In re Fortune

101 N.E.2d 174, 65 Ohio Law. Abs. 564, 45 Ohio Op. 449, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 352
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1951
DocketNo. 454264
StatusPublished

This text of 101 N.E.2d 174 (In re Fortune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Fortune, 101 N.E.2d 174, 65 Ohio Law. Abs. 564, 45 Ohio Op. 449, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 352 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By MERRICK, J:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Civil Service Commission of the City of Cleveland Heights. The appellant Herbert Fortune was a patrolman member of the police department of that city and was dismissed from the 'force by the City Manager who was likewise the director of public safety. Fortune was charged with being on duty in a drunken condition. The Civil Service Commission affirmed the finding and action of the administrative officer. This case has oeen [566]*566in court for more than 15 years, some of such delay being occasioned by a review on a jurisdictional question. In re:— Fortune, 138 Oh St 385.

Several questions are presented in the pleadings and urged in oral arguments and briefs. This Court feels that some elaboration on these questions might be helpful because of the fact that recent enactments of the Legislature provide that a policeman or fireman in the classified service who is reduced in rank, laid off or suspended may appeal to the courts if he is not satisfied with the treatment accorded him by the reviewing Civil Service Commission. Sidell v. Cole, 147 Oh St, 203. It is anticipated that this recent change in the statutes will mean a sharp increase in the number of appeals taken in matters which were heretofore subjects of departmental discipline and not subject to review by the courts.

Appellant complains that there were irregularities ■ in the proceedings of the Civil Service Commission in that certain papers were transferred from the departmental files of the police department to the civil service commission and may have been considered by it in arriving at its decision. One of these was an affidavit given by a witness who later appeared in person and gave testimony and was cross-examined by counsel. In hearings of this type, there is not always present the atmosphere of a trial court room and the members of the Civil Service Commission are frequently persons not schooled in the law. The procedure necessary to present the questions involved is plainly outlined in the statutes.

Sea. 486-2 et seq GC. The Commission is an administrative body given certain quasi-judicial powers by express authority of statute, but such powers do not constitute it a court though it has some of the attributes of a court. In re: Sidell, 51 Abs, 105, 80 N. E., 2nd, 203 (Ohio C. of A.)

It may be of interest to note that the statute does not provide that an appeal may be taken from a decision of a civil service commission on questions of law or on questions of.law and fact. The appeal sought to be perfected in this case is grounded upon §486-17a GC. This section does no more than to say, “An appeal may be had from the decision of the municipal commission to the Court of Common Pleas .... to determine the sufficiency of the cause of removal.” This brings us to the question of whether the word “appeal” as used in the statute connotes a hearing de novo. If it does, then whatever error of commission or omission may have been committed by the Civil Service Commission would be inconsequential in that the Common Pleas Court could conduct a hearing as if on review on questions of fact and law and could permit testimony and any other attribute of a full dress trial under all judicial rules of law and evidence.

[567]*567In the case of In re Fennell, (Common Pleas) 6 Ohio Supp. 145, it was held that procedure under §486-17a GC, relating to a specific matter in civil service, is an exception to the general class of appeals governed by statute.

In its present form §12223-3 GC reads as follows:

“Every . . . final order of . . . any administration . . . commission may be reviewed as hereinafter provided, unless otherwise provided by law . . .”

In the opinion in the Pennell case, supra, the trial court pointed out that a case within the provisions of §486-17a GC was restricted to the confines of that statute and could not be appealed under §12223-3 GC and refused to review a case brought in appeal from the Civil Service because it did not fall within the enveloping construction of §486-17 GC.

The most enlightening case on this subject is Kearns v. Sherrill, 63 Oh Ap 533, and the further review of the same case found in 137 Oh St, 468.

In reversing the Common Pleas Court, the Court of Appeals opinion used this language:—

“It is clear that the Common Pleas Court could not have been vested with power in an original action to exercise the executive or administrative discretion of determining whether under all the circumstances the patrolman should be retained in office, after it is determined that good and sufficient cause for his removal had been found to exist and tested by that rule, it is equally clear that it cannot be vested with such jurisdiction on appeal from an administrative tribunal . . In the light of this constitutional limitation upon the power of the Common Pleas Court to receive jurisdiction, we hold that the language of §486-17a GC, must be construed to confer upon that court jurisdiction to review the proceedings of the Civil Service Commission to determine whether it had exercised the authority conferred upon it in accordance with the statutes, and whether due process of law and other constitutional safeguards had been observed, thereby excluding from the review the administrative discretion exercised, by the appointing officer and the Civil Service Commission. That the Legislature was conscious of the limitation upon its power to confer jurisdiction upon the Common Pleas Court is indicated by the provision that upon the review the court should either affirm or reverse the ruling of the commission. Had the Legislature intended the court to determine the issue as though exercising original jurisdiction, certainly the power to modify the Commission’s ruling would have been conferred, as well as the power to affirm or reverse.”

[568]*568In the syllabi of this case the Court of Appeals held as follows:—

“On appeal from the civil service commission the case should be determined on the record made before the commission.
“Where the court heard the appeal as though it invoked original jurisdiction but the record shows that the evidence heard was the same as that heard by the commission, no prejudice resulted from the method of hearing the appeal.”

In affirming the Court of Appeals in the Kearns case, supra, the opinion of Judge Matthias contains this very pertinent passage:—

“Had it been intended by the law making branch of the government that the Common Pleas Court should act as if ‘sitting as the entire civil service commission and also as the city manager,’ as apparently was assumed by the common pleas judge hearing the appeal, the Legislature undoubtedly would have found it possible to employ language conferring such broad power.” (Emphasis ours.)

In the case of In re Watkins, 88 Oh Ap, 251, the Court of Appeals opinion notes that the Common Pleas Court tried the case de novo. No further comment is found on that theory of the case in the opinion.

The Supreme Court in the case of Hawkins v. Steubenville, 134 Oh St, 468, seemed to summarize the various conflicting theories theretofore existing by this syllabus:—

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Hamaker v. Olson
23 Ohio Law. Abs. 513 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1936)
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29 Ohio Law. Abs. 413 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1939)
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68 N.E.2d 353 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1943)
In re Reduction of Rank, Sidell
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 N.E.2d 174, 65 Ohio Law. Abs. 564, 45 Ohio Op. 449, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fortune-ohctcomplcuyaho-1951.