Douglas v. City of Des Moines

220 N.W. 72, 206 Iowa 144
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 26, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 72 (Douglas v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas v. City of Des Moines, 220 N.W. 72, 206 Iowa 144 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

*145 Kindig, J.

This controversy involves the Soldiers’ Preference Law, as contained in Chapter 60 of the 1924 Code. Section 1159 thereof reads as’follows:

“In every public department and upon all public works in the state, and of the counties, cities, towns, and school boards thereof, including those of cities acting under special charters, honorably discharged soldiers, sailors, marines, and nurses from the army and navy of the United States in the late Civil War, Spanish-American War, Philippine insurrection, China relief expedition, or war with Germany, who are citizens and residents of this state, shall, except in the position of school teachers, be entitled to preference in appointment, employment, and promotion over other applicants of no greater qualifications.”

Appellee, as plaintiff below, bases his cause of action upon that section, claiming that on the 13th of July, 1923, he was duly appointed and employed as a police officer of the city of Des Moines, and thereafter served and received compensation as such until about the 19th day of April, 1926, when he was removed from his position, in violation of Section 1163 of the same chapter, which provides:

“No person holding a public position by appointment or employment, and belonging to any of the classes of persons to whom a preference is herein granted, shall be removed from such position or employment except for incompetency or misconduct shown after a hearing, upon due notice, upon stated charges, and with the right of such employee or appointee to a review by a writ of certiorari.” - '

To accomplish this ‘ ‘ review, ” appellee made application for and obtained the allowance of a writ of certiorari from the trial court, directed to the appellants, the city and officers thereof, commanding that they make return of their doings in the premises. After hearing in that court, the writ was sustained, and the cause comes here by appeal therefrom. For return to that writ, appellants, in due time, made the following showing in the district court: That the appellee, Douglas, who had a defective and Useless right arm, was-originally permitted to do police department work as an extra special, from July 13, 1923, to September 15, 1924; as an assistant in the traffic regulations. On *146 November 1, 1924, he was allowed to help in the police department as an emergency assistant, continuing as a special extra until March 15, 1925. Then, on September 15th of that year, appellee was again permitted to help out in emergency, and served as bulletin clerk until November 15, 1925. Following some intermission, he was again employed, November 15, 1926, as a special member of a patrol crew, until April 30, 1927; at which time he was retired, for the ensuing reasons:

“ * * * 2, The emergency causing his employment had passed. 3. Our [tbe city’s] appropriation for the current year would not allow the employment of special help. 4. Dougias was never a regular member of the Des Moines police department. He never passed a civil-service examination. He never contributed to the pension fund. He has the misfortune to have a crippled arm, and is. not physically qualified for police duty. His physical condition has been the same throughout his entire period of connection with-the Des Moines-police department.”

At the trial, additional evidence was introduced by'appellee, to show that:. First, he was not employed as' an emergency officer; second, no complaint was made' about his- services, but, on the other hand, he was complimented for his efficiency; third, while appellee never took the civil-service examination, yet he wore a civil-service .policeman’s badge.; fourth, no notice was given of the contemplated discharge, nor was any- hearing per.mitted in reference to the.city’s right so to act; and fifth, the city has other employees who have not passed the civil-service examination. . Such .were the issues upon which the case was tried, and we are now called upon to investigate the errors alleged to have been committed by the district court.

I. Appellants contend that the first mistake made" at the trial was the admission of additional evidence on behalf of the appellee, supplementing the writ. Their argument is-that the dispute is to be decided entirely upon said “return.” With this thought, however, wé are compelled-to disagree. Butin v. Civil Service Com., 179 Iowa 1048. Under certain conditions, -further testimony may be introduced; -for, as said in the-Butin case, supra, it is the intent of the act “to permit the reviewing court to consider anything which legitimately bore on whether the discharge was for any reason wrongful; * * * ”

*147 II. Fundamentally, the “Preference Statute” (Section 1159, supra) contemplates competition between two applicants: that is to say, an honorably discharged soldier, on the one hand, and a non-soldier, on the other.' Without such situation, that legislative enactment has no application. Before us is not a demand for an appointment to a position, within the scope of that section of the Preference Act; for appellee here does not ask to be employed or promoted “ over other applicants of no greater qualifications.”

III. Consequently, the only portion of the' “Soldiers’ Preference Law” having to do with the instant legal quarrel is Section 1163, supra, relating to the removal from office. Mann festly, there is more embraced within the present status of affairs than a mere question ox dis- . /. . charge tor incompetency or misconduct, dealt jn section. Rather than this limited reason (the statutory ground of incompetency or misconduct) for the discontinuance of appellee’s services, the appellants were confronted with two barriers, preventing or making unwise his further employment. These are: First, the “emergency causing his employment had passed, ’ ’ thus making' the abolition of the office necessary; and second, the city’s “appropriation for the current year would not allow the employment of special help.” .

Soldier preference, as enacted by our legislature, does not prevent the abolishment of an office, nor does it demand, under the eireumstanees here revealed, the employment of a policeman or other official when the city treasury will not permit,' or public economy allow. Babcock v. City of Des Moines, 180 Iowa 1120.

. IV. There is no evidence in the record to dispute appellants’ return to the writ, so far. as it relates to the depleted treasury. Hence the result of the trial court’s decision is a command to the city of Des Moines to retain appellee upon its pay roll, even though there be no funds with .which to. compensate him. In Babcock v. City of Des Moines, supra, we said:

“There is nothing in the Soldiers’ Preference Law, or any other law, which compels a municipality to do its business less efficiently and economically than it is able to. When a position exists, the honorably discharged soldier has preferential rights *148 to filling it. -There is- no law that commands that, when such position is once filled by him, the position must be maintained.”

Y.

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220 N.W. 72, 206 Iowa 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1928.