Anderson v. Board of Civil Service Commissioners

290 N.W. 493, 227 Iowa 1164
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketNo. 45058.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 493 (Anderson v. Board of Civil Service Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Board of Civil Service Commissioners, 290 N.W. 493, 227 Iowa 1164 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Hamilton, C. J.

The substance of the charge laid against appellee, and for which he was removed from the police force, was his alleged failure to properly take care of his financial obligations. These consisted of debts owing at the time he came on the police force, September 16, 1933, and others since contracted. The evidence discloses the practice, on the part of some merchants and other classes of creditors in Des Moines, *1166 Iowa, of using tbe police department as a sort of collecting agency for delinquent accounts against members of the police force in an effort to impound the officer’s wages. This was true as to appellee.

The chief of police and some others in the department received letters and telephone calls and there were also some personal interviews, regarding appellee’s unpaid bills; this extended pretty much over the entire time he was on the force. Usually, this annoyance occurred around the regular paydays. It was the custom of the chief, usually by letter, to call appel-lee’s attention to these complaints and ask him to look after the account. This was a source of annoyance which required some time and effort and, to some slight extent, hampered or interfered with the service and furnished a subject for some criticism of the department by exasperated creditors for retaining on the force persons who are not prompt in paying their bills. It is interesting to note that these same' creditors, as a rule, continued to permit further credit, perhaps, on the theory that they could be sure of their money by again turning the heat on the police department. After some 5 years of this sort of thing, during which time appellee, while apparently doing all that he was capable of doing in the way of cleaning up his old debts, yet, on account of a great amount of sickness in the family, new bills accumulated, was unable to make very much headway although he did reduce his total indebtedness some; meanwhile, the department, growing weary, decided to end the annoyance by discharging appellee and served notice on him accordingly.

The statutory procedure found in sections 5702 et seq., Code of 1935, was in a manner complied with resulting, finally, in the matter reaching this court. Claim was made by petitioner-appellee in the court below as to failure of compliance with statutory procedure and as to the use of hearsay testimony, but these were given little consideration by the trial court and we prefer to also skip these for what we consider to be the more serious matter.

Appellee Anderson was a civil service employee. He was also an honorably discharged soldier, entitling him to preference. No claim is made that he is not a man of good character or that he is not fully qualified in every way, under the *1167 provisions of the law. The source of his difficulty lies in the fact that, for several years prior to his appointment as a policeman, he had not had steady employment and, to make matters worse, he was cursed with more than his fair share of sickness in his family, resulting in hospital and doctor bills and other-debts aggregating, at the time of his appointment, about $2,500. In this situation wherein he attempted to pay off the old debts and meet ever-accumulating current bills, he has had his nose to the proverbial grindstone. His debts axe not for luxuries, but, in the main, for necessities. They arose out of purely private matters in no way related to his services as a policeman. Nowhere in the record is he charged with “misconduct or failure to properly perform his duties”, which, under code section 5702, constitute the statutory grounds for removal; neither is he charged with “incompetency or misconduct”, which, under section 1163 of the Soldiers Preference Law, constitutes the only basis for removal. The burden of proving incompetency or misconduct rests on the party alleging the same. Code, section 1164. The charges made, which, on their face, purport to relate to purely private matters unrelated to his duties as an officer, must be supported by competent proof not only of the facts stated but that because of such facts his conduct may be said to fall within the grounds for removal found in the statutes above referred to.

The law is well settled in this state that, where the lower tribunal has jurisdiction and its findings are supported by competent evidence and it has otherwise acted legally, it is not for this court to review. If, however, the evidence is entirely lacking in support of the findings of the commission, then the question becomes one of law, and, under such circumstances, the action of the commission would not only be erroneous, but would amount to an illegality warranting a review by certiorari. Riley v. Crawford, 181 Iowa 1219, 165 N. W. 345; Luke v. Civil Service Commission, 225 Iowa 189, 279 N. W. 443; and Dickey v. Civil Service Commission, 201 Iowa 1135, 1139, 205 N. W. 961, 963. As stated in the last cited case:

“Section 5702, Code of 1924, 'prohibits the arbitrary removal of any person appointed from the civil service list which is furnished by the commission after proper examination of applicants, but authorizes such removal by a majority of such *1168 commission, after hearing, for misconduct or failure to perform the duties assigned.” (Italics ours.)

Quoting further from the Dickey case:

“The rule which prevents the court, upon certiorari or by any other proceeding, from undue and meddlesome interference in the details of -municipal government, is one so manifestly wise as to deserve and command general approval. If the law were such that every order of discharge or suspension or other measure of discipline intended to insure prompt and faithful discharge of duty by employees and ministerial officers generally could be dragged through the courts and set aside or nullified because the courts may disagree with the municipal authorities upon the merits of disputed questions of fact, discipline would be destroyed, and efficiency in public positions .become a lost art.”

With this sentiment, we are still in full accord. Neither •the Civil Service Statute nor the Soldiers Preference Law was intended as a cloak or shield to cover misconduct, ineompetency or failure to perform official duties, but such laws were certainly intended to provide some protection and safeguard against ^arbitrary action of superior officers in removing or discharging .such employees for reasons other than those named in the statutes. As has many times been said, the public service is at all times to be the criterion. In the case of Mohr v. Civil Service Commission, 186 Iowa 240, 245, 172 N. W. 278, 279, we said:

“The discharge is not for the purpose of punishing the officer, or depriving him of any of the emoluments of the office, but for the protection of the public. * * * A liberal construction should be given to the statute and to the rules and regulations, ■ to the end that the public safety may not be imperiled. No policeman has any vested right to hold the office. He holds it always subject to good behavior, and is subject to removal whenever his behavior is inimical to the public good.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 493, 227 Iowa 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-board-of-civil-service-commissioners-iowa-1940.