State ex rel. N. Olmsted Fire Fighters Assn. v. N. Olmsted

1992 Ohio 4
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1992
Docket1990-2191
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1992 Ohio 4 (State ex rel. N. Olmsted Fire Fighters Assn. v. N. Olmsted) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. N. Olmsted Fire Fighters Assn. v. N. Olmsted, 1992 Ohio 4 (Ohio 1992).

Opinion

OPINIONS OF THE SUPREME COURT OF OHIO The full texts of the opinions of the Supreme Court of Ohio are being transmitted electronically beginning May 27, 1992, pursuant to a pilot project implemented by Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer. Please call any errors to the attention of the Reporter's Office of the Supreme Court of Ohio. Attention: Walter S. Kobalka, Reporter, or Justine Michael, Administrative Assistant. Tel.: (614) 466-4961; in Ohio 1-800-826-9010. Your comments on this pilot project are also welcome. NOTE: Corrections may be made by the Supreme Court to the full texts of the opinions after they have been released electronically to the public. The reader is therefore advised to check the bound volumes of Ohio St.3d published by West Publishing Company for the final versions of these opinions. The advance sheets to Ohio St.3d will also contain the volume and page numbers where the opinions will be found in the bound volumes of the Ohio Official Reports. The State ex rel. North Olmsted Fire Fighters Association, Local 1267 of the International Association of Fire Fighters, et al., Appellants and Cross-Appellees, v. City of North Olmsted et al., Appellees and Cross-Appellants. [Cite as State ex rel. N. Olmsted Fire Fighters Assn. v. N. Olmsted (1992), Ohio St.3d .] Public employment -- Vacation leave -- National Guard service qualifies as prior state service under R.C. 9.44 -- R.C. 9.44 requires a current public employer to treat qualifying prior state service as if it were service with that employer, such that the value of the service, if any, is determined by the current employer's vacation leave policy -- R.C. 2305.07 limits the actionability of R.C. 9.44 claims. (No. 90-2191 -- Submitted July 8, 1992 -- Decided September 2, 1992.) Appeal and Cross-Appeal from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, No. 58968. Appellant Richard A. Smith is a Captain in the North Olmsted Fire Department and a member of the bargaining unit represented by appellant North Olmsted Fire Fighters Association ("union"). Smith joined the fire department as a full-time employee in August 1965. In July 1988, he asked that appellees, city of North Olmsted and its mayor ("city"), credit him with additional vacation leave in recognition of his prior service in the Ohio Air National Guard ("National Guard"). Smith served on active and inactive duty in the National Guard for approximately five years and nine months during 1957 through 1962. He claimed that his military duty entitled him to fifteen weeks more vacation by operation of R.C. 9.44 (prior state service of city employee to be counted for the purpose of computing vacation leave). The city disagreed and refused to reassess his vacation leave. Smith filed a grievance, but the city declined to participate in arbitration. The parties now agree that the collective bargaining agreement does not specifically cover vacation leave attributable to prior state service. In the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, Smith and his union sought a writ of mandamus to order that North Olmsted count Smith's National Guard service in determining his vacation leave. They argued that R.C. 9.44 required recognition of all this service, regardless of whether Smith was on active or inactive duty. They also urged the court not to apply laches or the six-year statute of limitations in R.C. 2305.07. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the court of appeals granted the writ, but only to compel "prior service vacation credit for the time periods [Smith] actually worked [in the National Guard], that is, during basic training, one weekend per month, two weeks per year, and ten months in France." The court held that since members of the state military service are unclassifed civil servants under R.C. 124.11(A)(6), Smith's tenure in the National Guard is prior state service under R.C. 9.44. However, because the court read the word "service" in R.C. 9.44 to refer only to employees who actually perform work, as opposed to employees who are merely available for work, the court did not grant relief for Smith's inactive duty. With respect to R.C. 2305.07, the court of appeals held that "a new and distinct claim" arose each year Smith was not credited for his prior state service. The court, therefore, ordered that Smith's National Guard service be credited toward vacation leave only for the period commencing on December 18, 1983, six years before Smith filed his complaint for a writ of mandamus. The court also rejected North Olmsted's laches defense, holding that the city had not demonstrated material prejudice from Smith's delay in asserting his claim. Smith and the union appeal the decision not to count Smith's five years and nine months in the National Guard as five years and nine months of full-time state employment. They also appeal application of the six-year statute of limitations. By cross-appeal, North Olmsted challenges the decision to allow Smith any prior service credit and reasserts laches.

Joseph W. Diemert, Jr. & Associates Co., L.P.A., Joseph W. Diemert, Jr. and Thomas M. Hanculak, for appellants and cross-appellees. Michael R. Gareau, Director of Law, and James M. Dubelko, for appellees and cross-appellants.

Per Curiam. This case presents the following questions for our review. First, is service in the National Guard prior state service for the purpose of R.C. 9.44? Second, does R.C. 9.44 impose a duty for North Olmsted to count Smith's five years and nine months of National Guard service as five years and nine months of full-time prior state service toward his vacation leave? Third, did the court of appeals err by applying the six-year statute of limitations? Fourth, did the court of appeals err by rejecting laches as a defense? For the reasons that follow, we hold that (1) National Guard service qualifies as prior state service under R.C. 9.44; (2) R.C. 9.44 requires a current public employer to treat qualifying prior state service as if it were service with that employer, such that the value of the service, if any, is determined by the current employer's vacation leave policy; (3) R.C. 2305.07 limits the actionability of R.C. 9.44 claims; and (4) North Olmsted did not prove Smith's delay caused the material prejudice required for laches to apply. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part the court of appeals' judgment. Moreover, because a material fact -- the conditions under which North Olmsted fire fighters accrued vacation leave during the period Smith may be entitled to relief -- has not been resolved, we remand this case for further proceedings. Prior State Service R.C. 9.44, at all times relevant to this case, has provided: "[A] person employed, other than as an elective officer, by the state or any political subdivision of the state, earning vacation credits currently, is entitled to have his prior service with any of these employers counted as service with the state or any political subdivision of the state, for the purpose of computing the amount of his vacation leave. The anniversary date of his employment for the purpose of computing the amount of his vacation leave, unless deferred pursuant to the appropriate law, ordinance, or regulation, is the anniversary date of such prior service." See Sub.H.B. No. 202 (133 Ohio Laws, Part II, 1917), Am.Sub.H.B. No. 178 (142 Ohio Laws, Part II, 2564, 2565), and Am.H.B. No. 552 (143 Ohio Laws, Part IV, 5670, 5671). North Olmsted argues that "service," as used in R.C. 9.44, was not intended to include employment in the National Guard because (1) military service is not mentioned as an example of prior state service in the Bill Analysis by the Legislative Service Commission (Comment to proposed Sub.H.B. No. 202 [R.C. 9.44]), and (2) members of the National Guard do not accumulate vacation leave and, therefore, have no vacation benefits to "bring with them" to a subsequent public employer.

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1992 Ohio 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-n-olmsted-fire-fighters-assn-v-n-olmsted-ohio-1992.