Kennedy v. City of Joliet

41 N.E.2d 957, 380 Ill. 15
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1942
DocketNo. 26567. Reversed in part; affirmed in part.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 41 N.E.2d 957 (Kennedy v. City of Joliet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. City of Joliet, 41 N.E.2d 957, 380 Ill. 15 (Ill. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

A judgment of the circuit court of Will county awarded the plaintiffs, seventy members of the police and fire departments of the city of Joliet, the respective differences between the salaries paid them for the period commencing July 13, 1937, and ending January 31, 1941, and the minimum salaries of $175 per month prescribed by the Policemen’s Minimum Wage act and the Firemen’s Minimum Wage act. The .judgment in favor of seven plaintiffs included the amount claimed as salaries during a thirty-day period in January, 1941, during which they were laid off pursuant to a resolution of the city council. Many of defendant’s contentions that the two minimum wage statutes transcend constitutional guaranties raise no debatable constitutional question not previoúsly decided adversely to it. Morgan v. City of Rockford, 375 Ill. 326; Littell v. City of Peoria, 374 id. 344; People ex rel. Gramlich v. City of Peoria, id. 313; People ex rel. Moshier v. City of Springfield, 370 Ill. 541.

A stipulation of facts discloses that on July 29, 1937, sixty-six plaintiffs signed a waiver agreement expressing their understanding and agreement that the revenues of the city of Joliet did not and would not permit compliance with the statutory requirement of a minimum salary of $175 per month without a reduction in the number of employees in both the police and fire departments. The waiver agreement signed voluntarily by each of these plaintiffs recited: “And whereas, the undersigned is desirous that said number of employees be not reduced; first, because he might possibly be one of those whose services would be dispensed with or if not, the additional burden of work falling on the remaining employees would be excessive. Now, therefore, in consideration that the city of Joliet do not reduce the number of employees in said departments, the undersigned herewith waives any rights he may have acquired under and by virtue of said statutory enactment and agrees to accept payment of his present rate of salary as payment in full of all moneys due him from time to time during his employment and to waive any additional claim for salary and release the city of Joliet from any claim for difference between the salary now being paid to him, or to be paid to him from time to time, and the said statutory minimum.” For approximately two years thereafter, these plaintiffs indorsed over their respective signatures each check covering their salaries as follows: “In consideration of premises set forth in agreement of July 29, 1937, and in further consideration of like waiver by certain other co-employees, the undersigned, by endorsement hereof, herewith accepts within payment as satisfaction in full of all moneys due him from city of Joliet for the one-half month period preceding the date of this check.” The same constitutional question raised as to the validity of the releases has been decided adversely to defendant and does not require further consideration. Anderson v. City of Jacksonville, post, p. 44.

The only other contention requiring consideration is the legality of a so-called lay-off plan effective during January, 1941. Seven plaintiffs, Alexander Davidson, Gordon E. Greenwood, Matthew Hartford, Stephen J. Heinzel, James C. McKean, John Malloy, and Paul E. Metzger, alleged that although no charges had been preferred against them and they had previously announced their willingness to work and signified their objection to being laid off, they were prevented by their superior officers from working during the month of January, 1941. By its answer, defendant averred it was heavily indebted for moneys due over and above operating costs, setting forth the amounts due to different funds and indicating that of approximately $340,000 due in 1937 about $116,000 remained due in 1941; that during the period in controversy all available funds over and above necessary operating expenses had been applied to reduce these debts. Defendant answered further that because of inadequacy of funds and the necessity for economy, a staggered program of lay-offs in order of seniority was adopted; that it was attempting to comply with the minimum wage laws but that in order to avoid reducing the force a rotated plan of lay-offs was adopted. The applicable resolution of the city council recites that commencing January 1, 1941, due to lack of funds, the five patrolmen and three firemen last appointed to the service shall be suspended without pay for a thirty-day period; that, at the conclusion of the period, they shall return to the service and five police officers and three firemen next in order of appointment shall then be suspended for a like period,-the program to be continued in rotation each thirty days until every patrolman and fireman has taken thirty days’ suspension without pay, at the conclusion of which time the program shall be repeated in like rotation indefinitely until further action of the council. The stipulated facts disclose that all funds during the period which were not expended for corporate purposes or held for working fund were applied to reduce the indebtedness amounting to $340,178.27 in 1937. Of this amount, $116,617 re~ mained unpaid on January 1, 1941.

To obtain a reversal of the judgment to the extent it awarded seven plaintiffs additional sums covering the period of temporary lay-off under the program described, the argument is advanced that since a city has the power to abolish an office or position in good faith for purposes of economy it also has the power to suspend employees for temporary periods in like good faith for like purposes. Fitzsimmons v. O’Neill, 214 Ill. 494, holds that section 12 of the Civil Service act, providing that no employee in the classified service shall be removed except for cause, upon written charges and after an opportunity to be heard in his own defense, does not apply to removal from a position as foreman of a repair shop in a police department consequent upon the abolition of the office itself in good faith and in the interest of economy. The court observed: “We are of the opinion that section 12 of the Civil Service act has no application to a case like the present. That section refers to cases where an officer or employee is removed for some reason personal to himself. His right to be heard in his defense upon written charges, as specified in section 12, implies that the cause of his removal is some dereliction, or neglect of duty, or incapacity to perform duty, or some delinquency, which affects his fitness for the position occupied by him. The provision in question does not apply to a case where the incumbent is dismissed for want of funds, or in order to reduce expenses, and when at the time of the dismissal, as was the fact in the case at bar, he has notice of that fact. * * * It certainly would be a harsh doctrine to hold that a city, or its officials, could not reduce their expenses by abolishing an unnecessary office, or refusing to make an appropriation for the salary of an office, when it was short of funds and did not need the services of the incumbent of such office.”

Defendant also places reliance upon Thomas v. City of Chicago, 273 Ill. 479. There, admitted facts disclosed that in 1912 it became necessary to cut down the expense of all departments of the city of Chicago on account of an unexpected shrinkage in the revenues. The head of the department of health found it necessary to lay off approximately one third of the sanitary inspectors in his department, including plaintiff Thomas.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E.2d 957, 380 Ill. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-city-of-joliet-ill-1942.