Crowley v. Freud

64 P. 696, 132 Cal. 440, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1082
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1901
DocketS.F. No. 2553.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 P. 696 (Crowley v. Freud) 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
Crowley v. Freud, 64 P. 696, 132 Cal. 440, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1082 (Cal. 1901).

Opinions

*441 McFARLAND,J.

—The only question presented in this case is, whether the consolidated municipal government called the city and county of San Francisco can, through its civil service commission, prescribe the qualifications of deputies of certain county officers, such as sheriff, county clerk, recorder, etc., and compel those officers to select their deputies from persons named by said commission. The court below held that there is no such power, and in accordance with such ruling made certain restraining and enjoining orders, from which defendants appeal.. The power in question does not exist, unless it is granted in that clause of section 8i of article XI of the state constitution, adopted in 1896, which is as follows: “ Where a city and county government has been merged and consolidated into one municipal government, it shall also be competent, in any charter framed under said section 8 of said article XI, to provide for the manner in which, the times at which, and the terms for which the several county officers shall be elected or appointed, for their compensation, and for the number of deputies that each shall have, and for the compensation payable to each of such deputies.”

It is scarcely necessary to again consider at length the position of appellants,— so elaborately discussed and so clearly held to be untenable in Kahn v. Sutro, 114 Cal. 316,—that there is no such thing as “county officers” in that part of the state which is included within the boundaries of the oity and county of San Francisco; for the clause of section 8½ of the constitution above quoted directly recognizes such officers, and expressly calls them county officers,” and the whole clause deals with county officers and their deputies, and with no other subject whatever.

In the opinion in Kahn v. Sutro, supra, the citation of authorities is very full, and it would be a mere waste of labor to restate here the reasoning there employed, or again refer to the authorities there cited. That case establishes the law as to the matters therein determined. It is proper, however, to notice the contention of appellants, that Kahn v. Sutro has been overruled or materially modified by the subsequent case of Martin v. Election Commissioners, 126 Cal. 404. There is no foundation for this contention. Kahn v. Sutro was decided before section 8½ had become a part of the constitution, and it was there held that, under the constitution and the statutes as they then stood, the terms of office and the times of election of *442 county officers wére fixed by the general state laws on the subject; but the Martin case was decided after section 84 had been adopted, and was based entirely on the amendment made by that section, which expressly makes the law as to the election, etc., of county officers different from the law as it stood on that subject when Kahn v. Sutro was decided. The Martin case was brought by certain county officers in San Francisco, upon the theory that the adoption of section 84 had not changed the law declared in Kahn v. Sutro as to the time of their election and their terms of office; and this court held in the Martin case that those things had been changed by section 84, because it declared that it was competent to provide in the charter of a consolidated city and county government “for the manner in which, the times at which, and the terms for which the several county officers shall be elected.” This was the only question involved and the only question decided,—the only question to which the minds of the court were directly called and upon which they directly acted. The contention of appellants is based mainly upon one or two expressions to be found in the opinion in the Martin case. One of these, and the main one, is as follows: “But the act establishing a uniform system of county and township governments does not, and never did, apply to the county of San Francisco, in the sense claimed by the appellants.” This, however, is not saying that it does not apply in any sense. And what was the sense in which appellants in that case claimed such application? They “claimed,” briefly stated, as follows: Section 6 of article XI provides that all municipal charters shall be, except in municipal affairs, “subject to and controlled by general laws”; county officers not being within the exception of “municipal affairs,” the County Government Act, which provides for their election, time of • office, etc., “ controls the provisions of the charter on that subject”; and section 84 can be kept out of conflict with section 6 only by a construction which is stated in appellants’ brief in the Martin case in this language: “The only construction admissible, therefore, is that which renders section 84 subject to section 6 by permitting a charter to provide for the appointment, election, tenure, and compensation of county officers and their deputies, only where there is no general law on'the subject; the charter to be superseded in that respect whenever a general law is adopted.” They also contended that section 84 could not be legally adopted as an *443 “amendment,” and that what was attempted thereby could only be done through a general revision by a constitutional convention. And they argued that, for the foregoing reasons, and for many others which were urged, section 8i is not an existing amendment, and therefore the County Government Act applies to San Francisco for all purposes. The above views of counsel show the application of the County Government Act to San Francisco, “in the sense claimed by the appellants.” But the court did not agree with these views, and held that section 8i was a valid amendment, and that by its express terms it provides for the election and terms of office of the county officers of the city and county of San Francisco; and it is with respect to the contentions of appellants in the Martin case that the expression above quoted must be taken. And a somewhat broader expression in the opinion, following closely after the one above noticed, must be taken as subject to the same qualification as the first. It is nowhere in the opinion stated that there are no county officers in the city and county of San Francisco; on the other hand, it recognizes the existence of such officers, as section 8i itself does. For instance, in the constitutional convention, Judge Hager, in replying to the objection that consolidated governments multiplied offices and increased expenses, said that the opposite was the result, and referred to the consolidated government of San Francisco as sustaining his position; and in the opinion in the Martin ease, the following, from his remarks, is quoted, “We have a sheriff who is sheriff of the county and of the city. ... We have a tax-collector and we have an auditor that acts for both;, formerly, we had one for each.” Whether there were county officers _ in San Francisco was not a question in the Martin case, and there was no pretense of overruling Kahn v. Sutro on that subject; the only question involved was, When are county officers

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 P. 696, 132 Cal. 440, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-freud-cal-1901.