Taylor v. City of Cleveland

93 N.E.2d 594, 87 Ohio App. 132, 57 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 42 Ohio Op. 348, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 683
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1950
Docket21398
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 N.E.2d 594 (Taylor v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. City of Cleveland, 93 N.E.2d 594, 87 Ohio App. 132, 57 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 42 Ohio Op. 348, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 683 (Ohio Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

OPINION

By DOYLE, J:

James E. Taylor is a lieutenant in the fire department of the City of Cleveland. The litigation in the Common Pleas Court involved the right of the lieutenant to recover a money judgment against the City of Cleveland upon a claim for *83 overtime pay for work performed in his capacity as such fireman.

The action is one of six or seven hundred like actions against the city by individual members of the department, and was selected by counsel as a test case.

The position of affairs as we find it to be in this appeal is a money judgment rendered upon a verdict of a jury in the amount of $3,688.96 in favor of the fire department lieutenant and against the city. The appeal now lodges the case in this court for affirmance or reversal of the judgment.

The petition of the claimant asserts that: — he, against his protests, was ordered and required to work for periods in excess of eight hours a day and forty-eight hours a week, and did

“work at his * * * duties for periods averaging seventy-two * * * hours per week”

he was required to “work under a so-called platoon system inaugurated by the defendant;” he worked “on the basis of a socalled twenty-four hour * * * shift, whereby said plaintiff, as well as other city firemen, was on duty for a period of twenty-four * * * hours, and then relieved for a like period of twenty-four * * * hours.”

It was further claimed that:

“said platoon system was inaugurated and kept in force, by defendant, without authority, and for the purpose of avoiding and evading the provisions of the charter of said city limiting the hours of labor, as aforesaid, and for the sole purpose of compelling and requiring plaintiff to work without compensation.”

The claimant then prayed for an award of $11,963.28 as the fair and reasonable value of his services on the basis of “time and one-half” pay for the number of hours worked in excess of the hours contemplated in the eight hour day provision of the city charter.

In addition to pleading the above, the claimant amended his petition, over the objection of counsel for the city, after he had rested his case, by inserting the provisions of Sec. 284 of the ordinances of the city of Cleveland. This ordinance will be set out later.

There are many assignments of error urged by the city and several hundred pages of briefs filed, which argue pro and con the claims of the respective litigants. No useful *84 purpose can be served by discussing each one of them. Basic laws will be set out with a critical analysis of the facts in their relation to them.

1. Art. II, Sec. 37 of the Constitution of Ohio, provides:

“Except in cases of extraordinary emergency not to exceed eight hours shall constitute a day’s work, and not to exceed forty-eight hours a week’s work, for workmen engaged on any public work carried on or aided by the state, or any political subdivision thereof, whether done by contract, or otherwise.”

This provision of the constitution applies to construction work performed on public projects, and its very language shows-it not to be self-executing. The enabling legislation enacted by the general assembly is contained in §17-1 GC which, states in substance the provisions of the constitution and makes unlawful, required work in excess of the hours stipulated. The section, furthermore, specifically provides that it “shall be construed not to include firemen in cities and villages and policemen in villages.”

The question of the interpretation of the language “for workmen engaged on any public work carried on or aided by the state, or any political subdivision thereof, whether done by contract or otherwise” was presented to the Supreme-Court of Ohio in 1925, in a case which grew out of the indictment of the director of public service of the City of Akron for the alleged unlawfully required work of city employees-engaged in operating the water works of the City of Akron, located in the adjoining county of Portage. It was there held that the Constitution of Ohio and the enabling statute-(§17-1 GC) relate solely to work performed on the construction of public improvements and not on their “maintenance and operation.”

State v. Peters, 112 Oh St 249.

Under this interpretation of the constitution, no debatable-constitutional question can be raised by virtue of the language-in the enabling statute specifically excluding firemen from its operation. Firemen are not employed to construct public works.

See also:

Clements et al v. Sherwood, Dir. of Public Welfare 70 Oh Ap 266.

It is our conclusion, therefore, that the constitution of' Ohio does not now and never has established a policy for the work day or work week for members of the fire department in cities of this state.

*85 2. Proceeding now to the charter of the city of Cleveland, we encounter Section 196 as amended in the year 1917. It provides:

“Except in cases of extraordinary emergencies not to exceed eight hours shall constitute a day’s work and not to exceed forty-eight hours a week’s work, for any city employee of the City of Cleveland in the classified service thereof and for any workmen engaged in any public work carried on or aided by the municipality whether done by contract or otherwise. The council shall by ordinance, provide for the enforcement of the provisions of this section.”

This provision of the charter is more comprehensive in its scope than the provisions of the state constitution. It provides for a work day and work week “for any city employee of the City of Cleveland in the classified service thereof” and firemen come within the bounds of classified service. The provision, however, is not self-executing “within the definition that a self-executing provision is one which supplies the rule or means by which the right given may be enforced or protected or by which a duty enjoined may be performed.”

Stange v. City of Cleveland 94 Oh St 377 at p. 380.

In fact, the charter provision itself states that council shall by ordinance provide for the enforcement of its provisions. Such language indicates that it is not self-executing and unless ordinances are passed by the city council carrying it into effect, the provision of the charter would not be effective.

See: Ellis v. Urner etc 125 Oh St 246 at p. 250

3. The next step in this opinion will be the determination of the source of the authority to provide for a work day and work week for firemen in cities of this state.

As has been heretofore shown, the state constitution does not provide such power. The charter of the city of Cleveland does not provide such power except through the enactment of enabling legislation under the authority of the state, as will be hereinafter demonstrated.

*86 *85 Under the “Home Rule” amendment of the constitution of Ohio (Art.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E.2d 594, 87 Ohio App. 132, 57 Ohio Law. Abs. 81, 42 Ohio Op. 348, 1950 Ohio App. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-city-of-cleveland-ohioctapp-1950.