delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiff in error, Charles H. Gersch, filed in the superior court of Cook county his petition in the name of the People, making the city of Chicago, the trustees of the police pension fund of the city, and city officials, defendants, and praying for a writ of mandamus commanding the trustees to forthwith enroll his name as one of the beneficiaries of the police pension fund from March 15, 1918. The court sustained a demurrer to the petition and dismissed it at the cost of the. relator.
The petition sets out the several acts under which the city of Chicago was organized as a municipality, beginning with the act revising the charter in 1863 and including the general act for the incorporation of cities, villages and towns, under which the city is now organized. It also sets out ordinances providing for a police department and making appropriations for the payment of members of that department, and alleges that on September 11, 1874, the relator was appointed a police patrolman and served as such until July 1, 1893, when he was promoted to the rank of patrol sergeant and continued as such until June 31, (?) 1895, when he was again promoted to the rank of sergeant of police and continued as such sergeant of police from thence hitherto, never having legally been reduced or removed therefrom by due process of law; that the General Assembly passed an act, in force July 1, 1887, to provide for the setting apart, formation and disbursement of a police pension fund in cities, villages and incorporated towns, by which any person who should at that time or thereafter have been duly appointed and sworn and have served for the period of twenty years or more upon the police force, should,, after becoming fifty years of age and his services having ceased, be paid from such pension fund a yearly pension equal to one-half the amount of the salary attached to the rank which he may have held for one year next preceding the expiration of said term of years; that on July 31, 1909, LeRoy T. Stewart.was appointed superintendent of police of the city, and thereafter the relator was notified to appear before the civil service trial board, which had no jurisdiction over him because he was not a sergeant of police under and by virtue of a civil service examination; that he refused to submit to the jurisdiction of the board and the board directed Stewart to discharge him, and that he was declared discharged by Stewart, superintendent of police, on December 2, 1910. It further alleges that the relator made application on March 15, 1918, to the board'of trustees for a pension from that date, after having made a demand upon the city of Chicago, the mayor and the superintendent of police to restore his name upon the roster of the police force with the rank of sergeant of police and upon the payroll, to the end that he might receive his salary therefor from month to month.
The relator sued out a writ of error from this court and has assigned for error the sustaining of the demurrer and dismissing his petition, on the ground that the attempted discharge or removal from the police force set forth in the petition was null and void and he was thereby deprived of his rights, in violation of section 2 of article 2 of the constitution of this State and section i of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States.
The petition alleges that the attempted discharge by the superintendent of police from the police force was null and void for want of jurisdiction in the civil service trial board, and therefore the relator has continued as sergeant of police from thence hitherto, never having been removed from that position by due process of law. If the relator is right in that conclusion he is not entitled to a pension, which is payable only to persons who have served on the police force for twenty years or more and have ceased to be members of the police department. The petition also alleges as a conclusion of law that having served for twenty years or more upon the police force the right of the relator to a pension became a fixed statutory right, of which he could not be deprived except by due process of law. If the first conclusion of the relator is incorrect and he ceased to be a member of the police force on December 2, 1910, he would only be entitled to a yearly pension equal to one-half of the amount of salary attached to the rank of sergeant of police at that time and would not be entitled to a pension equal to one-half of the salary attached to the office on March 15, 1918, which he claimed. If it be conceded that the relator had acquired on December 2, 1910, the right to a pension, of which he could not be deprived by the trial board or superintendent of police, the right was to a pension at the rate then allowed by the law. Whether the relator is still a police sergeant and member of the police force and therefore entitled to his salary from month to month, or was removed on December 2, 1910, no right secured to him by the bill of rights or the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States has been in any manner infringed upon by the refusal of the trustees of the police pension fund to accede to his demand for a pension equal to one-half of the salary of a sergeant of police on March 15, 1918.
The judgment is affirmed.
judgment affirmed.