Aggeler v. Dominguez

19 P.2d 241, 217 Cal. 429, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 628
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13722.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 241 (Aggeler v. Dominguez) 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
Aggeler v. Dominguez, 19 P.2d 241, 217 Cal. 429, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 628 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Plaintiffs are municipal judges of the city of Los Angeles, having been appointed to such offices by the Governor of this state pursuant to the authority vested in him by an act of the legislature creating four additional municipal judges in the Municipal Court of the City of Los Angeles. (Stats. 1931, p. 1537.) Said act became effective on August 14, 1931, and thereafter plaintiffs’ appointment followed and commissions of appointment were issued to them providing that they should hold office as municipal judges of the city of Los Angeles for the term prescribed by law. The defendant is the city clerk of said city of Los Angeles, and this action is brought by the plaintiffs to have it adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs’ terms of office are for the period of six years after and from the date of the creation of said offices, and that the defendant be restrained and enjoined from preparing or issuing nomination petitions for plaintiffs’ said offices, or from receiving or filing nomination petitions affecting said offices, or from expending any funds of the city of Los Angeles in any of said matters, or in connection with any other matter affecting plaintiffs and their said offices prior to the fourteenth day of August, 1937. The action was tried in the superior court, and judgment was therein rendered against the plaintiffs, from which they have appealed.

.Municipal courts are established under the authority of section 11, article VI, of the Constitution of this state, adopted November 4, 1924. In this section it is provided that the manner in which, the time at which, and the term for which the judges of municipal courts shall be elected or appointed shall be prescribed by the legislature.

The adoption of this constitutional amendment was followed by the enactment in 1925 of an act of the legislature *431 authorizing the establishment of municipal courts in the city of Los Angeles and in other cities of the state. (Stats. 1925, p. 648.) By this act it was provided that cities of the class to which the city of Los Angeles belonged should have twenty-four judges of this municipal court. This was in 1927 increased to twenty-six. (Stats. 1927, p. 129.) In 1931 it was increased to thirty. (Stats. 1931, p. 1537.) By section 15 of said act the term of office of each judge of a municipal court was fixed at six years, or until his successor is elected and qualifies. Section 17 of said act provides that “any vacancy in the office of a judge of a municipal court shall be filled by appointment by the governor, and any person so appointed shall hold office until the expiration of the term of the office to which he was appointed, and until his successor is elected and qualified”. There is no express provision in the Constitution, nor in said act of 1925, authorizing the Governor, or any other officer or official body, to appoint the judges of the municipal courts, after the establishment of said court, under said constitutional amendment and said act of the legislature of 1925. It was, however, provided by section 4 of said Act of 1925 that in each city or city and county in which a municipal court was established there should not be any other inferior court (except a court of small claims) and that all such inferior courts would be superseded by said municipal courts and that the judges, justices and other officers of said inferior courts should become the judges, justices and officers of said municipal courts. At the time of the amendment of section 11, article VI, of the Constitution, section 23 of said article was also amended, which provided that no person should be eligible to the office of judge of a municipal court unless he should have been admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of this state for a period of five years immediately preceding his election or appointment. Under this provision of the Constitution in at least one instance, one of the judges of an inferior court of the city where municipal courts were established was ineligible to the office of judge of the municipal court, by reason of the fact that he had not been admitted to practice law for the required time. In such case it was held that a vacancy existed in that particular municipal court, and that such vacancy could, under the authority of *432 section 17 of the act, which we have quoted above, be filled by appointment by the Governor of the state. (Wallace v. Payne, 197 Cal. 539 [241 Pac. 879].) Acting under the authority of said section 17, as construed by this court in the case just mentioned, -the Governor of the state appointed plaintiffs judges of the Municipal Court of the City of Los Angeles to fill the four positions in said court created by the statute of 1931. It' is plaintiffs ’ contention that they are each appointed to a full six-year term as judges of said court and that their terms of office will not expire until August 14, 1937. Accordingly, by this proceeding they seek to have the law so declared as holding that they are each appointed for a full term of six years and seek to have the defendant, as the clerk of said city, restrained from taking any steps towards preparing for an election prior to the year 1937 for the four offices of which they are now the occupants.

Plaintiffs ground their argument upon section 15 of the act, which fixes the term of office of a judge of the municipal court at six years, and on section 17, which provides that any person appointed to fill a vacancy in such office shall hold the same “until the expiration of the term of the office to which he was appointed”. In other words, plaintiffs contend that whenever a person is appointed to fill a vacancy in the office of judge of the municipal court he is appointed for a full term of six years. If plaintiffs’ interpretation of the law is correct, then no matter when the vacancy occurs, or for what cause it happens, the appointee to fill the same holds office under the appointment for six years. The precise words relied upon in support of plaintiffs’ contention are those found in section 17, which reads as follows: “Any person so appointed shall hold office until the expiration of the term of the office to which he was appointed.” In analyzing these words, it will be noted in the first place that they do not purport to expresssly fix the term for which the appointee shall hold the office. On the other hand, the term is vaguely stated to be for “the term of the office to which he "was appointed”. Had the legislature intended to fix the appointees’ terms at six years, the length of the regular term of said office, surely it could have employed much simpler and more direct language in which to express such intent. It would have been an easy matter for the legislature to have said that any person so appointed should hold *433 office for the full regular term of six years, had it intended to so fix the term of appointment. The fact that it did not express its intent in some such clear and simple language casts a grave doubt as to just what the legislature did intend by the use of these words. “Where a constitutional provision prescribing the term of a public office is uncertain or doubtful in its construction, that interpretation will be followed which limits the term to the shortest time.” (Mechem on Public Officers, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 241, 217 Cal. 429, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aggeler-v-dominguez-cal-1933.