State Ex Rel. Longman v. Kachelmacher

96 N.W.2d 542, 255 Minn. 255, 1959 Minn. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 1, 1959
Docket37,610
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 N.W.2d 542 (State Ex Rel. Longman v. Kachelmacher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Longman v. Kachelmacher, 96 N.W.2d 542, 255 Minn. 255, 1959 Minn. LEXIS 594 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Appeal from an order denying petitioner’s motion for a new trial.

The petitioner, Benjamin F. Longman, has for several years held the position of captain in the Minneapolis Fire Department. Prior to February 17, 1955, he took a civil service examination for the position of district fire chief. An eligibility list was posted on February 17, 1955, and appellant’s name appeared thereon. Minneapolis City Charter and Ordinances (Perm, ed.) c. 19, § 14, provides that such eligibility lists shall remain in force for not more than 2 years. By July 1956, petitioner ranked first on that list. During July petitioner’s status as a veteran was questioned. The Civil Service Commission, concluding that petitioner did not qualify for the statutory veteran’s preference because he was not a veteran within the meaning of the statute (M. S. A. 197.45), moved him down on the eligibility list. Thereafter, defendant Donald F. Rossman was appointed to the position of district fire chief. Petitioner at this point did not institute any proceeding to test the commission’s actions. Another examination was conducted on February 8, 1957, and a new list posted on February 27, 1957. Petitioner did not take the 1957 examination; thus, his name does not appear on the eligibility list which is now in force.

In July 1942, petitioner, then aged 28, was a Minneapolis fire fighter. He obtained a leave of absence, and enlisted in the Enlisted Reserve Corps component of the Army of the United States — apparently a phottraining program of the U. S. Department of Commerce. After being sworn in, petitioner was trained on the St. Thomas College campus, then transferred for further training at the University of Minnesota; then transferred to Rochester, Minnesota, where he obtained further flight training; then transferred to the University of Minnesota Farm School campus; then shipped to Randolph Field, Texas; then trans *257 ferred to Uvalde, Texas, where he was a flight instructor for Army Air Force cadets; and finally transferred to Minneapolis, where he continued to teach Army Air Force cadets.

Petitioner returned to the Minneapolis Fire Department in July 1945. In November 1950 he was promoted to fire captain.

Defendant Rossman was appointed district fire chief following the commission’s action of September 1956, in denying petitioner’s claim for a veteran’s preference. That eligibility list did not expire until February 1957. Not until 3 months later, on May 15, 1957, did petitioner commence this action for a writ of mandamus to require the commission to honor his right to a veteran’s preference and to place him in the higher-paying position of district fire chief.

Defendants’ defenses are twofold: (1) That petitioner may not use mandamus because, the eligibility list upon which his name appeared having expired, the courts are powerless to revitalize the old list or to insert his name on the existing list; and (2) that petitioner is not a “veteran” within the veterans’ preference statute. Although we entertain serious doubts as to petitioner’s claim of being a “veteran,” we need not reach that issue since we hold that petitioner’s action for mandamus should be dismissed as being moot. 1

The Veterans’ Preference Act, M. S. A. 197.45 and 197.46, applies to county and municipal civil service, while veterans’ preferment in state employment is governed solely by provisions of the Civil Service Act, § 43.30. 2 Section 43.30 eliminated the so-called remedy of statutory mandamus. Since municipal civil service is involved here, § 197.45 applies. This latter section expressly provides that veterans who have been denied their veterans’ preference shall have an action for damages, and also the remedy of mandamus for righting the wrong.

Petitioner in effect admits that the ordinary remedy of mandamus is unavailable to him. He argues, however, that by expressly providing *258 for a remedy of mandamus by statute in the Veterans’ Preference Act the legislature must have intended a broader type of mandamus and one not limited to our well-established rules concerning mandamus.

One of those well-established rules is that, as stated in State ex rel. Goar v. Hoffmann, 209 Minn. 308, 310, 296 N. W. 24, 25:

“A writ of mandamus against an official or an administrative officer will not issue unless there is a clear and complete right shown by the petitioner to receive that which the court is asked to command the official or officer to give him.”

Another rule is that mandamus will not be ordered where it will prove futile or practically unavailing. 11 Dunnell, Dig. (3 ed.) § 5759. Part of this latter rule is that where an event has occurred prior to or pending an appeal, which renders it impossible for the court to grant any effectual relief, the court will dismiss the appeal as moot. Barnes v. Macken, 252 Minn. 412, 90 N. W. (2d) 222.

The Minneapolis City Charter 3 requires that vacancies in civil service positions be filled by the “highest name from the appropriate list of the eligible register, * * Petitioner’s name does not appear on the current eligibility list. Clearly, this court is powerless to require the commission, by mandamus, to place his name on the current list, nor can this court revive the expired 1955 to 1957 list and require an appointment from it. 4 Barnes v. Macken, 252 Minn. 412, 90 N. W. (2d) 222, is precisely in point. There the petitioner’s eligibility expired after his appeal to this court and we dismissed the appeal as having become moot. In the Barnes case, the argument that the statutory mandamus of § 197.45 was broader than our usual concepts of mandamus was never raised.

In accord is State ex rel. Chernesky v. Civil Service Comm. 141 Conn. 465, 470, 106 A. (2d) 713, 715, where, on similar facts, the Connecticut court, in denying petitioner relief, said:

*259 “* * * There is therefore no list presently in effect upon which their names can be placed, nor is there any provision in the act for the revivification of a list which the passage of time has terminated.
“* * * To grant the relief sought, the court would, in effect, be required to establish an entirely new list. The court has no power to do this * * *.
“It may be unfortunate for the plaintiffs that they neglected to question the correctness of their standings on the eligibility list while it remained in force. Their failure to act at that time disposed of their right to the relief which they now request.”

Does the fact that the veteran’s remedy of mandamus is provided by statute add to this court’s power to establish a new list or revive an old one? We think clearly not.

Petitioner supports his argument that statutory mandamus is something more than ordinary mandamus by citing and quoting from 33 Minn. L. Rev.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W.2d 542, 255 Minn. 255, 1959 Minn. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-longman-v-kachelmacher-minn-1959.