Ziemer v. City of New Orleans

197 So. 754, 195 La. 1054, 1940 La. LEXIS 1142
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1940
DocketNo. 35791.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 197 So. 754 (Ziemer v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ziemer v. City of New Orleans, 197 So. 754, 195 La. 1054, 1940 La. LEXIS 1142 (La. 1940).

Opinions

PONDER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment restoring the pay of the members of the Fire Department of the City of New Orleans to the basis on which they were paid in the years 1929 and 1930.

The plaintiffs, about 620 members of the Fire Department of the City of New Orleans, instituted this suit against the Board of Commissioners of the Fire Department of the City of New Orleans and the City of New Orleans, seeking to have their pay restored to the basis on which they were paid in the years 1929 and 1930, and to recover a large amount of back pay which constituted the difference between what they were actually paid after the year 1930 and the amount they received in the years 1929-1930.

The plaintiffs’ petition is somewhat lengthy and we will only recite .in effect what is contained in the allegations necessary to the determination of the issues presented -herein, viz.:

During the years 1919 and 1920, the City appropriated $673,690.80, each year, for the support of the Fire Department, and the sums of $656,529.38 and $663,731.48, respectively, were used for that purpose. At that time members of the fire force of the City were paid monthly salaries as follows: Laddermen, pipemen, hosemen $100; tillermen $106.25; engineers $118.75; lieutenants $111; captains $125. An amendment to the Constitution of this State was adopted in 1921, being Article 14, Section 25, authorizing the City to levy a special tax not exceeding 2 mills on all the taxable property in the City, the avails of which was dedicated to the maintenance of a double platoon system in the Fire Department, a triple platoon system in the Police Department, and for an increase in the pay of the officers and men in the departments. After the amendment went into effect the Board of Commissioners in 1921 created the two platoon system and raised the salaries of all the members of the Fire Department, with some exceptions as to new appointees. It is alleged that all the statutes pertaining to the Fire Department make it the mandatory duty of the City to adequately maintain an efficient fire department. The City has never segregated the proceeds of the tax but has merged them with its general funds and has diverted part of the proceeds to other uses, thereby neglecting to pay the members of .the Fire Department the amount of the appropria *1060 tions made in preceding years plus one-half of the tax. The City appropriated an amount each/ year equal to its former appropriation, plus only part of the proceeds of the tax. Section 25 of Article 14 of the Constitution was amended in 1928, increasing the tax to 3 mills for the support of the Fire and Police departments. The salaries of members of the Fire Department were increased on January 1, 1930, whereby the privates or laddermen received $157 a month and the other members received a proportionate increase in their salaries. Since the year 1933 the City has appropriated an amount less than its prior appropriations plus one-half of the proceeds of the tax. It is alleged that various reductions were made in the salaries of the members of the Fire Department since that time until 1935 and that reductions have remained in effect from that date.

The petitioners pray that the one-half of the avails of the excess over 2 mills of the tax be segregated and applied exclusively to the payment of increases in their salaries; that the City be ordered to appropriate annually an adequate sum to maintain the department in addition to the avails of one-half of the excess over the 2 mill tax; for the restoration of their pay to the basis prevailing in the years 1929-1930; and for an auditor to be appointed to ascertain the amount of the back pay due them and report same to the court.

The defendants interposed a plea of estoppel to the claim for back pay on the ground that, if there was an improper reduction in the salaries, the plaintiffs are estopped from making any claim for reimbursement because they have accepted their pay every fifteen days, as the amounts were reduced, from January, 1935, up to the present time, without protest.

The answer of the defendants is in effect a denial of the plaintiffs’ claims. The City averred that it had appropriated and paid the Board of Commissioners which in turn had paid the plaintiffs all that was due them.

On trial, the lower court rendered judgment against the City, ordering and directing that one-half the proceeds derived from the 1 mill tax, provided for in the constitutional amendment of 1928, be segregated and kept in a separate account, and paid monthly to the Board of Commissioners for the purpose of increasing the pay of the members of the department above their pay in 1928; that the proceeds of the 2 mill tax provided for in the constitutional amendments of 1921 and 1928 be segregated and kept in a separate account, and the proportion thereof of the Fire Department paid monthly to the Board of Commissioners ; that the City appropriate annually out of its general fund a sum adequate to maintain the Fire Department, and in no event, shall that amount be less than was required for the maintenance of such department prior to 1921; that the City place in the separate accounts of the segregated millage an amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment for increased pay since October 6, 1939, and pay same to said Board of Commissioners, and from and after the date of the judgment to segregate the millage and pay same monthly as above directed. The court gave judgment against *1062 the Board of Commissioners ordering it to distribute the avails of the % mill tax as an increase in the wages of the members of the Fire Department, that the increase be a per capita increase, and that it be added to the rates of pay which were in existence prior to 'the 1928 constitutional amendment, so as to make the monthly rates of pay from October 6, 1939, as follows: Laddermen and hosemen $157.50; tillermen and chauffeurs $163.75; lieutenants $168.75; engineers $176.50; captains $182.50; and other grades 'at the similar rate of $32.50 plus the wage prior to 1928. The judgment provided that the amount derived from the % mill tax in future years be distributed in the amounts over or under $32.50 per month as lower or higher assessments may vary the amount available. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants maintaining the plea of estoppel by laches, insofar as it affected the demands for back pay, and rejected their claims for such.

The plaintiffs and the defendants have both appealed from the judgment.

■ It appears from the record that the monthly salaries of the officers and men of the Fire Department, fixed in compliance with Act 58 of 1910, were: ladder-men, pipemen and‘hosemen $70; lieutenants $75; engineers $85; and captains $85: In 1919 and 1920 the laddermen, pipemen and hosemen received a monthly salary of $100; tillermen $105; lieutenants $105; engineers $115; and the captains $120. In 1921, the year the constitutional amendment of 1921 went into effect, the salaries were increased to the following amounts per month: laddermen, pipemen and hosemen $125; tiller-men, chauffeurs, and lieutenants $131.25; engineers $143.75, and the captains $150. This same monthly rate of pay was followed from the year 1922 through the year 1928. In the year 1929, after the constitutional amendment of 1928, they received the‘following monthly pay: ladder-men, pipemen and hosemen $157; tiller-men and chauffeurs $163.25; lieutenants $168; engineers $175.75 and the captains $182.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 754, 195 La. 1054, 1940 La. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ziemer-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1940.