Martello v. Superior Court of California

261 P. 476, 202 Cal. 400, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 360
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9819.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 261 P. 476 (Martello v. Superior Court of California) 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
Martello v. Superior Court of California, 261 P. 476, 202 Cal. 400, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 360 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This proceeding comes to us for decision by reason of an order made by this court granting petitioner a hearing herein after decision rendered by the district court of appeal denying petitioner’s application for a peremptory writ of prohibition.

Prior to the adoption by the people, at the general election held in this state on November 2, 1926, of the constitutional amendments proposed by the state legislature at its forty-sixth session relative to the judicial department (chap. 48, Stats. 1925, p. 1369), amending the state constitution by adding to article VI a new section, to be numbered la (creating a judicial council), and sections 6, 7 and 8 of said article, there was pending in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles an action entitled John A. Ranney, Plaintiff, v. Dave Martello et al., Defendants. By the stipulation of the parties to the action, R. E. Abbott, Esq., a duly and regularly licensed attorney at law, fully qualified to engage in the practice of law in all the courts of this state, was named and agreed upon by said parties as a judge pro tempore to try said cause, and his action therein was to have the same effect as if he was a judge of said superior court. The stipulation was approved by an order duly made and entered by a judge of said superior court. The trial progressed to a stage whereupon, on October 19, 1926, said judge pro tempore directed respondent clerk of said superior court to make a minute entry in the records of said cause to the effect that judgment go for plaintiff in the sum of $5,940 and for costs of suit. Nothing further was done than the entry of said minute order until December 4, 1926, on which day the attorneys for petitioner were served with proposed findings of fact, conclusions of law and the proposed decision of respondent court. It will be noted that the act creating a judicial council and adopting the constitutional amend *403 ments whereby, it is claimed, all acts providing for the trial of causes by judges pro tempore were repealed, was ratified prior to the day upon which service of the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and proposed judgment was made upon petitioner’s attorneys. If, therefore, an irreconcilable conflict arose as between said act and said amendments and any unrepealed statute which would have been sufficient authority for a continuance of the proceedings to a finality by the judge pro tempore but for said conflict, the constitutional amendments must prevail, provided they do not impair the obligation of a contract or deprive either of the parties litigant in the court below of property without due process of law or otherwise infringe upon some right protected by the federal constitution.

To prevent said judge pro tempore from entering judgment as above indicated, petitioner prayed for the issuance of a peremptory writ of prohibition directed against said court and the judge and clerk of said court, claiming that said amendments, when ratified, eo instante abolished the office of judge pro tempore and withdrew from the judge the judicial authority which the law invested him with prior to the adoption of said amendments to the constitution.

The adoption of the judicial council plan introduced into our judicial system a new method of disposing of the judicial business of the state, which, in the language of the act creating it, was adopted “in the interest of uniformity and expedition of business.” (Italics ours.) One of its main purposes was to create an administrative judicial council or committee, of which the chief justice of the state supreme court is at the head, vested with authority to marshal the judicial forces of the state into a unified form in the interest of “improving the administration of justice.” The old practice of a judge of the superior court of one county holding court for a judge of the superior court of another county at the request of the latter was in practice a matter largely resting in judicial comity, and, therefore, was lacking in administrative cohesiveness which is essential for the accomplishment of a higher degree of efficiency. As a second and third part of the former plan, section 8, article VI, before the amendments of 1926, provided that upon the request of the governor of the state it became the duty

*404 of a judge of the superior court of any county to hold a superior court session for and in place of the duly elected judge in and for any other county of the state, and, finally, it was made permissible" for parties litigant or their attorneys to stipulate that a cause in the superior court be tried by a judge pro tempore, who must be a member of the bar, approved by the court. It is very clear that the former plan of judicial assignments, if it can be thus characterized, has been superseded by the judicial council plan. In fact, not a vestige of the old plan is to be found in the new. The former method of selecting judges pro tempore upon stipulation of parties litigant was patently repugnant both to the letter and spirit of the comprehensive plan devised by the Judicial Council Act for the assignment or motation of judges to the several courts of the state as the judicial business of the state may require. This being so, one or the other must fall, and, under the well-recognized rule of construction, the latest expression of the people upon the subject must prevail. Clearly the provisions of section 72, Code of Civil Procedure, which are but a verbatim repetition of the permissive language of the constitution as to the selection of judges pro tempore, cannot be harmonized with the evident purpose of the people as shown by the adoption of the more recent elaborate system for the expedition of judicial business. If the intent of the people to abolish the judge pro tempore plan could be said to be in doubt, by reason of a failure to abolish said plan by express language, such doubt is dispelled by the fact that section 8, article VI, state constitution, before amendment, contained the judge pro tempore provision, but no reference whatever was made to the trial of causes by a judge pro tempore in said amended section 8, article VI. In short, the judge pro tempore plan was amended out of the constitution by ex industria omitting it therefrom. The express provisions for trial of causes by a judge pro tempore in section 8 before amendment and their absence in the amendment, taken in connection with the object to be effectuated, leave no room to doubt that it was excluded ex industria by the framers of the constitutional amendments. (People v. Ah Chung, 5 Cal. 103.)

It is urged as an argument entitled to grave consideration that although the amendments to the constitu *405 tion omitted to re-establish judges pro tempore as a part of our judicial system, nevertheless the legislature of 1927 did not repeal section 72, Code of Civil Procedure, which provides for the selection of judges pro tempore

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 476, 202 Cal. 400, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martello-v-superior-court-of-california-cal-1927.