Barnes v. Ingram

397 S.W.2d 821, 217 Tenn. 363, 21 McCanless 363, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 548
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 397 S.W.2d 821 (Barnes v. Ingram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Ingram, 397 S.W.2d 821, 217 Tenn. 363, 21 McCanless 363, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 548 (Tenn. 1965).

Opinion

*365 Mb. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This ease involves an appeal by William B. Ingram, Jr., individually and as Mayor of the City of Memphis, from the action of the chancellor in sustaining a bill for injunctive relief filed against him and others by Richard W. Barnes, the appellee.

On December 3, 1963, the Acting Mayor of the City of Memphis appointed Mr. Barnes, an employee of the Personnel Department of the City, to be the Personnel Director to fill the vacancy in that office. Said appointment was approved unanimously by the Board of Commissioners. This appointment was made pursuant to Ordinance No. 24, sec. 290.8, which created the Office of Director of Personnel,

* * * who shall be the head of such division, shall be appointed by the mayor with the approval of the board of commissioners, shall serve at the will and pleasure of the mayor and board of commissioners, * * *

The Personnel Division is a part of the Department of Administration and Health of the City.

The appellant, William B. Ingram, Jr., is the duly elected Mayor of the City of Memphis and took office on *366 January 1, 1964, to serve during the ensuing four years. On February 18, 1964, Mayor Ingram wrote a letter to Barnes suspending him from his position as Personnel Director without setting forth his reasons therefor. Under date of February 19, 1964, Barnes replied to. the letter of suspension requesting specifications of reasons for such suspension, and a hearing before the Commissioners of the City of Memphis.

Such specifications were not furnished but under date of March 31, 1964, Barnes appeared before said Commissioners to answer, under oath, certain charges contained in the Mayor’s letter of February 25, 1964, addressed to the Board of Commissioners, but this letter, or a copy thereof, was not furnished to Barnes on the date written.

. At the conclusion of the hearing the Board, by a vote of four to one, reinstated the complainant as Director of Personnel of the City of Memphis, the dissenting vote being that of the Mayor, at which time the Mayor stated to the other Commissioners:

All right, the motion to reinstate Mr. Barnes carried by four to one, and I hereby inform you gentlemen that the Mayor suspends Mr. Barnes from February 18, 1964, [the date of the original suspension] and the reasons for such suspension will be submitted to you gentlemen at the proper time.

In response to such statement Commissioner Lane said: “I can say this, the man has done no wrong.” Commissioner Moore then stated: “Mr. Mayor you have to have a reason for suspending people * * * and in my opinion that man hasn’t done a thing and in my mind he is — honorable * *

*367 By Charter provision, sec. 181, the Mayor has the power to suspend any city officer for misconduct or dereliction in office, reporting such action and his reasons therefor, in writing, to the next regular meeting of the Board of Commissioners.

A hearing on the second suspension was concluded on September 1, 1964, at which time the Board of Commissioners, by vote of four to one, the Mayor dissenting, held that the suspension was without merit and again reinstated Barnes as of February 18, 1964, with full pay. Immediately thereafter, Mayor Ingram again suspended Barnes effective February 18, 1964, the original date of suspension.

It is alleged in the bill filed by the appellee Barnes that the Mayor has violated his rights in depriving him of the emoluments, rights and privileges of the office to which he was lawfully appointed. He averred that unless the Mayor he enjoined that he would continue in his efforts to force him to leave his office, all without good reason or just cause. He further averred that he had not performed his duties since the date of the first suspension on February 18, 1964, and that he had been without compensation during the intervening months because of the refusal of the City to pay his salary.

All of the Commissioners, except the Mayor, filed a joint demurrer in which they prayed the judgment of the court on the ground that the complainant was not entitled to any relief against them, and did not specifically pray for any such relief.

The defendant, William B. Ingram, Jr., individually and as Mayor of the City of Memphis, filed a demurrer containing the exact language as contained in the de *368 murrer filed collectively by bis co-defendants. Thereafter, tbe Mayor filed an additional demurrer setting forth some ten grounds.

Application for a temporary injunction was heard by the chancellor and in a detailed memorandum he set forth his reasons for granting the relief sought.

In this memorandum he referred to sec. 290.8 (Ordinance No. 24), which provides that the Director of Personnel shall serve at the will and pleasure of the Mayor and Board of Commissioners. The memorandum refers to sec. 185 of the codified Charter of the City of Memphis, which provides that all of the city officers whose removal from office is not otherwise provided for in this Act, shall be subject to removal by the Board of Commissioners of the City of Memphis, sitting as a court, upon written charges preferred by the Mayor or any member of the Board of Commissioners, etc.

Prom our reading of the Charter of the City of Memphis, together with the pertinent ordinances, we are convinced that the Mayor has the power to suspend any city officer for misconduct or dereliction in office, reporting such actions with his reasons therefor, in writing, to the next regular meeting of the Board of Commissioners.

Said sec. 185 applies to all “the city officers whose removal from office is not otherwise provided for in this Act * *

Ample provision is made by Ordinance No. 24, sec. 290.8, for the removal of the Director of Personnel, and in this ordinance it is specifically provided, as herein-above indicated, that such Director of Personnel “shall *369 serve at the will and pleasure of the Mayor and Board of Commissioners.”

The courts ordinarily are loath to interfere with the authority of a mayor to suspend an employee of the city, but under the facts in this case it appears that the Mayor’s determination to dispense with the services of Barnes is quite firm. He suspended him in the first instance without charges, and in the second instance with slight charges, and, as indicated above, at least two of these suspensions were made despite the unanimous decision of the Board of Commissioners, save and except his vote, that his charges were without foundation.

The order of the court reinstating Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
397 S.W.2d 821, 217 Tenn. 363, 21 McCanless 363, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-ingram-tenn-1965.