Butler v. Williams

279 P. 992, 207 Cal. 732, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 558
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1929
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4270.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 279 P. 992 (Butler v. Williams) 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
Butler v. Williams, 279 P. 992, 207 Cal. 732, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 558 (Cal. 1929).

Opinions

CURTIS, J.

Prior to the year 1925 the salary of the county surveyor of the county of Sacramento, a county of the seventh class, was fixed by section 4236k of the Political Code at the sum of $2,400 per annum. In that year said section of the code was amended to read as follows:

" Counties of the Seventh Class. Surveyor. Sacramento. In counties of the seventh class, the county surveyor shall receive a salary of two thousand four hundred dollars per annum; and in addition thereto all necessary expenses for work performed in the office and all necessary expenses and transportation for work performed in the field; provided, • however, commencing January 3, 1927, in counties of the seventh class the county surveyor shall receive a salary of one hundred twenty dollars per annum, and in addition thereto all necessary expenses for work performed in the office and all necessary expenses and transportation for work performed in the field.” [Stats. 1925, p. 811.]

The amendment consisted in adding to the section as it originally stood all that portion of said amended section beginning with the word “provided.”

Thereafter at the general election held in said county in November, 1926, the petitioner herein was elected to said office of county surveyor for the full term of four years, beginning January 3, 1927. He thereafter qualified as such county surveyor and on the third day of January, 1927, entered upon the discharge of the duties of said office, and has ever since continued to discharge said duties. Some months *734 thereafter he demanded of the respondent herein, the County Auditor of said county, that he as County Auditor issue his warrant in favor of petitioner and directed to the county treasurer of said county, ordering said county treasurer to pay to petitioner his salary at the rate of $200 per month beginning on the third day of January, 1927. The County Auditor refused to comply with said demand, whereupon the petitioner in May, 1928, filed in the District Court of Appeal, in and for the Third District, his petition praying for a writ of mandate directed to said County Auditor commanding him to issue to petitioner a warrant on the county treasurer of said county, directing said county treasurer to pay to petitioner the sum of $3,200 for services rendered by said petitioner as county surveyor of said county from the third day of January, 1927, to and including the second day of May, 1928. An alternative writ of mandate was issued out of said District Court, directed to said County Auditor. In the return of the County Auditor to said writ and in his answer to said petition it was alleged that the salary of petitioner as county surveyor of said county since the third day of January, 1927, was the sum of $120 per annum and that said County Auditor had drawn warrants in favor of petitioner at the end of each month during the term of office of petitioner for his said salary at the rate of $120 per annum, but that petitioner had refused to accept said •warrants and the same remained in the office of said County Auditor. It was further alleged in said return and answer that petitioner in addition to his salary is furnished a suitable office in the county courthouse of said county, together with suitable office furniture, heat, light and care of the same, and that ever since January 3, 1927, the board of supervisors of said county has employed a competent engineer and other engineering assistants to draw plans and specifications for the construction of highways, bridges and other structures built by said county and that by reason thereof the petitioner has not been called upon to do any of the engineering work appertaining thereto.

The matter came on for hearing before said District Court of Appeal, resulting in a judgment in favor of the petitioner as prayed for in his said petition. Upon the application of the respondent herein said proceeding was transferred *735 from said District Court of Appeal and a hearing thereon ordered in this court.

We can see but little, if any, difference in principle between the question here presented and that which was determined in the case of De Merritt v. Weldon, 154 Cal. 545 [16 Ann. Cas. 955, 98 Pac. 537]. In this latter case, the facts recited in the opinion show that the plaintiff therein was elected city marshal of the city of Ukiah. At the time of his election the salary of said office was sixty dollars per month. This salary had been fixed by the board of trustees of said city under the power given to said board by section 855 of the County Government Act then in force, which section read in part as follows: “the clerk, treasurer, marshal and recorder shall severally receive, at stated times, a compensation to be fixed by ordinance by the board of trustees. ’ ’ Thereafter, and during said plaintiff’s first term of office, the board of trustees created the office of “Executive Officer,” prescribed the duties of such officer and fixed his salary at seventy-five dollars per month. On the same day it fixed the salary of the marshal at ten dollars per month. Plaintiff was appointed as such executive officer and continued to hold such office until 1907 ’and drew the salaries of both offices, having been re-elected in 1904 and 1906. In March, 1907, the board of trustees revoked his appointment as executive officer. Plaintiff thereupon claimed the salary of sixty dollars per month, which had been fixed by said board of trustees by ordinance prior to the date of his first election to the office of marshal. Payment thereof was refused and he instituted said action for the purpose of compelling the payment of his salary in the amount of sixty dollars per month. The claim was made there, as it is made here, that while the legislative body has the power to fix the salary of the officer, it is precluded from fixing the salary at so small an amount that its action would result in the destruction of the office. This is clearly made to appear from the following language found on page 549 of the opinion: “It is urged that the effect of the provisions of the Municipal Corporation Act (sec. 855) is to require that the trustees shall fix a reasonable compensation, that, while it is for them to determine what is a reasonable compensation, they are at least precluded from fixing it at so small an amount that their action results in the destruction of the office of marshal, *736 a co-ordinate department of the government of the town, by reason of the fact that no competent person would seek the office or perform the duties thereof for the compensation fixed, that any ordinance fixing the compensation at such a low figure is in conflict with the provisions of the General Municipal Corporation Act, and therefore void, and that for this reason the ordinance fixing the compensation at ten dollars per month is void.” In reply to this contention the court held (p. 553): “The duties of the marshal were, then, only such as were prescribed by the state law. Under this, in a town of some 1800 inhabitants, he was in charge and control of the department of police, required to execute such process as might be delivered to him for execution; he was in charge of the city prison, if there was such a prison; he would be required to take charge of any chain-gang that might be established by the trustees, but none had been established; and he was required to collect all town taxes and town licenses. The last undoubtedly constituted the principal part of his duties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P. 992, 207 Cal. 732, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-williams-cal-1929.