Adams v. Morrison

105 N.E.2d 675, 90 Ohio App. 387, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 48 Ohio Op. 76, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 673
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1951
Docket7351
StatusPublished

This text of 105 N.E.2d 675 (Adams v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Morrison, 105 N.E.2d 675, 90 Ohio App. 387, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 48 Ohio Op. 76, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 673 (Ohio Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

*503 OPINION

By THE COURT:

The relief sought in this action is an injunction restraining the members of the Civil Service Commission of the City of Cincinnati from allowing any one other than the plaintiffs to compete in a promotional examination for the grade or rank of Police Chief of the police force of the City of Cincinnati. From, a judgment granting the relief sought, the defendant appeals on law and fact.

At the trial de novo in this court the cause was submitted upon a transcript of the testimony introduced in the Common Pleas Court, a stipulation of counsel, and copies of certain ordinances. The defendants also offered in evidence a copy of an ordinance and a copy of an amendment of the charter of the City of Cincinnati adopted during the pendency of this action to which the plaintiffs objected. The court reserved its ruling upon this objection until such time as it could be considered in the light thrown upon it by the briefs of counsel.

The plaintiff, William C. Adams is assistant Police Chief ranking immediately below the Police Chief and is the only member of the police force of that rank. The exact status or rank of the plaintiff Clem Merz is the disputed point in this case. The plaintiffs contend that his rank is that of Superintendent of Crime Bureau, and that this places him in rank immediately below the Assistant Police Chief and that as he is the only member of that rank in the police department, the plaintiffs contend that they and they alone, are the only members eligible to take the promotional examination to fill the position of Police Chief.

On the other hand, the defendants contend that the rank or grade of the plaintiff Merz is that of major, next in rank to that of Assistant Police Chief, and, as such, eligible to take the promotional examination for the position of Police Chief, but that as there are several other members of the police force of equal rank, they are all eligible to take the examination. In effect, the injunction granted excludes these other majors from entering the contest for promotion to Police Chief.

As disclosed by the testimony and ordinance in this case, as we enter the period material here, members of the police *504 department of the grade or rank of captain were eligible to take an examination for promotion to the rank of Police Chief. All captains were of the same rank or grade and all were equally eligible. Sometime in the late 1920s or early 1930s a rank or grade styled “Major” was created, but whether the authority was different or higher at any time than that of captain is not clear and is unimportant, as many years ago the position or grade was consolidated with that of captain, the only vestige remaining being the honorary title of major applied to those captains who had been majors.

In the course of time these captains or majors were assigned specific duties by their superior officer, and these assignments acquired a certain permanency. They in time came to be designated by names indicating the nature of the duties, such as superintendent of crime bureau, superintendent of highway safety, etc., and for one reason or another the thought developed that a captain or major assigned to perform certain services should receive additional compensation. Finally, in recognition of an existing condition in the department, the city council, by ordinance, established six positions with salaries somewhat greater than the base salary of a captain. However, the City council was careful to expressly provide that the occupants of these positions should have the grade or rank of captain or major. In one instance only was this omitted, and that was in the codification and as soon as the omission was discovered, the city council, by ordinance restored the designation.

So we are of opinion that so far as the City of Cincinnati had the power, it exercised that power to place all captains or majors in the same grade or rank, and if the grade or rank established by the City of Cincinnati at the time this vacancy occurred is given effect, they are all equally eligible to contest at the promotional examination for Police Chief and this condition continued to the time this action was filed.

It has not been suggested that the captains or majors occupying these other positions within that rank or grade are any less qualified by their experience to discharge the duties of Police Chief than the Superintendent of the crime bureau. It is not claimed that placing all captains or majors on an equality of eligibility for promotion to the position of Police Chief would be arbitrary and a disregard of essential differences. Nor is it contended that the Civil Service Commission acted arbitrarily in ruling that all captains or majors were eligible to take the examination for promotion to Police Chief.

After the Common Pleas Court had entered its judgment in this case, the Council of the city of Cincinnati passed an *505 ordinance to “clarify the procedure governing rank and promotions in the police force,” in which it was expressly ordained that “Within the ranks below that of assistant chief, the council shall establish such special positions having special duties, with preferential pay as the Council deems necessary; but the existence of such special positions shall not establish eligibility for promotion to the next higher rank. No special position established by Council within the ranks below that of assistant chief shall be filled without promotional examination.”

At the same meeting of the Council, it passed an ordinance to submit to the electors at the election to be held on November 7th, 1950, an amendment to the City Charter identical in terms with that of the ordinance. Said amendment was approved by a majority of the voters at that election.

We do not stop to consider what effect, if any, this later ordinance could be given as an independent legislative act in its application to a vacancy occurring prior to its enactment. In any event, we think it is competent to remove any doubt or uncertainty in the then existing ordinances. (50 Am. Jur., 326.) We do say, however, that no public employee — civil service or otherwise — has any vested right in the position he occupies, and by the same token no civil service employee has a vested right in a promotion status. Civil service employees are protected in their position and status against arbitrary interference — and that is all. No one has a vested right in a law.

The controversy, long continued as to the division of power between the State government and municipal governments, effected by Article XVIII of the Constitution, need not be reviewed here, although defendants’ counsel calls attention to a recent decision of the Supreme Court, in which no opinion was handed down which they assert is inconsistent with prior pronouncements of that court. The appeal as of right was dismissed, because no debatable constitutional question was presented. The record shows that there were other than constitutional questions involved, in that case, and as constitutional questions are not decided unless necessary, we think we may presume that this appeal was dismissed because the Supreme Court found that the judgment could be supported without deciding the constitutional issue.

The Supreme Court in Cincinnati v.

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.E.2d 675, 90 Ohio App. 387, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 48 Ohio Op. 76, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-morrison-ohioctapp-1951.