City of Tulsa v. Coker

1937 OK 557, 73 P.2d 443, 181 Okla. 291, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1937
DocketNo. 27406.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1937 OK 557 (City of Tulsa v. Coker) 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. Coker, 1937 OK 557, 73 P.2d 443, 181 Okla. 291, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 131 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

Plaintiff was a member of the police force of the city of Tulsa. On January 0, 1933, when he reported for duty he was given a letter signed by the chief of police, wherein he was informed that he was suspended for five days for conduct unbecoming an officer and that he had the opportunity of taking his cause to the mayor and commissioners if he so desired, and directing him to deliver over any equipment in his possession belonging to the police department. He turned in his badge, which was the only property of the police department which he had, and at the expiration of the five days he reported for duty. He whs not permitted to go on duty, and thereafter he daily reported for duty, according to his uncontroverted testimony, and was not permitted to work. Thereafter he filed salary claims for January and Febru'ary, which were refused. On March 13, 1933, a special meeting of the mayor and board of commissioners was held, “to consider charges heretofore filed against Geo. A. Coker, member of the police force of the city of Tulsa.” The record does not reveal when or by whom the charges were filed. At that meeting a hearing was had and plaintiff was dismissed from the police force.

Subsequently the plaintiff brought this action against the city to recover his s'alary for the period of time between the suspension and the date of the official discharge, March 13, 1933. The trial judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant city appe'als.

There appears to be no serious contention by the city that the method used in attempting to “discharge” the plaintiff, prior to the official discharge by the mayor and board, was legal. A provision of the city charter provides certain steps to be followed in the discharge of a member of the police force, discussion of which provision is unnecessary here, for the reason that it appears virtually to be conceded that the so-called “discharge” w<as illegal. We therefore do not pass upon the question.

The city, however, does contend that, even though the discharge was illegal, the city officers paid the plaintiff’s salary to another officer who took his place on January 6, 1933, and that therefore the plaintiff cannot recover. In this connection the defendant cites the rule announced in Stearns, Mayor, v. Sims, 24 Okla. 623, 104 P. 44, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 475, as follows:

“Where a de jure chief of police is, pending suit on charges against him in the district court, wrongfully suspended by order of the judge thereof at chambers, which ¿aid order is later set aside and said suit dismissed, and where said city pays a chief of police de facto, during his incumbency, the salary provided by law, said officer de jure after obtaining possession of the office cannot recover from the city the salary for the s'ame period.”

The defendant points out that the plaintiff had been assigned to and was doing duty in a certain scout car, on patrol duty in the city, and contends that upon plaintiff’s “discharge” one R. B. Jones was appointed in his stead, at the same salary, and was paid *292 the salary during- the period of time for which the plaintiff is seeking recovery thereof, and that if the city were now compelled to pay ¿alary to plaintiff, it would be paying the salary twice. Thus the defendant argues that the rule that payment to a de facto officer precludes the later recovery thereof by the de jure officer, relieves said city from liability in this suit.

In Stearns, Mayor, v. Sims, supra, the chief of police of Shawnee had been suspended from office by an order of the judge of the district court, but was thereafter reinstated in office, on the ground that the original order of suspension was illegally made. During the interim another had performed the duties of the office 'and the city had paid to him the salary pertaining to the office for the period of time which he served. In a subsequent action for the salary against the city by the chief of police who had formerly been suspended (who was the dg jure officer) it was held that the payment by the city to the officer serving during the interim (the de facto officer) barred the de jure officer’s action. That decision was based upon the rule announced in the syllabus copied therefrom above, which appears to be the weight of authority in this country. It remains to be seen whether the facts of the instant case bring it within that rule and the reason for said rule.

We now consider those facts in more detail. In stating such facts we are of course bound and limited by the record before us. The defendant introduced the pay rolls of the police department for the months of December of 1932 and Jarm'ary, February, and March of 1933. The December and January pay rolls show plaintiff thereon at $148.50 per month, to and including January 5th. Beginning Janu'ary 6th there appears the name of It. B. Jones, whose name had not appeared on the December pay roll. He is shown to be receiving $14S.50 per month, the same rate at which plaintiff had been p'aid. However, there are many others within the same classification on the same pay roll at the same rate of pay. The city also produced evidence to the effect that B. B. Jones was assigned to duty in the same scout dar and with the same scout car partner with whom the plaintiff had worked. These are the facts on that issue, and the defendant contends that they show that Jones was appointed to fill 'a vacancy caused by the discharge of the plaintiff, in such a way as to constitute Jones a de facto officer, payment to whom should bar recovery by the plaintiff. We 'are of the opinion that, accepting said facts as true, they do riot bring the case within the rule of Stearns, Mayor, v. Sims.

We perceive a basic distinction between cases like Stearns v. Sims, supra, and this one. An examination of that case, and of all the eases upon which it is founded, as well as virtually all other cases invoking the doctrine, reveals that the office under consideration in such cases was a particular and definite office with its own unique identity, which could be filled by one person only, such 'as chief of police, mayor, county clerk, county treasurer, court clerk, etc. When once the people have paid the salary prescribed for that particular office, let us say for the mayor, they should not be required to pay it again to some other individual, for the s'ame service for the same period of time. Else they would in effect be paying for two mayors, when the ordinance provides for but one. That is the main basis of the rule, the reasoning upon which it is founded, though some of the cases give additional reasons. It may be th'at the same reasoning would be applicable in the instant case if the police department had been operating at the full number authorized by ordinance (we express no opinion thereon), but such is not the case. The ordinance and the pay rolls are before us; they reveal th'at the department was operating with a considerably less number of officers within plaintiff’s salary class than that authorized by the ordinance. And there is no question in the case concerning any lack of appropriation to pay the salaries of all policemen authorized by the ordinance.

How, then, may it be said that plaintiff’s recovery is requiring the people to pay the salary of “the s'ame office” twice? It can no more be said that Jones filled a vacancy caused by plaintiff’s illegal discharge than it could be said that he filled 'any other vacancy. There were already vacancies, if they may be called that, before plaintiff was discharged.

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Related

City of Tulsa v. Parrish
1958 OK 301 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1958)
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1957 OK 139 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
City of Tulsa v. Johnson
1945 OK 53 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 557, 73 P.2d 443, 181 Okla. 291, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-coker-okla-1937.