City of Tulsa v. Board of Trustees of Police Pension

1963 OK 267, 387 P.2d 255, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 26, 1963
Docket39378
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1963 OK 267 (City of Tulsa v. Board of Trustees of Police Pension) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Tulsa v. Board of Trustees of Police Pension, 1963 OK 267, 387 P.2d 255, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 536 (Okla. 1963).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Chief Justice.

This case involves a Police Pension applied for by Paul J. Livingston, former Chief of Tulsa Police, on January 27, 1958, less than a month after his discharge from that position, on account of “conduct unbecoming an officer”, and after the United States Circuit Court of Appeals had, three weeks before, affirmed his conviction, subsequent to his indictment, with others, by a Federal Grand Jury, on February 21, 1957, upon charges of conspiring to violate the federal law concerning importation of intoxicating liquor into this State. (18 U.S.C.A. § 1262). These and other facts concerning the end of Mr. Livingston’s active career as a part of the Tulsa Police Department appear in State ex rel. Livingston v. Maxwell, Old., 353 P.2d 690.

When, while the cited appeal was pending, Livingston’s pension application was heard before the Board of Trustees of the Pension And Retirement System of Tulsa’s Police Department, on November 30, 1959, it was opposed by the City of Tulsa, represented by the City Attorney, Mr. N. Also appearing was another attorney, Mr. K. After it had been stipulated, with other facts, at said hearing, that Livingston had commenced his service with the Tulsa Police Department in 1935, the Board of Trustees (hereinafter referred to merely as the “Board”), concluded, at the close of the hearing, that the question presented was “ * -t- * whether a police officer who has earned a pension by twenty years of meritorious service, and who continues to work on past his retirement time, forfeits his r.ight to a police pension for non-meritorious conduct done after his pension is earned.” After expressions on this, and other matters not necessary to mention, the Board granted Livingston a Police Pension based upon his service prior to March 1, 1956.

Thereafter, the aforementioned Mr. K (for himself “ * * * and all other tax payers similarly situated”) and the City of Tulsa, pursuant to specific authorization by the Mayor and Board Of Commissioners, filed a petition in error in the District Court, alleging error in the Board’s decision on several grounds, and praying that said decision be reviewed and vacated. Before said purported .appeal had been considered on its merits, the attorney, who had represented Livingston before the Board, obtained permission from the court to appear *257 before it as “amicus curiae” and file a motion to dismiss the purported appeal. After such motion had been filed, and briefs for, and against, it submitted, the District Court (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the “trial court”) sustained it, and entered judgment dismissing the action upon two grounds. As the record before us does not contain facts sufficient to enable us to pass on the ground concerning Mr. K, we mention only the first one, which was:

“1. The City of Tulsa is not a proper party appellant by reason of the fact that it appears to the court that the appeal herein amounts to an appeal by the Board of Trustees of the Police Pension and Retirement System of the City of Tulsa, Oklahoma, from its own ruling. * * *
* * *»

Thereafter the City of Tulsa and Mr. K filed in this court their petition in error, with casemade attached, praying reversal of the trial court’s judgment of dismissal. Thereafter, Mr. K died, and a Mr. H was substituted for him as plaintiff in error. (He and the City will hereinafter be referred to as “appellants”). Subsequently Paul J. Livingston filed a' special appearance and objection to this court’s jurisdiction in the matter. We overruled said objection without prejudice to his re-asserting same upon our present consideration of the merits of the attempted appeal. As he is the party having a pecuniary interest in an affirmance of the trial court’s judgment, he will hereinafter be referred to as “ap-pellee”.

In support of the City’s right to maintain an appeal from the Board’s decision granting Livingston the pension, appellants point to the monetary interest the City has in such decisions, because a part of its revenue has been appropriated to the Tulsa Pension Retirement System, as authorized by Tit. 11 O.S.1961 § 541h, and these monies, supplemented by contributions from the Tulsa policemen, as authorized by sec. 541i of the same Title, make up the fund out of which such pensions are paid. The appellee does not deny these representations, nor does he dispute appellants’ claim that the City has a pecuniary, and real, interest in seeing that pensions — not authorized by law — are not paid out of said fund, to the end that it will not be unlawfully depleted and eventually bankrupted.

Appellee’s position that the City lacks the right of appeal is expressed in four arguments under his “Proposition No. 2”. In one of these he takes the position (apparently sustained by the trial court) that since, under the Police Pension And Retirement Law (particularly section 541b of Tit. 11, supra) the Clerk and Treasurer of the City are both members of the Board, it should represent the City’s view, and an appeal by the City from a decision of said Board granting a Police Pension would, in effect, be an appeal by the City from its own decision. There is no merit in this contention: The two city officials’ membership on the five-member Board is not due to any voluntary selection by the City, or any agent thereof, but is due solely to operation of the cited Law (sec. 541b, supra). Assuming, without deciding, that these two men sit on the Board in their capacity as City Officials, or as agents of the City, they comprise a minority of said Board. Section 541d of Title 11, supra, makes the vote of the majority of the Board’s members controlling in the disbursal of the System’s money. With the majority thus able to override the minority’s opinions, there would be no way for the City to successfully oppose payment of a pension — even if the Clerk and Treasurer did speak for it in the matter — unless it had a way of appeal from the majority’s decision.

Appellee next contends that the Board’s decision granting the pension was the exercise of an administrative, or ministerial, function, and for that reason, was not subject to appeal. We do not agree. While in some jurisdictions, as in some matters in this jurisdiction, the actions of such boards are undoubtedly ministerial, we think that, in the present subject matter, the decision of the Board shows upon its *258 face that, by it, members of the Board were expressing their opinion of the applicability, or inapplicability, of Oklahoma Statutes to the applicant’s rendering of twenty years’ meritorious service before committing acts "unbecoming an officer.” In rendering such a decision, the Board could be acting in nothing less than a quasi-judicial capacity. The Board’s Pension and Retirement Law itself, in effect, recognizes the judicial nature of such decisions by specifically providing (in sec. 541v, Tit. 11, supra) for court appeals from those denying such pensions.

It is appellee’s further position that since sec. 541v specifically mentions only appeals from such denials by “Any policemen, widow or dependent of any policeman * * * ”, such parties are the only ones, under said law, who may lodge an appeal to either the District Court or to this Court.

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Bluebook (online)
1963 OK 267, 387 P.2d 255, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-board-of-trustees-of-police-pension-okla-1963.