Millholen v. Riley

293 P. 69, 211 Cal. 29, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 298
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1930
DocketDocket No. L.A. 11805.
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 293 P. 69 (Millholen v. Riley) 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
Millholen v. Riley, 293 P. 69, 211 Cal. 29, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 298 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

Original proceeding in mandate.

Petitioner was on July 1, 1929, appointed a secretary of the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Two. Respondents are the State Controller, the Department of Finance of the State of California and the members thereof.

Petitioner received her appointment from the court she was serving and her compensation for such services was fixed by the same authority at $225 per month. She served during the months of July and August, 1929. The court approved her demand for said sum as salary for each of said months and ordered it paid from the treasury of the state. Petitioner thereupon made demand upon respondent Department of Finance for approval of said claims and upon *31 the Controller for the issuance of warrants in her favor in said amounts. Her request was refused. This proceeding followed, the issue being made by petition and answer. Admittedly ample funds appropriated by the legislature for the support and maintenance of the court exist and are available for the liquidation of petitioner’s claims.

In a budget proposed to the legislature for the fiscal years from July 1, 1929, to June 30, 1931, pursuant to section 34 of article IV of the state Constitution, an appropriation of $208,530 was requested for support of the Second District Court of Appeal, which included the following items for each of said years: Secretaries (law), $9,000; secretaries (10 months), $3,000. The budget was reduced by the legislature, which appropriated a total amount of $202,-330 for the support of said court, without specification of any kind as to the manner in which the money should be expended.

If the authority to appoint and fix compensation of persons in the category of petitioner is not lodged elsewhere by some other provision of the law, it seems too clear for argument that the court itself, in aid of the duty enjoined upon it by law, has both the power of appointment and the power of fixing compensation. In other words, in the absence of any enactment to the contrary, the duty to function includes by implication of law the power to properly apply the funds appropriated for that purpose. Abundant authority exists to this effect: Rankin v. Colgan, 92 Cal. 605 [28 Pac. 673]; Bateman v. Colgan, 111 Cal. 580, 587 [44 Pac. 238] ; Harris v. Gibbons, 114 Cal. 418 [46 Pac. 292] ; Lewis v. Colgan, 115 Cal. 529 [47 Pac. 357].

In the appropriation bill is found the following provision: “The officers of the various departments, boards, commissions and institutions for whose benefit and support appropriations are made in this act are expressly forbidden to make any expenditure in excess of such appropriations, except the consent of the state department of finance be first obtained, and a certificate in writing, duly signed by the director of said department, of the unavoidable necessity of such expenditure. ...” (Stats. 1929, p. 98.) This provision further confirms the conclusion above deduced.

This being true, we are required to search elsewhere to see if the power to fix the compensation of petitioner *32 has been delegated to any other officer or bureau. The position of respondents is that the Department of Finance has that power abiding in it by virtue of sections 654 and 675a of the Political Code. Section 654 gives the Department of Finance general supervision over the financial and business policies of the state. Section 675a (Stats. 1927, p. 455), so far as here involved, reads as follows: “All contracts entered into by any state officer, board, commission, department, or bureau for the purchase of supplies, materials, or services, shall before the same become effective be transmitted with all papers, estimates and recommendations concerning the same to the state department of finance for consideration. If such department approve the same, the contract shall, from the date of such approval, be in force and effect. ...”

At the time these two sections were enacted, a new article was added to the Political Code, which covers sections 654 to 685, inclusive (Stats. 1927, chap. 251, pp. 449-459). In the margin opposite the statute (Stats. 1927, see. 675a, p. 455) is found this annotation: “State departmental contracts”. This article was added pursuant to the policy announced in part III, title I, chapter 3, article II, of said Political Code, being sections 348 to 359a, inclusive, thereof. Section 348 then read: “It is the policy of this state to vest in the governor the civil administration of the laws of the state and for the purpose of aiding the governor in the execution and administration of the laws to divide the executive and administrative work into departments as provided by law.”

Taking these provisions in the context where found, coupled with the objects and purposes for which the enactments were made as disclosed in the other provisions of the same title, we have no hesitancy in declaring that the said sections of the code here invoked were intended to and do apply only to the executive department of the government and were not intended to and do not apply to the judicial department thereof set up by article VI, section 1, of the Constitution. The word “department” found in said sections simply relates to the administrative departments created in aid of the Governor in the enforcement and execution of the laws of the state.

*33 A case practically on all-fours with the one before us, where an able discussion of this identical question under a similar situation is found, is State v. Cunningham, 39 Mont. 165 [101 Pac. 962], The statute there involved (sec. 262, Rev. Codes 1907) read: “The board of examiners may at any time when necessary employ clerical help for any state officer or board, and no clerks must be employed by such officer or board without the authority of the board of examiners, and no such clerks must be employed by the board of examiners except when all the duties of the office cannot be performed by the officer himself.” The court in part said: “Whatever application section 262, supra, may have to the help employed in the executive department, it cannot have, and was not intended to have, any application to the necessary employees attached to this court. This court, viewed as a department of the state government, is neither an officer nor a board, and therefore does not fall within the terms of this provision.”

In fact, it may well be doubted whether the employment of petitioner is the making of a contract for personal services. Her duties partake more of the nature of a public office and there seems to be no contractual relation in the holding of such a position. (Mansfield v. Chambers, 26 Cal. App. 499 [147 Pac. 595]; Mono Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 175 Cal. 752 [167 Pac. 377].)

Another observation makes the conclusion above referred to manifest. Section 682 of the Political Code, a part of the same article (Stats. 1927, p.

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Bluebook (online)
293 P. 69, 211 Cal. 29, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millholen-v-riley-cal-1930.