delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs Thomas Klekamp, Ted Klekamp, Steve Merva and Nick Cinquepalmi filed this declaratory judgment action seeking additional compensation from the City of Burbank (Burbank) for their employment as firefighter /paramedics rather than firefighters. The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Burbank and plaintiffs appeal.
The issue on appeal is whether or not plaintiffs were entitled, as a matter of law, to compensation at the salary level of firefighter/ paramedics for the work they performed during their first two years of employment by defendant.
We affirm and file our decision as a published opinion in accordance with Supremе Court Rule 23(a) (Official Reports Advance Sheet No. 15 (July 20, 1994), R. 23, eff. July 1, 1994) because there appears to be a conflict among appellate districts of issues addressed herein.
The parties stipulated to the facts. During early 1985, all four plaintiffs participated in the testing process for the position of firemen on defendant’s fire department. Prior to testing for the full-time fire department positions, all four plaintiffs worked as paid on-call firefighters for defendant’s fire department.
On November 18, 1985, defendant hired three of the plaintiffs (Thomas Klekamp, Ted Klekamp and Steve Merva) as full-time firemen and compensated them accоrdingly. However, when hired, these three plaintiffs were licensed paramedics. In November 1987, after a two-year probationary period ended, these three plaintiffs were paid as firefighter/paramedics.
On February 18, 1986, defendant hired plaintiff Nick Cinquepalmi as a full-time fireman and compensated him at the salary of a firefighter. Subsequently, in December 1986, plaintiff Cinquepalmi became a licensed paramedic. At the end of his probationary period, he received the salary of a firefighter/paramedic.
From the date plaintiffs began service with defendant’s fire department, they functioned as firemen and paramedics, including being assigned on a regular basis to the fire department’s ambulance. The fire department required that two paramedics always be on duty. At times, plaintiffs were the only paramedics on duty for certain shifts.
Prior to being hired by defendant, none of the plaintiffs were advised by defendant that they would be paid as a firefighter / рaramedic. Each plaintiff was sworn in as a firefighter. Upon their inquiry after being hired, plaintiffs were advised by the deputy chief of the Burbank fire department, and later by the chief, that although they would be performing the functions of a firefighter and paramedic, they would only be paid as a firefighter for the first two years of employment. They continued their employment.
When plaintiffs were hired in 1985 and 1986, defendant had separate salary schedules in effect for firefighter /paramedics and firefighters. Defendant’s policy also provided that all newly hired firefighters, regardless of paramedic certification, would be paid as a firefighter for a two-year probationary period and employees with paramedic certificates would be elevated to the pay status of firefighter/paramedic beginning with their third year of service.
For fiscal years 1985, 1986 and 1987, defendant appropriated funds to pay plaintiffs in accordance with the salary schedulе for firefighters. For fiscal year 1988, defendant appropriated sufficient funds to pay fire department employees with more than one year of service and paramedic certification in accordance with the salary schedule of firefighter /paramedic. In February 1988, Burbank reworded its newspaper advertisements for the hiring of paramedics to acknowledge that paramedics would start at a higher salary than firefighters.
In July 1988 plaintiffs made a written request to the fire chief for the salary difference owed to them based on their service as paramedics. In December 1988 plaintiffs filed a complaint seeking a declaration by the court that they were entitled to be paid as firefighter/paramedics from the time they were hired.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In June 1993 the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Burbank, reasoning that plaintiffs were clearly hired as firefighters and were paid accordingly. The trial court further found that no contract implied in law was created since there was no evidence that plaintiffs had a reasonable expectation of additional compensation for their services as paramedics or that Burbank intended to compensate the plaintiffs as firefighter /paramedics. Furthermore, Burbank could not be held to have been unjustly enriched because its fire department informed plaintiffs that they would not be paid as firefighter/ paramedics and plaintiffs continued to perform their duties of paramedics for almost three years without filing a formal complaint.
Plaintiffs assert that their paramedic sеrvices created a contract implied in law because plaintiffs actually rendered the services of licensed paramedics and defendant unjustly reaped the benefits of plaintiffs’ services as paramedics.
Burbank primarily contends that the absence of an ordinance to appropriаte money to pay plaintiffs at any rate other than the firefighter’s salary vitiates any alleged contract to pay plaintiffs at a different rate because a municipal employee cannot receive additional compensation without a prior appropriation by the city and no such appropriation was ever authorized by defendant.
To determine the propriety of summary judgment, we must apply the de novo standard of review. (Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. (1992),
Plaintiffs’ request to recover compensation based on a salary schedule established for a job classification for which they were not hired is precluded by the prior appropriation rule established in the Illinois Municipal Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/1 — 1—1 et seq. (West 1992)) and interpreted by this court in Lindahl v. City of Des Plaines (1991),
The Code requires passage of an ordinancе to spend or appropriate money on behalf of a city (65 ILCS 5/3 — 11—17 (West 1992), repealed and now codified at 65 ILCS 5/3.1 — 40—40 (West Supp. 1993) (eff. May 13, 1993)) and establishes the prior appropriation rule:
"Except as provided otherwise in this Section, no contract shall be made by the corporate authorities, or by any cоmmittee or member thereof, and no expense shall be incurred by any of the officers or departments of any municipality, whether the object of the expenditure has been ordered by the corporate authorities or not, unless an appropriation has been previously made concerning that contract or expense. Any contract made, or any expense otherwise incurred, in violation of the provisions of this section shall be null and void as to the municipality, and no money belonging thereto shall be paid on account thereof.” 65 ILCS 5/8— 1 — 7(a) (West 1992).
In Lindahl, this court held that section 3 — 11—17 barred the plaintiff’s claim to rеcover compensation for overtime work because "[a] municipal employee is not entitled to additional compensation or benefits absent an express authorization and appropriation by an ordinance.” (Lindahl,
Following Lindahl, this court in Jordan held that under section 8 — 1—7 of the Code "any unauthorized contract or expense inсurred on behalf of the City would be deemed null and .void.” (Jordan,
In the present case, the record is clear that plaintiffs were hired as firefighters, not firefighter /paramedics, that defendant established a separate salary schedule for the two different positions, and that defendant appropriated funds to pay plaintiffs as firefighters for the relevant fiscal years. Under the statute and holdings in Lindahl and Jordan, plaintiffs wеre not entitled, as a matter of law, to compensation beyond the salary of firefighters during the first two years of their employment.
We recognize that our finding presents an apparent conflict with the third district on the application of the prior appropriation rule. (Eertmoed v. City of Pekin (1980),
To support their contention that the absence of prior appropriations does not necessarily defeat a claim based on a contract implied in law, plaintiffs misplace their reliance on this court’s decision in Woodfield Lanes, Inc. v. Village of Schaumburg (1988),
To circumvent the prior appropriation rule, plaintiffs also suggest alternative methods of funding retroactive paramedic pay, i.e., from the line item budget for fire department salaries (see Aiardo v. Village of Libertyville (1989),
Plaintiffs may not recover under any theory of contract implied in law, quasi-contract or quantum meruit (see Rutledge v. Housing Authority (1980),
The law will not imply a contract where an express contract exists (e.g., People ex rel. Hartigan v. E&E Hauling, Inc. (1992),
Equitable principles create and govern contracts implied in law. (Zadrozny,
A contract implied in law intends to prevent unjust enrichment on the part of the receiving party who voluntarily accepts a benefit which would be inequitable for him to retain without payment. E.g., E&E Hauling, Inc.,
It is axiomаtic "from the requirement of an inequity that there is no general responsibility to compensate one for work and labor done irrespective of the circumstances in which it is carried out.” Rutledge,
Cases which have addressed employees’ claims based on implied contract theories for extra compensation beyond a predetermined salary are sparse and have held against the employees. E.g., Chicago Patrolmen’s Association v. City of Chicago (1974),
Although neither overtime nor step increases nor seniority raises are involved in the present case, plaintiffs seek additional compensation by asking the law, in effect, to place them retroactively in a job classification different from the categоry for which they were initially hired and thereby provide additional money from the higher-paid job classification.
The principles articulated in Rutledge are particularly instructive and persuasive in the present case. While the dual services performed by plaintiffs as firefighters and paramedics must not be minimized and cаnnot be viewed as unbeneficial to defendant, the circumstances under which these duties were performed do not warrant the imposition of a contract implied in law. The linchpin of the equity principle inherent in the doctrine of a contract implied in law goes beyond the receipt and retention of a benefit and requires that the circumstances connote an injustice. Plaintiffs acknowledge that they were hired as firefighters and would serve a two-year probationary period before their job classification, and correspondingly their salaries, would change. Defendant hired and retained plaintiffs and appropriated funds to conform to this plan. Under these circumstances, we cannot find that defendant was unjustly enriched.
Affirmed.
TULLY, P.J., and CERDA, J., concur.
