OPINION
Appellant-defendant City of Evansville, Indiana, (City) challenges the trial court's decision ordering it to reinstate appellee-plaintiff Adam V. Zirkelbach on the eligibility list for appointment to the Evansville Police Department (Department). In this appeal, the City raises one issue for review: whether pursuant to Evansville City Ordinance 8.30.37.514, an applicant for аppointment to the Department must be twenty-one years of age at the time he or she files an application for appointment.
FACTS
The undisputed facts are that Zirkelbach, who was twenty years of age, filed an application for appointment to the Evansville Police Department. The City approved his application аnd placed him on the Applicant Eligibility List. Thereafter, the Department discovered that Zirkelbach was only twenty years of age when he filed his application, rather than twenty-one years old as allegedly required by Ordinance 3.30.37.514. On July 19, 1995, the Evansville Police Merit Commission (Commission) held a meeting to discuss whether Zirkelbach could remain on the eligibility list. The Commission determined that the ordinance required an applicant to be twenty-one years of age at the time he or she files an application for appointment to the Department and thus, voted to remove Zirkelbach from the eligibility list.
On July 20, 1995, Zirkelbach filed a complaint in the Vanderburgh Superior Court seeking a temporary and permanent injunction enjoining the City from hiring any police officers during the pendency of the proceedings and requesting the trial court to order the Commission to reinstate him on the eligibility list. On August 3, 1995, the trial court held а hearing on the propriety of injunctive relief. On August 8, 1995, after entering findings of fact and conclusions of law in which it found that an applicant for appointment to the Departmеnt was not required to be twenty-one years of age at the time he or she filed an application provided that he or she had attained twenty-one years of age аt *653 the time of appointment, the trial court ordered the Commission to reinstate Zirkel-bach to the eligibility list. The City now appeals the trial court's determination that Zirkelbach wаs eligible for appointment claiming that the court erroneously interpreted Ordinance 8.80.37.514.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. «Mootness
Initially, we address Zirkelbackh's argument that the issue raised in this appeal is moot. Spеcifically, Zirkelbach asserts that he is now over the age of twenty-one and has already been trained and sworn in as an Evansville police officer. Generally, an issue is dеemed moot when the case is no longer live and the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome of its resolution or when no effective relief сan be rendered to the parties. Huntingburg v. Phoenix Natural Resources,
II. Ordinance
Now, we shall address the City's argument that the trial court erred in interprеting Ordinance 3.30.87.514 and holding that Zirkelbach was eligible for appointment to the Department. Ordinance 8.80.37.514 provides in pertinent part:
Appointment to Department; ments. require-
(A) To be appointed to the departmеnt, an applicant must be:
(1) A citizen of the United States;
(2) A High School Graduate or equivalent; and
(8) At least twenty-one (21) years of age, but under thirty-six (86) years of age. However, the age requirements do not apply to a person who has been previously employed as a member of the department.
The City argues that this ordinance should be interpreted to mean that an applicant must be twenty-one years of agе at the time he or she files an application to become a member of the Department. To the contrary, Zirkelbach argues, and the trial court held, that the ordinance requires an applicant to be twenty-one years of age at the time he or she is appointed to the Department. We agree with the trial court's interpretation.
When interpreting an ordinance, the Court of Appeals will apply the same rules as those employed for construction of state statutes. Boyle v. Kosciusko Cоunty,
As evidenced by the parties' differing interpretations, Ordinance 8.30.87.514 is ambiguous and thus, we must construe it so as to give effect to the intent of the legislature, in this instanсe the Evansville City Council First, we find it compelling that the Council chose to title Ordinance 3.30.37.514 "Appointment to Department; requirements." See Kelly,
Additionally, we note that in the Department's process for аppointment, an applicant is referred to as an applicant not just at the time he or she files an application, but also at the time he or she is being considered for appointment. Therefore, we do not believe that the Council intended the term "applicant", in Ordinance 3.30.87.514, to refer only to an individual who is filing an application. Rather, we believe applicant refers to a person awaiting appointment to the Department during all stages of the application process. Further, in construing a statute, it is just as important to recognize what the statute does not say as it is to recognize what it does say. Peele v. Gillespie,
In conclusion, we hold that pursuant to Ordinance 3.30.37.514, an individual must be twenty-one years of age at the time he or she is actually appointed to the department, and not at the time he or she files an application seeking appointment. 3
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Indiana does not require that an issue be capable of repetition, but likely to evade rеview, in order for the public interest exception to apply. Matter of Lawrance,
. Zirkelbach mistakenly argues that the City has waived its right to appeal because it fаiled to file a motion to dismiss, pursuant to Ind.Trial Rule 41(B), to preserve the issue for review. TR. 41(B) does not require a party to file a motion to dismiss, but rather provides that the filing of such a motion is discretionary. Further, the filing of a T.R. 41(B) motion is not necessary to preserve issues for review. Thus, the City did not waive its right to appeal.
. Although the Department's 1995 application for еmployment and the informational memorandum prepared by the Commission for the 1995 application process specifically state that an individual must be twenty-one years of age at the time of application, they are in contravention of Ordinance 3.30.37.514 and are therefore, not binding departmental rules. Uhl v. Liter's Quarry of Ind., Inc.,
