Summary
distinguishing "an erroneous exercise of the court's equitable jurisdiction" from "an action beyond that equitable jurisdiction"
Summary of this case from Feehan v. MarconeOpinion
Although the Court of Common Pleas has both legal and equitable jurisdiction, it will not exercise its equitable power to restrain or relieve against proceedings for the removal of public officers because title to public office is a legal rather than equitable question. The plaintiff, having been dismissed from his position as patrolman by the Waterbury board of police commissioners, sought a mandatory injunction requiring that board to reinstate him. He also sought money damages, but his complaint contained no allegation of lost earnings or of any theory on which the money damages were claimed or could be awarded. Although the equitable and legal claims of relief in the complaint were demurrable, the defendants interposed a plea in abatement claiming that the appeal was tardy under the statute ( 52-7) and that the relief sought was not available to the plaintiff. The court sustained the plea in abatement on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction. The plaintiff failed to amend or otherwise plead over. Held: 1. There being no right to equitable intervention in actions involving title to public office, the court correctly held that the plaintiff was not entitled to the equitable relief sought. 2. The court's procedural error in sustaining the improper plea in abatement on the mistaken ground that it lacked jurisdiction, having achieved the same basically correct result as would have been reached had the defendants filed a demurrer, was not shown to have been material and was not therefore ground for reversal. The legal claim for money damages was treated by all parties and the trial court as ancillary to that for an equitable reinstatement so that when the plaintiff failed on that claim, the whole complaint fell. When damages are sought for lost salary resulting from a dismissal claimed to be wrongful, probably the best practice is to join the claim for the lost salary as ancillary relief in an appeal or other proper proceeding for the determination of the wrongfulness of the dismissal.
Argued October 7, 1966
Decided November 23, 1966
Action for an injunction to restore the plaintiff to his position as patrolman in the Waterbury police department, and for other relief, brought to the Court of Common Pleas for the judicial district of Waterbury, where the defendants' plea in abatement was sustained, Wall, J., and, the plaintiff failing to plead over, judgment was thereafter rendered dismissing the action, from which the plaintiff appealed to this court. No error.
Peter Marcuse, for the appellant (plaintiff).
Raymond J. Quinn, Jr., corporation counsel, with whom, on the brief, was John F. Phelan, assistant corporation counsel, for the appellees (defendants).
The complaint alleges that on March 29, 1963, the defendants, acting in their capacity as the board of police commissioners of the city of Waterbury, hereinafter sometimes referred to as the board, after notice and hearing, dismissed the plaintiff from his position as a patrolman and notified him of their action. The plaintiff thereupon instituted an appeal to the Superior Court.
The appeal to the Superior Court, on a motion to erase, was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction of the subject matter. General Statutes 52-7. No appeal was taken from that decision. See Riley v. Board of Police Commissioners, 145 Conn. 1, 6, 137 A.2d 759; Willard v. West Hartford, 135 Conn. 303, 305, 63 A.2d 847. Therefore we need give it no further consideration.
Thereafter, the plaintiff instituted the instant action in the Court of Common Pleas, seeking (1) a mandatory injunction requiring the board to reinstate him in his former position, and (2) "[m]onetary damages in the amount of $10,000.00". The defendant interposed a plea in abatement, which, in effect, was a plea to the jurisdiction under Practice Book 93. It was based on two main grounds: (1) The plaintiff failed to avail himself of the right of appeal to the Court of Common Pleas (under General Statutes 52-7) within the thirty days allowed. (2) Mandatory injunctive relief reinstating the plaintiff in office is a type of relief not available to him. From a judgment abating the action, the plaintiff took the instant appeal.
No claim has been made, and indeed there is no basis for any, that the plaintiff is not a public officer. The title to public office is a legal rather than an equitable question, and therefore equity does not act to restrain or relieve against proceedings for the removal of public officers. Bartlett v. Rockville, 150 Conn. 428, 430, 190 A.2d 690, and cases cited; 42 Am.Jur., Public Officers, 144. Indeed this rule has been the recognized law of Connecticut since at least as far back as 1887. Hinckley v. Breen, 55 Conn. 119, 120, 9 A. 31.
In support of his contention that the Court of Common Pleas may properly grant him the equitable relief he seeks, the plaintiff relies on Tremp v. Patten, 132 Conn. 120, 42 A.2d 834; Riley v. Board of Police Commissioners, 147 Conn. 113, 157 A.2d 590; and Bartlett v. Rockville, supra, 431. None of these cases supports his position or overcomes the settled rule denying equitable relief. Neither in the Tremp case nor in the Riley case was any equitable relief given. In each, judgment was rendered for the defendant.
In the opinion in the Bartlett case there is language on page 431 concerning the Tremp and Riley cases on which the plaintiff has seized, and which he claims holds that in any case where an attempt to appeal to the Superior Court fails because it was taken to the wrong court, an equitable, injunctive action lies in the Court of Common Pleas to afford the review and redress which the plaintiff would have had if he had taken a proper appeal to that court. Obviously this dictum was not intended to receive the construction which the plaintiff has put upon it. If the language were fairly susceptible of such an interpretation, we could not follow it. One cannot, by ignoring established, available procedure, acquire equitable rights which he would not otherwise have. The actual holding in the Bartlett case clearly follows the general rule denying a right of equitable intervention in actions involving the title to public office. And the rule applies whether there is, or is not, a statutory right of appeal from the action of an administrative body or commission in suspending or dismissing a public officer. Id., 430. The court below was correct in holding that the equitable relief sought was not available to this plaintiff under established equitable principles.
Technically, both parties and the court below seem to have confounded the jurisdiction or power of the Court of Common Pleas to grant the plaintiff the equitable relief demanded `with its right so to do under established equitable principles. The confusion seems to have arisen from the use of the ambiguous word "jurisdiction" in the statement of the rule denying the right to equitable relief in a proceeding such as this. See Bartlett v. Rockville, supra.
The Court of Common Pleas has both legal and equitable jurisdiction, and it may grant legal and equitable relief in one action. General Statutes 52-6, 52-1. It also has jurisdiction over appeals from the doings of municipal boards. General Statutes 52-7. Thus, whether an ousted public officer institutes an action at law or in equity, or takes an appeal from his dismissal, the Court of Common Pleas has jurisdiction of the subject matter in issue, which is the plaintiff's right to the office, together with the power to grant any appropriate ancillary relief, provided that any money damages demanded are, as was the case here, within its jurisdiction. Tremp v. Patten, 132 Conn. 120, 128, 42 A.2d 834. In that case, the plaintiff sought an injunction, in the Court of Common Pleas, against proceedings to remove him from what was alleged to be a public office. The trial resulted in a judgment on the merits for the defendants. On appeal we held that the trial court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and that the plaintiff's prayer for injunctive relief, although it was a type of relief not properly available in such an action, created no invalidity in the judgment in that case, since judgment had been rendered for the defendants, and, necessarily, no injunctive relief had been granted. To the same effect was our decision in Riley v. Board of Police Commissioners, 147 Conn. 113, 115, 157 A.2d 590. Cf. Olcott v. Pendleton, 128 Conn. 292, 296, 22 A.2d 633. Thus, although it would have been erroneous in the Tremp and Riley cases, as it would have been in the instant case, to have granted equitable relief, it would not have been an act beyond the jurisdiction or power of the Court of Common Pleas. The granting of such relief would be an erroneous exercise of the court's equitable jurisdiction, but it would not be an action beyond that equitable jurisdiction. Tremp v. Patten, supra. Since there was no lack of jurisdiction, the court below committed a procedural error in sustaining the plea in abatement. The defendants should have interposed a demurrer to the claim for equitable relief. Practice Book 108; German v. German, 122 Conn. 155, 165, 188 A. 429.
A further procedural problem, arising from the inclusion of the claim for money damages, perhaps should be considered. "[W]here a public officer is wrongfully suspended or expelled, he is entitled to recover the salary accruing during the period he is thus unlawfully removed from his office." McDermott v. New Haven, 107 Conn. 451, 453, 140 A. 826, quoted with approval in McKeithen v. Stamford, 149 Conn. 619, 621, 183 A.2d 280. But such damages are recoverable only where the suspension or expulsion is wrongful. If an independent action, seeking only the recovery of money damages for the loss of salary, is instituted, without any attempt to secure reinstatement or any direct adjudication of the wrongfulness of the suspension or discharge, as in the McDermott and McKeithen cases, in order to permit recovery of lost salary, the suspension or expulsion must have been wrongful not only in the sense that it was erroneous but also in the sense that it was void. See McKeithen v. Stamford, supra, 626. This rule obtains because an independent action seeking only recovery of lost salary amounts to a collateral attack on the determination of suspension or dismissal, and such a collateral attack, even in the case of a judgment of a court, is permissible only when the allegations of the complaint show that the judgment is not merely voidable but void. Rathkopf v. Pearson, 148 Conn. 260, 265, 170 A.2d 135; Restatement, Judgments 7, comments a and b, and 9 and 11; 1 Freeman, Judgments (5th Ed.) 306. As hereinafter more particularly pointed out, no such allegations are in the plaintiff's complaint. Thus, to what extent a collateral attack may be made on a decision of an administrative tribunal where extrinsic evidence is necessary to show that the decision was void, we need not now determine. See Lampson Lumber Co. v. Hoer, 139 Conn. 294, 296, 93 A.2d 143; 2 Am.Jur.2d, Administrative Law, 493-495; Restatement, Judgments, p. 2; 1 Freeman, op. cit. 397.
It necessarily follows that there can be no recovery of salary or compensation during the period of wrongful suspension or discharge, where the discharge was erroneous but not void, until its wrongfulness has been established in an appropriate proceeding. Terre Haute v. Burns, 69 Ind. App. 7, 15, 116 N.E. 604; 62 C.J.S., Municipal Corporations, 524. Probably the best practice is to join a claim for the recovery of lost salary as ancillary relief in an appeal or other proper proceeding for the determination of the wrongfulness of the discharge. Then if the wrongfulness is established, the loss of salary properly proven can be compensated in the form of damages. This method seems to have been adopted in McNamara v. New Britain, 137 Conn. 616, 618, 79 A.2d 819, and in Riley v. Board of Police Commissioners, 147 Conn. 113, 114, 157 A.2d 590. It appears to have been the method attempted here. It is clear from the conduct of all parties and the court below that the claim for damages was treated as ancillary to that for an equitable reinstatement so that, unless the plaintiff prevailed on his claim for equitable relief, the whole complaint would fall. There is no other reasonable explanation for the abatement of the entire action without mention by court or counsel of the prayer for legal relief in the form of money damages. Furthermore, nowhere in the entire complaint is there any allegation either of loss of salary or even suggestive of any theory on which the money damages were claimed or could be awarded. It follows that the complaint was clearly demurrable insofar as it sought recovery of money damages.
There remains the question of the proper disposition of this appeal in the light of the procedural errors in which it has become involved.
It is settled law that the parties cannot try a case under one theory and maintain an appeal on a different theory. McNamara v. New Britain, supra. In the instant case the plaintiff confined his claim in the court below, and his brief in this court, to the basic claim that the equitable remedy of reinstatement which he sought was available to him. The claim was erroneous for the reasons already pointed out. Had the defendants properly attacked the claim for equitable relief by demurrer, they would necessarily have prevailed on that issue.
The plaintiff made no attempt to amend in the court below after the plea in abatement had been decided against him. Practice Book 97. Instead he brought the decision up for review on appeal. Obviously, he would have pursued the same course had the defendants properly attacked the plaintiff's right to equitable relief by demurrer. Practice Book 131; Goldfarb v. Cohen, 92 Conn. 277, 281, 102 A. 649. It would be a hypertechnical waste of judicial time and effort to remand this case for the overruling of the improper plea in abatement when the same basically correct result was achieved as would have been reached had the defendants properly filed a demurrer. Especially is this true since the plaintiff has raised no claim in this court, nor was it raised in the court below, as to any of the procedural irregularities hereinbefore mentioned. The procedural errors and irregularities of the parties and the court below were not shown to have been material. There is, consequently, no reversible error. See Lampson Lumber Co. v. Hoer, 139 Conn. 294, 300, 93 A.2d 143.