O'Connor v. Board of Trustees

155 Ill. App. 460, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 563
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 8, 1910
DocketGen. No. 15,951
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 155 Ill. App. 460 (O'Connor v. Board of Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor v. Board of Trustees, 155 Ill. App. 460, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 563 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainants in this case filed an original bill and subsequently an amended and, supplemental bill. To the amended and supplemental bill the defendants filed demurrers and the Circuit Court entered a decree sustaining the demurrers and on motion of the defendants dismissing the complainants ’ bill. From that decree this appeal is prosecuted.

Inasmuch as the amended and supplemental bill states all that the original bill stated, with additional facts, the following statement of the allegations of the amended and supplemental bill is deemed sufficient for the purposes of this opinion.

The bill was filed by 0 ’Connor, Evans and Wolf, who are veteran captains in the Chicago Fire Department, each being now entitled to retire on half pay under the statute, against the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund of the City of Chicago and against six pensioners of that fund to restrain a spoliation of the Firemen’s Pension Fund and to prevent a diversion of it from the purposes for which it was created by the statute. ■ The complainants base their rights to file the bill, which is filed both on behalf of themselves and on behalf of all other members of the fire department who are contributors to, and future beneficiaries of, the Firemen’s Pension Fund, upon the facts that they are now and for more than twenty years have been contributors to the Firemen’s Pension Fund and that the members of the fire department have contributed to this fund since its organization in 1887 more than the sum of $207,934.33; and also upon the ground that the statutes of the State of Illinois set apart this Firemen’s Pension Fund solely for the benefit of the members of the fire department, and not for the benefit of ex-members.

The six pensioners made defendants in the bill are Mathias Benner, Arthur J. Calder, Daniel H. Flynn, ■John D. Cavanaugh, John C. Schmidt and Adolph Wilke.

Mathias Benner was in the fire department, it is •averred, from April 5, 1859, to July 16, 1879, when he was discharged. He had been out of the service about twenty-eight years when he applied for a pension. He had been out of the service for nearly eight years when the act of 1887 created the Firemen’s Pension Fund, ■and he was in the department only two years of the time during which the Police and Firemen’s Belief Fund was in force. Benner had never paid anything into the Firemen’s Pension Fund and did not pay anything into the Police and Firemen’s Belief Fund after leaving the service on July 16,1879.

It is averred that Benner, in 1907, applied to the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund of the City of Chicago for a pension of $1,800, being one-half of the salary of $3,600 which he was receiving when he was discharged, he being then. Chief of the Department. The Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund on December 21,1907, by formal resolution denied him a pension, basing their act upon the adverse opinion of the Corporation Counsel of the city of Chicago, who was ex-officio a member of the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund. On May 25, 1908, Benner instituted a mandamus proceeding in the Circuit Court of Cook county to compel the Board of Trustees to pay him a pension of $1,800 per year. The defendants filed a general demurrer to this petition, and on September 24,1908, an order or judgment was entered in the Circuit Court in favor of Benner. The Board of Trustees elected to stand by their demurrer and prayed an appeal to the Appellate Court. These were all of the proceedings in the case, and the appeal was never perfected. The bill then charges-that the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund made no adequate or sufficient defense to this Benner suit, and the order or judgment entered therein was by the consent and acquiescence of the Board of Trustees, and that no effort whatever had been made by the board to reverse that order or judgment, either by appeal, writ of error or otherwise; that the complainants ’ rights were not properly safeguarded and protected and that the Circuit Court’s order or judgment was null and void and that the court was without jurisdiction to enter it; that the Board of Trustees nevertheless proceeded to put Benner’s name on the Firemen’s Pension Fund pay roll and have been paying him $150 per month, the aggregate amount paid him up to the date of the filing of the original bill being” more than a thousand dollars. Benner was not a member of the fire department, it is averred, subsequent to July 16,1879, and had not served for twenty-two years, had never been a beneficiary of the Police and Firemen’s Belief Fund or of the Firemen’s Pension Fund,, and had not been retired from the fire department for disability, as provided by the statute.

The second defendant is Arthur J. Calder who, it is averred, entered the fire department May 9, 1868, and resigned July 5, 1884, his resignation being given to avoid meeting charges which were then pending against him, that he had absented himself from duty without the leave of his superior officer. He had been out of the service for about twenty-three years when he applied for a pension. He had been out of the service for about three years when the act of 1887 created the Firemen’s Pension Fund, and his service in the-department during the time the Police and Firemen’s Belief Fund Act of 1887 was about seven years. Calder had never paid anything into the Firemen’s Pension Fund, and did not pay anything into the Police and Firemen’s Belief Fund after leaving the service July 5, 1884.

In 1907 Calder applied to the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund of the City of Chicago for a pension of $600, it being one-half of the salary of $1,200 which he was receiving when he resigned. The Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund on December 21, 1907, on the same dáy that similar action was taken in the Benner case, by formal resolution denied him a pension, basing their act, as in the Benner case, upon the adverse opinion of the Corporation Counsel of the City of Chicago. On May 25,1908, Calder commenced a mandamus proceeding in the Circuit Court of Cook county to compel the Board of Trustees to pay him a pension of $600 per year. He averred in his petition that he was suffering from physical disability. His averment in the petition that he was suffering from physical disability was fraudulent and untrue, it is charged, for, as a matter of fact, he was then a bailiff in the Circuit Court of Cook county, and had for a long time been performing his duties in that position and receiving the compensation therefor amounting to more than $1,200 per year. The defendants also filed a general demurrer to the Calder petition and on September 24, 1908, a judgment was entered in the Circuit Court in favor of Calder. The Board of Trustees elected to stand by their demurrer and prayed an appeal to the Appellate Court. These were all of the proceedings in the case, and the appeal was never perfected. The bill makes the same charges with reference to the Calder suit that was made in the Benner case and avers that nevertheless the Board of Trustees put Calder on the Firemen’s Pension Fund pay-roll and had been paying him $50 per month from the date of the judgment, the aggregate amount paid him before filing of the bill being over $350.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Ill. App. 460, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-board-of-trustees-illappct-1910.