Ex parte Keeney

24 P. 34, 84 Cal. 304, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 809
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1890
DocketNo. 20660
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 24 P. 34 (Ex parte Keeney) 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
Ex parte Keeney, 24 P. 34, 84 Cal. 304, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 809 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Fox, J.

Petitioner, who is health officer of the city and county of San Francisco, is arrested and held under a warrant issued out of the police court of said city and county, upon a complaint charging him with misdemeanor, for that he, “as such health officer, did grant and issue a permit to deposit the body of said Ah Tin in the city cemetery, in said city and county of San Francisco, and to inter said body in said city and county, ■without requiring, receiving or obtaining, or filing, and without the issuance of the certificate of the death of said Ah Tin, signed or issued by an attending physician, or by the coroner of said city and county of San Fran[305]*305cisco, or by a physician authorized by the coroner to grant a certificate of death, thereby violating the provisions of order No. 2162 of the board of supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco.”

Order No. 2162 referred to is entitled as an order “ regulating the granting of certificates of death and the issuance of permits for interments.” It provides that no person shall deposit in any cemetery, or inter in said city and county, any human body, without first having obtained and filed with the health officer a certificate of death signed by a legally qualified attending physician, nor without having obtained from said health officer a permit to deposit or inter said human body; that if there be no attending physician, or he be absent, such certificate may be issued by the coroner, or by a physician authorized by the coroner to grant such certificates; that in case of death in maternity homes, lyin'g-in hospitals, or other similar institutions, the certificate shall be issued only by the coroner, or a physician authorized by him to grant certificates of death; that no permit to deposit or inter shall be granted or issued by the health officer until he shall have received the certificate of death required by the order, and that any violation of the provisions of the order shall constitute a misdemeanor, punishable by fine of not more than five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment not more than six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.

On the part of the people it is claimed that the passage and enforcement of such an order is fully authorized by article 11, section 11, of the constitution, which reads: “Any count}', city, town, or township may make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws.”

(Although “cities and counties” are not mentioned in this section, this and all other provisions of the constitution not inconsistent or prohibited to cities are made [306]*306applicable to consolidated cities and counties by section 7 of the same article.)

On the part of the petitioner it is claimed that the provisions of this order are in conflict with the provisions of sections 3012, 3025, and 3084 of the Political Code, and of section 377 of the Penal Code, all of which are general laws, and that in so far as the provisions of the order do conflict with these general laws, they are unauthorized and void. That they are unauthorized and void, if such conflict exists, cannot be doubted.

All these sections of the Political Code are found in title 7 of part 3. That title is in relation to the “general police of the state.” Chapter 2 of the title relates to “preservation of the public health,” and article 3 of that chapter relates to “ health and quarantine regulations for the city and harbor of San Francisco.” This article consists of sections 3004 to and including 3035. Section 3005 provides for a board of health for the city and county of San Francisco, to consist of the mayor, and of four physicians, to be appointed by the governor, to hold office for five years. Section 3007 provides for the appointment, by the board, of a health officer, and section 3008 makes him the executive officer of' the health department. Section 3012 reads as follows: "The board of health have general supervision of all matters appertaining to the sanitary condition of the city and county, including the city and county hospital, the county jail, alms-house, industrial school, and all public health institutions provided by the city and county of San Francisco; and may adopt such orders and regulations, and appoint or discharge such medical attendants and employees as to them seems best to promote the public welfare; and may appoint as many health inspectors as they deem necessary in time of epidemics.”

So much of section 3025 as needs to be considered here reads as follows: “No person shall deposit in any cemetery or inter in the city and county of San Fran[307]*307cisco any human body without first having obtained and filed with the health officer a certificate, signed by a physician or midwife, or a coroner, setting forth, as near as possible, the name, age, color, sex, place of birth, occupation, date, locality, and the cause of death of the deceased, and obtain from such health officer a permit; nor shall any human body be removed or disinterred without the permit of the health officer or by order of the coroner.”

It is very clear that by this article the legislature has undertaken, as a part of the provisions of the general law “relating to the public health,” and through a local department of the state government, to wit, a board of health for the city and county of San Francisco, all of the members of which, except the mayor of the city and county, are appointed by the governor, to manage and control certain—we do not say all, but certain — of the sanitary regulations of the city and county and contiguous harbor of San Francisco, and by section 3025 has particularly undertaken to manage and control the condition and terms upon which permits for the interment of human bodies within said city and county may be issued, and by whom.

So much of section 3005 as prescribed the term of five years for the officers of the board appointed by the governor has been declared to be unconstitutional. (People v. Perry, 79 Cal. 105.) But it was expressly held that this did not affect the validity of the balance of the act.

It follows that any order or ordinance, or provision of any order'or ordinance, of the municipality which conflicts with the provisions of this general law is prohibited and forbidden to the municipality,—is unauthorized and void. Is there a conflict between the provisions of this order and of the general law ? We think so. The order punishes the health officer as for misdemeanor if lie issues a burial permit upon the certificate of any person other than a legally qualified attending physician, except [308]*308that if there was no legally qualified attending physician, or if there was such, and he be absent (thus making it the duty of the health officer at his peril to ascertain and determine these facts before he can accept any other certificate), he may accept the certificate of the coroner, or of a physician authorized by the coroner, in writing, to grant such certificates, and with the one further exception, that, if the death occur in a maternity home, lying-in hospital, or other similar institution, and no matter whether the death be of a patient or of a servant, a stranger who has happened to call, a male or a female, he must ignore even the “legally qualified attending physician,” and all other persons licensed by the state to issue certificates of death, and issue his permit only on the certificate of the coroner, or of a physician authorized by that officer to issue such certificates.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 P. 34, 84 Cal. 304, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-keeney-cal-1890.