16 A.2d 710 | Pa. | 1940
Plaintiffs, civil service employees in the competitive class under the Act of May 23, 1907, P. L. 206, were dismissed by the Director of the Department of Public Safety of the City of Pittsburgh from their positions as patrolmen in the Bureau of Police of that city, upon the recommendation of the trial court of the Bureau of Police, duly approved by the Mayor, under the provisions of the Act of 1907, supra, and the Act of March 7, 1901, P. L. 20, as reenacted and amended by the Act of June 15, 1937, P. L. 1761. On appeal to the Civil Service Commission, the dismissals were sustained and plaintiffs then sought redress in the Court of Common Pleas. Writs of alternative mandamus to compel reinstatement with back salary were issued by the learned court below and, motions to quash having been overruled, returns to the writs were filed. After plaintiffs' demurrers to said returns had been sustained, judgments were entered in their favor and these appeals followed.
The pertinent facts of these cases are as follows: one Michael Murphy appeared before the District Attorney of Allegheny County and in a sworn statement accused plaintiffs of having accepted money in payment for protection of a business of "number writing", a form of lottery contrary to the statutes of Pennsylvania. The statement was detailed as to places and times money *275 was paid for such protection and as to the percentage of the profits paid to plaintiffs. When this statement came to the attention of plaintiffs' superior officers, they immediately suspended plaintiffs and charged them with conduct unbecoming officers and with accepting bribes. Thereafter, at the hearing before the trial court of the Bureau of Police, the evidence to substantiate the charges consisted of parts of Murphy's statement read by a county detective, attached to the District Attorney's office. On appeal the Civil Service Commission took under consideration the record of the proceedings before the trial court and also heard additional evidence over plaintiffs' objections, Murphy appearing and testifying at great length as to the details of his relations with plaintiffs. Subsequently, in the mandamus proceedings, the court below held that, since plaintiffs were adjudged guilty by the trial court of the charges solely on the basis of hearsay testimony, they were not afforded a fair trial and that this defect could not be remedied by the Civil Service Commission hearing additional evidence, that body being authorized only to determine whether the decision of the trial court was based upon substantial evidence and was made according to law.
The question as to whether plaintiffs were afforded a fair hearing before the trial court turns entirely on the fact that its decision was based on hearsay evidence. While it is not disputed that such evidence was admissible (Bradycamp v.Metzger,
There remains the question of the scope of the authority of the Civil Service Commission in reviewing the decision of the trial court on appeal, under the Act of 1937, supra.1 In order to determine this issue, it is first necessary to refer to Article III, section 1, of the Act of 1901, supra, which provides that "No policeman . . . appointed under this act shall be dismissed without his written consent, except by the decision of a court either of trial or inquiry. . . ." By this provision a trial court became the body to determine the innocence or guilt of a policeman against whom charges were preferred and, since no appeal from such decision was provided, it was final. Such procedure was adopted without change by the Act of 1907, supra,2 the act under which plaintiffs were appointed: Doverspike v. Magee,
Judgments reversed, and here entered for defendants; the writs of peremptory mandamus are dismissed; costs to be paid by plaintiffs.