State Ex Rel. Pike v. City of Bellingham

48 P.2d 602, 183 Wash. 439, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 735
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1935
DocketNo. 25676. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 48 P.2d 602 (State Ex Rel. Pike v. City of Bellingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Pike v. City of Bellingham, 48 P.2d 602, 183 Wash. 439, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 735 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

*441 Geraghty, J.

This is an appeal by the city of Bell-ingham and certain of its officers from a judgment granting a writ of mandamus directing them to issue salary warrants to respondents, members of the police and fire departments of the city.

The city, by ordinance No. 4802, passed in December, 1927, established the salaries to be paid the members of the police and fire departments of the city, effective as of January 1, 1928. In December, 1928, the voters adopted initiative ordinance No. 4941, as follows:

“Section 1. That the salary rates in effect September 1, 1928 of each and every civil service employee in the police department and each and every civil service employee in the fire department, of the City of Belling-ham, be and the same are hereby increased in the sum of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) per month; provided, however, that such increase of rates shall not become effective until the first day of January, 1930.
“Section 2. The city council of the City of Belling-ham, shall from time to time, pass the necessary and/ or ordinances to make such increase effective.”

The monthly increase in salaries provided for in the initiative ordinance was paid by the city during the years 1930 and 1931, and provision was made in the annual budget for the year 1932 for like salaries.

In the early part of 1932, members of the police and fire departments, including respondents, signed written waivers or donation agreements of a part of their salaries for the year 1932. The agreements recited that, owing to the fact that some of the members of the departments would have to be released from service during the year unless the men themselves donated a portion of their salaries into the general fund of the city; and, desiring that no further reductions in the departments be made, the entire personnel of the departments was willing to donate *442 to the city total aggregate wages of approximately $4,558.32 for the police department, and $6,535.85 for the fire department. The instruments recited that the signers thereof

“ . . . now sell, transfer, set over and assign unto the City of Bellingham all monies in excess of the salaries paid during the year 1926 to the various and respective offices now held, or to be held, by each and every of the undersigned during the current year, 1932.”

The city comptroller was directed to pay all surplus above the 1926 rate of salaries into the general fund of the city during the year 1932 only. In March, 1932, and after the execution of this agreement by the men, the city passed ordinance No. 5298, fixing the salaries of the members of the two departments in conformity to the figures recited in the agreement.

In December, 1932, the voters of the city adopted an amendment to the city charter, by the terms of which the tax levy for city purposes was fixed at fifteen mills. It was provided in the amendment that this limit should include certain specific levies theretofore authorized to be made to assist in the payment of salaries of civil service employees in the police and fire departments. Salary ordinances were passed for the years 1933 and 1934, providing for the reduced salaries, the reductions being part of the back-pay sued for in this action.

In August, 1934, the city council adopted ordinance No. 5426 for reference to the voters. The ordinance provided for the repeal of initiative ordinance No. 4941 “from and after January 1, 1930,” and recited that it was the voters’ intention in the adoption of the charter amendment of December 3, 1932 (§ 346), to repeal initiative ordinance No. 4941, and that therefore “this ordinance shall be and is hereby made *443 retroactive to effectuate that purpose and intent.” The ordinance was ratified by the voters December 1, 1934.

The trial court held that ordinance No. 5426 became effective upon the salaries of respondents January 1, 1935, and that they were entitled to the full salaries provided by initiative ordinance No. 4941 until that date, and by its mandate required the appellants to issue salary warrants to respondents for the difference between the salary schedule in that ordinance and the sums that had been paid them.

In argument, the appellants group their assignments of error under four heads. We shall consider these heads in their order.

Under the first head, it is contended that initiative ordinance No. 4941 never became a valid enactment of the city, for several reasons.

It is first argued that the ordinance is not complete in itself, but requires reference for its construction to the salary ordinance existing September 1, 1928.

Upon this point, the case of State ex rel. Knez v. Seattle, 176 Wash. 283, 28 P. (2d) 1020, 33 P. (2d) 905, would seem to be decisive. The initiative ordinance of the city of Seattle upon which Knez sued in that case was in this respect almost identical with ordinance No. 4941.

Ordinance No. 4941 is complete in itself, and while reference will have to be made to the pre-existing salary ordinance in order to determine the salary to be paid, this necessity does not make the ordinance obnoxious to article II, § 37, of the constitution or § 82 of the city charter, cited by appellants. As was said by Judge Rudkin in Spokane Grain & Fuel Co. v. Lyttaker, 59 Wash. 76, 109 Pac. 316, after the citation and discussion of authorities:

*444 “It seems to us the foregoing authorities demonstrate that the act in question is not violative of the constitutional provision under consideration. Nearly every legislative act of a general nature changes or modifies some existing statute, either directly or by implication, and as said by the court in Ex parte Pollard, supra [40 Ala. 77], ‘Whether an amendatory or an original act should be employed is a matter of legislative judgment and discretion which the courts cannot control. ’ The purpose of the constitutional provision was to protect the members of the legislature and the public against fraud and deception; not to trammel or hamper the legislature in the enactment of laws. If the act in question were entitled an act to amend the lien laws of the state, by proper reference, its validity could not be called in question, yet, what additional information would such a title or such an act bring home to either the legislature or the public. True, such an amendment would direct attention to the existing laws •on the subject, but such was not the object or purpose of the framers of the constitution. So long as a legislative act is complete in itself, and has a sufficient title, its satisfies the requirements of the constitution, whether it contains much or little. The legislature may embody all legislation relating to a given subject in a single act, or it may cover the subject by a succession of acts. This is entirely a matter of legislative discretion over wffiich we can assume no control.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 602, 183 Wash. 439, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pike-v-city-of-bellingham-wash-1935.