McClung v. Johnson

289 P. 199, 106 Cal. App. 264
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1930
DocketDocket No. 3327.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 289 P. 199 (McClung v. Johnson) 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
McClung v. Johnson, 289 P. 199, 106 Cal. App. 264 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The appellant in this action was, during all the times mentioned herein, the duly appointed, qualified and acting clerk of the Justice’s Court of the City of Stockton. The city of Stockton is a municipal corporation of 2% class. It is incorporated under a freeholders’ charter, duly ratified and approved by the legislature. Under the charter of the city of Stockton there was created a police court in and for said city. This court is presided over by a police judge, and also has a duly appointed, qualified and acting clerk.

The section of the Code of Civil Procedure under which the appellant vras appointed and qualified as the clerk of the Justice’s Court of the City of Stockton provides a salary of $1500 per year. On or about the first day of February, 1927, the appellant applied to the county auditor of the county of San Joaquin for a warrant in her favor in the sum of $125, payable out of the county treasury of the county of San Joaquin, as and for her salary for the month of January, 1927. The respondent, as the county auditor of said county, refused to issue or deliver to the appellant a warrant in said sum, or any sum, as and for her salary as clerk of said court. Upon the refusal of the auditor to *266 issue the warrant as herein referred to, this action was begun in the Superior Court of the County of San Joaquin, praying that a writ of mandate be issued by said court, directed to the respondent as the auditor of said county, to issue the warrant as requested by the appellant as and for her salary for said month of January, 1927, as clerk of the Justice’s Court of the City of Stockton. The respondent appeared in this cause and filed a demurrer to the appellant’s petition, which demurrer was sustained, and judgment thereafter entered in favor of the respondent denying the appellant any relief herein. From this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Only one question is involved in this action, to wit: Is the salary of $1500 per year, to which the appellant is entitled, payable out of the county treasury of the county of San Joaquin? No question is presented as to whether appellant is entitled to any salary, nor is any issue tendered as to the amount thereof.

It appears from the record that the appellant was denied relief by reason of the wording of section 103% of the Code of Civil Procedure, as said section read and was in force during the time involved in this proceeding. After providing for a clerk of the justice’s court in cities of the 2% class, and fixing the salary at $1500 per annum, and also fixing the salaries of other clerks, the section concludes as follows: “Said salaries shall respectively be paid in equal monthly installments out of the treasury of said cities.”

This section was re-enacted by the legislature in 1925 [Stats. 1925, p. 183], containing language which we have above set forth, after the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Graham v. Mayor of Fresno, 151 Cal. 465 [91 Pac. 147], to which case reference will be hereafter made.

In 1923, section 103 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended [Stats. 1923, p. 1011],. in such a manner as to provide for the election of a justice of the peace in cities of the 2% class, which includes the city of Stockton. This section specifies-the salary to be received by the justice of ' the peace of such court, and also provides for the payment of all fees collected by such justice, into the county treasury. No change was then made in the reading of section 103½ of the Code of Civil Procedure. Subsequently, in 1927, section 103½ of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended [Stats. *267 1927, p. 1657], relative to the payment of salaries, to read as follows: “Said salaries shall respectively be payable in monthly installments, by warrants drawn each month upon the salary fund, or if there be no salary fund, then upon the general fund of such city or county, as the case may be, such warrants to be audited and paid as any other city or county official’s, respectively,” etc.

In the case of Graham v. Mayor of Fresno, supra, the Supreme Court had before it the question as to whether the cost of maintaining a justice’s court in and for cities having a police court created by charter, could be made chargeable against such cities. In that case it is held that section 8½ of article XI, giving to cities having a freehold charter the power to create police courts, vested in such city the exclusive right to create such police courts, and left to the legislature the power only of creating justices’ courts, the expenses of maintaining which could not be made chargeable against the municipality in which such court was created. The language of the Supreme Court in this particular is as follows: “The effect of subdivision 1 of section of article XI was to make the matter of such police courts purely a municipal affair as to any freeholders’ charter city which subsequently made appropriate provision in its charter for such court. It confided the subject matter of such courts, and the election and compensation of the judges thereof, to any such city desiring to assume, and assuming, control thereof, just as, by the same section, the matter of fixing the compensation of county officers in consolidated cities and counties was confided to the city and county, to be provided for in its freeholders’ charter. Such jurisdiction could not coexist in both the legislature and the city, and the provision for the assumption of such jurisdiction by the city necessarily contemplated the removal of the same from the legislature whenever the jurisdiction was assumed by the city. Any act of the legislature relative to such subject matter would necessarily be inconsistent with a charter provision in regard to the same subject matter. As to such matters as the Constitution authorizes to be provided for in freeholders’ charters, the provisions of the charter are supreme, superseding all laws inconsistent therewith (Const., Art. XI, sec. 6), and being exempt from any control by any subsequent act of the legislature,”

*268 The effect of this decision was to write out of section 103½ of the Code of Civil Procedure that portion which specified that the salary of the clerk of a city justice’s court was payable out of the city treasury. Applied .to the case at bar the effect of the decision was and is to write out of section 103½ of the Code of Civil Procedure the provision that the salary of the appellant is payable out of the city treasury. This leaves the section as though it simply read: The salary of the clerk of the Justic’e Court of the City of Stockton is the sum of $1500 per year, payable in equal monthly installments.

We have thus the simple proposition of the legislature creating a justice’s court for the city of Stockton, providing for a clerk of said court at an annual salary of $1500 per year, payable in equal monthly installments, with all fees collected to be turned over to the county treasury. By reference to the sections of the code which we have mentioned it will be noticed that the clerk of the justice’s court is empowered to perform a number of functions, such as the administration of oaths, the preparation of bonds, justification of bail, etc., which, under the decision of this court in the case of Cunning v. Carr, 69 Cal. App. 230 [230 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
289 P. 199, 106 Cal. App. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclung-v-johnson-calctapp-1930.