Von Walter v. City of Canby

526 P.2d 599, 19 Or. App. 60, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 23, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 526 P.2d 599 (Von Walter v. City of Canby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Walter v. City of Canby, 526 P.2d 599, 19 Or. App. 60, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 691 (Or. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

THORNTON, J.

This case arises out of a dispute between the City of Canby and five of its police officers ever the right of the police to receive ‘overtime pay.’ Plaintiff, who was the former chief of police, brought this action on his own behalf and as assignee of similar claims of *62 f-onr fellow police officers, seeking damages for the City’s refusal to compensate them in full for ‘overtime’ work. All were employed on a monthly salary basis.

The circuit court sustained defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s fourth amended complaint on the grounds that plaintiff’s complaint failed to state a cause of action. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment for defendant entered following the order of the circuit court sustaining defendant’s demurrer.

In his complaint plaintiff alleged that he and his assignors were required by defendant to work 4,922% overtime hours between January 1969 and June 1973; that defendant compensated plaintiff and his assignors for 2,624 of these hours and at the regular rate, not overtime rate; and that there were 2,298% hours for which they received no compensation.

Plaintiff further alleged that all compensation should have been at the overtime rate (one and one-half times) rather than at the regular rate; that inasmuch as plaintiff is no longer employed by defendant and cannot receive compensatory time, he is now entitled to damages for defendant’s refusal to make such compensation.

Plaintiff bases his alleged cause of action in part upon OES 279.340, which he contends provides compensation to public officers for overtime hours worked, particularly subsection (1) thereof, inasmuch as Clackamas County has a population of less than 300,000. Plaintiff also alleges that defendant’s refusal to compensate plaintiff and his associates for labor performed at the specific instance of defendant, violates the standards set forth in the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution in that it deprives *63 plaintiff of his property without due process of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.

Although this statute has since been amended, at the time this case arose OES 279.340 provided as follows:

“Labor directly employed by a county, municipality, municipal corporation * * * shall be allowed overtime as follows:
“(1) In counties of less than 300,000 population, overtime shall be allowed in such manner as may be determined by the county, municipality, municipal corporation * * *, but such compensation shall not be less than time and a half off for employment in excess of eight hours in any one day or 44 hours in any one week. Any county, municipality, municipal corporation * * * regularly working employes less than 44 hours per week may compensate for overtime worked in excess of the regularly scheduled work time.

Also at that time, OES 279.342 provided as follows:

“The provisions of OES 279.340 relating to pay for overtime shall not apply to:
“(1) Labor employed in forest fire fighting.
“(2) Employes of any irrigation system district actually engaged in the distribution of water for irrigation or domestic use.
“(3) Fire or police protection personnel employed by any fire or police department of any municipal corporation.

Defendant makes the following points in support of its position that the trial judge did not err in sustaining defendant’s demurrer.

(1) Under the home, rule amendment to the Ore *64 gon Constitution (Art XI, § 2), defendant City has been granted exclusive authority to legislate on purely local affairs, and has done so with relation to this subject, citing State ex rel Heinig v. Milwaukie et al, 231 Or 473, 373 P2d 680 (1962).

(2) Plaintiff did not comply with the terms of defendant’s municipal legislation authorizing overtime compensation for city police .officers under certain conditions, and therefore is not entitled to any overtime pay.

(3) Even if defendant City is not exempt from state regulation under the home rule amendment, police officers are not entitled to compensation under OES 279.342 (3).

(4) Plaintiff is not entitled to recover on the theory of implied contract.

For the reasons which follow we reach the following conclusions: (1) Under the exception provided in OES 279.342 (3), quoted above, police personnel were and still are excluded from the operation of the provisions of OES 279.340; (2) plaintiff did not allege facts bringing himself and his fellow officers within the provisions of defendant City’s municipal overtime legislation; and (3) plaintiff is not entitled to recover on the theory of *65 implied contract. Therefore the trial judge correctly sustained defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s amended complaint.

In State ex rel Heinig v. Milwaukie et al, supra, our Supreme Court held that the employment and discharge of personnel in a city fire department were a matter of local, rather than state, concern and therefore the firemen’s civil service law (OES 242.702 to 242.990) was ineffective to require a home rule city to establish a state-mandated civil service system for city firemen.

Following Heinig, in Boyle v. City of Bend, 234 Or 91, 380 P2d 625 (1963), our Supreme Court had a similar question to resolve. The issue in Boyle was whether a state statute giving owners of property against which assessment for local improvements had been imposed the right to appeal to circuit court constituted an unauthorized interference in municipal affairs. The court held that the state statute authorizing an appeal to circuit court was not a matter of purely local concern, where the city charter was silent as to judicial review.

In explaining the basis of its conclusion in Boyle the court quoted with approval from Dell v. City of Lincoln, 170 Neb 176, 191, 102 NW2d 62, 73 (1960), the following:

“ £ “The preservation of order, the enforcement of law, the protection of life and property, and the suppression of crime are attributes of state sovereignty and matters of state-wide concern, * * ’ ” 234 Or at 100.

We believe that municipal police officers stand on an entirely different footing from firemen so far as state regulation is concerned. Enforcement of the crim *66 inal laws of the state is a matter of state-wide concern since the peace and safety of all citizens of the state are involved. In Oregon municipal police officers enforce state law as well as municipal ordinances. ORS 133.005, 133.225 et seq., 161.015. City officers can make arrests outside of their municipal boundaries. ORS 133.235

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Bluebook (online)
526 P.2d 599, 19 Or. App. 60, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-walter-v-city-of-canby-orctapp-1974.