Court Opinion

ID: 1999908
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 08:00:48.875438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:17:51.703377
License: Public Domain

42 Mich. App. 534 (1972)
202 N.W.2d 547
CAMPBELL
v.
CITY OF TROY.
Docket No. 12206.
Michigan Court of Appeals.
Decided August 29, 1972.
Hutson & Hutson, for plaintiff.
Burke & Sawyer, for defendant.
Before: LESINSKI, C.J., and BRONSON and TARGONSKI,[*] JJ.
BRONSON, J.
Plaintiff, Carl Campbell, was employed by defendant, City of Troy, as its Superintendent of Public Works from June 15, 1959, until his mandatory retirement on December 31, 1967. Plaintiff received an annual salary for his services. The demands of the job required him to work *536 overtime on numerous occasions. Plaintiff received no payment for this overtime work. Instead he accumulated compensatory time. At his retirement, plaintiff had accumulated 966-1/2 hours of compensatory time. He was paid for 80. He now seeks payment for the remaining 886-1/2 hours for which he received no compensation. The trial judge entered a judgment of no cause of action. We granted plaintiff leave to appeal.
When plaintiff began his employment defendant had in effect an administrative regulation governing payment of overtime. It provided that:
"Salaried employees shall not be entitled to overtime pay but may receive compensatory time-off on the basis of records kept by the department head and approved by the City Manager."
In 1960, defendant adopted a new regulation with regard to overtime. This regulation divided city employees into two groups. Plaintiff was then and at all times until his retirement a member of Group 2.[1] The pertinent regulation provided:
"Group 2 employees shall not receive overtime pay but may receive compensatory time-off on the basis of records kept by the department head and approved by the City Manager. Compensatory time shall be granted for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours per scheduled work week. For approved holidays worked during the scheduled work week, compensatory time shall be granted equal to the number of hours worked."
On January 10, 1966, defendant city adopted Resolution #66-33(A). The applicable paragraph reads as follows:
*537 "Employees in the Unclassified Service may not accumulate more than 80 hours of compensatory time. All compensatory time earned by employees prior to the adoption of these rules shall remain credited to them. Such employees, however, with more than 80 hours will be prevented from accruing additional hours. All compensatory time taken will be deducted from the total amount of compensatory time credited to the employee while no overtime worked will be added to the total until such time as the total compensatory time credited to the employee is reduced below 80 hours. Compensatory time will be taken off at a straight time ratio and such time off must be authorized by the City Manager."
Pursuant to these regulations, plaintiff accumulated 1,330-1/4 hours of compensatory time prior to the adoption of the 1966 resolution. Subsequent to this he reduced the number of hours to 966-1/2. He now contends the defendant has a duty to pay him in monies for any accumulated compensatory time off he was unable to take prior to his mandatory retirement. The basis of his contention is the existence of an implied contract in law between himself and the city. He bolsters his argument by emphasizing the inequities of the situation. Justice can only be achieved by imposinq a duty on the city to pay for the benefits it has received as a result of plaintiff's extra service. Cascaden v Magryta, 247 Mich. 267 (1929); In re Camfield Estate, 351 Mich. 422 (1958); Detroit v Highland Park, 326 Mich. 78 (1944).
Appealing as plaintiff's argument seems, closer examination finds it to be legally flawed. A contract will be implied only where no express contract exists. There cannot be an express and implied contract covering the same subject matter at the same time. Superior Ambulance Service v Lincoln Park, 19 Mich. App. 655 (1969). Plaintiff concedes that the regulations adopted by the defendant *538 city constituted an employment contract between the parties which governed the payment of overtime. The cases which plaintiff relies on have no application to the instant situation. All three involve situations where no express contracts were proven. See Cascaden v Magryta, supra; In re Camfield Estate, supra; Detroit v Highland Park, supra.
To determine whether plaintiff is entitled to monies in lieu of his unused compensatory time, we must look to the city ordinances and regulations which comprised the employment contract. If these ordinances and regulations do not provide for payment of the monies claimed, then plaintiff's claim must fail. Olson v Highland Park, 312 Mich. 688 (1945).
The applicable ordinances and regulations clearly indicate that at no time during his employment was plaintiff entitled to overtime pay. Any overtime worked could be compensated for in time off. The real issue before us is whether plaintiff had a vested right to be paid for unused compensatory time upon termination of his employment with the defendant. On this point, the ordinances and regulations are not clear.
Plaintiff bases his argument on the following language from Resolution #66-33(A): "All compensatory time earned by employees prior to the adoption of these rules shall remain credited to them". Plaintiff contends that by using this language and by paying him for 80 hours, the city recognized his right to be paid for all his unused compensatory time. We agree that this is one possible interpretation of this language. We do not believe it is the correct interpretation.
Prior to the passage of Resolution #66-33(A), no limit was placed on the number of compensatory *539 hours an employee could accumulate. The language on which plaintiff relies appears to be recognition by the defendant of the inequities that would have resulted had it stripped employees in plaintiff's classification of hours they had accumulated in excess of the 80-hour limitation. There is nothing in the language of the 1966 resolution approving the payment of any monies for unused hours. It is important to note that plaintiff has offered nothing to counter defendant's argument that prior to 1966, employees were not paid for their unused compensatory time at termination. Only after Resolution #66-33(A) was passed did this practice begin. In fact, when he retired, plaintiff accepted defendant's payment for 80 hours without complaint. Further, plaintiff participated in drafting the 1960 regulation and argued at that time for changing the word "may" to "shall". This indicates he understood that taking compensatory time off was not a matter of right. Given the history of the ordinances and regulations in question and the understanding of how overtime was to be paid to employees in plaintiff's position which existed during the years of his employment, we cannot say that defendant's interpretation of the challenged language is unreasonable or incorrect. See Satterley v City of Flint, 373 Mich. 102 (1964). Plaintiff has no vested right to be paid for his unused compensatory time.
Plaintiff nevertheless contends that defendant should be estopped from denying a duty to pay him for the time in question. He claims that this estoppel is created by the city's having accumulated his compensatory time over the years, giving him notice of the accumulated time annually, and allowing him a portion of this time as time off during his employment. We cannot accept this *540 argument. An estoppel arises only when a party acts to induce another to believe that certain facts exist and the other rightfully relies and acts on such a belief to his detriment if the former is allowed to deny such facts. Holt v Stofflet, 338 Mich. 115 (1953). Plaintiff has not proven nor alleged any action on the part of defendant or any of its officials which induced him to believe that he would be paid for his unused compensatory time at retirement. This is not a proper case for invoking the estoppel doctrine against defendant.
Affirmed.
LESINSKI, C.J., concurred.
TARGONSKI, J. (dissenting).
For purposes of this dissent I accept the majority's statement of facts with some modification. It is important to note that the resolution limiting the accumulation of overtime recognized the existence and the validity of the already accumulated overtime. Vouchers were given certifying the portion remaining unused. It is vital to the disposition of this case to recognize that, while the resolution provided for compensatory time off, this time could be liquidated only with the concurrence of the city manager. There were occasions where he refused to consent to the liquidation of overtime. As a consequence, the plaintiff in this cause was precluded from liquidating his overtime by way of compensatory time off prior to his forced retirement under the terms of the retirement program which the city has for its employees. Application for extension was denied.
Further, there was testimony that indicated that some employees, in the same category as the plaintiff, had been paid for their compensatory time in excess of 80 hours in order to reduce their accumulated *541 compensatory hours to 80. These payments and adjustments were made shortly after the new ordinance was passed. Also, we deem it significant that upon the plaintiff's retirement the city did pay him for 80 hours of the overtime although the resolution and applicable ordinances are silent on any authority for payment for any overtime. It is significant that in its past dealings with its amployees, the city has recognized that overtime may be paid for in money. There is no valid reason shown why a limit of 80 hours must be placed on this payment. An acceptance of services implies a promise to pay therefor at the established rate. Detroit v Highland Park, 326 Mich. 78, 99 (1949). The city cannot retain the benefits of the plaintiff's services without compensation therefor. DiPonio v Garden City, 320 Mich. 230, 239 (1948).
There was no specific contract to pay money for services rendered by way of overtime. However, from all of the attendant facts, we believe a contract must be implied between these parties. To do otherwise would be to change the contract of employment. That such a change cannot be made unilaterally is set forth in 43 Am Jur Public Officers, § 348, pp 140-141, which provides as follows:
"But after services have been rendered by a public officer under a law, resolution, or ordinance which fixes the rate of compensation, there arises an implied contract to pay for those services at that rate. There is in such case a completed contract the obligation of which is perfect and rests on the remedies the law gives for its enforcement. This obligation cannot be impaired by any act of the legislature or other body changing the compensation of the office."
43 Am Jur, Public Officers, § 348, cited above, based on all of the facts of this case, in my opinion *542 establishes the existence of an implied contract in this case. The law of implied contracts in Michigan was summarized in Moll v Wayne County, 332 Mich. 274, 278-279 (1952), as follows:
"`There are 2 kinds of implied contracts: one implied in fact, and the other implied in law. The first does not exist unless the minds of the parties meet, by reason of words or conduct. The second is quasi or constructive, and does not require a meeting of minds, but is imposed by fiction of law, to enable justice to be accomplished, even in case no contract was intended.
"`In order to afford the remedy demanded by exact justice and adjust such remedy to a cause of action, the law sometimes indulges in the fiction of a quasi or constructive contract, with an implied obligation to pay for benefits received. The courts, however, employ the fiction with caution, and will never permit it in cases where contracts, implied in fact, must be established, or substitute one promissor or debtor for another.' Cascaden v Magryta, 247 Mich. 267 [270 (1929)], quoted with approval in Detroit v Highland Park, 326 Mich. 78 [100 (1944)].
"`A contract implied in law is quasi or constructive, and does not require a meeting of minds, but is imposed by fiction of law to enable justice to be accomplished, even where no contract was intended.

* * *
"`The essential elements of a quasi contractual obligation, upon which a recovery may be had, are the receipt of a benefit by a defendant from a plaintiff, which benefit it is inequitable that the defendant retain.' Herrmann v Gleason 126 F2d 936 [939, 940 (CA 6, 1942)]." (Emphasis in original.)
Plaintiff here rendered valuable services to the defendant which services were accepted by the defendant. What the plaintiff may have thought as to his right to compensation for accumulated compensatory hours is irrelevant and immaterial. What is important is the action of the defendant *543 city itself. The important point specifically is the fact that the defendant city decreased some of the Group 2 employees' accumulation to 80 hours and paid them for the amount decreased shortly after the adoption of the ordinance in question. This action was in addition to the actions set forth hereinabove with reference to this plaintiff and other similarly situated employees in his group classification.
There is no question based on the record, and such fact is not contested by the defendant city, that the plaintiff at the time of his retirement was not compensated for 866-1/2 hours credited to his compensatory overtime account. Based on his final salary, a debt of $5,540.63 was due and owing to the plaintiff. This matter should be remanded to the circuit court for entry of a judgment in that amount plus interest from date of retirement to date of payment. As a matter of public policy, the good faith of government in its treatment of its contractual obligations should never be less sacred than that of individuals. Webb v Wakefield Twp, 239 Mich. 521, 527 (1927). I would therefore reverse and remand.
NOTES
[*]  Former circuit judge, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment pursuant to Const 1963, art 6, § 23 as amended in 1968.
[1]  In 1964 the City of Troy adopted a civil service ordinance. Under its terms, plaintiff's position was exempted from civil service protection.