Gaffney v. Young

205 N.W. 865, 200 Iowa 1030
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 865 (Gaffney v. Young) 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
Gaffney v. Young, 205 N.W. 865, 200 Iowa 1030 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

The appellee, on October 22, 1924, filed in the lower court a petition against the appellants, the members of the board of trustees of the policemen’s pension fund of Sioux City, asking for a writ of certiorari to review the action of the board in denying her a pension as the widow of a policeman who, as is alleged, died as a result of exposure in the performance of his duties. It was alleged that his death occurred on January 18, 1912, and that on September 10, 1924, the plaintiff filed with the board her application for a pension from the date of her husband’s death, which the board, on October 20, 1924, arbitrarily rejected.

The appellants appeared in response to a notice of the time and place at which the application for the writ would be made, and set up a number of reasons why the writ should not issue. Of these, the ones now urged upon our attention may be summarized as follows: 1. That certiorari is not the proper remedy. 2. That appellee’s alleged right to a pension accrued at the death of her husband, and more than twelve months before the application for the writ, and the action of certiorari was therefore barred. 3. That appellee’s claim to a pension was barred by the statute of limitations. 4. That such claim was defeated by her laches. The facts upon which these contentions are predicated appeared on the face of the petition. The lower court issued the writ, commanding the board to certify the transcript and proceedings upon appellee’s application to it for review. It is from this order that the appeal is taken.

The statute in force at the time of the death of appellee’s husband was Chapter 13-B of Title V of the .Code Supplement of 1913. It provided for the levy of a tax of one-half mill on *1032 the dollar upon the taxable property within the limits of cities having an organized police department, for the purpose of creating a fund, to be under the control of a.board of trustees, and exclusively devoted to the payment of pensions. It provided for a membership fee to be paid to the treasurer of the fund by members of police departments coming under its provisions, and assessments to be deducted from the policemen’s salaries, and for certain other accretions to the fund.

It further provided, among other things, that, if any member of the police force should die because of any disease contracted by reason of his occupation as policeman, and leave a widow surviving him, there should .be paid to such surviving widow, so long as she remained unmarried and of good moral character, a pension of $20 per month out of the policemen’s pension fund.

I. Certiorari was a proper remedy. Section 12456, Code of 1924. In Home Sav. & Tr. Co. v. District Court, 121 Iowa 1, we said:

“It seems to be fundamental that, when a new jurisdiction is created by statute, and the court or officer exercising it proceeds in a summary mode, or in a course different from the common law, and a remedy for a revision of its exercise is not given by the statute creating it, certiorari from a court having general superintendence and control over inferior jurisdictions will lie for its revision.”

See, also, Jewett v. Ayers, 167 Iowa 431.

II. The petition herein for a writ of certiorari was filed and the writ issued within twelve months after the action of the board denying appellee’s application for a pension, which action it Avas sought to have reviewed. The action was timely, under Section 12467, Code of 1924.

Counsel for appellants at this point relies upon eases holding that the general statutes of limitation commence to run when the cause of action' accrues. They are not applicable to the point raised here, nor is the situation controlled by what Avas said in Prescott v. Conser, 34 Iowa. 175, in reference to the right to a writ of mandamus to enforce the performance of an official duty, and where it was held that a party *1033 by neglecting to malee a demand for action could not avoid the statute of limitations.

III. It has frequently been said that such a pension , is not a matter of contract or vested right; that it is a mere gratuity or bounty from the sovereign power, to be given, changed, or withheld at its pleasure. Eddy v. Morgan, 216 Ill. 437 (75 N. E. 174); Ryan v. Foreman, 262 Ill. 175 (104 N. E. 189); Pecoy v. City of Chicago, 265 Ill. 78 (106 N. E. 435); State ex rel. Risch v. Board of Trustees, 121 Wis. 44 (98 N. W. 954); Gibbs v. Minneapolis F. D. R. Assn., 125 Minn. 174 (145 N. W. 1075); Pennie v. Reis, 132 U. S. 464 (33 L. Ed. 426). But this is said of the right of the lawmaking power with respect to the pension, or to change the terms and conditions upon which it shall be given, prior to the happening of the event upon which the party becomes entitled to it, and has no reference or application to the right of a party within the class to receive the pension provided for by existing law upon the happening of the event which entitles him to receive it. Upon the happening of that event, and the existence of other facts entitling him to the pension, it cannot be doubted that his right, so fár as relates to the obligations of the custodians of the fund to pay, and his right to receive, the pension then provided for, accrued and vested, and could then have been enforced. Pennie v. Reis, supra; State ex rel. Risch v. Board of Trustees, supra; Stevens v. Minneapolis F. D. R. Assn., 124 Minn. 381 (145 N. W. 35); Gibbs v. Minneapolis F. D. R. Assn., supra; Rudolph v. United States ex rel. Stuart, 36 App. D. C. 379; O’Dea v. Cook, 176 Cal. 659 (169 Pac. 366); Dickey v. Jackson, 181 Iowa 1155.

We are not concerned with any right or power of the legislature to affect by subsequent legislation the amount or terms of an existing pension. But see Section 932-q, Code Supplement of 1913 (Section 6323, Code of 1924).

*1034 *1033 The question here is whether, when the right of the appellee to a pension accrued and vested in her on the death of her'husband, the right to enforce it may be wholly lost and barred by *1034 a failure to do so within the period of any statutory limitation. The act providing for the creation of the pension fund and for the payment of pensions. from it fixes no limit of time Avithin Avhieh application for a pension must be made or action to enforce the right commenced. The appellee’s right to the pension — assuming it to exist — and to the payments to be made monthly would continue during her life, so long as she remained unmarried and of good moral character. The right was and is a continuing one, and, so far as present and future payments are concerned, we are of the opinion that it was one which she could enforce at any time, upon proof of the facts sustaining it.

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Bluebook (online)
205 N.W. 865, 200 Iowa 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaffney-v-young-iowa-1925.