OPINION
As stated in his brief, appellant brought suit to recover contributions in the amount of $1,258.89 made by him through salary deductions to the Firemen, Policemen and Fire Alarm Operators’ Pension Fund of El Paso, Texas, while employed as a fireman in El Paso, Texas from on or about December 22, 1960 until May 31, 1966. Ap-pellee filed its Motion for Summary Judgment and, after notice and hearing, the court granted appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment, to which plaintiff in open court excepted and gave notice of appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Eighth Supreme Judicial District of Texas.
It appears that appellant voluntarily terminated his employment, and at the time of such termination was advised for the first time that he would not be able to receive a refund with respect to any of the contributions paid in by him, despite his request that such refund be made.
Appellant has two points of error, which we will consider together, in which he challenges the court’s action in granting appellees’ motion for summary judgment on the ground that Article 6243b, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.St., is a local law regulating the affairs of the City of El Paso in violation of Article III, Section 56 of the Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St., in that such statute sets up a pension fund applicable to firemen and policemen only in El Paso; and secondly, that said Article 6243b as applied to appellant denies him the equal protection of the law, in violation of Article I, Section 3 of the Texas Constitution, and in violation of Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in that the legislative enactment fails to protect contributions made by firemen and policemen in other Texas cities. As set forth in the brief of the appellees the statute in question — Article 6243b — authorizes the establishment of a pension.-system and provides how the necessary funds are to be obtained and specifies how and to whom benefits are to be paid. Management of the fund is placed in a Board of Trustees.
We believe that the points of the appellant must be overruled for the following reasons. In the first place, there is nothing in this statute under which the pension is regulated, authorizing the trustees to pay anything to an employee who leaves the City service before he qualifies for a pension. Texas courts have uniformly held that an employee who resigns or is discharged cannot get his contributions back. Reagan v. Board of Firemen, Policemen, etc.,
Now as to the constitutionality of Article 6243b, both state and national, we do not find any such to exist. It has long been held that states may enact population bracket statutes, and the constitutional questions applied thereto have been long decided. As recently as 1968 the Supreme Court, in Smith v. Davis,
The present population bracket for El Paso was put in the statute by amendment passed in 1963. If it should be held void, then the El Paso plan would revert to the 1960 census, which had by its terms brought six other cities into the bracket. It appears, therefore, that Article 6243b was legal and was also valid when the appellant went to work for the City and began to contribute to the fund; and even if appellant’s charge that the statute is a local or special law were sustained, it would only knock out the 1963 amendment and leave the original statute in effect. Such a situation would then permit the City of El Paso to operate the pension system as before, and the right of the fund to retain appellant’s contribution would be the same, whether the 1963 amendment be valid or not. We will not discuss the constitutionality of these bracket-type statutes any farther, as they have been passed on so many times by both state ánd federal courts that it is elementary that unless the statute or regulation is such that it could never apply but to one city and locality, it is constitutional. If it could only apply, as in the Bobbitt case, to one city, it could not be constitutional.
We have checked through the appellant’s cases but do not find them in point or persuasive, in view of what we have said. With regard to appellant’s second point in which he compares the different population-bracket cities and their plans to the one used in El Paso, we do not think it violates any part of the federal constitution. There are different provisions and different percentages paid into the various funds of the various cities, and different times and conditions for retirement; nor do we find merit in appellant’s argument that he had a vested right, or a property right, in said fund, permitting him to withdraw his contributions. This matter was definitely set out in the case of Reagan v. Board of Trustees (supra), and Jud v. City of San Antonio (supra). The same reasoning applies to the city’s contribution to the fund. Once made, they are not the property of the city, but of the fund, and the city loses control of it as the city’s contribution no longer belongs to the city. These provisions enable those in control of the funds to invest them in corporate stocks and other means of investment where city funds cannot constitutionally be invested. Another theory is that the salary paid to appellant or others working in similar capacities is city money, part of which ■the city places in the fund, and the remainder is paid to the fireman or other employee as his salary.
We have carefully considered appellant’s position and brief, as well as the cases cited therein, but we cannot find any legal reason that would justify the city (or even permit it) in withdrawing from the *701 fund controlled by trustees a sum of money to give it to a resigning employee, even though the sum of money represents the amount placed in the fund as a part of the employee’s salary. Nor do we find the statute, Article 6243b, which is the one controlling the pension plan in El Paso, to be exclusive in any way. In other words, other cities could, by population changes, qualify under this same provision.
Appellant’s points are therefore overruled and the decision of the trial court is affirmed.
