Paine v. Kellar

4 Ohio App. 138, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 479, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 224
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Ohio App. 138 (Paine v. Kellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paine v. Kellar, 4 Ohio App. 138, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 479, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 224 (Ohio Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Richards, J.

These two actions are injunction proceedings brought by Louis H. Paine and William E. Cordill to prevent the mayor of the city of Toledo from removing the plaintiffs as civil service commissioners of that city. They involve the same matters and, having been argued together, may be conveniently disposed of in one opinion.

In each case the plaintiff is one of the civil service commissioners of the city of Toledo. No answer [139]*139has been filed in either case, but the actions have been submitted to the court upon motions and the sufficiency of the petition in each case is questioned, the defendant claiming that no cause of action is set forth justifying the allowance of a temporary injunction.

It appears from the petitions that the civil service commission of the state of Ohio has made and submitted a written report to the mayor of the city of Toledo of a certain investigation relative to certain claimed violations of the civil service law by the civil service commission of the city of Toledo. The petitions further allege that the defendant has served on each of the plaintiffs a copy of this written report, and they aver substantially that the defendant has announced that, because of such report, he will remove the respective plaintiffs from their offices as members of the civil service commission of the city of Toledo. In the case brought by Mr. Paine he avers that neither the report of the investigators nor the report of the state civil service commission makes any charge against him of inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office on his part, and that no copy of any such charges has been filed with the defendant or served upon him, and that the defendant has not made any such charges against him. His petition, in short, denies the making of any charges against him within the purview of the statute providing for the establishment of a civil service commission and the removal of any of its members, and he avers iii the petition that the only charge made against the civil service commission of the city of [140]*140Toledo as a commission and contained in the report of the special investigators is as follows:

“That the spirit of the civil service law has been violated in the failure of the municipal civil service commission to investigate the violations of the civil service law in said city. We believe that the spirit of the civil service law is violated in holding oral examinations of the character held in Toledo, and that positions of such importance ought not to be filled from those who pass examinations exclusively oral because there is no method of preserving the record of the actual examination, which leads to distrust on the part of the people upon the fairness of such examinations.”

In the petition filed on behalf of Mr. Cordill it is admitted that certain charges have been filed against the civil service commission of the city of Toledo, but averred that none has been filed against the plaintiff himself, and it is averred that these pretended charges are as follows:

“1st. Appointments have been made to numerous important positions without any examinations.
“2d. That persons separated from the service, due to the fact of the positions having been abolished, or unnecessary, have not been placed at the head of appropriate eligible list.
“3d. That the spirit of the civil service law has been violated in the failure of the municipal civil service commission, to investigate the violations of the civil service law in said city.”

The petition further avers that none of these charges is sufficient in law to constitute a cause'of action for the' placing of plaintiff on trial before said defendant or for the removal of plaintiff from [141]*141his office. The petition further avers that the defendant has openly and publicly stated: “That there is no question in my mind what I will do. There is but one thing for me to do. I will dismiss Cordill [plaintiff herein], Paine and McMahon.” The plaintiff alleges that the defendant is prejudiced against the plaintiff and has prejudged his case and threatens to remove him on said pretended charges without a hearing.

In the action brought by Mr. Paine he prays that the defendant may be restrained from removing him from his office as a member of the civil service commission; and in the action brought by Mr. Cor-dill he prays that the defendant may be restrained from, proceeding with a hearing on the pretended charges and from removing him from his office of civil service commissioner of Toledo.

It will be observed from this summary statement of the averments of the petitions that in the action brought by Mr. Paine he, in effect, avers that the mayor is about to proceed and remove him from his office without any charges being made against him, and that in the action brought by Mr. Cordill the contention is made that the only charges which have been filed are against the civil service commission of the city of Toledo as such, and not against Cordill individually, and that these charges are insufficient in law upon which to base an order of removal. The Paine case, conceding the allegations of the petition to be true, is one in which it appears that the mayor is about to act under such circumstances as would involve an entire want of power on his part to proceed; while in the other case, conceding the allegations of the petition to [142]*142be true, the mayor is about to act on charges not against an incumbent of the office, but against the commission itself, and on charges which are insufficient in law.

The statute which clothes the mayor with authority to act on these matters is the act to regulate the civil service of the state of Ohio, and the particular part to which reference is made is found in 103 O. L., 709, and is known as Section 19 of the municipal civil service. (Section 486-19, General Code). The pertinent portion of that section is as follows:

“The chief executive authority of such city may at any time remove any municipal civil service commissioner for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office, having first given to such commissioner a copy of the charges against him and an opportunity to be publicly heard in person or by counsel in his own defense, and any such act of removal shall be final.” ,

The italics are not in the statute but are the court’s.

It is contended on behalf of counsel for the defendant that injunction will not lie to prevent the threatened action of the mayor, and that is really the only question which we have for decision. We have given the matter very careful consideration and have arrived at a solution which we believe is in accordance not only with principle but with the almost universal current of authority.

The statutes of Ohio creating the civil service commission provide the means and method for removing any commissioner who shall have been ■found guilty of inefficiency, neglect of duty or. mal[143]*143feasance in office, but, under the language of the statute, such removal can only be made after the commissioner shall have been given a copy of the charges filed against him and an opportunity to be publicly heard in his own defense.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio App. 138, 25 Ohio C.C. Dec. 479, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-kellar-ohioctapp-1915.