Drake v. City of Portland

143 P.2d 213, 172 Or. 558, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 108
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 143 P.2d 213 (Drake v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. City of Portland, 143 P.2d 213, 172 Or. 558, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 108 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is ah appeal by all except seven of the defendants from a decree of the circuit court which was entered after all parties had filed their pleadings and after - the close of the evidence. The attacked decree (a) overruled a demurrer filed by the appealing defendants to the second amended complaint, and (b) awarded the plaintiffs the relief sought by the pleading-just mentioned. That relief consists of:

“ * * * the reclassification by the Civil Service Board of the City of Portland, Oregon, adopted by said Board October 6, 1938, in so far as the same applies to or affects the plaintiffs and the seven employe-defendants and the positions occupied by them in the Bureau of Water Works of the City of Portland, is null and void.”

*561 The plaintiffs, twenty-six in number, hold clerical positions in Portland’s Bureau of Water Works, Revenue Division. The defendants, after the amended complaint was filed, fell into four categories: (1) the city of Portland; (2) the city’s five commissioners, who constitute its council, one of them being also its mayor; (3) the three commissioners who compose the city’s Civil Service Board; and (4) seven employees of the defendant municipality who, like the plaintiffs, hold clerical positions in the city’s Bureau of Water Works, Revenue Division.

The appellants are the defendant municipality, the Civil Service Board and the five officials who are the commissioners of the city.

The ruling upon the demurrer to the second amended complaint was postponed, according to the decree, because of a stipulation “that the trial upon the issues of fact should proceed, and the decision on the demurrer should abide the introduction of the evidence, the final arguments and submission of the case. ’ ’ In our determination of the cause, we will ignore the demurrer.

It is seen from the language above quoted that the circuit court termed the Civil Service Board’s order of October 26, 1938, a “reclassification.” The plaintiffs also denominate the order a “reclassification.” The appellants insist that it is a “classification.” As Mr. Justice Holmes said, “Definition is the most difficult of all things, both in the law and elsewhere.” We believe that this is another of the numerous cases in which nothing of importance turns upon nomenclature. Until we reach a subsequent paragraph of this opinion, we shall use the words “classification” and “reclassification” interchangeably.

*562 The subject-matter attacked by this suit is the order made by the Civil Service Board October 26,1938. The second amended complaint, to which we may refer as the complaint, seeks an adjudication holding that order void and “defining the lawful rights, status and classification” of the plaintiffs. This suit was instituted under our Uniform Declaratory Judgments statute, §§ 6-601-6-616, O. C. L. A.

The purpose and basis of this suit are stated thus in the plaintiffs ’ brief :

‘ ‘ This suit was instituted to nullify a re-classification made by the defendant Civil Service Board on October 26, 1938, on the ground that said Board had no charter power to make the re-classification.; that in making it the Board usurped certain powers granted by the charter exclusively to the Council and to the Commissioner in charge of the pártieular department; * * * ”

The plaintiffs concede that the challenged classification order dismissed no one from the city’s employ. Salaries of all the city’s employees remained the same after the entry of the order as before. All of the city’s employees continued to perform the same work after the classification as they were performing when it was adopted. The plaintiffs contend, however, that the order injured or prejudiced them in these particulars: (1) They can no longer be transferred, so they say, from position to position in the Bureau of Water Works, Bevenue Division, to the same extent as before the entry of the order; (2) their seniority rights were impaired by the order; (3) some of the thirty-three employee parties to this suit were, in effect, promoted and the others were, in effect, demoted by the order; (4) some of the plaintiffs are performing work which *563 is inferior in ldnd to that which is performed by some of the other thirty-three employee parties to this suit; and (5) before those who were disfavored by the order (to adopt the plaintiffs’ phraseology) can be entitled to perform the better kind of work, they must take a promotional examination.

The classification made by the attacked order does not affect merely the clerical positions, but applies to all positions subject to classified civil service, with the exception of some in the Fire and Police Bureaus. There are about 2400 employees in the city’s classified civil service. The work performed by the clerks in the Bureau of Water Works, Revenue Division, was segregated by the attacked order into three divisions: Senior Account Clerk, Account Clerk and Junior Clerk.

The plaintiffs claim that the Board’s order was a reclassification of the employees and not, as the appellants contend, a classification of positions or jobs. They also contend that the order, in dividing the existing clerical work into three divisions, created jobs in violation of the charter provision which confers upon the council — not the Board — the power to create jobs and designate their duties. The plaintiffs call attention to a provision of the charter which empowers the city’s commissioners, and not the Board, to hire and dismiss employees. The plaintiffs argue that the 1938 order was a reclassification, not a classification, and urge that the Board has no power to reclassify. The plaintiffs claim that all of the employees in the revenue division were adversely affected by the order. After calling attention to the fact that prior to the 1938 order the employees in the revenue division were transferred from time to time to different positions, thus gaining relief from the monotony of the work, they contend that *564 the challenged order, prohibits transfers. ' They insist that the- employees whose work was classified by the 1938 order as senior account clerk were by that very fact promoted without examination, and that the others were demoted in the same way. In pursuing their contention that the account clerks and junior clerks were demoted, the plaintiffs argue that the employees within those two classifications could not, after the entry of the attacked order, be advanced to the position of senior account clerk unless they (1) passed a promotional examination, and (2) Were appointed senior account clerk by the commissioner in charge of the water bureau. Next, they argue that the 1938 order denies all clerks in the Revenue Division the seniority to which they would otherwise be entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
143 P.2d 213, 172 Or. 558, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-city-of-portland-or-1943.