Newport Beach Fire & Police Protective League v. City Council

189 Cal. App. 2d 17, 10 Cal. Rptr. 919, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2142
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 1961
DocketCiv. 6395
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 Cal. App. 2d 17 (Newport Beach Fire & Police Protective League v. City Council) 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
Newport Beach Fire & Police Protective League v. City Council, 189 Cal. App. 2d 17, 10 Cal. Rptr. 919, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2142 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

COUGHLIN, J.

The question for determination on this appeal is whether an initiative ordinance of the city of Newport Beach relating to its civil service system is valid.

The petitioners, appellants herein, filed a petition for a writ of mandate asking that the City Council of Newport Beach and others, respondents herein, be directed to declare invalid the adoption of that ordinance; a general demurrer thereto was sustained with leave to amend; petitioners elected not to amend; a judgment of dismissal followed; and from this judgment the petitioners have taken this appeal.

The city of Newport Beach became a chartered city on January 7, 1955. Under the provisions of its charter the civil service system previously in effect was retained. Pertinent provisions thereof are:

(1) “Section 800. Continuance of Present System. The civil service system existing at the time this Charter takes effect, to the extent that the same is not inconsistent with any of the provisions of this Charter, is hereby continued in existence subject to all of the terms and provisions of this Charter and subject to amendment by proper authority as in this Charter provided ’ ’;
(2) “Section 801. System to be Maintained. The City Council shall by ordinance continuously maintain a civil service system for the selection, employment, classification, advancement, suspension and discharge of those appointive officers and employees who shall be included in the system. The system shall comply with all other provisions of this Charter ’ ’; and
(3) “Section 803, Withdrawal from System. After inclusion in the system, any departments or appointive officers or employees shall not be withdrawn therefrom, either by an outright repeal of the civil service ordinance or otherwise, *19 unless such withdrawal has been submitted to the city electors at a special or regular municipal election and approved by a majority of two-thirds of those electors voting on the proposition.” (Stats. 1955, pp. 3634-3635.)

The petition indicates that ordinance number 511 of the city of Newport Beach was the civil service ordinance in effect at the time the charter was adopted; alleges that on November 4, 1958, an initiative proposition was submitted to the electors of the city which proposed the repeal of ordinance number 511 and the adoption of ordinance number 866; that this initiative measure was adopted by a majority vote of the electors but not by a two-thirds vote thereof; indicates that ordinance number 866 is a civil service ordinance; alleges that this ordinance withdraws certain rights and benefits from the officers and employees of the police and fire departments particularly in that it changes the method of advancement therein by eliminating a requirement that the chiefs of these departments must be selected from their ranks; and also alleges that, pursuant to said initiative proceedings, the city council purported to adopt ordinance number 866 and repeal ordinance number 511. Copies of these ordinances are not set forth in or attached to the petition.

The appellants contend that the repeal of ordinance number 511 amounted to a withdrawal of all of the civil service employees from the civil service system and, therefore, under the charter the initiative measure could be adopted only by a two-thirds vote of the electorate. There is no allegation in the petition that any civil service employee actually was withdrawn from the system. It does not appear that any city employee has lost his job as the result of the adoption of the initiative measure.

Respondents contend:

(1) that the initiative measure did not involve a withdrawal of any civil service employee from the system and, therefore, the charter provisions requiring a two-thirds vote did not apply; and (2) that the section of the charter in question contravenes the provisions of the state Constitution which reserves to the electorate through the initiative and referendum the right to legislate by majority action and, therefore, is invalid.

It appears that the initiative measure in question substitutes one civil service ordinance for another civil service ordinance but does not withdraw any officer or employee from *20 the civil service system. The obvious purpose of section 803 of the charter is to prevent an officer or an employee who is a member of the civil service system from being taken out of that system either by repeal of the ordinance or otherwise without submitting the matter to the electorate. (Schildwachter v. City of Compton, 14 Cal.2d 342, 344-345 [94 P.2d 346].) To conclude that an initiative measure such as is under consideration in this ease achieves the purpose which the charter provision in question seeks to prevent is unreasonable. As heretofore noted, the argument in support of such a conclusion is founded upon the premise that the initiative measure in question not only substituted a new civil service ordinance for the old civil service ordinance but also repealed the old ordinance, and by such repeal caused the withdrawal of all employees and officers from the civil service system. The premise is faulty. Section 800 through section 803 of the charter give primary consideration to a civil service system and not to a civil service ordinance. It is argued, in substance, that the system and the ordinance are one and the same; that the reference in section 800 of the charter to the civil service system is a reference to ordinance number 511 as it then existed; and that any change in the ordinance is a change in the system. However, the section just referred to provides that the system is subject to amendment, and if the term “system” as therein used means “ordinance” charter recognition is given to the fact that the ordinance may be amended. That a civil service system and a civil service ordinance are interrelated may not be questioned. On the other hand the language of the charter would indicate that these terms are not to be considered as one and the same for its purposes. The charter expressly refers to an “ordinance” as well as to a “system.” Section 801 provides that the “City Council shall by ordinance continuously maintain a civil service system.. ..” (Emphasis added.) Section 802 recognizes that the system shall include members of the police and fire departments and authorizes the inclusion of “other appointive officers or positions” by ordinance. We conclude that the civil service system of the city of Newport Beach may be changed by an amendment of its civil service ordinance. In addition, we are of the opinion that the fact that this change takes place by the substitution of a new ordinance for an old ordinance, with a consequent and incidental repeal of the old ordinance, does not *21 effect a withdrawal of the officers or employees of the city from the system.

Furthermore, when particular attention is directed to the phraseology used in section 803, its inapplicability to the instant situation is evident. Paraphrased for the purpose at hand, that section provides that “After inclusion in the system . . . officers or employees shall not be withdrawn

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Bluebook (online)
189 Cal. App. 2d 17, 10 Cal. Rptr. 919, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newport-beach-fire-police-protective-league-v-city-council-calctapp-1961.