delivered the opinion of the court:
This сase originated with a suit filed in the circuit court of Cook County by seventeen Chicago Park District employees who sought compensation from the park district for a period covering about seven and one-half years, during which they were wrongfully excluded from their resрective positions as civil service employees. The trial court entered judgment for the plaintiffs in lesser amounts than claimed, whereupon both plaintiffs and defendant took an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District. The latter court held thаt the plaintiffs were entitled to the full amounts claimed, with some minor exceptions, reversed the judgment of the circuit court and remanded the cause. Upon leave granted, the defendant has perfected an appeal to this court from the judgment of the Appellate Court.
The present litigation is an outgrowth of the consolidation, on May 1, 1934, of twenty-two park districts in the city of Chicago into one district, vis., the Chicago Park District, the defendant in this case. At the time of consolidation, nineteen of the districts, referred to generаlly as the “small park districts,” did not operate under the provisions of the Park Civil Service Act of 1911. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1933, chap. 24 par. 78 et seq.; Laws of 1911, p. 211, as amended.) The remaining three districts known as the “large park districts” operated under that act. By the provisions of section 14 оf the Chicago Park District Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1933, chap. 105, par. 333.14,) said act being the authority under which the consolidation was accomplished, the Park Civil Service Act was to apply to the Chicago Park District.
At the time of the consolidation the plaintiffs were employees of the non-civil-service park districts. The commissioners and civil service board of the Chicago Park District, soon after the commencement of their administration on May 1, 1934, concluded that the provisions of section 14 of the Chicago Park District Act did not evince а legislative intent that the employees of the small park districts should, subsequent to the consolidation, enjoy civil service status. The opinion of this court upholding the validity of the Chicago Park District Act became final on October 11, 1934, (People v. Kelly,
Thereafter, in September, 1942, three months after the prolonged mandamus proceeding had culminated in a final and successful judgment, plaintiffs brought the action which generates this appeal. By it they sought to recover from the defendant salaries aggregating approximately $279,000 for the varying periods they were wrongfully excluded from their respective positions from November, 1934, when they were released, to July, 1942, when they were restored to duty. The judgment of the circuit court only awarded compensation for the period from January 19, 1942, the date when the decision of the Appellate Court reversed the trial court, to the date of the actual reinstatement of each plaintiff in July, 1942. On appeal by the plaintiffs, and cross appeal by the defendant, the Appellate Court reversed the judgment of the circuit court and remanded the cause. (Kelly v. Chicago Park District,
Throughout this litigation, the defendant has contended that the plaintiffs’ salary claims are barred by the five-year Statute of Limitations. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap. 83, par. 16.) It is urged that the plaintiffs’ mandamus proceeding, by which thеy sought to compel their recognition and reinstatement as civil service employees, and the present proceeding to recover salaries, are but two different types of remedy for the same cause of action and that the statute began tо run against the salary claims when the right to pursue the earlier remedy of mandamus accrued. In arriving at such a conclusion defendant relies largely on several cases in which this court has held that civil service reinstatement and recovery of salary may be accomplished in one proceeding. (People ex rel. Blachly v. Coffin,
In determining that plaintiffs were entitled to their salaries for the period they were wrongfully prevented from working, the Appellate Court followed the familiar rule of law pertaining to public officers, which recognizes that if one is lawfully entitled to a public office the right to salary attaches to the office and that it may be recovered in full, irrespective of any sеrvice rendered and without regard to the fact that he may have earned money elsewhere in private employment. While the rule undoubtedly applies to the holders of public office, we think the Appellate Court erred in extending the rule to the plaintiffs in this cаse. As a general proposition, this State, including others where the question has arisen, has rejected the idea of classifying all civil service employees as officers. (People ex rel. Dunderdale v. City of Chicago,
We pointed out in Moon v. The Mayor,
While we concede that the plaintiffs, as holders of civil service positions, are entitled to their salaries for the period during which they were illegally prevented from performing their duties, (People ex rel. Polen v. Hoehler,
Defendant also cоntends in this court, as it did in the Appellate Court, that the plaintiffs failed to allege or prove the legal existence of the positions claimed by them; that plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the fact that other persons were employed in their positions in question and were compensated therefor; that the period of recovery should be limited to the period subsequent to the judgment of the Appellate Court on January 19, 1942; and that the recovery should be limited to the minimum rate of salary. Our examination of the authorities cited and the arguments made in this court have not led us to deviate from the Appellate Court’s finding on, or treatment of, the points raised, nor to see the necessity for further discussion of them.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court of Cook County, with directions to enter a judgment consistent with the findings of this opinion.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
