Abbott v. McNutt

22 P.2d 510, 218 Cal. 225, 89 A.L.R. 1109, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 485
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1933
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14871.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 510 (Abbott v. McNutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbott v. McNutt, 22 P.2d 510, 218 Cal. 225, 89 A.L.R. 1109, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 485 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

*227 THOMPSON, J.

Application for a writ of mandamus. At the general election held in November, 1932', the electors of San Mateo County ratified and adopted a county charter theretofore prepared and proposed by a board of freeholders. In January, 1933, the state legislature, by concurrent resolution of the senate and assembly, approved said charter. Among other things, the charter provides for a chief executive officer, in effect a county manager, to be known as the county executive. This officer is to be appointed by the board of supervisors of the county. However, an initial or preliminary step to the selection of such officer is the consideration of qualifications of applicants for the office and a determination of the five candidates found to possess the highest qualifications therefor, if five there be, otherwise so many thereof, not less than two, as are found to possess the necessary qualifications. The duty of considering and determining the qualifications of applicants for the position of county executive is imposed upon and vested in a “qualification board” created by section 2 of article IV of the charter. It is the constitutionality of this section of the charter that is here brought in question. The membership of the “qualification board” therein provided for is made to consist of the two judges of the Superior Court of San Mateo County, or their nominees in the event they, or either of them, decline to serve, the county superintendent of schools, a fourth person to be selected by the aforementioned three persons, and a fifth person to be selected by the board of supervisors. The members of the “qualification board” so constituted are required to take the constitutional oath of office, serve without compensation, and are charged with the duty of soliciting and obtaining applications of candidates for appointment to the office of county executive and thereafter submitting to the board of supervisors, the appointing body, a list of persons “qualified” to fill the position. In the event the board of supervisors is unable to agree upon an appointment from the list so submitted “the clerk of said board of supervisors shall notify the qualification board of such fact, and it shall thereupon be and become the duty of the qualification board to solicit and obtain, and to select and submit, to the board of supervisors, other candidates possessing the aforesaid *228 qualifications, . . . The exercise of such power by said qualification board shall not be exhausted by a single reference, nor until an appointment shall in fact have been made by said board of supervisors.” Section 3 of article IV of the charter provides that upon an appointment being made to the office of county executive the “qualification board shall be automatically dissolved”. In the event of a subsequent vacancy in the office of county executive “a new qualification board” is to be selected in the manner above described.

The two respondent judges of the superior court who, by virtue of their office as judge, are made members of this “qualification board” decline to act as members of said board until it is judicially determined that with propriety they may so act. Hence this mandamus proceeding instituted by the Superintendent of Schools of San Mateo County, also a member of said board, to test the validity of the above cited charter provision, in the light of certain provisions of our state Constitution.

Section 1, article III, of the Constitution provides: “The powers of the government of the state of California shall be divided into three separate departments—the legislative, executive, and judicial; and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any functions appertaining to either of the others, except as in this Constitution expressly directed or permitted.”

As regards this particular provision the respondents in their points and authorities submitted in support of their general demurrer to the petition concede that if this “were the only provision of the Constitution upon the subject, it is not to be doubted that judicial officers of the state might be appointed or elected to other offices of inferior and subordinate governmental institutions or instrumentalities, such as cities or counties, provided, only, that in exercising the power of these other offices they do not exercise any function pertaining to the legislative or executive departments of the state”. It was so held by this court in the cases of People v. Provines, 34 Cal. 521, and Staude v. Election Commrs., 61 Cal. 313, 322, 323.

Respondents contend, however, that the present proceeding turns solely upon the question of whether or not membership upon the “qualification board”, above described, *229 constitutes such an office or public employment as judges of the superior court are made ineligible to by the provisions of section 18 of article VI of the Constitution”. That section reads:

“The justices of the Supreme Court and of the District Courts of Appeal and the judges of the superior courts and the municipal courts shall be ineligible to any other office or public employment than a judicial office or employment during the term for which they shall have been elected or appointed, and no justice or judge of a court of record shall practice law in or out of court during his continuance in office; provided, however, that a judge of the superior court or of a municipal court shall be eligible to election or appointment to a public office during the time for which he may be elected, and the acceptance of any other office shall be deemed to be a resignation from the office held by said judge.”

The phrase “any other office or public employment” necessarily has application to any other public office or public employment, as distinguished from a purely private office or private employment. The only constitutional inhibition against the private employment of judicial officers has to do with the practice of the law. Research fails to disclose any case construing or applying that portion of the constitutional provision above quoted. However, the purpose and policy underlying such a provision is cogently stated by Justice Cardoza in In re Richardson, 247 N. Y. 401 [160 N. E. 655, 661], wherein the following appears: “The policy is to Conserve the time of the judges for the performance of their work, and to save them from the entanglements, at times the partisan suspicions, so often the result of other and conflicting duties.” In other words, it is intended to exclude judicial officers from such extrajudicial activities as may tend to militate against the free, disinterested and impartial exercise of their judicial functions.

In our opinion service upon the “qualification board” by the respondent judges would be in contravention of the purpose and policy underlying the constitutional inhibition. As already stated, the charter provision requires that the qualification board continue to solicit and select and submit to the board of supervisors lists of qualified candidates for the office of county executive until such time as the board *230

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 510, 218 Cal. 225, 89 A.L.R. 1109, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-mcnutt-cal-1933.