State Ex Rel. Creel v. Booker

1 So. 2d 167, 146 Fla. 402
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 167 (State Ex Rel. Creel v. Booker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Creel v. Booker, 1 So. 2d 167, 146 Fla. 402 (Fla. 1941).

Opinions

Buford, J.

On writ of error we review judgment in favor of respondent in mandamus proceedings.

In March, 1926, relator entered the employ of the City of Tampa as a policeman at a monthly salary of $147.25. He was apparently then in good health. Between the date of his employment and April 27, 1933, he became totally and permanently disabled. On January 11, 1933, he was discharged as a police officer but on April 27 (1933) was reinstated by *403 order of the Civil Service Board. On April 29, 1933, he was retired under the provisions of Chapter 11761, Special Acts of Extraordinary Session of 1925. That Act, inter alia, provided:

“Sec. 4. Members of the police department who have been in continuous service for a period of twenty years shall be retired on a pension upon application to the Board and any member reaching the age of sixty-five years shall be retired on a pension.
“Members who shall by reason of sickness or injury contracted in line of duty while in the service of the City, become permanently incapacitated to perform their duties in the positions they hold, shall be eligible for pension as hereinafter provided.
“Sec. 5. Members shall receive an amount equal to and not to exceed seventy-five per cent of their average yearly salary at the time of retirement. Members shall be retired on account of permanent incapacity and shall receive an amount equal to and not to exceed seventy-five per cent ■of the salary received at the time of such injury or sickness, payments to be made in monthly installments.

The Legislature of 1933 enacted Chapter 16721, which inter .alia, provided:

“Section 2. All members of the fire department of the City of Tampa who are engaged in or subject to call to actual duty of fighting fire and conflagration, and whose employment shall be of a regular and continuous and not of a temporary character, and all members of the police department of Tampa who are engaged in or subject to call to actual duty of enforcing the law or of preserving the peace, and whose employment shall be of a regular and continuous and not of a temporary character, shall come within the purview of this Act. But, any member of such depart *404 ment not subjected to the hazard of fire fighting or of enforcing the law or preserving the peace shall not come within the purview of this Act for any purpose and no widow, child or other beneficiary shall benefit under this Act except where the member himself under whose right they claim came within the purview of this Act as above defined. However, all members of the fire, or police department of the City of Tampa, active or retired, who are at the time of the taking effect of this Act entitled to receive or make application for a pension under any law hereby repealed, whether such application shall have been heretofore made or not, shall be included within the purview hereof.” . . .
“Section 6. Members of the fire or police departments of said city, coming within the purview of this Act as defined in Section 2 hereof, who have been in regular and continuous service in either or both of such departments of the character as defined by Section 2 hereof as coming within the purview of this Act, for a period of twenty-five years and shall have reached the age of fifty-five years, shall be retired on pensions upon application to said qualification committee, and members of said departments engaged.in a line of duty which brings them within the purview of this Act as defined by Section 2 thereof, who shall be permanently incapacitated from performing their duties in their respective departments by reason of injury occasioned by the hazards of their duties in fighting fire or enforcing the law or preserving the peace, shall likewise be entitled to retirement on pension as herein provided upon application to and approval by said qualification committee, provided, that any member transferring from one such department to the other shall be entitled to full credit for all time of the character defined in Section 2 hereof as coming within the purview of the Act which shall have been served in the other *405 department before such transfer; and provided, further, that no member shall be included within the purview of this Act in either of said departments, if employed after he shall have reached the age of forty years, and any person who shall have begun his service in such employment after reaching the age of forty years shall not be qualified to receive any pension or relief hereunder, anything in this Act or in any former pension Act to the contrary notwithstanding; and provided, further, that in calculation of time of service, all continuous time of service of the character described in Section 2 hereof as entitling a member to come within the purview of this Act heretofore served by any member of either of said departments shall be counted; and provided, further, that any member of said departments, or any widow or child of such member, who has heretofore been awarded pension or relief, or who but for this Act, would now be entitled to the award thereof if application had not been heretofore made under any former pension law hereby repealed, shall be qualified to receive pensions hereunder without respect to age or length of service (other than that required by such repealed Acts), but such pension or relief shall be of the amounts and under the regulations provided by this Act and not under those provided by any such former or repealed law, and no person not now entitled to receive pension or to make application therefor, shall upon the death of any present pensioner, receive any pension or relief unless he or she qualifies under the terms hereof.
“Section 7. Members retired on pensions in pursuance to the preceding section shall receive a monthly pension of one hundred dollars ($100.00) per month plus one dollar ($1.00) per month additional for each year in excess of twenty-five years of service of the character mentioned in Section 2 of this Act which such pensioner shall have performed prior to such retirement. Provided, however, that *406 no pension shall under any circumstances be paid under this Act to any person while he is receiving any compensation as an official or employee of the Federal Government, or of any State, County, City, Municipal, or District Government, or of any other governmental agency.”

The Legislature of 1935 enacted Chapter 17164, which, inter alia, provided:

“Section 1. There is hereby created a special fund to be known as the city pension fund for firemen and policemen in each city in the State of Florida having a population of not less than fifty-five thousand or more than one hundred eighteen thousand; said fund to be used exclusively for the purpose provided for in this Act, which fund shall be collected, administered and disbursed according to the provisions of this Act.”
“Section 7. Benefits. — Pension to Members — Compulsory. The Board shall upon his application retire:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hackett v. City of New Britain
477 A.2d 148 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 167, 146 Fla. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-creel-v-booker-fla-1941.