101 Mo. App. 661 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
Respondent G-eorge H. Blackwell was the duly elected, qualified and acting marshal of the city of Thayer, a city of the fourth class.
On April 30, 1902, charges were preferred against him by the mayor’, the purport of which was that he was interested in a gambling hall, gambled himself and encouraged gambling by notifying individuals that they might do so within that city without interference. The
The defenses are: first, a prior judgment in favor of the city rendered by a justice of the peace id an action involving the same subject-matter this one involves; that is to say, a plea of res judicata; second, that Blackwell agreed to relinquish his salary while he was suspended from office in consideration of the dismissal of the prosecutions and the impeachment, and, third, that as a matter of law he was not entitled to a salary for that period whether such an agreement was made or not.
At the trial in the circuit court no evidence was introduced to support the plea of former adjudication, and there was quite a conflict in the testimony as to whether there was a compromise agreement made by which Blackwell released his salary in consideration of the dismissal of the proceedings against him. The point left for determination is, whether, without regard to the disputed compromise, he is entitled to his salary during the time he was suspended, it being admitted that he was not removed from office but voluntarily resigned.
An officer who is lawfully suspended from the performance of his duties • can not recover his salary or wages for the period covered by the suspension, whether he is finally removed from office or not. Westburg v. Kansas City, 64 Mo. 493; Howard v. St. Louis, 88 Mo. 656; Lewis v. St. Louis, 12 Mo. App. 570. Those cases
In State ex rel. v. Police Commissioners, it was said: ‘ ‘ The suspension of an officer pending his trial for misconduct, so as to tie his hands for the time being, seems to be universally accepted as a fair, salutary and often necessary incident of the situation.”
Blackwell’s suspension being legal, it follows by force of the decisions first cited, that he was not entitled to a salary during his suspension, as an officer lawfully relieved from the duties of his office ceases to earn a salary. The court below charged the jury that unless the proceedings against Blackwell culminated in his removal from office, he should have judgment for his salary during the period of suspension, a proposition decided the other way in Westburg v. Kansas City, supra.
There was testimony that the action embraced respondent’s wages for two days before he was suspended, which, of course, he was entitled to recover.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed arid the cause remanded.