Koehler v. Board of Trustees

257 P. 187, 83 Cal. App. 648, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 548
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5504.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 257 P. 187 (Koehler v. Board of Trustees) 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
Koehler v. Board of Trustees, 257 P. 187, 83 Cal. App. 648, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 548 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This original proceeding by a qualified elector of the city of Coronado is brought to secure a writ of mandate directed to the trustees of that city compelling them to call a special election for the purpose of determining whether the following trustees (Humphrey J. Stewart, George Holmes, Fellows Jones, J. E. Alearez, and Margarethe M'acMullen) should be recalled and their successors elected. Since the filing of the recall petition making these demands, however, J. E. Alearez has resigned as trustee and one. Frank L. Wilson has been appointed in his stead, and George Plolmes has died and Captain Wm. M. Grose has been elected in his stead, also the respondent Mar-gar ethe MacMullen failed to join with her eotrustees in either the answer, the demurrer, or the motion to strike filed in response to the petition and the alternative writ. So far as the motion to strike is concerned, it relates to various conclusions of law and is submitted by respondents with the statement that a reading of the complaint is sufficient to show that they have no place in the complaint. When no more cogent reason is assigned for their detrimental effect it is enough in a proceeding of this character to say that conclusions of law in a pleading are disregarded. Nor are we called upon to pass upon the special demurrer which attacks the petition for alleged uncertainties, ambiguities, and unintelligibilities. No argument is presented to support the specification, and but one authority which goes to the merits of the general demurrer.

The answer to the petition having raised issues of fact a referee was appointed to try the issues and make his findings, from which, together with the pleadings, it appears that on October 18, 1926, a recall petition was first *650 filed in this present situation, but was apparently abandoned. A second petition, the one here involved, was circulated, and filed on October 21, 1926. The city clerk compared the names on the petition with the printed indices furnished by the county clerk and not with the original affidavits of registration and attached to the petition his certificate as follows:

“I, W. Tilden Clark, City Clerk of the City of Coronado, State of California, do hereby certify: That I am the regularly elected, duly qualified and acting City Clerk of the said City of Coronado, State of California. That on the 21st day of October, A. D. 1926, there was filed in my office a petition demanding the recall of and election of successors to the following-named members of the Board of Trustees of the City of Coronado, to-wit: Humphrey J. Stewart, George Holmes, Fellows Jones, J. E. Alcarez and Margarethe F. MacMullen. That said petition contains the names of more than twenty-five per cent of the entire vote cast at the last preceding municipal elections at which such offices were respectively voted for. That in ascertaining such percentage I have counted only the names of duly qualified electors of said city.
“In Witness Whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of my office the day and year in this certificate first above written, to-wit: the 21st day of October, A. D. 1926.
“(Seal) W. Tilden Clark,
“City Clerk of the City of Coronado, State of California.”

The first consideration relates to the matter of the certificate and whether it is conclusive of the matters therein recited. The petitioner contends that it is final and conclusive. The respondents assert that it may be attacked on the grounds of fraud—which fraud may consist of failure on the part of the clerk to perform his legal duty or of the acts of the verification deputy in certifying that he saw each signature appended when in fact three or four signatures were written out of his presence, or of the forging of some of the names to the petition or of making additions to some of the signatures. It has been held that the duty performed by the city clerk under the general laws relating to recall elections (Stats. [Ex. Sess.] 1911, p. 128) is not judicial but ministerial.. (Ratto v. Board of *651 Supervisors, 75 Cal. App. 724 [243 Pac. 466]; Wright v. Engram, 186 Cal. 659 [201 Pac. 788].) Such, ruling is not necessarily determinative of the entire question. It is stated in Ratto v. Board of Trustees, supra, that the certificate of the clerk is final, although the duty performed is not judicial, and yet it will be observed that in that opinion the court referred questions to the superior court for findings, the purpose of which could only be to determine the correctness of the clerk’s certificate. The trustees are vested with no discretion to review the action of the clerk, their duty being to call the election upon submission to them of the petition in due form with the clerk’s certificate. (Ratto v. Board of Supervisors, supra; Laam v. McLaren, 28 Cal. App. 632-639 [153 Pac. 985].) In the sense then that the certificate conclusively establishes those things which it is the duty of the clerk to do, the certificate is final and not subject to revision by the trustees. This does not mean, however, that the certificate is final as to those things which it is not the duty of the clerk to do nor is it final if the clerk has failed to perform his duty. It has been held in a mandamus proceeding that the duty of the trustees does not compel them to call an election where the petition is legally insufficient. Sidler v. City Council of Bakersfield, 43 Cal. App. 352 [185 Pac. 194], and in Watts v. Superior Court, 36 Cal. App. 692 [173 Pac. 183], it is said: “As to all matters comprehended within the proper scope of examination thus committed to the clerk, his decision thereon is final.” And, speaking of forgery of signatures and unauthorized additions thereto, the court says: “They are not matters which could become apparent to the clerk in the course of his inspection of the petition or his examination of the great register, and would not be included in the matters passed upon by him in the determination made by him concerning the sufficiency of the petition.” And as a further indication that the failure of the clerk to perform his duties or the misconduct of the clerk might be the proper subject of inquiry, the court says: “The Superior Court has not before it in the injunction case any charge of fraud or wilful misconduct upon the part of the City Clerk of the City of Watts.” We are of the opinion that the certificate of the clerk is final as to all matters properly comprehended by a correct performance of his *652 duties, but that it is not final if there has been a failure on his part to perform his duty nor is it a final determination upon the question of fraud committed by the verification deputies in certifying that signatures were appended in their presence when, in fact, they were not. Nor as to the forgery of names which might not be apparent by an inspection of the records of registration, nor as to additions made to signatures of a descriptive nature which would not be evidenced by a comparison with the records of registration. The referee has found that the name of Mrs. B. H. Lyons was not signed in the presence of the verification deputy, Jack B.

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 187, 83 Cal. App. 648, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koehler-v-board-of-trustees-calctapp-1927.