53 Ohio St. 2d 114 | Ohio | 1978
The central, issue in the: instant cause is whether the commission was under a clear legal duty to
Under R. C. 124.40, it is expressly provided that the municipal civil service commission shall conduct promotional examinations in accordance with the provisions of R C. Chapter 124. R. C. 124.44 provides that “* * * [n]o position above the rank of patrolman in a police department shall be filled by any person unless he has first passed a competitive promotional examination.” The promotional examination must be in writing (R. C. 124.23) and include credit for efficiency and seniority in service (R. C. 124.31). It is clear that before the results of a promotional examination can be certified to the appointing officer under R. C. 124.44, the examination itself must have been properly administered.
In the instant cause, the commission determined that its first examination was void, because the examination required that the candidate take an oral test and conditioned credit for efficiency and seniority in service on the basis of performance on the written test. Because of these defects, the commission did not certify the results of the first examination to the appointing authority, but rather conducted a second examination.
Clearly, the commission, which is vested with authority under R. C. 124.40 to effectuate the civil service laws of this state on a local level, exercised proper discretion in voiding the first examination. The examination improperly included an oral test (see State, ex rel. Ethell, v. Hendricks [1956], 165 Ohio St. 217), and in effect improperly excluded credits for efficiency and seniority of service earned by three of the four candidates.
The Court of Appeals, in granting relator’s request for a writ of mandamus, held that the first examination was not per se void, but voidable, and thus, given a few corrective adjustments, was a proper basis for certification to the appointing officer. However, even if this court were to
Because there was no clear legal duty on the part of the commission to certify corrected results of an improperly administered promotional examination, it was improper for the Court of Appeals to issue the writ of mandamus. (See State, ex rel. Cook, v. Civil Service Comm. [1949], 152 Ohio St. 71.)
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed.
Judgment reversed.