42 A.2d 89 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued March 5, 1945. This is an appeal from an order quashing a writ of alternative mandamus. The controlling issue is not whether the relator had the status of a civil service employee as stated in appellant's brief, but when he acquired that status.
On February 11, 1944, he was given written notice that his employment as timekeeper in the Department of Public Works of the City of Scranton would "terminate at the end of business February 16, 1944, due to the fact that [his] services [had] been unsatisfactory." He was originally appointed to the position of timekeeper November 16, 1943. It is well to keep in mind that his appointment as timekeeper was an original appointment and not apromotional appointment as contended by appellant.
Appellant further contends that his dismissal was in violation of the provisions of the Act of June 3, 1943, PL 826, 53 P. S. § 10771, entitled: "A supplement to the act, approved the twenty-third day of May, one thousand nine hundred seven (Pamphlet Laws, two hundred six) entitled `An act to regulate and improve the civil service of the cities of the second class in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; making violations of its provisions to be misdemeanors, and providing penalties for violations thereof,' providing for and regulating dismissal of certain employes under civil service in cities of the second class A; and authorizing fines and suspensions of them."
We agree with the learned president judge of the court below "that the facts set forth in the petition for mandamus [do not] give the petitioner the right to trial under the act . . . . . . [of 1943]." Prior to his appointment to the position from which he was dismissed he had been employed as stenographer-clerk in *152 the same department for a period of a little more than five months.
Nowhere in the petition for mandamus or in the writ does it appear that petitioner ever took an examination for the position of stenographer-clerk, a competitive position under the Rules of the Civil Service Commission of Scranton, Issue of 1927. He, therefore, in that position had no higher status than that of a provisional employee: McCartney v. Johnston et al.,
It was not until DeSarro was appointed to the position of timekeeper after passing a competitive examination as provided by Section 14 of the Act of 1907, supra, 53 P. S. § 9376 that he acquired the status of a probationary employee. Section 14 provides in part as follows: "When an appointment is made under the provisions of this section, it shall be, in the first instance, for the probationary period of three months, as provided in section eight of this act." Section 8, 53 P. S. § 9370 provides in part as follows: "All original appointments to tile competitive and noncompetitive classes of the service shall be for a probationary period of three months: . . . . . . If at the close of this probationary term, the conduct or capacity of the probationer has not been satisfactory to the appointing officer, the probationer shall be notified, in writing, that he will not receive absolute appointment, whereupon his employment shall cease; otherwise, his retention in the service shall be equivalent to his final appointment." (Italics supplied)
The distinction between provisional and probationary appointment was clearly pointed out by the Supreme Court inMcCartney v. Johnston, supra. At page 448 the court held: "Provisional and probationary appointments under the act are of an entirely different standing. Provisional appointments are provided so that when there is no list of eligibles temporary appointments can be made to meet emergencies until the Civil Service Commission has sufficient time to prepare, advertise and *154 hold competitive examinations for the position to be filled. The purpose of probationary appointments is to afford an opportunity to observe the fitness of the probationer while at work, and to ascertain whether it is probable that he will become a proper and efficient municipal employee. Save for the fact that both periodsof appointment are for three months, provisional and probationary appointments have nothing in common." (Italics supplied)
Since appellant's "rights [could not] rise any higher" than that of a provisional employee, McCartney v. Johnston, supra, he could not be promoted to a permanent position without serving the required probationary period. His entrance into the service was different from that of the petitioner's in Arthur v. Pittsburghet al.,
Having entered the employ of the city as a provisional employee he lost his civil service status after the expiration of three months and did not regain it until he was appointed timekeeper after passing the civil service examination for that position. And since it was an original appointment it could be only for a probationary period of three months at the close of which it could be and was terminated.
While the constitutionality of the Act of 1943, supra, has been discussed at length in appellee's brief we will not pass on the question at this time as "It is a fundamental rule that a court will never pass on the constitutionality of a statute unless it is absolutely necessary to do so in order to decide the cause before it." Com. to use v. Picard et al.,
The order is affirmed.