Baines v. Zemansky

168 P. 565, 176 Cal. 369, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 526
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1917
DocketS. F. No. 8505.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 168 P. 565 (Baines v. Zemansky) 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
Baines v. Zemansky, 168 P. 565, 176 Cal. 369, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 526 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

*371 SHAW, J.

This is a proceeding for a writ of mandate to compel the registrar of voters of San Francisco to examine into the sufficiency or insufficiency of a petition filed with the board of election commissioners for the recall of Charles M. Fickert, as district attorney of said city and county, and thereupon to attach to said petition a certificate showing the result of such examination, mail a copy thereof to the person who filed the petition, and report the same to the board of election commissioners.

A recall petition against Charles M. Fickert was filed with the board of election commissioners, consisting of 232 sections, and bearing 15,214 names purporting to be signatures of registered voters of said city and county, asking for the said recall. The number of legal signatures necessary to authorize a recall election in said city and county was and is 11,837. The registrar of voters proceeded thereupon to examine said petition and verify the signatures thereto. After such examination he attached to the petition a certificate stating that there were only 10,219 genuine signatures of registered and qualified electors of San Francisco thereto. Thereupon, within the twenty days allowed for that purpose, a supplemental petition was filed, embracing 120 sections with 5,104 additional signatures. The registrar then proceeded to examine said supplemental petition to verify the signatures thereon, and, after completing his examination, ascertained and determined that there were 3,050 genuine signatures thereto. The two petitions taken together have, therefore, 13,269 signatures attached, and if such signatures are genuine and not subject to any other lawful objection, it is the duty of the registrar under the provisions of the San Francisco charter, as amended on January 24, 1917, not only to attach thereto his certificates, showing the result of his examinations, and mail a copy thereof to the persons who filed the petitions, which he must do whether there are enough signatures or not, but also to report the sufficiency of said petitions to the board of election commissioners, and exhibit to said board the certificates attached to said petitions. When he does this it becomes the duty of the board of election commissioners to call an election for a vote on such recall. (Charter, art. XI, c. Y, secs. 1 and 2; c. III, secs. 2 and 3; Stats. 1917, p. 1728.)

*372 The answer of the registrar admits the filing of the petition and .supplemental petition aforesaid for the recall of Fickert, with the number of signatures as stated; that he has examined and determined as to the genuineness of such signatures, and as to the sufficiency of the two petitions as above stated, and avers that on, August 30, 1917, before he had made or attached thereto his certificates of the result, and when he was ready and willing to do so, he was served with an alternative writ of prohibition, issued out of the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco in a proceeding in prohibition, begun by Charles M. Fickert against said regis-^ trar, commanding him' to refrain from further action upon said recall petitions until the further order of the court; that on August 31, 1917, he was served with a restraining order of said superior court, made in an action begun therein by said Fickert in his own behalf as the officer against whom the recall petitions were filed, and also as a citizen and taxpayer of said city and county, which said order restrained him as such registrar from further action upon said recall petitions until the hearing of the application for an injunction as prayed for in said action; and that said proceeding in prohibition, and said action for an injunction, are still pending in said superior court, and said alternative writ of prohibition and said restraining order still remain in full force and effect.

The registrar asserts his willingness to proceed with the recall petitions, and states that he believes the superior court was and is without jurisdiction to issue said writ and restraining order, and that he has made and presented to said court his objections to its jurisdiction of said matters, but that said court has not yet determined the merits of said objections.

Although he so believes that said superior court is without jurisdiction, he is unwilling to disregard or disobey its writs and orders in said cases, deeming it more orderly to test the matter in a regular way in a higher court. Therefore he submits to this court the questions whether or not the superior court has jurisdiction and lawful power to issue said writ and make said restraining order, and whether or not the same are void, and declares his readiness to do as this court shall order. Briefs on these questions have been filed in his *373 behalf, and also for Mr. Fiekert, and for the filers of said recall petitions.

Under well-established principles of law it cannot be denied that if the superior court has jurisdiction, upon any possible state of facts, to prohibit or enjoin the registrar of voters from proceeding with such recall petitions in the manner prescribed in the charter, the sufficiency of the petition or complaint upon which that court acts, so far as the facts stated therein are concerned, cannot be inquired into by this court in this collateral proceeding, but that, on the contrary, its writs and orders must be upheld so far as this case is concerned, and can only be questioned when presented by way of appeal after the final judgment of said court in the cause. If that court has jurisdiction, it may decide the wrong as well as the right in the matter, and its decision is binding on all other persons, officers, and courts, save upon an appeal to the court having appellate jurisdiction of the cause. The sole question for our consideration, therefore, is whether or not the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter of said proceeding in prohibition and of said action for an injunction. For the solution of this question we must look to the provisions of the city charter, the allegations upon which the rights and orders were issued, and the general principles of law applicable to the subject.

The petition for the writ of prohibition, and the complaint for the injunction in the superior court, contained precisely the same allegations, except that the latter stated that Fiekert is a citizen and taxpayer of the city and county, and that the board of election commissioners, if said recall proceedings are continued, will immediately call an election to determine the matter of said recall; that the holding of such election would require an expenditure of the public moneys of said city and county to the amount of fifty thousand dollars; and that for a proportional part. thereof said Fiekert is liable to be assessed by way of taxation. These additional allegations have no bearing on the question, unless they may give the plaintiff in the injunction suit a status which would enable him to maintain the action for injunction if the court has jurisdiction of such action as established by the other allegations of the complaint.

The petition for the writ of prohibition, and the complaint for injunction, are both predicated upon the theory that a *374 number of the sections of which the petition is composed are false, fictitious and forged.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P. 565, 176 Cal. 369, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baines-v-zemansky-cal-1917.