Dryden v. Board of Pension Commissioners

59 P.2d 104, 6 Cal. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 556
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1936
DocketL. A. 15674
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 104 (Dryden v. Board of Pension Commissioners) 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
Dryden v. Board of Pension Commissioners, 59 P.2d 104, 6 Cal. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 556 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A hearing was granted in this case after decision by the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division One. Upon further consideration, we are satisfied with the conclusion reached by said court, and we hereby adopt the following opinion of Mr. Justice pro tempore Roth as part of the opinion of this court:

“Petitioner and defendants both filed separate appeals from the judgment in this case in favor of defendants. Pe *577 titioner’s appeal is Civil No. 9912, and the appeal of defendants is Civil No. 10025. Both will be considered together.

“Petitioner is the widow of Claude Le Boy Dryden, a former police officer of the city of Los Angeles, who for more than three years prior to his death held the rank of detective-lieutenant. The trial court found from conflicting evidence that on October 13, 1924, deceased received injuries in an automobile accident, occurring while deceased was acting in the line of duty, which injuries were a primary contributing cause of his death on August 10, 1931. On June 6, 1932, approximately ten months after the death of Dryden, his widow, petitioner herein, presented to the Board of Pension Commissioners of the City of Los Angeles and the members thereof (defendants herein), her claim and petition for pension, which was by said court denied. The trial court upheld the action of the Pension Board on the sole ground that section 376 of the city charter required all such claims or demands to be presented within six months, and that, since more than six months had elapsed since the death of petitioner’s husband, the said claim was barred and petitioner entitled to no relief under the pension provisions of the city charter of the city of Los Angeles.

“The sole point presented on petitioner’s appeal (Civ. No. 9912) is the correctness of the trial court’s ruling in this respect. The appeal of defendants (Civ. No. 10025) attacks the correctness of the finding made by the trial court to the effect that the injuries received in the accident of 1924 were a primary cause of death. A number of experts testified as to the cause of death, and the trial court in a written opinion sums up the evidence and states its conclusions as follows:

“ ‘Dr. B. M. Dunsmoor, the only physisian who performed an autopsy and the only eye witness thereto, testified that upon the opening of the heart of the deceased he found a thrombus, a fibrous ribbon-like substance about the size of a rubber document band, such as he presented at the trial. This thrombus when found was attached to the lower apex of the right ventricle, extending free, upward, in the main sinus of the ventricle, through the tricuspid valve into the right auricle. He testified that the clinical symptoms indicated a degree of closure of the tricuspid valve by reason *578 of the presence of this connective, ribbon-like tissue, which closure resulted in the death of the lieutenant.
“ ‘All of the evidence of the physicians indicated that thrombosis may originate in an ante mortem blood clot forming by reason of such a fracture.
“ ‘The physicians differed materially as to whether such a thrombus would tend to and could work its way against the blood stream through the tricuspid valve into the auricle. One of the witnesses stated that it would tend to and does in many cases work its way into the pulmonary arteries.
“ ‘None of the evidence denies that the witness Dr. Duns-moor found the conditions as stated. He was an eye witness, the only one, and his evidence is contradicted only by the negative evidence of learned witnesses as to their observation in numerous other cases and their deduction from years of study and practice. . . .
“ ‘We value very highly the testimony of these learned men, but in applying the law of evidence greater weight must be given to the unshaken testimony of an expert eye witness.
' “ ‘We are therefore inclined to hold that the lieutenant’s death resulted from a traumatic thrombosis caused by the injury in the automobile collision in question. ’

“A perusal of the recorder’s transcript convinces us that the foregoing resume of the evidence made by the trial court is fair and fully corroborated by the record. We are, therefore, satisfied that there was a substantial conflict in the evidence, and that the conclusion of the trial court on the facts cannot be disturbed.

“ Petitioner’s appeal presents a more substantial question. Section 186 of article XYII of the charter of the city of Los Angeles provides for the creation of a pension fund and particularizes the sources from which money shall be derived to make up the fund. Section 186% of the same article requires, in effect, that a member of the police or fire departments of the city of Los Angeles shall pay to this fund 4 per cent of each salary check received. The deceased was a member of the police department for approximately fourteen years before his death, during the entire period of which he paid his required 4 per cent of each salary cheek received. A pension based upon such facts is not a gratuity. It is a periodical allowance of money granted by the city in consideration of services rendered or of loss or injury sus *579 tained, and payments actually made for that purpose. It has been clearly held that the pension provisions of the city charter are an integral portion of the contemplated compensation set forth in the contract of employment between the city and a member of the police department, and are an indispensable part of that contract, and that the right to a pension becomes a vested one upon acceptance of employment by an applicant. (O’Dea v. Cook, 176 Cal. 659 [169 Pac. 366]; Aitken v. Roche, 48 Cal. App. 753 [192 Pac. 464] ; French v. Cook, 173 Cal. 126 [160 Pac. 411] ; art. XVII, sec. 183, Charter of the City of Los Angeles.)

“ The pertinent portion of section 183 of the charter is as follows:

“ ‘Whenever any member of the . . . Police Department shall die as a result of any injury received during the performance of his duty . . . then an annual pension shall be paid in equal monthly installments to his widow ... in an amount equal to one-half (½) of the average monthly rate of salary which such deceased member shall have received in such department during the three years immediately preceding the time of his death ...” (Stats. 1927, p. 2008.)
“Section 183 undoubtedly gives to petitioner the unqualified right to a pension. The section does not, nor does any other section of article XVII, which article is in its entirety devoted to pensions, set out the procedural machinery by which the pension therein provided for may be obtained. There is nothing in the whole of said article XVII which requires a widow to file an application for a pension within a given period of time or to file such an application at all. As defendants concede in their brief, ‘standing alone, it (sec. 183) amounts to a declaration that a pension shall be paid, but is silent as to the manner of its payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 104, 6 Cal. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dryden-v-board-of-pension-commissioners-cal-1936.