service Commission periodically

revised the qualifications for Metro’s Fire Chief with the September 24, 1991 revision

providing under education and experience standards the following:

               “High School Diploma and ten (10) years of experience in the Fire
               Fighting Division of the Nashville Fire Department, including a total of
               seven (7) years of supervisory experience as a Fire Captain, District Fire
               Chief, Assistant Fire Chief, Chief Training Officer, Deputy Fire Chief-Fire
               Fighting, or Deputy Director.”

       At some time prior to November 10, 1992, Mayor Bredesen called John W.

Lynch, then Director of Personnel for Metro Government, and asked for a review of the

job description of the Fire Chief seeking to expand the qualifications in order to give

consideration to management experience with emphasis on persons experienced in

managing large corporations.

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       Following this request, the “education and experience” standards in the job

description for the Metro Fire Chief were, on November 10, 1992, amended by the

Metropolitan Civil Service Commission to read as follows:

               “Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university, and ten (10)
               years of increasingly responsible management or administrative
               experience.

               No substitution.”

       So it was that the Metropolitan Civil Service Commission removed from the job

description all requirements for previous fire service (experience).

       The minutes of the November 10, 1992 meeting of the Metropolitan Civil Service

Commission, wherein this change in job qualification was made, describes the basis for

the present lawsuit.

               “Mr. John Kennedy stated that the proposed change to Fire Chief and
               Deputy Director was to require a Bachelor’s Degree bringing the education
               in line with what is required for other Department Directors. Also to
               change the experience from specific experience in the Fire Fighting
               Division into general experience in administration and management, not
               necessarily obtained in the Fire Fighting Division of the Fire Department.

                                                    ...

               Mr. B.R. Hall, President of the Metro Fire Fighters Association stated that
               he thought the Fire Chief classification should continue to require the ten
               (10) years experience in the Fire Division of the Fire Department.”

       In 1993, incumbent Fire Chief Coleman retired and the Personnel Department

posted a job announcement that it would accept from November 29, 1993 to December 3,

1993, applications for Fire Chief. The Personnel Department further on November 28,

1993, placed a classified ad in the Nashville Tennessean announcing that starting the next

day it would accept Fire Chief applications until the end of the week. This ad ran for one

day. There is no assertion by the Plaintiffs that these actions by the Personnel

Department did not conform to the requirements of law.

       Norman “Buck” Dozier submitted his application as did numerous other

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individuals many of them from within the Fire Department. There is no assertion by

Plaintiffs that the qualifications of Mr. Dozier did not match the qualifications required

for a Fire Chief under the November 10, 1992 amendment to such qualifications adopted

by the Civil Service Commission.

        Mayor Bredesen appointed Mr. Dozier as Metro Fire Chief, effective January 1,

1994 and this appointment was approved by the Civil Service Commission on February 8,

1994.

        Such are the controlling fact of this case which are undisputed in the record.

        The only statement of issue presented for review by the Appellant asserts:

               “Whether the undisputed facts demonstrate that the Metro Civil Service
               Commission (‘CSC’) violated the Metro Charter when it a) eliminated a
               thirty-year requirement that Metro’s Fire Chief must possess fire
               department experience; and b) approved a man without any fire
               department experience as Metro’s current Fire Chief.”

        The difficulty with the position of the Appellant is that it essentially seeks to

equate job qualification language contained in Civil Service Regulations, adopted by the

Metropolitan Civil Service Commission, with statutory language contained in the

Metropolitan Government Charter.

        Metro Charter, Section 8.304, requires the Metro’s Fire Chief be “especially

qualified . . .by training and experience”. This particular phrase is not otherwise defined

anywhere in the Charter.

        At the time the Metropolitan Government Charter was submitted for ratification to

the people of Nashville-Davidson County, Section 20.08 (g) provided that the incumbent

City of Nashville Fire Chief Mr. Ragsdale would be, in fact, the first Fire Chief under

Metropolitan Government. Because Chief Ragsdale had many years experience in the old

                                               6
City of Nashville Fire Department, Appellant asserts that construing Section 8.304 in pari

materia with Section 20.08 (g) mandates that the term “especially qualified . . .by training

and experience” contained in Section 8.304 elevates to Charter dignity a qualification that

all future Fire Chiefs must have fire experience. Such a construction would effectively

prevent the Civil Service Commission from ever changing the job qualifications of the

Fire Chief from those qualifications possessed by Chief Ragsdale. This is a non-sequitur.

          The same Section 20.08 of the original Metropolitan Charter designated the old

City of Nashville government incumbents and various Davidson County government

incumbents as “first” Metropolitan government holders of their respective positions.

These included:

          1.     Metropolitan Clerk;
          2.     Metropolitan Treasurer;
          3.     Chief Medical Director;
          4.     Director of Department of Water and Sewerage Service;
          5.     Public Defender;
          6.     Director of Department of Police;
          7.     Budget Officer, Division of Budgets;
          8.     Chief Accountant;
          9.     Metropolitan Judges;
          10.    Clerk, Deputy Clerk and Court Officers of Metropolitan Court;
          11.    Director of Welfare;
          12.    Collections Officer.

          It is significant, that in many of these positions the Charter itself designates
certain

minimal qualifications. The Director of Water and Sewerage Services must be a graduate

engineer, trained and skilled in public utility problems. The Chief Traffic Engineer must

have a least five years experience in traffic administration. The Budget Officer must have

a least five years experience in budget preparation, administration and accounting.

          There are no such Charter limitations in the qualifications of Fire Chief.

          In construing a statute such as the Metropolitan Government Charter, the pertinent

language must be considered in the context of the entire statute “. . .without any forced or

                                                 7
subtle construction extending its import” McClain v. Henry I Segal, Co. 834 S.W.2d. 295

(Tenn. 1992).

       It is the failure to distinguish between the governing language of a statute and the

wholly subordinate language of a civil service rule that defeats the position of the

Appellants.

       The Fire Chief of the old City of Nashville Government had to have fire

experience, because under the private act of the legislature forming the Charter for the

City of Nashville, the Fire Chief had to come from within the Fire Department. The first

Fire Chief, under the Metropolitan Government Charter, had past fire experience because

the Charter itself appointed the then incumbent Fire Chief of the City of Nashville. Those

who succeeded Chief Rasdale, up until the appointment of Mr. Dozier, had to have fire

experience not because of any provision of the Metropolitan Charter, but because prior

fire experience was written into the qualifications for Fire Chief under the rules of the

Metropolitan Civil Service Commission.

       The argument of the Appellants that any future Fire Chief must possess a

“modicum” of fire experience can be true only if Metropolitan Civil Service rules

subsequent to the adoption of the Metropolitan Charter can be equated in dignity to the

Charter language itself.

       This effort to expand the meaning of words used in the Charter fails because no

where else in the Metropolitan Charter is there any provision requiring that the Chief

have prior fire service or even creating an ambiguity relative to prior fire service.

       The Supreme Court of Tennessee after acknowledging the time honored rule, that

the fundamental rule of construction of all instruments, including statutes, is that the

intention shall prevail and to this end, the whole instrument must be considered,

expressed the context in which the present controversy must be resolved.

                                              8
              “But there is no authority for modifying, supplying, enlarging or
              expanding the meaning of words used in a statute, except when necessary
              to effectuate an intent otherwise appearing. It is not enough that the
              draftsman of a statutory enactment had in mind the accomplishment of a
              certain end, the enactment must itself expressly, or by necessary
              implication, indicate such an intention: otherwise the legislative power
              might be employed to effectuate objects not at all in the contemplation of
              the legislative body. The Courts are not required to depart from the
              primary meaning of words, and the statutory context in which they stand to
              find and apply an intention not otherwise apparent.”

                              Nashville Gas and Heating Co. v. City of Nashville
                              152 S.W. 2d. 229, 233-234

       In this case, the Metropolitan Charter does not require that the Fire Chief have

prior fire service. The November 10, 1992 change in the Civil Service qualification rules

was made within the discretionary powers of the Metropolitan Civil Service Commission.

Norman “Buck” Dozier met those qualifications and submitted an application for the job.

His application along with other applications were before the Civil Service Commission.

Mayor Bredesen chose Mr. Dozier for Fire Chief.

       All of these actions were in conformity with the Metropolitan Charter and the

action of the Chancelor in sustaining the Motion for Summary Judgement made by the

Defendant was correct.

       The judgement of the Chancellor is affirmed with costs assessed against the

Appellant.

                                     ______________________________________
                                     WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE

                                     ______________________________________
                                     HENRY F. TODD,
                                     PRESIDING JUDGE, MIDDLE SECTION

                                     _____________________________________
                                     WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE

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