74 Wash. 199 | Wash. | 1913
— The trial judge filed a memorandum decision in this case. He found the facts to be as follows:
“In May, 1911, there occurred a vacancy in the office of the city comptroller for the place of real estate clerk, a
It may be inferred from this statement that the position occupied by the relator was the only position abolished by the council. This is not true. The ordinance of which he complains abolished several positions and the new ordinance seems to have been designed to combine their several duties with that of others. From these facts, the court concluded that the office in which the relator had been employed had
“The testimony before the court clearly established the existence of the duties as formerly, but their transference to another clerk. Owing to varying changes of conditions the duties at times have been more or less numerous than formerly, but there is no dispute of the fact that the same duties of the alleged abolished position remain to be performed and still continue to occupy another clerk from one-half to two-thirds of all his time.”
We think the court has gone further than the law warrants. The council has the right to create offices and it may abolish them, or it may, in the interest of economy and efficiency, combine the work of several employees so that their duties will be thereafter performed by a lesser number of men. In this case the city council has done no more than this. It abolished the position of “file and real estate clerk” and by another ordinance provided that the work formerly done by that employee should be done by “a detail clerk in charge of index and real estate record work in clerk’s division.” The testimony, and most of it is in our opinion irrelevant, shows that Farren, the present employee and a civil service man, is doing a part of his old work as well as the work formerly done by Voris. Relator undertook to show that he was not keeping up with his work. That is a matter with which courts have nothing to do. So long as he is performing, either in whole or in part, the work that he formerly did, his right to remain in the office of the comptroller is greater than is the right of the relator to be reinstated. An employee cannot be removed to make way for one who is in the same legal position. In other words, the work formerly done by
In the instant case, the object of the ordinance was to work a reduction of the force. We are informed by counsel, on oral argument, that there was an actual reduction under the ordinance complained of, of five men. We may assume that this could only be done by combining the work previously done by the greater number, and this the council had a lawful right to do under its general powers, as defined in §§ 18, 19 and 41, art. 4 of the charter.
Much of the brief of the respondent is taken up with a discussion that goes to the good faith of the city council in abolishing this office. Courts will not inquire into the motives of the legislative body. If the ordinance or law is fair upon its face and does no violence to any provision of the city charter or the constitution, it will be upheld. This ordinance is fair upon its face. It suggests nothing unless it be a purpose to work economy. If the rule were otherwise, it would be impossible for the governing body of a city to-change, rearrange, or redefine the duties of its employees, uo long as any one of them had been classified by the civil service commission and had a scintilla of work to perform.
The case of Fitzsimmons v. O'Neill, 214 Ill. 494, 73 N. E. 797, is a valuable authority in that it deals with a case similar to the one at bar and reviews many authorities. A foreman in the city repair shop was laid off for the reason that no appropriation had been made to meet his salary. He demanded reinstatement, contending that the duties of his position had not been abolished, and could not be abolished, as it was essential to the proper management of the repair department that there should be a superintendent. It was further made to appear that the duties which had been performed by him were performed by others; that those who
In Phillips v. Mayor etc. of New York, 88 N. Y. 245, a clerk of the fire department of the city was discharged, not for any personal reason, but because it was necessary for the department to conform its expenses to a smaller appropriation, thus necessitating a reduction of the clerical force. It was held that the civil service rules did not apply; that it was not a case of removal within the meaning of those rules. The court said:
“He [plaintiff] could not claim that the office or clerkship should be retained for his benefit, and the fire commissioners were not obliged to consult him before abrogating it.”
In Langdon v. Mayor etc. of New York, 92 N. Y. 427, a clerk in the financial department of the city was separated from the service and his removal was sustained as not in violation of the civil service rules, for the reason that “the business of the department had so diminished that the plaintiff’s services were not needed.” In People ex rel. Corrigan v. Mayor etc. of Brooklyn, 149 N. Y. 215, 43 N. E. 554, speaking of the civil service statutes, the court said:
A case which we conceive to be more in point is that of People ex rel. Hartough v. Scannell, 48 App. Div. 445, 62 N. Y. Supp. 980. The relator, a civil war veteran, was employed as “an inspector of fire hydrants.” He was discharged, and duties similar to those theretofore performed by him were performed by persons who were not veterans. The court found the real question to be: “Whether the fire department had the right to abolish the position held by the relator without notice and hearing, so long as other laborers, not veterans, were retained in the service.”
“We are thus left to the question whether the position which the relator had was abolished in good faith and for reasons of economy. This was a question of fact. It appears that 16 other veterans, occupying positions similar to that of the relator, were removed in January, 1898, and that there was evidence tending to show that this was done so as to bring about uniformity in the rules and method of inspecting fire hydrants over the entire city by extending over Brooklyn and Queens the rules which had been in existence for many years in the old city of New York, the duty in the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens being devolved upon the fire department instead of the water department, and that this was done from motives of economy. In such a change, standing alone, we can see no evidence of bad faith on the part of the commissioners.”
Judge Dillon finds the law to be:
“The purpose of the civil service statutes and of other laws prohibiting the discharge of employees without cause assigned, notice, - and a hearing, is to insure the continuance in public employment of those officers who prove faithful and competent, regardless of their political affiliations. These statutes are not intended to affect or control the power of the city council or the executive officers of the city to abolish offices when they are no longer necessary or for reasons of economy. They are not intended to furnish an assurance to
See, also, People ex rel. Moloney v. Waring, 7 App. Div. 204, 40 N. Y. Supp. 275; Caulfield v. Jersey City, 63 N. J. L. 148, 43 Atl. 433; In re Kelly, 42 App. Div. 283, 59 N. Y. Supp. 30; People ex rel. Nason v. Feitner, 58 App. Div. 594, 69 N. Y. Supp. 141; 28 Cyc. 445, 594.
The council having the right to abolish the position occupied by relator, it would be an unwarranted usurpation for the courts to go beyond the question of the good faith of that body. We find nothing in the record to overcome that presumption of regularity and integrity which attends every act of a co-ordinate branch of the government. If there was anything proven that would challenge the good faith of the council, the fact that five positions were abolished in the ordinance which abolished the relator’s position is a sufficient answer, and enough to sustain our holding that the motive of the council was pure and prompted by a disposition to work economy. It would certainly be harsh doctrine to hold that a city council cannot reduce the expenses of a department. As has been held, the council can abolish an office and refuse to make an appropriation to pay the employee. If this is so, it cannot be denied that the same power can combine two or more positions in one. We think this case is controlled by the authorities cited and commented upon. In passing, it may not be out of place to say that many of the cases to which we have referred grew out of departmental
Nor do we find anything in Gilmur v. Seattle, 69 Wash. 289, 124 Pac. 919, or State ex rel. Powell v. Fassett, 69 Wash. 555, 125 Pac. 963; Foster v. Hindley, 72 Wash. 657, 131 Pac. 197, or State ex rel. Cole v. Coates, ante p. 35, 132 Pac. 727, that in any way qualifies our view of this case. Those cases are in line with the general rule laid down by Judge Dillon and admitted in all the cases we have cited. In the Gilmur case, the court found that the position had been changed only in name. The plaintiff was “a foreman of outside construction.” The council passed a new ordinance creating the position of “foreman pole gang, such position being intended to cover the position then held by respondent, to wit, that of foreman of outside construction.” The case was decided in favor of the plaintiff because “his duties remained the same after the passage of the second ordinance, and the title of his office is of no moment.” If the relator in this case were reinstated, his duties would not be the same. He would have to take the place now occupied by Farren and perform additional duties. This fact distinguishes this case from the Gilmur case.
In the case of Foster v. Hindley, the employee of the city was dismissed from the services by the mayor, for the reason, as stated by that officer, that “the office that you now hold is discontinued.” As required by the civil service rules, the mayor reported the cause of the separation to be “reduction of force.” We held that the office was not discontinued; that the council, and not the mayor, had power under the charter to abolish offices. Here we have the act of a council with power “to modify or abrogate from time to time as the needs of the city shall require, all proper offices and bureaus, and to provide for the conduct and government of such offices and bureaus, and the appointment, removal, duties, and compensation of officers, . . .” The Powell case is so clearly without significance here that it needs no
The supreme court of Illinois was called upon in Fitzsimmons v. O’Neill, supra, to distinguish a former decision. In the case of Chicago v. Luthardt, 191 Ill. 516, 61 N. E. 410, the court had held as we held in the Gilmur case. The court distinguished the earlier case, saying:
“There, the common council merely changed the name of the official'but did not change his duties, and made an appropriation for the salary of the same office by another name. No such facts exist in the case at bar. The appropriation bill here did not designate the foreman of the repair shop by another name, nor appropriate any salary for his successor acting under another name.”
That Farren, the present incumbent, has had an increase of salary and has not been able to keep up with his work, can have no bearing. These facts do not indicate bad faith. People ex rel. Steers v. Department of Health of New York, 86 App. Div. 521, 83 N. Y. Supp. 800. If the council errs in its judgment when it passes an ordinance combining two positions, the courts are powerless to correct the mistake. In the case just cited it is said: “If, in good faith, a department initiates a policy of enforced economy, but goes too far . . . that affords no reason for the reinstatement of a subordinate.”
Nor does the testimony offered to show that the comptroller has acted in bad faith have any bearing. Whatever his design may have been, it is lost in the ordinance. Our con
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and remanded with instructions to enter a judgment of dismissal.
Gose, Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.