City of Indianapolis v. State Ex Rel. Kennedy

70 N.E.2d 635, 224 Ind. 600, 1947 Ind. LEXIS 167
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1947
DocketNo. 28,250.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 70 N.E.2d 635 (City of Indianapolis v. State Ex Rel. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Indianapolis v. State Ex Rel. Kennedy, 70 N.E.2d 635, 224 Ind. 600, 1947 Ind. LEXIS 167 (Ind. 1947).

Opinion

Starr, J.

On December 30, 1940, the relator, John L. Kennedy, brought this action against the City of Indianapolis and others, to set aside his suspension which occurred on January 4, 1926, as a fireman of the City of Indianapolis and to restore his name to the membership roll of the firemen’s pension fund as of the date of his suspension. The trial resulted in a judgment rendered February 1,1946, in favor of the appellee which set aside the order of suspension and “discharge” of the appellee, restored appellee’s name to the payroll and to the membership roll of the firemen’s pension fund as of January 4, 1926, and awarded him a judgment against the city in the sum of $39,980.80 for his wages from January 4, 1926, to and including December 31, 1945. From this judgment this appeal is taken.

The complaint herein named as defendants said city, its board of trustees of the firemen’s pension fund, members of the board of safety of the city in their official capacity, and certain other officers of said city. The substantial allegations of the complaint are that the appellee was on January 4, 1926, a member of the fire department of said city and that on said date without notice to him and without cause or charge against him he was suspended as such fireman for an indefinite *603 period by an order of said board of public safety, which said suspension has continued over his constant protest and objection; said complaint further alleges that his suspension was on the “pretext of conformity to the budget of the City of Indianapolis”; that “At the time of his said purported suspension, the plaintiff was not informed of the financial condition of the City of Indianapolis or its capacity for employment and retention of firemen, but he protested said suspension and thereafter, and as soon as he discovered that the reason given in the order of suspension was not the actual or any existing reason for his purported suspension, he immediately demanded, of the proper authorities, recognition of his continuing employment and rights; and restoration accordingly; and since such time he has continued to make like demands and has from time to time received assurances of favorable action, but no such action has been taken and has been postponed from time to time and the defendants are now failing and refusing and continuously have failed to recognize the plaintiff’s employment, position, or rights, or to do anything to afford him benefits thereof.” That “The plaintiff’s salary at the time of his purported suspension was $175 a month, such suspension was, as aforesaid, arbitrary, wrongful and unlawful, void and of no legal effect.

The prayer of said complaint is that an order issue mandating the defendants and each of them in their official capacity to disregard the said suspension of the plaintiff and to restore his name to the payroll of the fire department and the membership roll of the firemen’s pension fund as of January 4, 1926, and to recognize his status as such fireman since that date, and to accord to him all other further and proper relief. To *604 this complaint the defendants filed their demurrer for want of facts. In due course this demurrer was overruled by the court. It will not be necessary to determine whether this ruling was correct. All of the evidence in this case was introduced without objection. We have elected to decide this matter on the questions of the sufficiency of the evidence and whether the decision is contrary to law; each of which has been properly reserved.

Appellee’s evidence was to the effect that he was employed as a fireman by the appellant city from December 19, 1925, to January 4, 1926, at which time he was suspended; that he appeared before the board January 9, 1926; that he had a hearing and trial but he could not remember the date when the same was had. Appellee also introduced the record of the board of public safety which disclosed that on February 9, 1926, there was a charge filed against the appellee by the chief of the fire department which charged that appellee was illegally appointed and that there was no money provided in the budget and that the action was taken for the purpose of public economy; that the date of February 11, 1926, was fixed as the time for the hearing on said charge. The evidence discloses that appellee was present at this hearing and had been notified of the same by the chief of the fire department. The appellee testified that after the hearing on February 11, 1926, he was discharged; that since then he has not been a member of the fire department of said city; that since his discharge he has talked to various chiefs of the' fire department about being reinstated and that he has told them that he would like to get back on the department, and also that he had been discharged for insufficient funds. One of these officers, Chief Kennedy, told him *605 he would see what he could do about it and another told him he would “look after it.” Appellee also testified that he turned in his badge to the board of public safety about two weeks after he was discharged and that he has been employed since that time except for a period of one and a half years during the depression. The appellee also proved, without objection, that there was a balance of $1,387.40 in the salary fund of the fire department at the end of the fiscal year of 1926. Appellee also established by evidence the wage rate for firemen from the date of his discharge to the end. of the year 1945.

The appellants placed in evidence the records of the fire department showing that the appellee resigned from said department under charges on November 22, 1918, and that he was appointed as substitute fireman January 1, 1926, and was dismissed by the board of public safety January 11, 1926. Also, appellant introduced the record of the said fire department which was dated December 31, 1925, which record disclosed that the appellee was on that date appointed as a substitute fireman to serve “from the pleasure of chief.” Appellants also proved orally that the rules of the department during all the time that appellee was last employed provided that substitute firemen were on probation and could be discharged at any time by said board upon recommendation of the chief of the fire department and without trial.

It is our opinion that the foregoing evidence wholly fails to explain why appellee delayed bringing this action for nearly 15 years after the time of his discharge by the board of public safety and after he had full knowledge of such discharge. The fact that he talked to the various chiefs of the fire department as the evidence dis *606 closed could not excuse diligence on his part in bringing this action. The requirement of diligence in bringing an action such as this has been clearly explained in the case of Bd. Trus. Frmn’s. Pen. Fd. v. St. ex rel. Stuck, Gdn. (1935), 208 Ind. 117, 194 N. E. 623, where the court on page 121 stated:

"It is clear that, because of some ailment, not necessarily incapacitating, Stuck was dismissed without a hearing. We must presume that there was sufficient cause for dismissal. It would not be' contended that at this late date Stuck might maintain an action to require the board of safety to reinstate him or grant him a hearing upon the question of dismissal. He acquiesced in the order of dismissal, and has not been a member of the fire force since that time. .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.E.2d 635, 224 Ind. 600, 1947 Ind. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-indianapolis-v-state-ex-rel-kennedy-ind-1947.