190 P. 991 | Mont. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the
court.
Respondent Breen, hereafter for convenience called the plaintiff, instituted proceeding in mandanms against appellant, hereafter referred to as the defendant, to compel his restoration as assistant city jailer in the police department of Butte. This appeal is from the judgment of the district court awarding the peremptory writ, filed and entered September 14, 1919. The bill of exceptions herein was settled October 14, 1919.
On March 25, 1920, plaintiff filed in this court a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that defendant had fully complied with the writ and satisfied the judgment. In support of this motion he filed, on May 25, 1920, affidavits to the effect that on September 14, 1919, the very day of the issuance of the writ, R. L. Clinton, city attorney and counsel for defendant, notified plaintiff to return, and instructed the city jailer to return plaintiff to his position, which was done, and he has ever since retained the position and received his monthly warrants signed by the defendant mayor.
If plaintiff was restored to his position by the mayor, acting
The undisputed facts are that plaintiff was a duly appointed and qualified member of the polide department of the city of Butte, and, having served the probationary period of six months, under the Metropolitan Police Law, as assistant city jailer, that he was, on the sixteenth day of April, 1919, permanently appointed by the defendant to that position; and that he thereupon gave his bond in the sum of $2,500 for the faithful performance of his duties. On May 28, 1919, the mayor, finding the shrinkage in the city’s finances, through discontinuance of the liquor licenses, amounting to some $65,000 per annum, increase in wages and costs of materials, made retrenchment imperative, and that, owing to the closing of the saloons and, perhaps, other causes, the city could well dispense with practically one-third of the police force recommended to the council the placing of twenty members of the police department on the eligible list, without pay until reinstated by the council. The council accepted the recommendation, and passed a resolution to that effect, embodying their reasons for so doing in the resolution, and placing on the list the twenty men last appointed to the police department, among them, the plaintiff.
While it is true that under our statute (Rev. Codes, sec.
It can be readily understood that, in many instances, especially in those cities dependent largely for their prosperity and population on mining operations, and where consequently, the needs as to police protection fluctuate frequently, the officials upon whom rests this duty to protect the city’s finances must, of necessity, be vested not only with power to increase the police force to meet either growing or sudden demands, but to thereafter reduce the force, with a decrease of the demands, by retiring to the eligible list those members of the force last appointed and whose services are no longer needed. This question has been fully disposed of in the eases of State ex rel. Rowling v. Mayor of Butte, 43 Mont. 331, 117 Pac. 604, and State ex rel. Dwyer v. Duncan, 49 Mont. 54, 140 Pac. 95. It is therefore clear that, if the plaintiff was merely a patrolman and one of the number thus, for economic reasons, retired to the eligible list, he has no just cause of complaint, even though his particular work is performed by some member of the force still retained.
The position of jailer is one which might, we assume, be filled by any patrolman, and the council might properly have
Again, the question presented is disposed of by the opinion in State ex rel. Dwyer v. Duncan, supra. We see no distinction between the position of a lieutenant of police and an assistant city jailer, where each position is created and denominated an “office” by the ordinance. While the office might be vacated for economic purposes, it cannot, under the civil service principle of the Metropolitan Police Law, be continued in operation, the incumbent removed therefrom, and another placed in charge.
The judgment of the district court of Silver Bow county is affirmed.
Affirmed.