delivered the opinion of the court:
On Sеptember 2, 1947, the petitioner, Betty E. Polen, filed her petition for writ of mandamus in the superior court of Cook County in the name of the People against Cassius Poust, Director of the Department of Public Welfare, et al, requiring that she be reinstated and reassigned as an institutional worker at the Illinois Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Children’s School at Normal, Illinois, and for an order that she be paid her regular salary for the period she was illegally prevented from performing her duties. The defendants are the Director of the Department of Public Welfare, the Superintendent of the Illinois Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Children’s School at Normal, the members of the Illinois State Civil Servicе Commission, the Auditor of Public Accounts and the Treasurer of the State of Illinois. Since the commencement of the suit Fred K. Hoehler, the present Director of the Department of Public Welfare, has be^g made a party, as a successor to Cassius Poust, the Director at the time the suit was started, as likewise have various of thе State officers, the substitution having been brought about by the change in the administration.
The defendants answered the petition for mandamus, denying the allegations in part, but principally relying úpon a rule adopted by the Civil Service Commission as justification for the discharge of petitioner. After a hearing before the court a writ of mandamus was issued on July 8, 1949, ordering that the petitioner be reinstated in her position, and reassigned to duty, and that she be paid her regular salary from July 1, 1947. The defendants appeal directly to this court because the People are a party to the litigation.
The errors assigned are: (1) That the trial court erred in holding the discharge оf the petitioner was not authorized under a 'rule of the Civil Service Commission, and (2) that the court improperly ordered the petitioner’s salary to be paid from July 1, 1947, because the biennial appropriation for 1947 expired September 30, 1949.
The rule under which she was discharged is as follows: “Absence Without Permission Deemed Resignation — An employee absent from duty without leave for a period of three successive days or longer, without proper written notice to and approval by his superior officer of the reason for such absence, shall be considered to have resigned.”
Application was made by the petitioner to the commission for a hearing, which was denied because it was considered petitioner had resigned by reason оf said rule. A petition for rehearing was made to the Director of the Department of Public Welfare in order to afford her an opportunity to show the discharge was illegal and improper, but this was also denied. It is not claimed that the petitioner ever had a hearing of any kind. She was not able to obtain a hearing, and nо notice of any kind was given
The Civil Service Commission is a statutory body, and its powers and duties are regulated by statute. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 243/2, pars. 1 to 37.) The material parts of section 12, (par. 14,) entitled “Removals, etc. — Hearing —Review,” are as follows:
■ “Any appointing authority may remove, discharge or demote any officer оr employee in the classified civil service of the State for just cause. The term ‘just cause’ as herein used means any cause which is detrimental to the public service.
“An appointing authority in making a removal, discharge or demotion shall set forth the cause therefor in writing, which shall be signed by him and made in duplicate upon forms furnished by the Civil Service Commission. One copy of such statement shall forthwith be personally delivered to the employee or sent by registered mail, postage prepaid, to his last known address and the other copy filed in the office of the Commission with a notation thereon showing the method, time and place of servicе of the statement upon the employee.
“Any employee who has been so removed, discharged or demoted may file with the Commission, within ten days after the filing of the statement of the reasons for his removal, discharge or demotion, a statement in writing alleging that his removal, discharge or demotion was without just cause and that he believes upon a hearing he will be able to establish such a fact. Upon the filing of such an instrument, the commission shall grant a hearing within sixty (60) days. The time and place of the hearing shall be fixed by the Commission and due notice thereof given
Inspection discloses that the statutory provisions require that any employee in the classified civil service of the State (1) may be discharged for just cause; (2) that the appointing authority making removal, discharge or demotion shall set forth the cause in writing; (3) that one copy shall forthwith be delivered to the employee, or sent by registered mail to his last known address; (4) that any employee who has been discharged, after the filing of a statement of the reason of his removal, may file a statement with the commission stating that he is discharged, removed or demoted without just cause; and (5) that a hearing must be hаd upon such application within sixty days.
It has been repeatedly held that the State Civil Service Commission exercises purely statutory powers, and must find within the statute its warrant for the exercise of any authority which it claims. (People ex rel. Baird v. Stevenson,
In the Coffin case,
After she had been discharged, at her insistence, the superintendent gave her a letter telling her she was automatically discharged, and upon her application for a hearing to show that the discharge "was illegal she was refused such hearing, as the superintendent states in his letter, because of her automatic discharge under the rule. Under the clear terms of the statute the discharge was illegal, and this leads us to a consideration of whether the rule was within the power of the commission to adopt.
Appellants attempt to justify the rule under section 6 of the Civil Service Act which reads as follows: “Said commission shall make rules to carry out the purposes of this act, and for examination, appointments, transfers and removals and for maintaining and keeping records of the efficiency of officers and employees, and groups of officers and employees in accordance with the provisions of this act, and said commission may from time to time make changes in such rules.” It will be noticed that the power to make rules must be “in accordance with the provisions of this act,” and, as we have said in People ex rel. Jacobs v. Coffin,
Looking at the situation from a practical standpoint, it may be seen that such a rule is unreasonable and arbitrary, and gives the supervisor or the head of a deрartment the right to violate the Civil Service Act. There are many instances in which three days’ absence, without notice, might occur without the slightest indication of resignation or of improper conduct. An employee may be at a distant place, and by reason of weather, or other act of God, unable to communicate with, or to reach, his place of employment; or he may be temporarily ill, or there may be other legitimate reasons why a failure to give notice of absence would necessarily be excusable, and yet it is claimed that this rule is absolutely binding, and not to be ignored by the appointing authority or anyone else, and all recourse of the employee foreclosed. We are of the opinion that the rule is arbitrary, unreasonable and contrary to law, and that the trial court properly so held.
In People ex rel. Brinkerhoff v. Swigart,
This case has been quoted and followed in People ex rel. Downs v. Brown,
The State Treasurer and other State officers are presumed to do their duty, and to comply with the constitution, and we must consider that all of the appropriation for the biennial of 1947-1949 has lapsed, and is not only not available for payment, but could not be paid under the constitutional provision. This provision of the constitution also precludes the Auditor of Public Accounts from issuing any warrants against an appropriation that has lapsed, and he mаy not be compelled to issue such warrant by a writ of mandamus. (People ex rel. Redman v. Board of Trustees,
It was error to issue the writ of 'mandamus to pay the salary illegally withheld, but it was proper to render a judgment that petitioner was entitled to the same.
The order of the superior ' court of Cook County is аffirmed in all respects ■ except that part of the order requiring the Auditor of Public Accounts to draw and issue warrants for the payment of the salary of petitioner illegally
A firmed in part and reversed in part.
