Logan v. Shields

214 P. 46, 190 Cal. 661, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 592
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1923
DocketS. F. No. 10528.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 214 P. 46 (Logan v. Shields) 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
Logan v. Shields, 214 P. 46, 190 Cal. 661, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 592 (Cal. 1923).

Opinion

WILBUR, C. J.

This is an original proceeding in mandamus. The petitioner has been employed as a traffic officer or employee by the board of supervisors of San Mateo County at a salary of $150 per month. A claim for that amount for the months of November and December, 1922, *662 was audited and approved by the board of supervisors and was presented by the petitioner to the respondent auditor for his warrant. The auditor having refused to issue his warrant, petitioner brought this proceeding to compel the issuance of the warrant. It appears from the return herein that for a period of about ten years the board of supervisors of San Mateo has, by resolution and by appointment thereunder, employed and paid a number of persons known in the resolution and in the report as traffic officers or “traffic cops. ’ ’

The petitioner was appointed or employed under such resolution and by virtue thereof seeks by this proceeding to secure his compensation.

If the petitioner is an officer within the meaning of article XI, section 5, of the constitution, it is clear under decisions rendered shortly after the adoption of the constitution that the legislature of the state alone has power to create such an. office and that the board of supervisors of the county can neither provide for such officers or their compensation under the police power granted directly by the constitution to the counties in article XI, section 11, nor by authority expressly granted by the legislature. The rule was thus stated in County of El Dorado v. Meiss, 100 Cal. 268, 274 [34 Pac. 716, 717]: “The duty of providing for the election or appointment of the particular officers named in section 5 of article XI of the constitution, ‘and such other county officers ... as public convenience may require,’ and to prescribe their duties and fix their terms of office, is by this section vested exclusively in the legislature of the state, and can be exercised by no other body. The legislature cannot divest itself of this duty by any delegation of the power. ‘This provision of the constitution, ’ said this court in Welsh v. Bramlet, 98 Cal. 219 [33 Pac. 66], ‘is mandatory, and must be construed, not only as giving to the legislature the exclusive authority to provide for the officers in the several counties, fix their terms of office, and prescribe their duties, but also as declaring that such provision must be made “by general and uniform laws,” and that any law which the legislature may enact upon these subjects must be uniformly applicable to all the counties in the state. ’ ” It was, therefore, held in that ease that an ordinance creating the office of license tax *663 collector was void in so far as it attempted to create such office because of want of power in the board of supervisors to create such an office.

In the case of People v. Wheeler, 136 Cal. 652 [69 Pac. 435], this court held that a county physician was not an officer within the meaning of the constitutional provision above quoted. With reference to the question as to whether or not an office was created by the appointment of the county physician it was said:

“It may be added that if the act could be thus construed, it would be clearly unconstitutional. For the effect of the act would then be to delegate to the board of supervisors the power to create an indefinite number of public officers, with varying duties and compensation; which cannot be regarded as within the constitutional powers of the legislature. ‘The legislature cannot commit to the discretion of others the important function of creating public offices in unlimited or indefinite number.’ (Ford v. Harbor Commrs., 81 Cal. 19, 37 [22 Pac. 278]; Farrell v. Board of Trustees, 85 Cal. 408, 415 [24 Pac. 868].) Still more obviously would this be the case if the supposed office be regarded as a county office; as, ‘if an office at all,’ it should be. (People v. Harrington, 63 Cal. 257, 260.) For with relation to county offices, it is the constitutional duty of the legislature not only to provide for the election of the officers, but also to fix their terms of office, to prescribe their duties, and to regulate their salaries or compensation; and this duty could not be delegated to the board of supervisors or others. (Const., art. II, sec. 5; Ventura County v. Clay, 112 Cal. 65, 70 [44 Pac. 488]; County of El Dorado v. Meiss, 100 Cal. 268, 274 [34 Pac. 716]; Farrell v. Board of Trustees, 85 Cal. 415, 416 [24 Pac. 868]; County of Los Angeles v. Lopez, 104 Cal. 257 [38 Pac. 42]; People v. Johnson, 95 Cal. 471, [31 Pac. 611] ; Dougherty v. Austin, 94 Cal. 601 [16 L. R. A. 161, 28 Pac. 834, 29 Pac. 1092] ; Dwyer v. Parker, 115 Cal. 544 [47 Pac. 372].)”

In the statute considered in Coulter v. Pool, 187 Cal. 181 [201 Pac. 120], the legislature attempted to delegate to the board of supervisors the power to employ a county engineer. Although such officer was designated as an employee in the statute it was held that he was in fact an officer and that the attempted delegation of power was void. The court there said: “. . . ‘The label placed by the legislature *664 upon its work cannot be permitted to give it a meaning not fairly contemplated within its terms. ’ In other words, a legislative declaration, whether contained in the title or in the body of a statute, that the statute was intended to promote a certain purpose is not conclusive on the courts, and they may and must inquire into the real, as distinguished from the ostensible, purpose of the statute, and determine the fact whether, after all has been said and done by the legislature, the statute, in its scope and effect, departs from the declared legislative design and contravenes the fundamental and supreme law of the state, (Matter of Jacobs, 98 N. Y. 98, 110 [50 Am. Rep. 636] ; State v. Redmon, 134 Wis. 89, 107 [126 Am. St. Rep. 1003, 15 Ann. Cas. 408, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 229, 114 N. W. 137]; Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623 [31 L. Ed. 205, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 273, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].) ...” The court then said: “Its definition and application depend not upon what the particular office in question may be called, nor upon what a statute may call it, but upon the power granted and wielded, the duties and functions performed and other circumstances which manifest the true character of the position and make and mark it a public office, irrespective of its formal designation. (Knox v. Los Angeles County, 58 Cal. 59; Mechem on Public Offices, sec. 4; Hartigan v. Board, 49 W. Va. 14 [38 S. E. 698].) . . .” In determining whether or not the county engineer was a public officer, one of the rules of the determination of that question is thus stated in Coulter v.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P. 46, 190 Cal. 661, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-shields-cal-1923.