State Ex Rel. Ammons v. City of Knoxville

232 S.W.2d 564, 33 Tenn. App. 622, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 564 (State Ex Rel. Ammons v. City of Knoxville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Ammons v. City of Knoxville, 232 S.W.2d 564, 33 Tenn. App. 622, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

SWEPSTON, J.

This appeal is by the City of Knoxville from a decree of the Chancellor holding that the resignation of two policemen, Ammons and Scruggs, were executed by them under duress.

The questions for decision raised by the assignments of error are:

(1) Whether they did resign under duress.

(2) If they did, are they guilty of laches barring them from relying on duress ?'

(3) Are they estopped judicially or equitably by reason of positions taken by them in certain proceedings participated in by them as is reflected on the face of the pleadings in same?

(4) Is this suit res adjudicata because of those former proceedings and the judgment of the Court of Appeals?

We believe it will be conducive to brevity and to an intelligible disposition of the case to relate at once in proper sequence both those matters which are not in dispute and our findings as to disputed questions of fact.

These two policemen had been on the force a number of years, Ammons since 1930 and Scruggs since 1936 when their troubles arose in May 1944. Their records were clean and they are given a good character in this record; each is married; up to the inception of this trouble each was working eight hours per day on the force and a like period for a private employer as guards at Appalachian Mills; one of them had attained the rank of sergeant.

May 10, 1944 the local newspapers carried stories to the effect that these men had been accused of having ae- *625 cepted a bribe of $300 for allowing a load of liquor to be unloaded at the Elks Home at the instance of an individual employed there. At this time George R. Dempster was City Manager of Knoxville and appears from the record to be an aggressive, dynamic person of considerable force and will, anxious and alert to do his job well. Upon learning of the accusation he immediately had these men brought in by the Chief of Police and in his presence and the presence of several other officials and a newspaper reporter he demanded the written resignations of the two as an alternative to his threats of criminal prosecution and of a trial under the civil service rules of the City Charter, after having heard the accuser’s statement.

They refused to resign at that time. Formal charges under civil service rules were promptly brought and set for hearing. Complainants then consulted counsel and both they and counsel sought to pacify the City Manager and convince him of their innocence but to no avail. He was greatly agitated over the matter from the start and continued in the same frame of mind during the ensuing weeks; he was soon to come up for reelection and had no patience or taste for this potential scandal. Each time he was approached he would hear to nothing but their resignations. The civil service hearing was continued at the request of complainants and finally set for June 1, 1944. On that day before the time for the hearing complainants appeared with their attorney and executed the resignations. They testified they did so because they had worried and thought over the matter, that they were embarrassed for themselves, their wives and family and friends and did not know how they could establish their innocence, so they gave in.

*626 Notwithstanding the resignations the criminal warrants which the City Manager had directed to he procured were issued the next day. This is strange indeed, because Ex. 9 is an affidavit of the accuser dated June 1 which exonerates the complainants. June 9 a preliminary hearing lasting eight hours was had in the General Sessions Court as a result of which complainants were found not guilty and the charges dismissed.

In the fall of 1944 Scruggs had a conversation with the City Manager who then stated that he had investigated the matter and was convinced they had been mistreated and he was going to have the error rectified. Pursuant thereto complainants’ counsel filed petitions on January 17, 1945 with the City Council for restoration. A committee was appointed by the Council to investigate and report, but before the committee had completed the investigation petitioners by letter of January 23 addressed to the City Council withdrew their request, stating in effect that, although they had been completely exonerated by the affidavit of the individual by whom they were supposed to have been bribed, which affidavit was made and filed June 1, 1944 insofar as the City was concerned and by the hearing on the criminal charge in the General Sessions Court, they nevertheless had ascertained there was some opposition by certain members of the City council to their reinstatement; further “we fail to understand, in view of the above facts, why this opposition has developed, but since it has, and since we have, since the filing of this petition, been offered more lucrative positions, we hereby withdraw our application for reinstatement to the police force of the City of Knoxville”.

This request for restoration was withdrawn because it was realized that the City Council had no authority to restore them, but a plan was agreed upon by counsel *627 for complainants and tlie Law Director of the City with the evident approval of the City Manager, and pursuant to that plan petitions for mandamus were filed in the Circuit Court on February 13, 1945 and judgments, that were actually agreed judgments though not so appearing on their face, were entered (R. 17 & R. 184) restoring the petitioners to duty. They were then transferred to the fire department with the understanding that after a short while they would be put back on their jobs as policemen and that they could not lose seniority rights.

At the insistence of the City Manager they omitted from the petitions for mandamus anything about the threats and coercion, so as to make it as mild as possible, because he had promised to take care of them, and these petitions leading to compromise judgments were the first step in that direction.

Sometime after the entry of those judgments the City appealed on the technical record to the Court of Appeals, which held as follows:

(1) That the mandamus petitions, iii alleging that petitioners were accused by individuals and that “petitioner resigned his position . . . for the purpose of relieving the embarrassment, worry and trouble that was being heaped upon him, his family, friends and acquaintances and upon the City of Knoxville and its officials, including the two named herein as defendants. At the time he resigned ... he did so as the result of the aforesaid circumstances, ’ ’ failed to charge the City with any wrongdoing and that, therefore, so far as the City is concerned, the resignations were voluntary;

(2) That therefore section 76 of the Charter provisions applies which is: “Whenever a policeman or fireman has in any way severed his connection by resigning or being removed or discharged from his service in the em *628 ployment of the City, before be shall again be elected, be shall be required to stand a civil service examination just as any other applicant and subject to the same qualifications as required for new applicants”;

(3) That, if for any reason, the resignation be held nugatory,

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 564, 33 Tenn. App. 622, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ammons-v-city-of-knoxville-tennctapp-1950.