DocketNumber: No. 13,021.
Judges: Campbell, Butler, Bouck
Filed Date: 5/7/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
This controversy is between Fred W. Zarnow, a policeman of the City and County of Denver, as plaintiff, against Carl S. Milliken, as manager of safety and excise, William McNichols, as auditor of the City and County of Denver, and George D. Begole, as mayor of the City and County of Denver, as defendants. It arose out of a refusal by Milliken, as such manager, permanently to appoint Zarnow as a police officer of Denver. To secure such permanent appointment, to which he claims he is entitled, Zarnow thereupon filed his petition in mandamus in the Denver district court whereby he sought and obtained an alternative writ of mandamus, which, upon final hearing, was made absolute, requiring and directing Milliken as manager of safety and excise to make Zarnow a permanent patrolman of the Denver city police forced The city authorities, respondents below, plaintiffs in error here, are prosecuting this writ of error to this adverse decree of the district court.
Included in the bill of exceptions and apparently as a part thereof is a so-called stipulation of the parties substantially as follows: It is agreed between counsel that the following" facts were admitted: That on, before and after April 16, 1929, Leslie M. Bratton was the manager of safety and excise of the City and County of Denver; that on, before and after June 29, 1931, Carl S. Milliken was the duly and regularly appointed manager of safety and successor to Bratton; that on or about April 16,1929, Fred W. Zarnow — the defendant in error on this review —possessed all the requisites provided for and necessary, to be eligible as provided by the ordinances of the City and County of Denver, the charter provisions thereof, and the rules and regulations of the civil service commission of the City and County of Denver, to take an examination for and be appointed a patrolman in the classified service; that on said April 16, 1929, the said
Notwithstanding the somewhat ambiguous and uncertain language of this so-called agreement, we have thus reproduced it, in substance, for what it is worth, and have done so because of our conclusion as to the merits of the controversy, which is adverse to the conclusion of the civil service commission and Zarnow.
Milliken, as manager of safety, proceeded in this matter and relies for his action in dismissing Zarnow, upon section 234 of article XV of the charter of the City and County of Denver, which reads: “Every original appointment in the classified service shall be for six months, at the end of which time, if the conduct and capacity of the person appointed have been satisfactory, he shall be permanently appointed; otherwise he shall be out of the service.”
Section 238 of the Denver charter, 1927 edition, the same being section 204 of the original charter of the City and County of Denver, Zarnow contends provides the
Supplemental to section 238 of the charter, the civil service commission adopted rule XI, paragraphs 1 to 10 of which relate to the method to pursue in the removal from office of a city employee. In substance section 238 and the rules of the civil service commission passed in pursuance thereof provide that certain persons within the classified service may be removed only after notice and a hearing by the civil service commission. One of these rules provides for notice and a hearing as an essential condition to the validity of a removal. If section 234 is the provision of the charter that is applicable here, and we think it is, the action of the manag’er of safety in removing Zarnow from the service was valid. If section 238, in connection with the rules of the civil service commission, governs, the removal was improper. The controlling question therefore is: Which section of
As already observed, the discussion here has taken a wide range far beyond the necessities of the case. In our view section 234 is the applicable provision of the Denver charter to the case now under consideration. It is conceded that Zarnow at the time of his removal had not received a permanent appointment in the classified service of the city. In other words, his appointment was probational or temporary only. Section 234 expressly provides that every original appointment in the classified service shall be for six months, at the end of which time, if the conduct and capacity of the person appointed shall be satisfactory, he shall be permanently appointed; otherwise he shall be out of the service. One of the paragraphs of rule XI of the civil service commission provides that the person selected for appointment under section 234 shall receive a certificate of appointment for a probational period of six months, and this rule further provides that if any probationer shall upon a fair trial be found incompetent or disqualified for the performance of the duties of the position he is filling, the appointing officer shall certify the same in writing to the commission. There is a further provision in this rule that upon the approval of the commission the probationer should be dropped from the service. When Zarnow was appointed a probationary policeman by Bratton he received from that officer a certificate of appointment for a probationary period of six months. On June 29, 1931, before the expiration of the six months period, petitioner was notified in writing by Milliken, successor of Bratton as manager of safety and excise, that on June 30, 1931, the end of his probationary period as a police patrolman, he, the petitioner, would be dropped from the pay roll of the police department of the city, and at the same time Milliken as such manager so notified the civil service commission as rule VI requires, that the petitioner would be dropped from the pay roll of the police department of
That Milliken as snch manager was the appointing power is not questioned; that he had the right to discharge Zarnow at the end of his probationary term it seems to us is without question, and this discretionary right of the manager is not subject to review by the civil service commission. The power so to act is expressly conferred upon Milliken by a provision of the Denver charter. If, however, it be said that under the rules enacted by the civil service commission its concurrence in such removal was required, we say that the charter of the city of Denver is its organic law. If there is any provision in the rules of the civil service commission inconsistent with or antagonistic to the provision of section 234 of the charter which confers the appointing power upon the manager of safety and excise, the charter provision, and not the rules of the civil service commission, governs. We hold, however, that the rules of the civil service commission invoked by Zarnow are inapplicable. They do not affect a probationary appointee discharged at the expiration of his probationary period under and by virtue of section 234 of the charter. It seems too plain for further discussion that section 234 of the charter of Denver clearly authorized Milliken, as manager of safety and excise, at the expiration of the probationary period, either permanently to appoint Zarnow as a patrolman or to refuse to do so. Milliken did not see fit permanently to appoint Zarnow but, on the contrary, he discharged him, and by the express provision of section 234 Zarnow thereafter was out of the service.
We are not without express authority for this conclusion by previous decisons of this court. In Shinn v. People, 59 Colo. 509, 149 Pac. 623, the case there considered involved an interpretation of the Civil Service Act. In an able opinion by Mr. Justice Bailey it was said: “The scope of the application of this law is to be
The failure of Milliken to appoint Zarnow permanently at the expiration of his probationary term of appointment is not the equivalent of a discharge from the classified service. Section 238 of the Municipal Code, claimed to be the section governing this case, is wholly inapplicable to the case before us of a probationary appointee who fails to receive a permanent appointment at the expiration of his probationary period.
Directly in support of our conclusion is the case of Sowers v. Pitcher, 63 Colo. 139, 165 Pac. 253, involving the same section as that now before us. It was an action in mandamus to compel payment of salary which the plaintiff in error claimed to be due her after her discharge from a position in the county treasurer’s office which was then under civil service. At page 142 of the opinion the court refers with approval to the decision in Shinn v. People, supra, and says: “Plaintiff came within the classified service only when she took and passed the civil service examination, and accepted employment thereunder, as a probationary appointee. Her subsequent discharge, within the six months ’ probationary period, was, by express charter provision, within the discretion of defendant, and was therefore lawful.”
Nisbet v. Frincke, 66 Colo. 1, 179 Pac. 867, was an action in mandamus to restore the defendant in error Princke to her official position as matron of the city jail of the City and County of Denver, from which position it is alleged she was unlawfully discharged by the commissioner of safety. In the elaborate opinion which was written by Mr. Justice Scott, we find the following
That is exactly the case now before us. In the same opinion at page 7 the court clearly points out the difference between the rule that is applicable in a probationary appointment and the rule that governs after the expiration of the period of probation, stating, in effect, that before the end of the probationary period the appointing officer has the unqualified power of dismissal, but after the period of probation expires the appointee is in the classified service and entitled to the protection guaranteed by the charter and rules of the civil service commission. Following- our previous decisions and the plain and unambiguous provisions of the charter of the City and County of Denver, we hold that the order of the manager of safety and excise in removing- Zarnow from office was clearly authorized by the charter of the City and County of Denver. It is asserted by counsel for plaintiffs in error in their brief, and not denied by opposing counsel, that the method of procedure adopted by Manager of Safety Milliken in discharging Zarnow, is the same as that which the acting manager of safety and excise has followed ever since the Denver city charter was enacted.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court with instructions to dismiss the proceedings at the costs of defendant in error.
Mr. Justice Holland not participating.
Mr. Justice Butler and Mr. Justice Bouck dissent.