Oratowski v. Civil Service Commission

123 N.E.2d 146, 3 Ill. App. 2d 551
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 4, 1955
DocketGen. 46,280
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 123 N.E.2d 146 (Oratowski v. Civil Service Commission) 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
Oratowski v. Civil Service Commission, 123 N.E.2d 146, 3 Ill. App. 2d 551 (Ill. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Robson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs filed their action under the Administrative Review Act to reverse two orders of the Civil Service Commission of the City of Chicago. The actions were consolidated. The Commission had ordered the plaintiffs discharged from their positions as patrolmen in the Department of Police. The trial court reversed the Commission. This is an appeal by defendants from that order.

The Commission contends that the trial court erred in setting aside the findings of the Commission because they were supported by a preponderance of the evidence. In construing the Administrative Review Act the findings of the hearing body must be supported by the evidence. Drezner v. Civil Service Commission, 398 Ill. 219; State Public Utilities Commission ex rel. Chicago Board of Trade v. Toledo, St. L. & W. R. Co., 286 Ill. 582. The charges need only be proved by a preponderance of the evidence and need not be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It is not within the province of a court to disturb the findings of fact made by the administrative agency unless manifestly against the weight of the evidence. Drezner v. Civil Service Commission, supra. The court does not have the right to reweigh the evidence in the cause appealed from nor to make its own independent determination of the facts. Harrison v. Civil Service Commission, 1 Ill.2d 137, 146; Logan v. Civil Service Commission, 3 Ill.2d 81, 87.

We must ascertain if the action of the trial court was proper. The record reveals that on August 1, 1952, the Commissioner of Police filed charges with the Commission against plaintiffs, charging them with conduct unbecoming police officers, using coarse, profane or insolent language to a citizen and willful maltreatment of a person in violation of the rules and regulations of the Department of Police. A hearing was held on the charges. Plaintiffs were present and represented by counsel. The Commission entered findings and decisions as to each plaintiff which were substantially the same. The Commission found,

“Koprowski, who returned to wait for his employer, stated to a third party that he had received a ticket and was thereupon interrupted by the respondent (Oratowski) who asked Koprowski if he thought that he, the respondent, (Oratowski) was ignorant, and Koprowski replied in the affirmative, at which point the respondent (Oratowski) told Koprowski he was under arrest and so advised Porterfield who was standing nearby and thereupon the respondent (Oratowski) and Porterfield with considerable force pushed and shoved Koprowski into the front seat of such squad car and forced him down on his back and struck, hit, shoved and assaulted him, and Porterfield accompanied and abetted by the respondent (Oratowski) grabbed Koprowski by his hair and punched him in the stomach and struck him with his knee in the groin between Koprowski’s legs causing him to cry out, and Porterfield grabbed a microphone off its hanger in the squad car and beat Koprowski over the head with it and otherwise beat and maltreated Koprowski and thereupon the respondent (Oratowski) and Porterfield, as the driver of such squad car, proceeded to take Koprowski to a police station in such car and en route to such station the respondent (Oratowski) gave Koprowski a further beating, striking and assaulting him about the head and body and choking him; . . .”

and that plaintiffs were,

“Guilty as charged herein and contrary to law and the rules and regulations of the said Department of Police, of conduct unbecoming a police officer or employee of the said Department ... .”

The evidence upon which the Commission based these findings reveals that Casimir Koprowski, the party against whom the acts complained of were committed, was on June 30, 1952, driving an automobile for the Como Manufacturing Company. He stopped at Hollywood avenue near Broadway where the Broadway Buick Sales Company was located, to wait for the manager of his company, Carl Knippel. While stopped there he was given a ticket by plaintiff Oratowski for illegal parking. He then drove the car to another location, parked and returned to the Buick entrance to wait for Knippel. He stood there talking to one of the Buick employees when Tyson Poppel, president of Buick, came ont. He told Poppel about tbe parking ticket. Plaintiff Oratowski interrupted the conversation and Koprowski told bim be was ignorant. Plaintiff Oratowski then told Koprowski be was under arrest. He asked on what charge and received no reply. Plaintiff Porterfield, who bad been sitting in tbe squad car, came out and seized bim, threw bim on tbe seat of tbe squad car where be landed on bis back, punched bim in the stomach, pushed bis knee in Koprowski’s groin, bit bim across tbe face with bis policeman’s bat, struck bim across tbe nose, pushed bis teeth and again struck bim in tbe stomach. On tbe way to tbe station in tbe squad car plaintiff Oratowski pulled bis bead back, grabbed bis ear, pushed bim in tbe stomach, face and chest and choked bim. This caused a bowel movement. Oratowski told bim be was going to have a one-way ride. On tbe way to tbe station Oratowski told bim, “Start running you yellow bastard.” Thereafter be -was taken to tbe station and booked. He said at no time did be resist tbe plaintiffs or give them cause to strike bim. He only kept asking tbe reason for tbe arrest. As a result of tbe beatings Koprowski said be suffered a cut nose, cut lip, loose teeth, abrasions on bis neck and back, and stomach injuries that required him to be on a liquid diet for two weeks.

A sergeant of tbe police at tbe station where Koprowski was taken testified be asked bim to remove bis shirt. He noticed three horizontal marks on tbe left side of bis neck, an abrasion on bis back but no discoloration above bis waist. Koprowski told a man that was present in tbe station that be bad been messed up in tbe arrest. Tbe sergeant asked Koprowski if be wanted medical attention and be said no.

Joseph Moore, a chauffeur for a cab company, said be was walking on tbe sidewalk at Hollywood and Broadway when he saw a police officer get ont of his car and walk over to Koprowski, take him by the arms and say, “I will throw yon into the sqnad car and take yon into the station.” He was about ten feet from them when it happened. The officer was plaintiff Oratowski. Koprowski told Oratowski, “You ain’t throwing me in no squad car.” Oratowski took Koprowski to the squad car but Koprowski did not bend down to get in and Oratowski turned around to the people who were standing there and said, “You can see he is resisting arrest.” At that time the other policeman, Porterfield, who was driving the car came around from the back and grabbed Koprowski by the middle of the hair, kicked him between the legs with his knee and hit him in the stomach. Koprowski yelled and fell on the seat with his foot hanging out of the door of the car. Koprowski’s feet were still sticking out. The officers finally got his feet in the squad car and drove away.

Leslie M. Williams, assistant manager of Buick Service Department, testified to substantially the same effect as Joseph Moore. Carl Knippel, manager of the company which employed Koprowski, also testified substantially the same as Moore to the events before the sqnad car drove away. He, in addition, stated that after the arrest he went to the station and bailed Koprowski out. While there he noticed that Koprowski’s lips were swollen.

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.E.2d 146, 3 Ill. App. 2d 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oratowski-v-civil-service-commission-illappct-1955.