People Ex Rel. Griffin v. City of Chicago

48 N.E.2d 329, 382 Ill. 500, 1943 Ill. LEXIS 653
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1943
DocketNo. 26809. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 329 (People Ex Rel. Griffin v. City of Chicago) 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
People Ex Rel. Griffin v. City of Chicago, 48 N.E.2d 329, 382 Ill. 500, 1943 Ill. LEXIS 653 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

On July 18, 1936, there was filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the circuit court of Cook county by twelve plaintiffs who are members of the fire department of the city of Chicago and thereafter, during the year 1936, this petition was consolidated with two other petitions for writs of mandamus filed by other members of the fire department of said city. These petitions sought to compel the mayor, the comptroller, the fire commissioner and the city treasurer to certify and issue proper vouchers and checks for the difference between the amounts paid the plaintiffs during the years 1932 to 1936, inclusive, and the sums which were established in ’the appropriation ordinances for said years, and, in the alternative, to compel the city council to make appropriations for the payment of said amounts.

The petitions, besides containing the jurisdictional allegations, also alleged that during the period in question the city council, by the appropriation ordinance passed in each year, fixed and determined the salaries of the appellants at certain rates, being the same rates as the salaries for the year 1931, but failed to appropriate for the full amounts thereof and that the city paid only the reduced amounts to the petitioners, though full services were rendered.

The manner of appropriating for the salaries of the appellants is best illustrated by. the following portion of the appropriation ordinance for the year 1932:

“Fire Department

Bureau of Fire Control and Extinguishment. Division of Fire Extinguishment.

Amounts

Appropriated

Salaries and wages — continued

Division Fire Marshal, 12 at $4,500.00 per annum. $ 42,491.76

Chief of Battalion, 54 at $4,000.00 per annum____ 169,967.15

Chief of Battalion, 4 for 6 months beginning

July 1, 1932, at $333.33 per month.......... 6,207.65

Captain, 184 at $3,200.00 per annum............ 463,317.52

Lieutenant, 213 at $2,900.00 per annum......... 486,059.61

Fireman and Probationers; first six months of service at $2,140.00;' Third Class after six months’ service at $2,320.00; Second Class after eighteen months’ service at $2,440.00; First Class after thirty months’ service at $2,500.00; (see Section 8 of this ordinance) .. 3,544,000.00”

The appellants contend that the compensation was fixed by a figure appearing immediately after the statement of the position of each office, while the city insists the salary was fixed at the amount actually appropriated for the position.

The appellants further alleged in their petition that the deductions made were equivalent to the amount of pay which the appellants earned for 78 days in 1932, 65 days in 1933, 52 days in 1934, 52 days in 1935 and 26 days in 1936.

The answer and amended answer of the city admitted the factual allegations of the petition, but denied that the city council had fixed the salaries at the sums claimed and denied that the city had funds with which to pay the claims and charged that the appellants were guilty of laches and that the city would become insolvent and suffer undue hardship because it would be unable to make up a deficit of $22,500,000 which would accrue if mandamus were.allowed. The defense of laches and undue hardship was raised in the amendment to the answer and a motion to strike the same was overruled by the court.

The matter was tried before the court and most of the evidence was stipulated but certain testimony was taken with reference to oral demands by the fire department members upon the city council for the appropriation of money sufficient to pay the full salaries due them, and testimony by the chief clerk in the comptroller’s office as to the amount of taxes received by the city of Chicago during certain years. The plaintiffs tried to show, by a transcript of a speech made by former Mayor Anton J. Cermak to the firemen of the city, representations regarding their reduction in salaries. The court refused to admit this speech in evidence on the ground that it would not be binding upon the city of Chicago and on the further ground that it was made prior to the appropriation ordinance complained of.

Plaintiffs claim to have two theories, which are as follows: 1. That the city council determined their annual salaries in the appropriation ordinance for the years 1932 to 1936, inclusive, at a definite figure and that having so determined the salary of each petitioner, that said city council could not legally appropriate a lesser amount; that the liability of the city was determined by the fixing of the salaries and that if the city has difficulty in securing funds for their payment, it is not a legal excuse for nonperformance of its duty. 2. The second theory applies only to the year 1932 and is based on the idea that the appropriation ordinance for 1932 had to be passed in the first quarter of the year or before March 31, 1932, and that by the failure of the council to adopt the appropriation ordinance for 1932 until June 13, 1932, it was entirely void and the basis of pay for the petitioners was the scale for the year 1931. In this contention, the appellants assert the invalidity of an act of the legislature which purported to validate the appropriation ordinance.

Defendants take the position that the amounts actually appropriated in the appropriation ordinance constituted the salaries and limited the city’s liabilities to those amounts. As to the second theory, the city asserts that the validating statutes of the legislature are constitutional and the city further asserts that the plaintiffs have been guilty of laches in prosecuting their claims.

A very similar, if not identical, situation to the one involved in this case was presented to the Appellate Court for the First District in the case of People ex rel. Mulvey v. City of Chicago, 292 Ill. App. 589. That case was a consolidation of twenty-three separate suits for mandamus on behalf of most of the employees of the city of Chicago, except the appellants in the present cases. The plaintiffs there sued for alleged deductions in salary for the years 1932 to 1936, inclusive. The same appropriation ordinances were involved, and outside of the constitutional question, the issues were almost identical. The suits were filed only a few months prior to the instant cases, and the plaintiffs in those cases stood very much in the same position as the firemen here. That case was decided upon the following grounds: 1. The plaintiffs had been guilty of such laches as bars their claims, even if they were valid. 2. A writ of mandamus would, under the circumstances, operate as an instrument of injustice and the court must take into consideration the effect of the issuance of the writ, and where it appears that the defendant would be prejudiced unduly by the issuance thereof, a writ will not be granted. 3. The plaintiffs’ rights to a writ are at least doubtful and under those circumstances the court will not issue the writ. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 329, 382 Ill. 500, 1943 Ill. LEXIS 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-griffin-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1943.