Curtin v. State of California

214 P. 1030, 61 Cal. App. 377, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 511
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 2613.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 214 P. 1030 (Curtin v. State of California) 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
Curtin v. State of California, 214 P. 1030, 61 Cal. App. 377, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 511 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover against the state of California the aggregate sum of $11,947 for services rendered and moneys expended for and in behalf of said state. The authority for the maintenance of such an action against the state is to be found in an act of the legislature of 1921, entitled, “An Act to authorize suits against the state for services rendered to the state or moneys expended in connection • with such services, and regulating the procedure therein.” (Stats. 1921, p. 1592.)

The plaintiff, from and including the year 1909 to and including the year 1913, which covered the period during which the services for which he herein sues were rendered, was a member of the legislature of the state of California, representing in the senate the twelfth senatorial district. The brief of respondent correctly states the facts and the history of the legislation by and under the authority of *379 which the plaintiff performed the services and expended the moneys for which he here seeks reimbursement against the state as follows:

“On March 10, 1905, Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 21 was adopted by the Legislature. (Statutes 1905, p. 1067.) It provided for the appointment of a joint committee of the Senate and Assembly, consisting of four members, two to be appointed by the President of the Senate and two by the Speaker of the Assembly, ‘to examine into and report upon all matters connected with or in any way appertaining to the system of revenue and taxation in this state, and to further report such constitutional and legislative measures as may be deemed necessary to the revision and reform of said system of revenue and taxation.’ Power and authority was given to the commission so that the investigation would be full and complete, with authority to employ all necessary clerical and expert assistants, to send for persons and papers, and to take all necessary means to procure the attendance of witnesses and testimony. It was further provided, ‘that in the event provision is made by law for the existence of a commission for the revision and reform of revenue and taxation in force in this state of which the aforementioned committee is to be a constituent part, then and in that event the joint committee aforesaid and the members thereof are authorized to act as, and be an integral part and portion of, said commission. ’

“On March 20, 1905 (Statutes 1905, p. 390) an act which authorized the Governor to appoint an expert in taxation and public finance to sit with the joint committee authorized by Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 21 when appointed, was passed. The Governor was made an ex officio member of said commission. • In section 4 of the act, there is, in effect, 'a repetition of the powers given to the joint committee as contained in the concurrent resolution. Section 5 of the act provided that the members of said commission, other than the Governor, as Chairman thereof, and the expert, should be paid for their services the sum of $10.00 per diem and their necessary expenses while actually engaged in the performance of their duties as prescribed in the act. By section 6 an appropriation of $10,000 was made. It is thus recognized by the Legislature that the two Senators and the two Assemblymen who were appointed on the com *380 mission were to be paid $10.00 per diem while engaged in the performance of their duties, and in addition thereto their necessary expenses. The act did not provide that any member of the committee should take an oath of office or give a bond. There was no term fixed. There was no time fixed for the making of the report. There was specified work required to be done, to-wit: ‘to investigate the system of revenue and taxation in force in this state and to recommend a plan for the revision and reform thereof. ’ When this investigation of the specific matter was completed and report made, the work directed would be finished. The Governor was authorized to appoint the expert in taxation and public finance to sit with the committee and to be a member thereof. If there was a vacancy caused by any reason in the personnel of either of the Senators or either of the Assemblymen, there was no power of appointment given. If the work was not completed during the term of office of either of the two Senators or of the Assemblymen, it was, nevertheless, to 'be continued by the committee so appointed by the Legislature until the investigation had been fully made and the recommendations filed. . . .

“There is no evidence that any oath of office was taken by the plaintiff under the act of March 20, 1905. Plaintiff was one of the Senators appointed by the President of the Senate.”

It is readily to be seen that the object of the act of 1905 was to facilitate an investigation of the tax system then in vogue in California by persons who had had special experience in the fiscal affairs of the state and to that end acquire information and data and to report the same to the legislature so that the law-making body could have an intelligent basis upon which to reform or correct the defects in the system as it existed at the time of the enactment of the act of 1905. The report of the commission to the legislature of 1907 of its investigations of the matters submitted to it in pursuance of the provisions of the act of 1905 embraced a proposed constitutional amendment, which was subsequently adopted by the legislature of 1907 and submitted to the vote of the electors at the ensuing general election. That proposed constitutional amendment, although supposed to involve the correction or the reformation of the then existing system of taxation and the improvement of said system, *381 was, nevertheless, upon consideration by the people, regarded as wholly inefficient for the purposes for which it was designed and was, consequently, rejected at the general election in November, 1908. The legislature of 1909, still sensible of the deficiencies in the then existing tax system, and for that reason desiring that the investigation authorized by the act of 1905 should be further pressed and something more practicable evolved and formulated than the scheme contained in the proposed but rejected constitutional amendment, passed the act of 1909. (Stats. 1909, p. 779.) The act of 1909 by reference makes the act of 1905 a part thereof, particularly in so far as arc concerned the purposes designed to be accomplished by said acts.

The act of 1909 “authorized the Governor of the State to appoint ‘one person versed in matters relating to taxation, and a secretary, who shall be an expert on the science of finance and taxation, to carry on the work’ provided for in the act of March 20, 1905, and the persons so appointed were to carry on the work mentioned. J. B. Curtin, the plaintiff, was appointed by the Governor as the ‘one person versed in matters relating to taxation, ’ but no oath of office was required of him or of the Secretary, who was to be an expert in the science of finance and taxation, and no term was fixed, but it was contemplated that the work should be done by the two. There was an appropriation of $5,000 to be used for the purpose of carrying on the work mentioned, and to pay the necessary expenses of the members of the commission while engaged in the performance of their duties and the salary of the expert mentioned, and for all necessary clerical, printing and other expenses connected with the work of carrying out the provisions of the act.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P. 1030, 61 Cal. App. 377, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtin-v-state-of-california-calctapp-1923.