Tyson v. Board Trustees of Firemen's Pension Fund

129 S.W. 820, 139 Ky. 256, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 820 (Tyson v. Board Trustees of Firemen's Pension Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyson v. Board Trustees of Firemen's Pension Fund, 129 S.W. 820, 139 Ky. 256, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 29 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

[258]*258Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hobson

Reversing.

This is an action by appellant, Fillmore Tyson, for a writ of mandamus requiring the Trustees, of the Firemen’s Pension Fund of the city of Louisville to reinstate him as a pensioner of the Firemen’s .Pension Fruid, from which position he has been, as he claims, unlawfully removed by the appellee. There is no contrariety in the facts in the case; the question is one purely of law. *

Appellant was, and had been for several years prior to the 15th day of November, 1909, chief of the fire department of the city of Louisville, at a salary of $250 per month. Having served in the fire department for more than 20 consecutive years next before the date mentioned, he was deemed entitled, under the provisions of the act establishing the pension fund, which will be hereafter discussed more fully, to be retired from active duty in the fire department and placed on the pension roll at half pay, and an order was made to that effect by the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund, as it was then constituted. Subsequently, on the 15th day of February 1910, the personnel of the board having, in a large measure, changed, an order was made dropping the name of appellant from the pension roll and requiring him to resume active service as a fireman. Upon final hearing of the action, the circuit judges— three of whom sat together in the case — entered a judgment dismissing appellant’s petition; from which he prosecutes this appeal. The question of law presented by the record is whether or not it was within the competency of the newly constituted board to abrogate and set aside the order made by their predecessors as hereinbefore set out.

[259]*259The Firemen’s Pension Fund was “established by an act of the Legislature, approved February 19, .1902 (Acts 1902, c. 2). The title of the act is as follows: “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act for the government of cities of the first class, approved July 1, 1893, for the better government, administration and disposition and discipline of the fire department, and to create and perpetuate a pension fund for disabled firemen, their widows and children and dependent fathers and mothers, and to create and perpetuate a hoard of trustees for the management and conduct thereof, and to pension members thereof after service of a term of years. ’ ’ ’

By section 17 of the act it is provided: ‘ ‘ There may he levied and set apart by the general councils of cities of the first class a tax for the year nineteen hundred and three, not exceeding one cent on each one hundred dollars of value of the taxable property in said cities for said year as a fund for the pensioning of crippled and disabled members of the fire department, and their widows and dependent children under the age of fourteen years, and dependent fathers and mothers of deceased members of the fire department of said cities, and a like tax may be levied and set apart for the same purposes, for any succeeding year when the amount and” value of property to the credit of the Firemen’s Pension Fund falls below three hundred thousand dollars as of the date of the first of September, preceding.”

Section 22 enumerates in large part the beneficiaries of the pension fund, hut does not include by name pensioners who have been retired because of time service on the force.

Section 24 is as follows: “Any member of the fire department of such cities having served twenty years [260]*260or more consecutively in sucli fire department may make application to be relieved from such fire department, and if his application is granted, the said Board of Trustees shall order and direct that such person be paid a monthly pension equal to one-half the amount of the salary said person is or was in receipt of as a member of said department at the time of granting application.”

Section 26 is as follows: “No person shall be en-' titled to receive any pension from the said fund except a regularly retired member or a regular member in said fire department, his widow and children under the age of fourteen years, and his dependent father and mother.”

The lower court was of opinion that, because section 17 enumerates some of the beneficiaries of the pension fund to be established, but omits the time-service pensioners, therefore the latter are not entitled to participate in the fund created. "We think, with ¿all respect to the opinion of the trial court, this is entirely too narrow a view to take of the matter. The rule is elementary that a statute is to be construed so as to effectuate the purpose of the Legislature, and .that in reaching this intention every word and phrase in the statute must be given full force and effect, unless in so doing a manifest inconsistency or absurdity is the result. The Constitution provides (section 51): “No law enacted by the General Assembly shall relate to more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.” The law under .consideration relates to the establishment of a pension fund for disabled firemen, their widows and children, and dependent fathers and mothers, and to create and perpetuate a board of trustees for the management and conduct thereof, and to pension members thereof after [261]*261a service of a term of years. It is clear, then, from the title of the act and also from the preamble, that pensioning members of the fire department after service of a term of years was distinctly a part of the intention of the Legislature in enacting the law. While it is true section 17 does not enumerate pensioning firemen for time service as among the purposes for which the tax creating the fund is to be levied, this omission will not limit the beneficiaries of the fund established to those enumerated in this section, if it be clearly shown by other sections of the act that it was the intention of the Legislature that members of the force who had served 20 years or more might be made beneficiaries of the pension fund. Now, section 24 provides very plainly that any member of the fire department who has served 20 years or more, consecutively, in the fire department may be retired from the force, and the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund shall order and direct that such person be paid a monthly pension equal to one-half of the monthly salary he is or was in receipt of as a member of the department at the time of granting the application. The trial judges in their opinion say that, while those persons mentioned in section 24 mre entitled to a pension, they are not to be paid out of the pension fund established by the act. It is difficult to understand how such a conclusion could be reached. There is but one pension fund established, and there is but one board of trustees. This board has the management and control, as set forth in the act, of the one pension fund established; and when section 24 provides that the Board of Trustees shall order and direct that such persons be paid a, monthly pension, the conclusion is irresistible that they are to be paid out of the pension fund established [262]*262by the act. Section 26 also shows that the regular retired members of the force are beneficiaries of the pension fund.

The view we have taken is made plainer by examining the companion act establishing a pension fund for the police department. These two acts are the same in substance, and were evidently drawn from the same model, although the verbiage is slightly different in parts of the acts.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 820, 139 Ky. 256, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-board-trustees-of-firemens-pension-fund-kyctapp-1910.