49 A.2d 365 | Pa. | 1946
Argued September 30, 1946. This action is an attempt to compel a city to perform retroactively a duty which should have been performed by it during the course of preceding years. Viewed academically an order compelling such performance might be justified, but from a realistic standpoint such relief would, under the circumstances, be extremely inequitable. *166
Beaver Falls is a city of the third class, organized as such in 1930. Article XLIII of the Third Class City Law of June 23, 1931, P. L. 932, provides for the establishment of a Police Pension Fund. It directs, section 4301, that such cities "shall establish, by ordinance, a police pension fund, to be maintained by an equal and proportionate monthly charge against each member of the police force, which shall not exceed annually three per centum of the pay of such member; . . ." Section 4305 provides that "There shall be paid annually to the organization or association, constituting and having in charge the distribution of police pension funds in every [such] city, a sum of money not exceeding one per centum of all city taxes collected by the city, other than taxes levied to pay interest on or extinguish the debt of the city or any part thereof". By the amendatory Act of July 12, 1935, P. L. 722, the latter provision was changed to require the city to pay to the fund "a sum of money not less than one-half, nor more than one per centum of all [such] city taxes".
In 1939 the city of Beaver Falls enacted an ordinance purporting to create "The Beaver Falls Police Retirement Fund Association" in order to carry out these statutory mandates, but because of defects in some of its provisions, here immaterial, this ordinance was declared invalid by the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County. On May 12, 1941, the council passed a new ordinance establishing a "Police Pension Fund Association of Beaver Falls" and from then on the city has been making deductions of 3% from the wages of the policemen for the benefit of the fund and has itself contributed annually 1/2% of the taxes, that being the minimum stipulated in the Act of 1935.
In 1943 one Davidson, a police officer of the city, petitioned the court for a writ of mandamus against the members of the city council directing them to show cause why they should not make retroactive payments to the pension fund for the years from 1931 to, and including, *167
1941. The court quashed this writ on the ground that Davidson had no legal standing to prosecute it, and this ruling was upheld in Davidson v. Beaver Falls Council,
Undoubtedly, when a public official is vested by statute with a discretionary power, although the court *168
may not control his judgment it may at least compel him to exercise his discretion so as to arrive at some decision:Commonwealth ex rel. Kelley v. Pommer,
The legislative scheme for the establishment and maintenance of police pension funds is obviously based upon the principle of joint contributions by the policemen and the city. The Third Class City Law directs that the fund is to be maintained by a monthly charge against each member of the police force and also that a payment is to be made annually of a certain proportion of the taxes collected by the city. While, on first impression, it might seem that where a city has, either wilfully or negligently, failed to carry out the obligations imposed upon it by statute, as here for a period of ten years, it should, however belatedly, be compelled to perform retroactively the duty which it has thus neglected or defied. But, as a practical matter and as far as the present case is concerned, the original situation cannot be restored in a way to make possible a satisfactory remedy for the condition caused by the city's delinquency. The sums which should have been deducted from the wages of the policemen cannot now be recaptured, and the personnel of the force has undoubtedly suffered changes during that ten-year span. To establish, therefore, a fund for those years which would consist only of contributions now to be made by the city and thus give to *169
the policemen benefits toward the realization of which they did not make any payments whatever into the fund, would be to provide a fund not constituted in a manner contemplated by the law, for, while the amount to be paid in by the policemen was to be left to the discretion of the city authorities, the statute clearly designs that some such payments should be made and that the retirement allowances to the policemen should not become mere gratuities on the part of the taxpayers. Since the council of Beaver Falls cannot now effectively exercise a discretion in regard to the payments which the policemen themselves should have made, it should not be compelled to exercise such a discretion with regard to the payments which the city should have contributed. Laches may, under some circumstances, be imputed to the Commonwealth as well as to individuals (Commonwealth ex rel. Attorney General v. Bala Bryn Mawr Turnpike Co.,
Order reversed; costs to be paid by the City of Beaver Falls.