Dease v. McNamara, Unpublished Decision (10-18-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 2001
DocketNo. 78320.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dease v. McNamara, Unpublished Decision (10-18-2001) (Dease v. McNamara, Unpublished Decision (10-18-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dease v. McNamara, Unpublished Decision (10-18-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
The Chief of Police for the City of Brook Park, Thomas A. Dease, appeals from a decision of the common pleas court which granted summary judgment to the City's Director of Public Safety, Eileen M. McNamara, in connection with Dease's complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief, in which he challenged the authority of the Safety Director to issue directives to him regarding the stationing and transfer of police officers in the Brook Park Police Department. The Police Chief claims that the Safety Director exceeded her authority because he asserts that the City's Charter and ordinances vest the Police Chief with exclusive authority to station and transfer officers. We agree and therefore reverse the judgment of the court, enter summary judgment for the Police Chief, and declare that the Chief of Police has exclusive control over the stationing and transfer of police officers in the City of Brook Park.

The procedural history of this case reveals that on February 1, 2000, the Police Chief filed a complaint against the Safety Director seeking a declaration from the common pleas court that the Safety Director interfered with his lawful authority as Chief of Police by issuing six directives, four of which he challenges on this appeal, claiming violations of the provisions of either the city's Charter or its codified ordinances and asserting therefore these directives are contrary to law.

In her defense, the Safety Director filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that the city, in exercising its municipal home rule powers, adopted a charter establishing a chain of command vesting the ultimate authority over the Police Department in the Mayor, and derivatively in the Director of Public Safety. Specifically, she asserted that Brook Park Ordinance 141.05 was invalid, because it granted the City's Police Chief exclusive control over the stationing and transfer of officers in the Police Department and conflicted with the city Charter. She further urged that, even if the section were valid, her directives were lawful because they fell within the ambit of authority given to the Safety Director to prescribe general rules and regulations for the Police Department.

Dease filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that the questioned ordinance does not conflict with the provisions of the Charter and he requested the court to declare that the directives issued by the Safety Director contravened the provisions of Ordinance 141.05.

In its opinion, the trial court determined that section 141.05 of the Brook Park City ordinances purported to grant powers to a police department, while the Charter reserved such powers to a police division; the court held, therefore, that Ordinance 141.05 was invalid because it purportedly granted power to a mythical police department, not a police division, and because section 5.01 of Brook Park's Charter preempts any legislation that would assign to any office, department, or division any function or duty already assigned by the Charter to a particular office, department, or division. The court consequently granted summary judgment to the Safety Director, holding that Article VIII section 8.02 of the Charter empowered the Safety Director to make all necessary rules and regulations for the Division of Police and in conformity with that authority the Safety Director had issued the directives to the Chief of Police.

The Police Chief now appeals from the trial court's judgment, raising two assignments of error for our review, which we consider together because they concern the same issues of law. They state:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO THE APPELLEE ON APPELLANT'S COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY JUDGMENT, AND HOLDING THAT THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC SAFETY FOR THE CITY OF BROOK PARK HAD AUTHORITY, UNDER THE CHARTER AND CODIFIED ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF BROOK PARK, TO ISSUE DIRECTIVES TO THE CHIEF OF POLICE AND TO UNIFORMED MEMBERS OF THE BROOK PARK POLICE DEPARTMENT WHICH CONSTITUTED THE STATIONING AND TRANSFER OF UNIFORMED OFFICERS.

II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO APPELLANT ON HIS COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY JUDGMENT, AND HOLDING THAT, UNDER THE CHARTER AND CODIFIED ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF BROOK PARK, THE CHIEF OF POLICE DOES NOT HAVE EXCLUSIVE CONTROL OVER THE STATIONING AND TRANSFER OF UNIFORMED PERSONNEL IN THE POLICE DEPARTMENT.

The Police Chief contends that the trial court erred and he urges that the court should have entered summary judgment in his favor and declared that, as Police Chief, he has exclusive control over the stationing and transfer of Brook Park police officers, and also should have declared that the Safety Director exceeded her authority in issuing the directives to him purporting to instruct him how to do his job.

The Safety Director, on the other hand, urges that the Ohio Constitution authorizes municipalities to exercise home rule in matters of local self-government, contending that when a municipality purports to exercise its home rule powers, the municipal charter prevails over state statutes and local ordinances. Specifically, she points to case law permitting municipalities to create and operate their own police departments without interference from the state. Moreover, she argues that sections 3.03 and 8.07 of the city's Charter establish a chain of command placing ultimate authority over the Police Department in the Mayor and the Safety Director. The Safety Director therefore asserts that, pursuant to the Charter, the Chief of Police must ultimately answer to the Safety Director, his authority being inherently subordinate to that of the Safety Director, which can only be exercised if consistent with the directives from the Safety Director.

The Safety Director maintains therefore that Ordinance 141.05, which gives exclusive control of the stationing and transfer power to the Police Chief, conflicts with the authority vested in the Mayor and the Safety Director by the Charter and is thus void. To support her contention, she also points to section 141.02 of the ordinances, which states that the Safety Director is the executive head of the Police Department and therefore authorizes her to issue the challenged directives. Finally, McNamara maintains that, even if section 141.05 is applicable, the directives were issued pursuant to her authority to prescribe rules and regulations for the division of police.

The central issue therefore presented for our review on this appeal concerns whether the trial court properly granted summary judgment to the Safety Director, finding Ordinance 141.05 to have no application to the Brook Park Police Department and holding that the Safety Director properly exercised her authority in issuing directives to the Chief of Police.

More specifically, we are asked by the Police Chief on this appeal to determine whether the Safety Director exceeded her authority when she issued a series of directives instructing the Police Chief to assign a specific officer to the K-9 unit; to prepare a schedule for lieutenants to be put on all regular shifts; to personally assist her with dispatch duties; and to personally handle certain clerical tasks.

Courts of appeal review determinations of summary judgment de novo. See Grafton v. Ohio Edison Co.(1996), 77 Ohio St.3d 102, 105, 671 N.E.2d 241.

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Bluebook (online)
Dease v. McNamara, Unpublished Decision (10-18-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dease-v-mcnamara-unpublished-decision-10-18-2001-ohioctapp-2001.