Cline v. Lewis

165 P. 915, 175 Cal. 315, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 675
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 4781.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 165 P. 915 (Cline v. Lewis) 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
Cline v. Lewis, 165 P. 915, 175 Cal. 315, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 675 (Cal. 1917).

Opinions

SLOSS, J.

The appeal before us was taken, in the first instance, to the district court of appeal for the second appellate district. The justices of that court differed in opinion, and the cause was accordingly transferred to this court.

While the appeal was pending in the district court of appeal, an opinion, of which the following is a copy, was prepared by Presiding Justice Conrey, of that court.

“This is an appeal by the respondent in the court below from a judgment granting the petitioner’s demand for a peremptory writ of mandate.

“At the general election held in November, 1914, the petitioner was elected to the office of sheriff of Los Angeles County for the term beginning January 4, 1915. Claiming that his salary is five thousand dollars per year, he presented demands computed at that annual rate for the months of January to November, 1915. Appellant, as county auditor, refused to audit these demands for any sum in excess of a salary computed at the rate of four thousand dollars per year.

*317 “Ordinance 326 (New Series) of the county of Los Angeles, as adopted by the board of supervisors under date of June 2, 1913, provided for a sheriff’s salary which, during the term of petitioner, was to be four thousand dollars per annum. On the first day of August, 1914, the board of supervisors passed and adopted an ordinance amending said Ordinance 326 and thereby providing that the salary of the sheriff of Los Angeles County should be five thousand dollars per year. We are called upon to determine whether this latter provision applies to the sheriff’s present term of office.

“Section 52 of the Charter of Los Angeles County (Stats. 1913, p. 1500) states that ‘the compensation of any elective county or township officer shall not be increased nor diminished during the term for which he was elected, nor within ninety days preceding his election. . . .’ As applied to the sheriff, this plainly means that the amount of compensation to which the sheriff shall be'entitled during his term of office shall be controlled by whatever law was in existence on the ninety-first day preceding the election, with respect to the salary of that office for and during the ensuing term. August 1, 1914, was the ninety-fourth day preceding the general election of that year. If the ordinance passed on that date was not an existing law for a full period of ninety days prior to November 3, 1914, it cannot be the law under which petitioner may claim his salary. This brings us to certain questions arising under the provisions of section 4058 of the Political Code, under which it is claimed that the ordinance could not become a law until thirty days after its final passage by the board of supervisors.

“The authority for county charters is derived from section 7%, article XI, of the state Constitution, and it is there declared that a county charter, when duly adopted and approved, ‘shall supersede all laws inconsistent with such charter relative to the matters provided in such charter. ’ It is further declared, among other things, that county charters shall provide ‘for the powers and duties of boards of supervisors . . . ; provided, that the provisions of such charters relating to the powers and duties of boards of supervisors and all other county officers shall be subject to and controlled by general laws.’ The charter of Los Angeles county, in article III, section 11 thereof, declares it to be the duty of the board of supervisors to ‘provide, by ordinance, for the *318 compensation of elective officers and of its appointees, unless such compensation is otherwise fixed by this charter. ’ It is conceded that under this section valid ordinances may be passed establishing the salary of a sheriff. It is equally clear that there may be two existing and valid .ordinances at the same time, one operative with respect to the current term, and another postponed in its operation to a subsequent term.

“The charter is silent as to the time when ordinances shall take effect and as to the subjects of initiative and referendum, and under the foregoing provisions of the Constitution these matters are subject to be controlled by the provisions of the Political Code as a part of the general law of the state. Section 4058 of the Political Code provides for the enactment of ordinances by the initiative process and also for referendum votes upon ordinances passed by the board of supervisors. As to the latter we find therein the following provision: That no ordinance passed by the board of supervisors (with exceptions not applicable in the present case) ‘shall go into effect before thirty days from its final passage; and if, during said thirty days, a petition signed by qualified electors of the county equal to ten per cent of the entire vote cast therein for all candidates for Governor of the state at the last preceding general election at which a Governor was voted for, protesting against the passage of such ordinance, be presented to the board, the same shall thereupon be suspended from going into operation, and it shall be the duty of the board to reconsider such ordinance. If said board shall thereupon not entirely repeal said ordinance, it shall submit the same to a vote of the electors either at a general election or a special election to be called for the purpose, and such ordinance shall not go into effect or become operative, unless a majority of the voters voting upon the same shall vote in favor thereof. ’

“A legislative act cannot become operative until it has become a law, but the time when it becomes operative may be much later than the date when it becomes a law. This is illustrated by frequent instances where legislative acts by their own terms are not to go into effect until a certain date named. It is well illustrated by the instance to which I have referred of two. laws in existence at the same time, one establishing the present salary of a public office and another establishing the future salary of that office. ‘The Constitution (article XI, section 9) clearly implies that there must be a *319 law in force, fixing the compensation of every county and township officer at the date of his election, and it imperatively forbids any increase of that compensation by a law subsequently enacted. It permits, however, an increase of compensation to the person to be elected to the ensuing term, and if such increase is provided, it must be by a law which for that limited purpose tabes effect long before the expiration of the current term—the old law remaining in the meantime in full effect as to the incumbent. In such a case the operation of the amended law is postponed, not because it is unconstitutional, but because the courts construing it in the light of the Constitution, hold that such was the intention of the legislature.’ (Smith, v. Mathews, 155 Cal. 752, 757, [103 Pac. 199, 202].)

“When it is said in section 4058, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
165 P. 915, 175 Cal. 315, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cline-v-lewis-cal-1917.