State ex rel. Pell v. City of Westlake
This text of 415 N.E.2d 289 (State ex rel. Pell v. City of Westlake) 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.
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The threshold question is whether appellant is the sole person eligible for the promotion to the position of sergeant. We begin the analysis by recognizing that the charter of a city, as approved by the residents of that city, represents the framework within which the city government must operate. Cleveland, ex rel. Neelon, v. Locher (1971), 25 Ohio St. 2d 49.
In this case, Section 12(d) of Article IY of the Charter of Westlake2 requires the civil service commission to act in accordance with the “general law” of this state, where that general law does not conflict with the charter itself. The rele[362]*362vant general law here is R. C. 124.44,3 which, in the case of a promotion, orders a civil service commission to certify to the appointing authority the person with the highest score on the qualifying examination. Furthermore, the provisions of this section have been specifically adopted by the Westlake Civil Service Commission in Section 1 of its own Rule XVIII.4 Although the charter and the commission’s rule are in direct conflict with Westlake’s Ordinance No. 137.06,5 which instructs the commission to certify the three highest individuals on the qualification list, the provisions of the charter must prevail over the ordinance, as indicated above. Thus, the appellant in this case is clearly entitled to be certified to his appointing authority as being entitled to the next vacancy which occurs in the position of sergeant, and the commission is under a legal duty to so certify the appellant to the respondent-mayor.
We turn to the next question, namely, whether there is [363]*363presently a “vacancy” in the grade of sergeant in the Westlake Police Department. Westlake Ordinance No. 137.01 provides for the table of organization for the police department and includes four sergeants. It is undisputed that there are presently only three sergeants on the Westlake Police force.
State, ex rel. Finn, v. Garfield Heights, supra (34 Ohio St. 2d 5), instructs that a “vacancy” entitling a person to a promotion to a higher grade in a municipal police or fire department does not exist, in the context of a right to a writ of mandamus to compel the promotion, unless the city council has appropriated money sufficient to fund the promotion.6
Historically, as here, city councils adopt appropriations for salaries for police departments by a single line item with one lump sum figure. Such an appropriation ordinance does not contain a specifically earmarked sum for any specific number of policemen or any specific number of officers, or any specific breakdown as to the allocation of the officers’ rank or any other designated purpose. However, the Court of Appeals adopted the argument of the city, which is that absent a specific express appropriation by council to fund the particular promotion, mandamus is not available. We reject that position. To place such a burden on an individual police officer, otherwise eligible for promotion, would constitute a pro tanto repeal of the constitutional mandato that promotions in the civil ser[364]*364vice shall be according to merit and fitness. Section 10 of Article XV of the Constitution of Ohio.
Likewise, we reject the proposition that the budget request papers of the administration (relator's Exhibit No. 4) are controlling on the issue of the availability of funds for the particular promotion in dispute. The amount appropriated for police salaries is on its face sufficient to fund the appellant’s promotion. (See fn. 1.) To deny mandamus because of administration testimony that its budget request did not contemplate this particular promotion would allow a mayor to avoid any personally obnoxious, but otherwise meritorious and fit, promotion as objectively determined by competitive examination.
In sum, finding (1) that there exists a vacancy in the position of sergeant in the Westlake Police Department, and (2) that appellant is the sole person eligible for promotion to that position, and (3) that the city’s allegation of an inadequate appropriation is unsupported, we hold that appellant has demonstrated that he is entitled to the promotion and that the mayor has a clear legal duty to order the appointment of appellant to the rank of sergeant.7 No legal remedy exists which would prove to be adequate to enforce this duty other than the present action. Appellant has established the prerequisites to maintain an action for a writ of mandamus. State, ex rel. Brown, v. Cleveland (1979), 58 Ohio St. 2d 232, 233; State, ex rel. Clark, v. Krause (1977), 52 Ohio St. 2d 201, 203.
We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and order that the writ be allowed.
Judgment reversed and writ allowed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
415 N.E.2d 289, 64 Ohio St. 2d 360, 18 Ohio Op. 3d 514, 1980 Ohio LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pell-v-city-of-westlake-ohio-1980.