People ex rel. Nicholson v. Board of Trustees of the Police Pension Fund

281 Ill. App. 394, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 555
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 30, 1935
DocketGen. No. 8,949
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 281 Ill. App. 394 (People ex rel. Nicholson v. Board of Trustees of the Police Pension Fund) 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
People ex rel. Nicholson v. Board of Trustees of the Police Pension Fund, 281 Ill. App. 394, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 555 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of DuPage county awarding a writ of mandamus against the board of trustees of the police pension fund of the Village of Hinsdale. The parties waived a jury trial and .submitted the issues of fact to the court for decision. The order directs the writ of mandamus to command said board to forthwith pay to relatrix a pension at the-rate of $800 per year, payable in monthly instalments of $66.66 to commence April 29, 1931. The payments shall continue during the lifetime of said relatrix whose name said board shall place on the pension roll of the police pension fund of said village. All these proceedings are in accord with the terms prescribed in the statute governing the police pension fund in cities, villages and incorporated towns having a population of not less than 5,000' and not more than 200,000 inhabitants.

The said board relies upon seven alleged errors for a reversal of the order awarding the writ, the second of which is urged in this court and states that ‘ ‘ There is no competent evidence whatsoever in the record to support the finding of the court that the population of the Village of Hinsdale on January 5, 1926, was 5,732.” To determine this question requires an interpretation of paragraph one of section one of chapter 24 of the amended act of 1909, Cahill’s St. ch. 24, ft 915 (par. 892, ch.-24, Smith-Hurd Rev. St.) which, by an amendment of 1919, provides for a police pension fund in cities, villages and incorporated towns in the State of Illinois having a population of not less than 5,000 and not more than 200,000 inhabitants and reads as follows: “That in all cities, villages and incorporated towns having a population of not less than 5,000 and not more than 200,000 inhabitants, said population to be determined by the United States government statistics, there shall be set apart the following* moneys to constitute a police pension fund.”

The claim of the relatrix as a beneficiary of the pension fund arises out of the following facts which are not disputed by the board: John W. Nicholson, the husband of the relatrix, at the time of his resignation, January 5, 1926, was chief of police of the Village of Hinsdale, and as such a member of the regularly constituted police force of said village. He became a member of said police force in the year 1892 and thereafter continuously remained a member until May, 1908. In May, 1909, he again became a member of said police force and thereafter continuously remained a member thereof in good standing until the day of his resignation, January 5,1926. He was a member of said police force for about 34 years, when he resigned and went to work for the village in a different capacity. He did not make application for a pension. He remained in the employ of the village until the date of his death, March 29, 1931. He was past 64 years of age at the time of his death. The relatrix, after the death of her husband, made proper application to the board for a pension, which was denied by the board on the ground that at the date of the resignation of John W. Nicholson, January 5, 1926, said village did not have a population of 5,000 inhabitants and therefore did not come under the provisions of the statute requiring villages of 5,000 inhabitants and over to establish a fund to pay a pension to policemen or their dependents, when they had served on the force for 20 years or over and had reached the age of 50 years. On April 30, 1934, there was approximately $2,500 in the pension fund of said village. For the year immediately preceding his resignation, John W. Nicholson had received the sum of $1,600 per annum as his pay as chief of police of the village.

The court further found, as a matter of fact, “that in the year 1926, on January 5th, the population of the Village of Hinsdale was five thousand seven hundred and thirty-two. ’ ’ The second alleged error relied upon by the board for a reversal of the order granting the writ is directed at this finding of fact made by the trial judge.

The Village of Hinsdale did not have a policemen’s pension fnnd and a board of trustees of such fund until October 18, 1932, after it had been determined by the United States decennial census of 1930 that the village had a population of 6,923 on April 1, 1930. There is no federal census prior to the decennial census of 1930, stating that the population of the said village was 5,000 or more.

It is conceded by counsel that in order to establish the right of the relatrix as a beneficiary of the police pension fund as provided by statute, it was incumbent upon her to prove that on January 5, 1926, the date when John W. Nicholson resigned as policeman, the village had a population of not less than 5,000 inhabitants, “said population to be determined by the United States government statistics,” according to the meaning and intent of the statute.

It is the contention of the relatrix that to prove the population of Hinsdale as of January 5, 1926, she was not confined to the decennial census taken by the United States Government in 1920; that by the words of the statute, ‘ ‘ determined by the United States government statistics,” the published reports of the United States Census Bureau, supplemented by informal reports of such special census as have been taken, supplemented also by unpublished figures that can be taken from the existing tabulations, are competent evidence to prove the population of Hinsdale on January 5, 1926. The relatrix introduced in evidence Bulletin 138 published by the United States Department of Commerce, which has jurisdiction over the United States Census Bureau, and which the relatrix insists is a part of the United States government statistics. She urges that the method used by employees of the census bureau in compiling the bulletin to estimate the population of the United States, the states, the territories and the cities between the decennial census, should be adopted by this court as in strict compliance with the provisions of the policemen’s pension fund act. This method of estimating population will hereafter appear from the depositions of two employees of the census bureau. To prevent confusion and to present this contention of the relatrix in its single aspect, we digress at this point to say that Bulletin 138 was printed in 1918 and it does not contain any estimate of the population of Hinsdale at any time, being confined to cities having 8,000 or more population on July 1, for the years 1910 to 1917 inclusive. There are no informal reports of a special federal census of Hinsdale at any time; nor any unpublished figures in the form of United States statistics that can be taken from existing tabulations of the United States Census Bureau which show the population of Hinsdale- on January 5, 1926. The contention of relatrix in this behalf rests upon the premise that as the United States Census Bureau employs a method by which the population of cities is estimated between the decennial census by using the decennial census as a factor, this court should adopt that method and thereby determine the population of Hinsdale to have been over 5,000 inhabitants on January 5, 1926, in accordanee with the words of the statute, “determined by the United States government statistics.”

The population of Hinsdale as shown by the Federal Decennial Census of 1910, 1920 and 1930, respectively, and the dates as of which such enumerations were made are: April 15, 1910, 2,451; January 1, 1920, 4,042; April 1, 1930, 6,923.

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281 Ill. App. 394, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-nicholson-v-board-of-trustees-of-the-police-pension-fund-illappct-1935.