499 N.E.2d 1276 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1985
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Marion County permanently restraining and enjoining the County Auditor of Marion County from implementing a pay schedule for county employees paid on an hourly basis which schedule would include fewer than twenty-six biweekly pay periods in the calendar year 1984 or thereafter.
The trial court indicates in its judgment entry that "the cause came on for consideration by the court on the pleadings [,] stipulations of the parties, exhibits and the briefs of plaintiffs and defendant." We note that no answer was filed and that no written stipulations were filed, nor is there any sort of a transcript of proceedings indicating oral stipulations of fact. Since neither party raises any issue in regard thereto on appeal, we merely note the same and conclude from the facts acknowledged in the briefs that the parties in fact submitted the matter as an agreed case as provided in R.C.
R.C.
"The officers mentioned in section
In 1983, the Marion County Auditor determined that in order to properly comply with R.C.
Plaintiffs filed the complaint seeking (1) a temporary restraining order, (2) a preliminary and permanent injunction, (3) a determination of the matter as a class action, (4) an order of mandamus requiring defendant to issue warrants for payment of plaintiffs on a biweekly basis and twenty-six times a year, and (5) a declaratory judgment as to the rights, benefits and obligations of the parties.
The trial court found that R.C.
Defendant appeals setting forth four assignments of error:
"1. The court of common pleas erred in permanently restraining and enjoining the Marion County Auditor from implementing a pay schedule that would include fewer than 26 biweekly pay periods in the calendar year 1984 or thereafter because there was no evidence that appellant intended to do so.
"2. The court of common pleas erred in permanently restraining and enjoining the Marion County Auditor from implementing a pay schedule that would include fewer than 26 biweekly pay periods in calendar year 1984 or thereafter because there was no showing that any actual damage would result to appellee[s] but merely inconvenience.
"3. The court of common pleas erred in finding that R.C.
"4. * * * [T]he court of common pleas erred in finding that the effect of phasing in the auditor's plan would be to deprive all the county employees of a pay period during the year 1984 because there was to be no change in the pay periods under the auditor's plan."
The proposed pay schedule indicated twenty-five payments to plaintiffs in the calendar year 1984. Payments ranged from fourteen-day to seventeen-day intervals in the schedule.
"Biweekly" is defined as meaning every two weeks; occurring or appearing every two weeks; having a two-week interval between occurrences. Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1981).
The applicable part of the statute, R.C.
The court of common pleas found that there is no discretion given the auditor as to when the county employees shall be paid since the applicable statute mandates that the deputies, assistants, clerks, bookkeepers or other employees of the county auditor, county treasurer, probate judge, sheriff, clerk of the court of common pleas, county engineer and county recorder shall be paid only on a biweekly basis, which consists of twenty-six pay periods of fourteen days per pay period.
"As a general rule, statutes which relate to the essence of the act to be performed or to matters of substance are mandatory, and those which do not relate to the essence and compliance with which is merely a matter of convenience rather than substance are directory." State, ex rel. Jones, v. Farrar (1946),
The assignments of error are not well-taken and accordingly the judgment of the Marion County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
GUERNSEY, P.J., and COLE, J., concur.