Travers v. Fogarty

50 A.2d 238, 187 Md. 348, 1946 Md. LEXIS 283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 12, 1946
Docket[No. 29, October Term, 1946.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 A.2d 238 (Travers v. Fogarty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travers v. Fogarty, 50 A.2d 238, 187 Md. 348, 1946 Md. LEXIS 283 (Md. 1946).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal in a mandamus case in which the Board of Fire Commissioners of Baltimore City was ordered by the Balitmore City Court to remove the appellants from the roster of employees of the Department and to retire them. The appellants are the chief engineer and operating head of the department, the executive secretary of the department, and a mechanic in the repair shop. The record shows that Chief Travers is now 71 years old, that Secretary Wilkinson is now 72 years old, and that Mr. Yake is now 74 years old. The *350 reason given by the lower court for the granting of the writ is that in its opinion and under the terms of Ordinance 553 of 1925-1926, establishing a general pension system for the City of Baltimore, all classified employees of. the city must retire at 70 years of age. This conclusion is strongly contested by the appellants, who say that it is not warranted either by a strict construction of the ordinance, or by its long-continued executive and administrative interpretations. They further deny the power of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to incorporate such a provision affecting members of the Fire Department in the ordinance, in view of the statutory provision contained in Section 90 of the Baltimore City Charter. They also contend that the appellees have no standing in court to entitle them to ask for a writ of mandamus, and that the court cannot issue such a writ against the Board of Fire Commissioners because the Board is not given any duties or powers under the ordinance and because its functions under Section 90 are discretionary.

The proceedings in this case were first instituted by the. filing of a petition in which the Baltimore Fire Fighters Association, Local No. 734, a union existing among the firemen of Baltimore City, and the four appellees, presumably members of that union, were the petitioners, and the three members of the Board of Fire Commissioners of Baltimore City were the defendants. The appellant Travers thereupon filed a petition to be made a party defendant. This permission having been given, he filed a demurrer to the petition which was sustained. The reason for this is not in the record and is not before us, but presumably it was on the ground that the union, as such, was not a proper party to such a proceeding. Thereafter the union disappeared from the case and an amended petition was filed by the four appellees individually, not only against the Board of Fire Commissioners, but against the appellants and four other members of the Fire Department who were also claimed to be over 70. Before the case came on for *351 hearing these last four had been retired by the Board, so that there is no question before us as to them. Appellees state in the petition that they are all residents, citizens and voters of the City of Baltimore, all are members of the classified service of the city, all are employees of the Fire Department, and all are taxpayers in the city. Their right to file a petition is based, according to the allegations in the petition, upon their interest, shared in common with other voters, citizens, taxpayers and property owners, in the maintenance and efficiency of the Fire Department. They also claim special interest in the light of their present employment and their intention to make a life-time career of the service in the Fire Department. They state that the retention of overage employees retards the opportunities for the advancement of all departmental subordinate employees and that this is to the prejudice of the welfare and promotion of the latter and also to the general utility and efficiency of the departmental personnel as a whole.

The Act of 1924, Chapter 411, authorizes the City to establish a general system of pensions and retirements for its employees and to provide for the inclusion in such system “with the consent of a majority of its members, any existing pension system.” This Act was before this Court in the case of Duncan v. Graham, 155 Md. 507, 142 A. 593, where it was held it did not authorize the passage of an ordinance providing for the payment of death benefits. Its authority was restricted by that case to provisions for payments to employees, still living, of “pensions and retirements.” Subsequent amendments changed the Act to permit death benefits.

In the exercise of the power conferred by this Act the City passed Ordinance 553 of 1925-1926. This provided that all employees on January 1, 1926 (not members of the Teachers’ Retirement Fund who were treated separately), shall become members of the retirement system provided by the ordinance “unless on or before a date not more than 90 days thereafter to be set by the *352 Board of Trustees any such, employee shall file with the Board of Trustees on a form prescribed by such Board a notice of his election not to be covered in the membership of the system” and a waiver of benefits. This provision affected firemen as well as all other employees except police who were excepted from the definition of employees, and teachers, who were specially treated. As to .those employees who elected not to be covered, it was provided that their services should terminate when they attained the age of 70. There is a special provision for firemen who elected not to join. They “shall be entitled to pensions * * * under existing laws as if this Article had not been passed.”

A retirement system, to be financially sound (which it is presumed this was intended to be), must be based not only on specified payments by the members, but on the probability of the continuance of these payments. This must be calculated not only on the expectancy of life, but also on a definite age at which living members cease to be contributors and become beneficiaries. The age for retirement and the beginning of the receipt of benefits is therefore fixed in the ordinance. The members have to retire at the age of 70 or on the first day of the calendar month next succeeding their 70th birthday. The provision for a similar age limit of nonmembers made a uniform rule of retirement and foreclosed an argument for not joining the system which might otherwise have been made. This was that those who remained outside could have a longer tenure of service than those who joined. This would undoubtedly apply to firemen, if there were nothing else in the ordinance to the contrary.

But as we have seen, firemen, who already had a pension system, were singled out for special treatment. Those who did not come in the new system were to be entitled to their pensions under existing laws “as if this Article had not been passed.” This statement means, if it means anything, that they were to be treated as if the ordinance including the retirement age (because that *353 is a part of it) were not in existence. The wording is clear. It requires no interpretation. The literal meaning of the expression used should not be tortured into something else. If a fireman elected not to be covered, he was not to be subject to any of the provisions of the ordinance. There is no occasion for an attempted construction to harmonize the provisions so that such a fireman would be subject to some provisions and not to others. Under the plain wording he is covered by all or exempt from all.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A.2d 238, 187 Md. 348, 1946 Md. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travers-v-fogarty-md-1946.