Haga v. City of Seattle

99 P.2d 623, 3 Wash. 2d 31
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1940
DocketNo. 27750.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 99 P.2d 623 (Haga v. City of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haga v. City of Seattle, 99 P.2d 623, 3 Wash. 2d 31 (Wash. 1940).

Opinions

Simpson, J.

Plaintiffs brought this action to recover compensation accruing to their civil service positions during the intervals when they were separated from those positions.

There were six causes of action set out in the complaint. Haga appeared as plaintiff in the first and second causes of action, King in the third, Delmar in the fourth, Langum in the fifth, and Simmonds in the sixth cause of action. All plaintiffs were duly certified and classified civil service workers of the city of Seattle. Haga and Simmonds were carpenters, and the other plaintiffs were painters.

In the first cause of action, plaintiff Haga alleged that, February 2, 1938, he was laid off or suspended on the pretense that there was a lack of work as a carpenter in any of the departments of the city of Seattle; that his suspension lasted for a period of forty-five days, during which time carpenter work was being done for the defendant city by a laborer and by carpenters inferior in fine of appointment. In each of the other causes of action, plaintiffs alleged their positions as certified and classified civil service workers, and that the defendant city of Seattle had laid them off or suspended them on the pretext or pretense that there was lack of work in the departments of the city; and that the work they were entitled to do under their civil service classifications was done by workmen who had no civil service standing whatever.

In its answer, the defendant, city of Seattle, denied *33 the allegations of the plaintiffs concerning their right to work as civil service employees during the periods of time they were suspended from work.

The case was tried to the court, sitting without a jury. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the city and entered a judgment dismissing the action. Plaintiffs have appealed. The errors which plaintiffs press upon us will be noted as we proceed.

Appellant Haga’s first contention, that he should be allowed recovery at the rate of ten dollars per day for the forty-five days between February 2, 1938, and May 9, 1938, during which he was not employed, is supported by the allegation that other men performed carpenter work which should have been allotted to him because of his superior civil service rating. In this connection, evidence was introduced relative to the activities during the period in question of one Herbert M. Ridley, a civil service utility laborer, of other laborers, and of two civil service carpenters, John A. Fureby and Martin A. Nyland.

Ridley, it is argued, was wrongfully employed in the performance, for the park department, of services of a character usually performed not by a “utility laborer,” but by a “carpenter.” In other words, respondent is charged with having Ridley perform duties not properly within his civil service classification. Likewise, it is contended by appellant Haga that other laborers in the employ of respondent, Oscar Thoreson and Charles Prader, were improperly engaged in doing carpenter work for respondent.

The objection relating to the employment by the park board of the carpenters, Fureby and Nyland, in the erection of a house at Golden Gardens, is not based upon an inconsistency between the civil service classi *34 fications of these men and the work in which they were engaged, but rather upon the contention that appellant Haga had a superior civil service rating with the park department which entitled him to a preference over them when the employment of carpenters was undertaken.

With reference to the activities of Ridley, the trial court found:

“The Court finds that under the evidence Ridley’s civil service classification and status at all times herein mentioned was that of Utility Laborer, in which classification he was entitled to perform the duties of a carpenter’s helper. The Court further finds from the evidence that at no time during the forty-five day period herein referred to and mentioned was said Ridley performing such work as carpenter as to require him to be displaced and Haga substituted in his stead, nor was said Ridley performing any work that he was not entitled to perform under his civil service status as Utility Laborer.”

The evidence adduced at the trial discloses that Ridley was made a utility laborer January 1, 1938, prior to the period embraced in the first cause of action, and evidence was introduced to the effect that, under this classification, he was entitled to act as a carpenter’s helper. There was some testimony to the effect that he and the other laborers mentioned were engaged in carpenter work. On the other hand, there was no direct proof that the carpenter work in which Ridley was engaged exceeded the scope of activity made legitimate by his civil service classification as utility laborer. Further, the record fails to disclose reference to any specific days, or to any definite number of days, on which any of these laborers were employed in carpenter work during the period involved in appellant Haga’s first cause of action.

Appellant Haga calls our attention to Haga v. Seattle, *35 195 Wash. 226, 80 P. (2d) 821, in which we held that he was wrongfully separated from his. employment with the park department for two hundred fifty-five days between January 3, 1936, and May 18, 1937, and that his work was being done by Ridley, the same person mentioned in this case. Appellant contends that his status and that of Ridley was fixed in that case; and that, under the evidence adduced in the case at bar, the prior case is conclusive of Haga’s present right to recover for the forty-five days during which he was idle between February 2, 1938, and May 9, 1938.

This argument must fail, for the obvious reason that appellant has failed to prove that Ridley was wrongfully engaged in carpenter work.

We conclude that appellant Haga’s first cause of action cannot be sustained upon the activities of either Ridley or the other laborers to which the evidence refers.

Consideration of the bearing which the employment of the civil service carpenters, Fureby and Nyland, has upon Haga’s first cause of action, requires a more detailed examination of the facts. It is undisputed that Haga was laid off from his prior temporary employment with the building department February 2, 1938; that he returned for temporary work February 25, 1938, and was again laid off March 25, 1938; that he filed written protest with the civil service commission February 25,1938, alleging, inter alia, that laborers and civil service carpenters junior to him in point of service and without preference over him were doing work which he was entitled to do; that, pursuant to a hearing on these matters April 12, 1938, the civil service commission ordered Haga’s name placed on the reinstatement register for the park department; that Haga returned for temporary work with the park de *36 partment May 9, 1938; that he was idle for forty-five days between February 2, 1938, and May 9, 1938; and .that his basic pay during this period was at the rate of ten dollars per day.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mount Spokane Skiing Corp. v. Spokane County
936 P.2d 1148 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1997)
Cunningham v. Community College District No. 3
489 P.2d 891 (Washington Supreme Court, 1971)
State Ex Rel. Morris v. City of Seattle
104 P.2d 1118 (Washington Supreme Court, 1940)
Cluff v. State of Arizona
90 P.2d 630 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P.2d 623, 3 Wash. 2d 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haga-v-city-of-seattle-wash-1940.