County of Mono v. Depauli

100 P. 717, 9 Cal. App. 705
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 527.
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P. 717 (County of Mono v. Depauli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Mono v. Depauli, 100 P. 717, 9 Cal. App. 705 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants in an action brought by the county of Mono, to recover the sum of five hundred and fifty ($550.00) dollars, alleged to be due under a county ordinance numbered 90, which regulates the business of raising, grazing, herding, and pasturing sheep in Mono county and fixes as a license tax therefor the sum of five cents per head. In the court below,: as stated by appellant, the ordinance was attacked on various, grounds, to wit, that the county had no authority to regulate, or to attempt to regulate, such business, that the ordinance is unconstitutional and therefore void, that the license tax demanded is unwarranted, unreasonable and excessive, and that the ordinance never became effective because not published as required by the statute.

The trial court, relying upon the decision of the supreme-court in County of Plumas v. Wheeler, 149 Cal. 758, [87 Pac. 909], and in County of Sierra v. Flanigan. 149 Cal. 769, [87 Pac. 913.], held with plaintiff as to all these propositions except the last, but in that respect it adopted the view of defendants, basing the conclusion upon the following finding: “That the-names of all the members voting for and against said ordinance were, never published in any newspaper published in said county or elsewhere, but that when said ordinance was published there was published together therewith the names-of four of the members as voting for the same and none voting-against, as follows: ‘this ordinance having been twice read, and duly considered by the board was put upon its passage and adopted and passed on the 8th day of April, 1904, by the following vote: Ayes: David Hays, N. W. Boyd, C. W. Rickey and J. A. Greaser. Noes, none." (Signed) R. G. Montrose,. Chairman. ’ And the ordinance as published was duly attested by the clerk of said board and authenticated by the seal of said board. It thus appearing therefrom that R. G. Montrose had not voted, while as a matter of fact the said R. G. Montrose had voted ‘aye’ and the record of his vote had never been published.” The materiality of this finding is evident *707 from the provision in the County Government Act that “The enacting clause of all ordinances of the board shall be as follows: ‘The board of supervisors of the County of-do ordain as follows.’ Every ordinance shall be signed by the chairman of the board and attested by the clerk. On the passage of all ordinances the votes of the several members of the board shall be entered on the minutes, and all ordinances shall be entered at length in the ordinance book. No ordinance passed by the board shall take effect within less than fifteen days after its passage, and before the expiration of the said fifteen days the same shall be published, with the names of the members voting for and against the same for at least one week in some newspaper published in the county, if there be one, and if there be none published in the county, then such ordinance shall be posted at the court house door at least one week. ’ ’

It is admitted that there was no departure from a strict compliance with the requirement of the statute save in the single instance of an omission to publish the name of the chairman as having voted “aye”; and the inquiry is thus presented whether for this reason it should be held that the ordinance is inoperative.

The publication is necessary to the validity of the ordinance, and the provision in reference thereto must be deemed, therefore, mandatory and not directory merely. In San Luis Obispo v. Hendricks, 71 Cal. 264, [11 Pac. 684], it is said: “The essential thing to be done was to publish the ordinance in some newspaper published in the county, if there was one, for at least one week, with the names of the members voting for and against the same.” And in People v. Russell, 74 Cal. 578, [16 Pac. 395], it is held that “Under section 26 of the County Government Act of March 14, 1883, an ordinance of a board of supervisors of a county does not take effect until it has been published in its entirety, as required by that section, and a publication which omits the enacting clause of the ordinance is insufficient.”

The only question, then, to determine is whether there has been a substantial adherence to the mandate of the statute. '

It is not contested that the legislature has authority to provide the procedure to be pursued by the board of supervisors in the enactment of ordinances, but it is claimed by appellant, and rightly so, that to this as to other legislation must be ap *708 plied the rule which requires a reasonable construction, keeping in view the obvious purpose of the law; and it is insisted that “Granting that the provision commanding the act to be performed is mandatory, if the act is performed, but not in the time or in the precise mode indicated, it will still be sufficient, if that which is done accomplishes the substantial purposes of the statute. ’ ’ In other words, the operation of the law is not to be circumvented and the purpose defeated by reason of some trivial irregularity or unimportant departure from the strict letter, which can be of prejudice to no one and which is not inconsonant with the manifest intention of the lawmakers.

In Sutherland on Statutory Construction, section 611, the rule is stated as follows: “When a statute is affirmative it does not necessarily imply that the mode or time mentioned in it is exclusive, and that the act provided for, if done at a different time, or in a different manner, will not have effect.”

“Such is the literal implication, it is true; but since the letter may be modified to give effect to the intention, that implication is often prevented by another implication, namely, that the legislature intends what is reasonable, and especially that the act shall have effect; that its purpose shall not be thwarted by any trivial omission, or a departure from it in some formal, incidental or comparatively unimportant particular.” And further on it is stated that “Those directions which are not of the essence of the thing to be done, but which are given with a view merely to the proper, orderly and prompt conduct of the business, and by the failure to obey which the rights of those interested will not be prejudiced, are not commonly to he regarded as mandatory. ’ ’

In the Matter of the Estate of W. B. Johnson, Deceased, 98 Cal. 538, [33 Pac. 460], the question of whether the provision of the statute in relation to adoption requiring the examination of the child is mandatory was discussed by the supreme court, and it is there said, through Mr. Justice De Haven: “But the examination of a child whose consent to the contract is unnecessary, and who is of such tender years that it is incapable of exercising any judgment as to the effect of such contract upon its interests, would certainly be an idle thing to do, and the section should not receive such an extremely narrow and literal construction as to make the examination of such a child mandatory and its omission fatal to the creation of a valid contract binding upon adults who have done every *709 thing required of them in order "to manifest their full and free consent to such adoption.” The court quotes with approval the following from People

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Related

County of Sierra v. Flanigan
87 P. 913 (California Supreme Court, 1906)
Country of Plumas v. Wheeler
87 P. 909 (California Supreme Court, 1906)
Smith v. Swain
52 A. 857 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1902)
People Ex Rel. Lefever v. Board of Supervisors
34 N.Y. 268 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)
Zottman v. City & County of San Francisco
20 Cal. 96 (California Supreme Court, 1862)
People v. Stokes
12 P. 71 (California Supreme Court, 1886)
People v. Russell
16 P. 395 (California Supreme Court, 1888)
County of Orange v. Harris
32 P. 594 (California Supreme Court, 1893)
In re the Estate of Johnson
21 L.R.A. 380 (California Supreme Court, 1893)
Kenaston v. Riker
109 N.W. 278 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)
Allen v. Allen
91 N.W. 218 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1902)
Summit County ex rel. Boyden v. Gustaveson
54 P. 977 (Utah Supreme Court, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
100 P. 717, 9 Cal. App. 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-mono-v-depauli-calctapp-1909.