City of Denver v. Burnett

9 Colo. App. 531
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Colo. App. 531 (City of Denver v. Burnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Denver v. Burnett, 9 Colo. App. 531 (Colo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

We entertain such grave doubts about the right of the plaintiff to recover that we do not hesitate to reverse the case chiefly because the record does not exhibit sufficient evidence to support it. Burnett brought suit against the city of Denver to recover pay as a policeman for the period between the 8th of Ma}*-, 1894, and the 8th of May, 1895, in the sum of $930, which he alleged was the compensation payable to a policeman at that time. The construction of the answer is such as to amount to an admission that the plaintiff would have been entitled to such wages had he been employed by the city and performed services during that period. The circumstances of the appointment are very peculiar. The plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that in the month of May, 1894, he made application to the fire and police board of the city of Denver for employment as a policeman, and that his application was pending before the board on the 7th of May. He offered evidence tending to show his engagement as an officer. To establish this part of his case, he testified that after his application had been presented lie was informed bjr one of the members of the board that he had been appointed, and was instructed by that member to take the oath of office which is prescribed by the ordinance and statute, which he did, and to report for duty. Acting under this instruction, he took the oath before a judge of a court of record, and thereafter presented himself at the police office in the city hall, was given a key and. a star, and detailed for a special duty that afternoon. Very shortly after he entered on his work, he was informed by some one, apparently in authority, that there was a mistake respecting his appointment; and he was called on to surrender his key and star, and thereafter performed no service as an officer. This evidence did not establish an employment or an appointment, and two members of the fire and police board as it was constituted in 1894 were produced as witnesses to give evidence concerning it. The city promptly objected to parol -testi[533]*533mony respecting the matter; insisted that appointments were matters of record of the police board, and that the record was the sole and conclusive evidence of them. The plaintiff recognized the obligation to produce the ordinances relating to the payment' of policemen to show the amount to which he would have been entitled had he worked, and which he was entitled to recover as damages for the alleged breach of contract, and the city agreed that the city ordinances as well as the record should be admitted in evidence. This is the only embarrassing feature of the case, because one of the principal points on which the case is to be reversed is the absence of any proof in the record which might possibly show the compensation to be as he claimed it, the prerequisites of the appointment to have been complied with, and due action taken bj' the board which might possibly establish a contract between the city and the plaintiff. We are unable, however, to discover in the bill of exceptions any preservation of this testimony which the plaintiff was bound to offer, and did attempt to produce. If the bill of exceptions did not purport to contain all of the evidence, and did not so recite, we might indulge in the presumption that there was enough competent testimony to support the judgment, and therefore accept the finding as conclusive. The plaintiff accepted the bill of exceptions as prepared. It was signed by the judge, and contains nothing on this subject. Neither the ordinance nor any of the ordinances are produced, nor is the record, or any part of it, contained in the bill of exceptions, although there is a quasi recital by the clerk of what possibly were the contents of the record respecting the same. We cannot, however, find any copy of any resolution offered by any member of the board, or acted on by the board as a whole, any vote taken, nor anything else to indicate that the board, as such, took such action as would result in the appointment of Burnett to the position. When the book, which we may assume was probably the record of the acts of the fire and police board, was produced by the clerk, it appeared that the name “Burnett” was on the list of men who were [534]*534acted on by the board on that date; but the initials were E. J., and not M. M., which latter were the initials of the plaintiff. It would appear from the testimonjr that there was some erasure on the book, and the initials originally there had been scratched out, and others inserted. We are left very much in the dark as to the circumstances under which this erasure was made. The court held that, since the record showed evidences of erasure, it could not be taken as conclusive; and he admitted the testimony of the two members respecting the circumstances under which it was done, which tended to prove that the board intended to appoint M. M. Burnett, and not E. J. We do not quite agree with the theory which the trial court adopted with reference to this record, as we are able to gather it from the bill of exceptions. It does not necessarily follow, because there was an erasure, that the record is not the only legitimate evidence of the appointment of a policeman. The record may not import the absolute verity which it would had it remained uualtered, and it maj'- possibly have been the subject both of attack and of explanation, but we are quite unable to see how this fact renders the testimony of the two members of the board either satisfactory or conclusive respecting the board’s action in making the appointment. One of the members testified that the man he voted on was M. M., but that when the record came to be made up, which seems to have been on the same day, some other member remarked that it was a mistake, and the initials were changed and the name corrected. The board then, as an entirety, approved the proceedings, and accepted the record as amended; so that there is no evidence to show that the record as it stands does not exhibit the action which the board took with reference to the appointment of a Burnett on the police force. The members who testified, as well as the one who was absent, assented to the correctness of'the record, concurred in the change, and the record stands as showing the appointment of E. J. Burnett, and not of the plaintiff, M. M. In the absence of any countervailing proof, this [535]*535record would clearly demonstrate that the plaintiff had never been appointed, and, barring an appointment, his action must fall. The evidence which the members offered was not exact to show that in point of fact the vote was taken on M. M. Burnett, and not on E. J., and that this was the action of the board, which ought to control over the record. We do not intend to be understood as deciding that if the record, in its present shape, be absolutely contradicted by the members, and it is by their testimony established the vote was on M. M., but it was incorrectly entered on the book, this might not be sufficient to make out a case for the plaintiff. Our embarrassment in this particular comes from the fact that we are unadvised as to what the ordinance may be, or what the regulation is, which provides for the appointment of policemen, nor what action the fire and police board must take in order to make a valid appointment. These matters are not before us. Doubtless there is an ordinance on the subject, and possibly the action of the board, in the absence of a record, would be enough for the purpose. Since we are quite of the conviction the record is in other respects defective, we are not at liberty to assume the regularity of the plaintiff’s appointment, to the extent of making the city liable on the contract.

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City of Leadville v. Bishop
14 Colo. App. 517 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Colo. App. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denver-v-burnett-coloctapp-1897.