Gartsu v. Coleman

106 A.2d 248, 82 R.I. 103, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 25, 1954
DocketEq. No. 2237
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 A.2d 248 (Gartsu v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gartsu v. Coleman, 106 A.2d 248, 82 R.I. 103, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 18 (R.I. 1954).

Opinion

*104 Baker, J.

This is a petition for mandamus brought in the superior court praying that the petitioner be reinstated to the office of captain in the police department of the city of Woonsocket in this state. The respondents constitute the board of police commissioners of that city. No question of procedure or pleading is involved. After a hearing a justice *105 of the superior court granted the petition and a judgment was entered ordering the issuance of a writ of mandamus as prayed. From the entry of that judgment respondents duly prosecuted their appeal to this court.

It appears without dispute that in 1929 petitioner was appointed as a patrolman in the police department. In 1945 he was promoted to the position of captain in that department. The respondents became members of the •board of police commissioners of Woonsocket on January 5, 1953. On the following day, while petitioner was on vacation, the board met and voted two to one to demote him from his position of captain to that of patrolman, to become effective January 19, 1953. No charges whatever were filed against petitioner by respondents or by any other person. He was not notified to be present at the above meeting and in fact was not there. No hearing was held and he was not given an opportunity to be heard or to be represented by counsel. The petitioner was promptly notified of the above action by the board and thereafter filed the instant petition.

It is agreed by the parties that the following statutes are applicable and controlling in respect to the questions raised in this case. By public laws 1935, chapter 2246, a board of police commissioners for the city of Woonsocket was established. That chapter contained the following pertinent provisions:

“Sec. 6. Said board of police commissioners shall have authority to appoint, remove, and control the chief of police, the police matrons and all other attaches of the police department of said city as said city is now or hereafter may be constituted, and shall have authority to make all needful rules and regulations for their efficiency, management, and direction, not inconsistent with the laws of the state. All the powers now vested in the police commissioner of said city, or other competent authority, concerning the qualifications, appointment, removal, organization, compensa *106 tion, term of office, discipline, or control of the police or police surgeons and police matrons and all other attaches of the police department of said city by the statutes of the state, or by special laws relative to said city, or by ordinance of said city, or by rule or regulation of the board of aldermen or otherwise, except as in this act otherwise provided, are hereby conferred upon and vested in said board of police commissioners.
"Sec. 9. Said board of police commissioners may remove from office at any time any officer appointed by it or placed under its control by law * * *.”

Thereafter the above-quoted portion of sec. 9 of chap. 2246 was amended by P. L. 1936, chap. 2429, to read as follows:

“Sec. 9. Said board of police commissioners may dismiss at any time the chief of police, police matrons, officers and all other attaches of the police department appointed by the board or placed under its control by law, for cause, which may be violation of law, flagrant or persistent violations of the rules and regulations legally prescribed by said board, inefficiency, incapacity, insubordination, conduct unbecoming an officer, or other just cause; provided, however, that no chief of police, police matron, or police officer shall be dismissed unless he has received a written copy of the charge or charges that have been preferred against him, not less than fifteen days before the meeting, at which such charge or charges are to be considered, and unless such person, if he so requests it, has been given a public hearing before said board, and had an opportunity to be present, heard and represented by counsel, and unless the charge or charges has or have been admitted or substantiated; and provided, further, that the board of police commissioners may suspend any chief of police, police matron, or other police officer for cause, pending a hearing, but that suspension shall not involve loss of salary unless the cause is sufficient to justify dismissal, as provided in this section.”

Broadly speaking petitioner contends that he was entitled to be notified of the charges against him, to be given a *107 public hearing, and to be represented by counsel before he could properly be demoted by the board from captain to patrolman. On the other hand, respondents maintain that chapter 2429 does not apply under the facts appearing herein ; that in the case of demotion petitioner was not entitled to receive a copy of the charges against him and to be given a public hearing thereon; and that the board’s action in the premises was legal and within its powers.

It is clear that under chap. 2246, especially secs. 6 and 9, the board of police commissioners of Woonsocket was given broad and general powers over the police department in respect to the appointment, removal and control of the members thereof and in the making of rules and regulations necessary for their efficiency, management and direction. When the chapter was enacted it was apparently expected that all details in that connection would be governed largely by the rules and regulations of the department.

However, nothing in the existing rules and regulations has been brought to our attention which has any bearing on the determination of the questions raised by the parties under the instant petition. In exercising the powers given by such chapter, it is obvious that the board at times acts in an administrative capacity and at times in a quasi-judicial capacity depending upon the nature of the duties it performs. In our judgment the board in demoting the petitioner from captain to patrolman in the circumstances here was acting in the last-named capacity. See Garvin v. McCarthy, 39 R. I. 365.

In support of his position, petitioner has cited the case of Bergeron v. Batchelor, 46 R. I. 224, 229, 230. The actual decision, which was based on the specific and peculiar facts there involved, is not controlling in fact in the instant case. However, certain language used by the court in construing a similar statute and in setting out certain principles of law, in our judgment, applies to the case now before us. The *108 Bergeron case, which was decided in 1924, concerned the demotion by the board of police commissioners of the city of Woonsocket of two sergeants who previously had been patrolmen in its police department. The pertinent Statutes in effect at that time were P. L. 1911, chap. 661, as amended by P. L. 1912, chap. 902. An examination of those chapters shows that sec. 3 of chap. 661, as amended by chap. 902, contains substantially the same language as sec. 6 of chap. 2246, which we are now considering, in so far as the authority of the board to appoint, remove and control the members of the police department is concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.2d 248, 82 R.I. 103, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gartsu-v-coleman-ri-1954.