Donovan v. Board of Police Commissioners

163 P. 69, 32 Cal. App. 392, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 251
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1685.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 163 P. 69 (Donovan v. Board of Police Commissioners) 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
Donovan v. Board of Police Commissioners, 163 P. 69, 32 Cal. App. 392, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 251 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

In the court below the plaintiff in this proceeding sought a writ of certiorari reviewing and annulling an order of the defendants, sitting as the board of police commissioners of the city and county of San Francisco, whereby the plaintiff was dismissed from the police depart *395 ment of the city and county after a trial upon charges preferred against him, which were in effect (1) neglect of duty in failing to discover and suppress a gambling resort existing and operating in the district assigned to him for patrol as a sergeant of police, and (2) neglect of duty in failing to initiate immediate and effective measures for the arrest of a person actually engaged in the commission of a crime—■ a felony—coupled with conduct unbecoming an officer of the department in voluntarily delivering his revolver to a stranger, who was present at or near the place where said felony was being committed, and who, armed with the defendant’s revolver thus abandoned to him, attacked the criminal and shot and billed him.

Plaintiff’s second amended petition for the writ prayed that the defendants be commanded to certify fully to the court below a transcript of the record and proceedings made and had, including the testimony taken, in the matter of his dismissal, and that “upon said certification of said record and proceedings the same be reviewed,’’ and that the judgment or order for the plaintiff’s dismissal be thereupon annulled and vacated.

The record before us does not disclose that the clerk of the defendant board made the return' accompanied by a transcript of the proceedings sought to be reviewed, as required by section 1070 of the Code of Civil Procedure; in fact the record fails to show that the writ applied for was ever allowed and issued, or that in lieu thereof the court below granted an order to show cause why it should not be allowed, as provided and permitted by section 1069 of the same code. True, uncertified excerpts from the proceedings had upon the trial of the plaintiff before the board were offered and received in evidence upon the hearing in the court below, but such detached and unauthenticated portions of the record assailed cannot be considered a full or any return in the sense required by the statute. The defendants, however, in due course appeared in the proceedings by a purported answer to the plaintiff’s petition for the writ, wherein they admitted some and denied the other allegations of the petition, and at the same time pleaded laches on the part of the plaintiff as a ground for the denial of the writ.

_ Confronted by this condition of the record we are constrained to hold that the court below was without jurisdiction *396 to proceed, as indicated by its findings and judgment, to a final hearing and determination of the only questions which could be litigated upon the hearing of the writ, viz., (1) Did the defendants, as the board of police commissioners, exceed their jurisdiction when making the order complained of? And (2) Did they, in the matter before them, regularly pursue the authority conferred upon them? (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1068, 1074; Miller v. Board of Supervisors, 25 Cal. 93.)

There is a decided difference between the hearing and determination of an application for the issuance of a writ of certiorari, and the final hearing and determination had upon the writ itself and the return made thereto. In the first case no particular procedure is prescribed; and it is the usual course to allow the writ, or to grant an order to show cause why it should not issue, if the petition upon its face discloses merit. However, the court to whom the petition is addressed may, it seems, in thé exercise of its discretion, and for the purpose of determining whether or not, despite the irregularities complained of, injustice may be. done by the issuance of the writ, resort to evidence from without the record sought to be reviewed (Harris on Certiorari, sec. 15; White v. Lincoln County Commrs., 70 Me. 317, 326; Smith v. Cumberland County Commrs., 42 Me. 395, 400; In re Inhabitants of West Bath, 36 Me. 74; Stevens v. County Commrs., 97 Me. 121, [53 Atl. 985]; Hewett v. County Commrs., 85 Me. 308, [27 Atl. 179]); and in so far as the record before us shows, virtually that is what the court below did in the present case. The fact that the defendants saw fit to make and file an answer to the plaintiff’s petition unaccompanied by a return of the record, does not alter the situation. An answer in the sense usually understood in civil pleading is neither necessary nor proper upon a final hearing in certiorari, for the issue ultimately involved therein is presented by and determined from the writ itself and the return made thereto. “Upon certiorari the terms ‘answer’ and ‘return’ are sometimes inaccurately used interchangeably. Strictly speaking the lower tribunal or board should not answer, but should make return, stating its ruling and proceedings, as the return to the writ constitutes an answer as well as evidence” (4 Standard Cyclopedia of Procedure, 935; Stumpf v. Board of Supervisors, 131 Cal. 364, [82 Am. St. Rep. 350, 63 Pac. 663]; Lowell v. County Commrs., 146 *397 Mass. 403, [16 N. E. 8]; Tewksbury v. Middlesex County Commrs., 117 Mass. 563; Woodin v. Phoenix, 41 Mich. 655, [32 Am. Rep. 172, 2 N. W. 923]). The only purpose of the petition is to procure the issuance of the writ; and when it has served that purpose it has ceased to be a factor in the proceedings (Taylor v. Bissell, 1 Minn. 225). This is so because the settled general rule in certiorari is that the trial and judgment therein must be had solely upon an inspection of the record of the proceedings assailed and not upon any ulterior issue of fact (Tewksbury v. Middlesex County Commrs., 117 Mass. 563; Gerdes v. Champion, 108 Ill. 137; McManus v. McDonough, 4 Ill. App. 180; .Roe v. Superior Court, 60 Cal. 93; Harris on Certiorari, secs. 120-130). Clearly, therefore, the required return or its equivalent is an indispensable prerequisite to a final hearing in certiorari. (Leroy v. City of New York, 20 Johns. (N. Y.) 430, [11 Am. Dec. 289] ; Ex parte Dugan, 69 U. S. (2 Wall.) 134, [17 L. Ed. 871]; McManus v. McDonough, 4 Ill. App. 180.)

We are not unmindful of the many cases which might be cited tending to support the proposition that the issuance of the writ may be waived by stipulation of the parties, or impliedly by an appearance in anticipation of its issuance, and then proceeding to a hearing without objection.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P. 69, 32 Cal. App. 392, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donovan-v-board-of-police-commissioners-calctapp-1916.