Donlon v. Jewett

26 P. 370, 88 Cal. 530, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 728
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1891
DocketNo. 14334
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 26 P. 370 (Donlon v. Jewett) 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
Donlon v. Jewett, 26 P. 370, 88 Cal. 530, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 728 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

Beatty, C. J.

The petitioner is assessor and the respondent auditor of Ventura County, and it is the duty of the latter, prescribed by law, to draw his warrant at the end of each month for a monthly installment of the salary of the former. At the end of the month of January, petitioner demanded a warrant for his Jan-[531]*531nary salary, claiming that Ventura was a county of the ihirty-ninth-and-one-half class, and that his annual salary as assessor of a county of that class was three thousand two hundred dollars. But the respondent, being in doubt whether Ventura was, according to a correct construction of the statute, a county of the thirty-ninth-and-one-balf class, or of the forty-first class, in which the assessor’s salary is less than three thousand two hundred dollars, refused to draw his warrant on that basis. Thereupon this original proceeding was commenced here for a writ of mandate to compel the auditor to perform his supposed duty.

There is an entire agreement between the parties as to all matters of fact, and the only question in the case is one of statutory construction.

Section 5 of article 11 of the constitution enjoins upon the legislature the duty of providing for a uniform system of county government, but for the purpose of regulating the compensation of county officers permits a classification of counties according to population. In pursuance of this provision an act was passed March 14, 1883, entitled “An act to establish a uniform system of county and township governments ” (Stats. 1883, p. 299), by which (sec. 162) the counties of the state were divided into forty-eight classes, according to their population as established by the federal census of 1880, the thirty-ninth, fortieth, and forty-first classes being defined as follows: —

“Counties having a population of five thousand six hundred, and under six thousand, shall belong to and be known as of the thirty-ninth class.
“Counties having a population of five thousand three hundred, and under five thousand six hundred, shall belong to and be known as counties of the fortieth class.
“ Counties having a population of five thousand, and under five thousand three hundred, shall belong to and be known as counties of the forty-first class.”

[532]*532Ventura, having a census population of 5,073, fell into the forty-first class.

By section 163 of the same act the salaries of the several county officers of the respective classes of the counties were fixed.

By an amendatory act passed March 18, 1885, this section 163 was amended and divided into new sections, numbered consecutively from 163 to 210. In this amendatory act the salaries of officers of the thirty-ninth class were regulated by section 201, those of officers of the fortieth class by section 202, and those of officers of the forty-first class by section 203.

Another amendatory act was passed in 1887 (Stats. 1887, p. 178), and finally, on March 16, 1889, the act was passed (Stats. 1889, p. 232) which gives rise to the present controversy.

By this last amendatory act section 162 of the original act was so amended as to change the definition of the thirty-ninth class, and add a new class, numbered 39-J-. A new section, numbered 201£, was also inserted between sections 201 and 202, by which the salaries of officers of the thirty-ninth-and-one-half class of counties were regulated. By this amendment the definition of counties of the thirty-ninth class was changed so as to read as follows:—

“Counties having a population of 5,640, and under 6,000, shall belong to and be known as counties of the thirty-ninth class.”
And the following definition was made of counties of the thirty-ninth-and-one-half class:—
“ Counties having a population of 5,000, and under 5,640, shall belong to and be known as counties of the thirty-ninth-and-one-half class.”

In all other respects, including the clauses defining the fortieth and forty-first classes, section 162 was reenacted in precisely its original terms.

The effect of this legislation was to produce a conflict [533]*533in the terms of the statute, rendering it necessary to resort to construction in order to ascertain the intention of the legislature.

The thirty-ninth-and-one-half class, by its definition, embraces all counties having a population of 5,000, and under 5,840; that is to say, all counties formerly embraced in classes 40 and 41, and any county formerly embraced in class 39 with a population of 5,600, and under 5,640.

By reason of the amendment to the definition of class 39, it is brought into perfect conformity with the definition of the new class, but the literal re-enactment of the clauses defining classes 40 and 41 creates the conflict; for, as above shown, they consist of counties having a population, respectively, of five thousand three hundred, and under five thousand six hundred, and of five thousand, and under five thousand three hundred,— both of which classes are embraced in the definition of class 39-|~. Such being the terms of the statute, and the circumstances of its enactment in its present form, the petitioner contends that we must hold the intention of the legislature to have been to repeal the clauses defining classes 40 and 41, and to substitute for those classes, and a part of class 39, the newly defined class 39-¡-. On the part of respondent it is contended that the intention was to preserve classes 40 and 41, and to make the new class consist of those counties only —formerly embraced in class 39—containing a population of 5,600, and under 5,640.

It is certain that the legislature intended one thing or the other; but either construction of the statute convicts it of a blunder, and the question to be solved is, whether the mistake consisted in the inadvertent use of the number “ five thousand” instead of “ five thousand six hundred in defining class 39£, or in the re-enactment of the clauses defining classes 40 and 41.

. The principle of construction relied on by petitioner [534]*534in support of his contention is, that in cases of repugnancy a later statute controls an earlier one; from which he argues that the clause defining 391 being new, and those defining 40 and 41 being a mere republication of the terms of the original act, the former must govern.

But in view of the constitutional provision prescribing the method of revising and amending statutes and sections of statutes, can we, for the purpose of construing an amendatory act, consider its new features as being later in point of time than those parts of the original which are merely republished?-

The constitution, article 4, section 24, provides that “no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title; but in such case the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted and published at length as revised or amended.”

The effect, and the only effect, of this requirement is to compel the republication of so much, and so much only, of the old law as the legislature intends to continue in force along with the amendment, and it would seem that one object of the provision must have been to prevent conflict and repugnancy between the new and the old portions of the statute, by requiring the incorporation of all amendments in the revised text of the statute or section amended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 P. 370, 88 Cal. 530, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donlon-v-jewett-cal-1891.