GILDEA v. Pittsburgh

290 A.2d 878, 5 Pa. Commw. 364, 1972 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 495
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1972
DocketAppeals, 600 C.D. 1971 and 949 C.D. 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 A.2d 878 (GILDEA v. Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GILDEA v. Pittsburgh, 290 A.2d 878, 5 Pa. Commw. 364, 1972 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 495 (Pa. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

Opinion by President

Judge Bowman,

These two appeals arise out of unrelated factual backgrounds but both involve the statutory power of the Mayor of Pittsburgh or its Director of Public Safety to suspend allegedly insubordinate police officers from the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police either initially or after hearing before a police trial court for definite or indefinite periods of time.

Robert Gildea and thirty-three other police officers were suspended from their duties by the Director of the Department of Public Safety in late 1970. Officials of the Bureau of Police had begun an investigation into the payment of court witness fees to certain police officers and discovered that some thirty-four police officers had received substantial court witness fees to which they were not entitled. The Superintendent of Police on the basis of the investigative report preferred [367]*367charges against these officers and recommended disciplinary action.

The Public Safety Director ordered police trial courts convened to examine the charges pursuant to the Policemen’s Civil Service Act of August 10, 1951, P. L. 1189, as amended, 53 P.S. §23531. Before such police trial courts were actually convened, the police officers were suspended from duty without pay.

The police trial courts subsequently met to dispose of the charges but in all cases continued the hearings pending disposition of possible criminal charges being filed against the suspended police officers. Further, these police trial courts ordered the police officers restored to duty with pay in the interim. In fact, no criminal charges were ever filed against any of them.

The Mayor of Pittsburgh concluded that the police trial courts lacked power to order such restorations and continued the suspensions. The police trial courts then reconvened, took testimony and examined evidence, and concluded in all cases that the police officers had received the questioned court witness fees by mistake. Suspensions ranging from twenty-five to fifty-eight days were imposed.

Upon reviewing the various police trial court transcripts and findings, the Mayor determined that the police trial courts had in all cases totally disregarded the evidence before them and abused their discretion. He disapproved their conclusions. By individual- letter to each police trial court and police officer, the Mayor advised that the original suspensions imposed by the Public Safety Director would continue in effect pending further administrative action and disposition of the criminal chax’ges.

Thirty-one of the affected policemen filed a complaint in equity in the Coixrt of Common Pleas of Allegheny Couxity seeking to enjoin the suspensions as re[368]*368instated by the Mayor. A Chancellor (Hester, J.) heard argument on a request for a preliminary injunction, having refused a previous petition for ex parte preliminary injunctive relief. After hearing, a preliminary injunction issued ordering the policemen restored to duty pending new hearings by police trial courts to be promptly convened. The Mayor appealed from the granting of such preliminary relief to this Court. At the time of argument of the appeal before this Court, new police trial courts had not been convened.

Barry M. Joyce and Daniel J. Cuneen, two officers employed by the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, were involved in an incident on September 24, 1971 where they were alleged to have fired their service revolvers so as to seriously wound a fleeing felon. On the basis of this incident, the Mayor ordered that Joyce and Cuneen be suspended from duty without pay; the City of Pittsburgh concurrently filed criminal charges against both officers charging them with assault with intent to kill.

Within six days of the suspension, a police trial court was convened to hear evidence on the Mayor’s charges supporting his suspension actions for violations of the Bureau regulations as to the use of firearms. Following hearing, the police trial court ordered the officers restored to duty pending final disposition of the criminal charges.

The Mayor reviewed the determinations and conclusions to restore these two officers to full duty by the police trial court and disapproved the decision by opinion dated October 5, 1971. The opinion concluded that both officers had violated the firearm regulations promulgated by the Bureau of Police. The suspension order issued by the Mayor indicated that Joyce and Cuneen would continue to be suspended from duty for a period of one hundred and twenty days dating back to [369]*369September 24,1971 unless modified by tbe Civil Sendee Commission on appeal.

At the time this appeal was filed, tbe criminal charges were still pending.

No appeal was taken from this order to tbe Civil Service Commission but the suspended officers, believing tbe Mayor’s opinion and order to be an unlawful exercise of bis statutory powers, instituted a complaint in equity in tbe Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. Tbe complaint alleged that tbe Mayor bad failed to properly notify them of bis disapproval order and bad otherwise reinstated the suspensions without legal authority. After bearing before a Chancellor (McCarthy, J.) upon tbe officers’ petition for preliminary injunction to set aside tbe suspensions, tbe requested relief was denied. Joyce and Cuneen filed an appeal from tbe denial of preliminary injunctive relief to this Court.

In these appeals, one from tbe granting of a preliminary injunction and tbe other from tbe refusal to do so, our scope of reviewing would normally be limited to tbe narrow issue of whether tbe Chancellor bad reasonable grounds for bis action. McMullan v. Wohlgemuth et al., 444 Pa. 563, 281 A. 2d 836 (1971).

In each case, however, instead of restricting himself to tbe issue of whether a preliminary injunction should be granted, tbe Chancellor addressed himself to tbe merits and reached legal conclusions on substantive issues, which conclusions in tbe two cases are not wholly consistent.1

[370]*370Thus we are called upon by the parties to pass upon the substantive legal issues involved in these cases on appeals from the granting and refusal to grant a preliminary injunction. Under ordinary circumstances we would not do so. However, because of the public interest in and importance of these cases already too long delayed and without any indication that they have proceeded one step towards conclusion on their merits in the lower court, we shall consider them on their merits.

Generally speaking, the Act of 1951 was enacted to provide a complete and independent system for the appointment, promotion, suspension, reduction, removal and reinstatement of employees of the bureau of police in second class cities except certain ranking officers. The construction to be placed upon certain provisions of Sections 7 and 8 of this statute is the underlying issue in these appeals.

Procedure for the suspension of covered employees is found in Section 7 which provides, inter alia,, as follows: “No employe in the competitive class in any bureau of police in any city of the second class, except any such employe who has been convicted of a felony and whose appellate remedies have been exhausted shall be removed, discharged or suspended for a period exceeding ten days as a penalty, or reduced in rank or pay [371]

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Related

Lamb v. City of Pittsburgh
512 A.2d 1361 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
Fairbanks v. City of Pittsburgh
328 A.2d 533 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1974)
GILDEA v. Pittsburgh
290 A.2d 878 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
290 A.2d 878, 5 Pa. Commw. 364, 1972 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gildea-v-pittsburgh-pacommwct-1972.