ANDREWS, Judge.
We granted the application of the Georgia Department of Community Health to determine whether the Tift County Superior Court erred when it held that the State Personnel Board exceeded its authority in adopting regulations authorizing an administrative law judge (ALJ) to resolve an appeal from the Board's termination of a classified state employee, Elizabeth Dillard, without holding an evidentiary hearing. We hold that the regulation at issue does not comport with the Georgia Merit System Act, OCGA § 45-20-1 et seq., in that it denied Dillard, who had been deemed "voluntarily separated" from employment, her statutory right to a hearing. We therefore affirm the decision of the superior court.
A superior court may reverse a decision of the State Personnel Board only
OCGA § 45-20-9(m).
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Dillard began working with the Department of Community Health in 1991. In October 2008, by which time she was a classified employee, Dillard went on a leave of absence without pay as a result of a carpal tunnel injury. She returned to work from April 20 through July 31, 2009. On September 2, Dillard requested additional leave in order to have surgery. The Board granted her request, and Dillard was paid workers' compensation
When Dillard did not return to work in November, the personnel officer called her to say that in order to maintain her status on unpaid leave, she must provide further documentation showing that she was not yet able to work. When Dillard responded that she had a test scheduled for December 7, the officer agreed that Dillard could wait to submit documentation until after that date. As of December 29, however, the Department had not yet received any further documentation. When the officer called Dillard again, she indicated that her attorney had sent something to the Department. Because it had received no such information, the Department sent Dillard a certified letter on December 30 stating that "[f]ailure to submit required documentation by Monday, January 4, 2009 [sic] will result in a `Presumptive Resignation.'" Although Dillard signed for delivery of the letter on December 31, neither she nor her attorney responded to it before January 12, 2010. On that date, the Department terminated Dillard as voluntarily separated under State Personnel Board Rule 478-1-.24(10)(b).
On January 21, 2010, Dillard appealed her separation to the Board and requested a hearing. The ALJ assigned to the matter informed the parties that the appeal would be decided on the written record, that Dillard had 20 days to file submissions to that record, and that "[n]o evidentiary hearing [would] be conducted." After Dillard submitted written evidence, the ALJ found that the Department had been authorized to conclude that Dillard had resigned voluntarily. Dillard appealed to the superior court, which reversed on the ground that OCGA § 45-20-8(b) guaranteed her an evidentiary hearing. The superior court also found that the appropriate remedy for Dillard's unlawful separation was the procedure of reinstatement "as though there had been no break in service" as outlined in Rule 478-1-.24(9)(f)(4). This appeal followed.
1. The Department's only argument on appeal is that nothing in the relevant statutes or rules bars the Board from dispensing with an evidentiary hearing in cases arising from separations deemed "voluntary." We disagree.
OCGA § 45-20-8 provides in relevant part:
(Emphasis supplied.) OCGA § 45-20-8; see also Ga. L. 1982, p. 1245, § 1; Clark v. State Personnel Bd., 252 Ga. 548, 550(2), 314 S.E.2d 658 (1984) (classified employees "are entitled to such rights as the Merit System Act affords them at the time they assume a classified position"). OCGA § 45-20-9(a) adds:
Subsections (b), (c) and (d) of OCGA § 45-20-9 detail the authority of the Board and/or an ALJ "in connection with any hearing on a dismissal or other purported violation of the rules and regulations," including powers to issue subpoenas, to set the time and place of continued hearings, to dispose of motions to dismiss, and to impose contempt sanctions. Finally, Rule 478-1-.24(8) sets out "hearing procedures" concerning appeals by classified employees as follows:
(Emphasis supplied.)
"When construing a statute this court must look to the plain meaning of words and if there is only one reasonable construction, the statute must be construed in that manner." Davis v. State, 213 Ga.App. 212, 213(2), 444 S.E.2d 142 (1994).
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Ga. Society of Ambulatory Surgery Centers v. Ga. Dept. of Community Health, 309 Ga.App. 31, 34, 710 S.E.2d 183 (2011).
OCGA §§ 45-20-8 and 45-20-9 both contemplate that a classified employee filing an appeal from an adverse job action has a right to an evidentiary hearing upon "request." Likewise, the regulation promulgated to enforce these statutes provides that when a classified employee files an appeal, "the Board shall designate an appropriate time and place to conduct the hearing." Rule 478-1-.24(8)(a)(1).
The Department points out that subsections (6) and (10) of the Rule dispense with the need for a hearing in cases involving voluntary separation, as follows:
Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 478-1-.24(10)(b), (c). The Department relies especially on subsection (6)(e) of the Rule, which provides:
(Emphasis supplied.) Subsection (6)(x) likewise provides that in cases involving voluntary separation, and "[u]nless the administrative law judge specifies otherwise, the appeal will be considered on the basis of the written record." Rule 478-1-.24(6)(x).
In our view, the curtailed procedure laid out in subsections (6)(e) and (x) of the Rule cannot be reconciled with either the statutory scheme, which contemplates that the Board "must provide the classified employee with reasons for the action and an opportunity to file an appeal and request a
On the basis of the plain language of the statutes as well as these authorities, we conclude that those portions of subsections (6)(e) and (x) of Rule 478-1-.24 which dispense with the need for an evidentiary hearing in cases involving the voluntary separation of a classified employee are contrary to law. It follows that the trial court did not err when it reversed the ALJ's determination of Dillard's appeal, which was made without the hearing required by OCGA §§ 45-20-8 and 45-20-9.
2. The Department has not asserted any error concerning the superior court's remedy of reinstatement as outlined in Rule 478-1.24(9)(f)(4). That remedy therefore stands as rendered.
Judgment affirmed.
PHIPPS, P.J., and McFADDEN, J., concur.