Glaser v. City of Burlington

1 N.W.2d 709, 231 Iowa 670
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 20, 1942
DocketNo. 45661.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 709 (Glaser v. City of Burlington) 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
Glaser v. City of Burlington, 1 N.W.2d 709, 231 Iowa 670 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

Count I of plaintiff’s petition, filed on March 30, 1939, states that on April 19, 1926, the council of defendant City adopted Ordinance 1457, quoted in the petition, fixing the salaries of its firemen at amounts therein set out. That on December 6, 1926, the council adopted Ordinance 1498 providing *672 a uniform allowance of not to exceed.$120 a year for each fireman, to be expended by the Superintendent of Public Safety for uniforms, caps, etc., under such rules as he shall deem consistent with the interest of the fire department, title to all articles purchased to remain in the City. That both Ordinances 1457' and 1498 remained in full force. That on January 1, 1933, plaintiff was appointed a fireman at the salary fixed by ordinance and served for five years. That for one year commencing April 1,1934, defendant wrongfully deducted each month $16.25 from plaintiff’s salary.

Plaintiff’s petition further alleges that he was required, by the rules of the Civil Service Commission of defendant, to wear the prescribed uniform at all times. That the Superintendent of Public Safety undertook to abrogate Ordinance 1498 by arbitrarily refusing to provide the firemen with uniforms, who thereupon were forced to purchase them at their own expense. That to the extent that defendant City was relieved of its obligation to furnish uniforms under Ordinance 1498, it was unjustly enriched and is liable on quasi contract to repay the sums advanced by the firemen for uniforms. That from April 1, 1934, to December 1, 1937, plaintiff was forced to spend $100.14 for uniforms. That plaintiff filed written claim, which defendant rejected, for the amount of his salary deductions and the amount spent by him for uniforms.

The petition contains 25 additional counts on behalf of 25 fellow firemen, each substantially the same as Count I, but containing the additional allegation that the claims of the other firemen had been assigned in writing to plaintiff. The total of the salary claims is $4,950. The claims for uniforms total $2,904.22.

Defendant in its answer, after admitting the legal adoption of Ordinances 1457 and 1498, the service of plaintiff and his assignors as firemen, and the rules of the Civil Service Commission regarding firemen’s uniforms, and denying all other allegations of the petition, pleaded as an affirmative defense that salaries of the firemen for the year commencing April 1, 1934, were reduced by Ordinance 1694, approved April 28, 1934. This ordinance, insofar as it has to do with the salaries of fire *673 men, is set out in Division IT of the answer. The material part reads substantially as follows:

“Ordinance No. 1694. An ordinance relating to finance, fixing compensation of officers, and making appropriations for proposed expenditures for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 1934.

“Whereas, An estimated budget of proposed expenditures for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 1934, has been published and set down for hearing, as required by Section 6218 of the Code, and no objections have been made or filed thereto. * * *

“Now, therefore, be it ordained by the city council of the city of Burlington: * ® *

“Section 9. Fire Maintenance Fund. That it is hereby estimated that there will be available in the Fire Maintenance Fund for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 1934, * * * the total sum of $41,460.86, which will be used for the payment of items properly chargeable to said fund as follows, to wit: (a) Wages: Firemen (22) $26,615.00: [Other items of wages to the chief, assistant chief, and a few others are also listed, totaling $6,545.55], (b) Miscellaneous: The balance in the

Fire Maintenance Fund not appropriated for the purpose as set out in (a) above is hereby appropriated for miscellaneous expenditures in the sum of $8,300.31.

“This ordinance shall he construed so that employees subject to live pension laws shall be allowed the monthly ba,sis of salaries or wages paid in 1933, but said present reduced amount shall be divided into twenty-four (24) installments payable on the 36th and 1st of each month. =::< * *

“Section 12. That the salaries, as set out in this ordinance be and they are hereby established as the salaries for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 1934.” (Italics supplied.)

Ordinance 1694 makes no reference to either Ordinance 1457 or 1498. Plaintiff moved to strike Ordinance 1694 from defendant’s answer because it did not legally revise or amend either the salary ordinance, 1457, or the uniform allowance ordinance by reason of its lack of compliance with section 5715, Code, 1939, which, so far as material here, reads as follows:

*674 “No ordinance shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title. An ordinance revising or amending an ordinance or section thereof shall specifically repeal the ordinance or section amended or revised, and set forth in full the ordinance or section as amended or revised.”

A further ground of the motion is that the italicized portion of the ordinance renders it inapplicable to plaintiff and his assignors, who were subject to the pension laws. Other portions of the answer which were stricken by the court pleaded estoppel and acquiescence on the part of the firemen. These will be dealt with later. The court sustained plaintiff’s motion to strike Ordinance 1694. The ruling presents the first error assigned by appellant City.

I. Ordinance 1694, which appellant claims reduced the salaries, does not profess to repeal, revise or amend either of the ordinances, 1457 and 1498, upon which appellee relies. No attempt is made at compliance with the plain provisions of Code section 5715. The statute is mandatory and limits the power of a city to enact ordinances. Tones v. Independent Sch. Dist., 190 Iowa 244, 247, 180 N. W. 157. Appellant, while conceding the elementary rule that repeals by implication of ordinances, as well as statutes, are not favored, argues that section 5715 has no application because Ordinance 1694 is so repugnant to the salary ordinance, 1457, that the two cannot be reconciled. Appellant relies principally upon Des Moines v. Hillis, 55 Iowa 643, 647, 8 N. W. 638, which recognized repeal of an ordinance by implication by a later enactment “plainly inconsistent and repugnant therewith.” The cited case was decided in 1881, under section 489, Code, 1873, before the enactment in its present form of Code section 5715 requiring that the amending or revising ordinance “shall specifically repeal the ordinance or section.amended or revised”.

Even assuming, without deciding, that implied repeals of ordinances are recognized notwithstanding section 5715, we think Ordinance 1694 is not so repugnant to 1457 as to work its repeal. No. 1694 has a definite time limit. By its own terms'its operation is restricted to one year commencing April 1, 1934. It can scarcely be claimed to be more than an amendment or revision of the salary ordinance for that limited period.

*675 Furthermore, the quoted italicized provision of 1694 purports to render the ordinance inapplicable to employees “subject to the pension laws”, who are to “be allowed the monthly basis of salaries or wages paid in 1933”.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 709, 231 Iowa 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glaser-v-city-of-burlington-iowa-1942.