O'Brien v. Olson

109 P.2d 8, 42 Cal. App. 2d 449, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1273
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1941
DocketCiv. 6508
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 109 P.2d 8 (O'Brien v. Olson) 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
O'Brien v. Olson, 109 P.2d 8, 42 Cal. App. 2d 449, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1273 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

THE COURT.

By means of certiorari, A. fi. O'Brien and other duly appointed and qualified prison directors, seek to review and annul the proceedings instituted under article X, section 1, of the Constitution of California, which resulted in their removal from office by the governor. The respondent moved to quash this proceeding on the ground that the executive act of the governor in dismissing the officers is exempt from interference by the courts for the reason that he is granted by the Constitution exclusive power and authority to do so.

Each of the petitioners was appointed and qualified, for the term of ten years, as a member of the State Board of Prison Directors. The term of none of the directors, with the exception of that of Donald Kolts, has expired. His term ended January 15, 1940. John Gee Clark is the duly appointed Director of Penology of the State of California. As such officer, he filed adequate written charges of alleged “misconduct, incompetency and neglect of duty”, against each of the prison directors, on October 23, 1939. The accusation contained eighteen separate specifications of inefficiency. The removal of the directors from office was thereupon demanded. The charges were regularly served upon the officers. The specifications of the complaint accused the directors of: Employing and retaining as warden of San Quentin state prison an incompetent person; the lack of proper supervision of the state prisons; a failure to supply and prepare wholesome food for the use of the prisoners; permitting the maintenance of unsanitary conditions in the prisons; employing dangerous machinery in the jute mills; the lack of adequate medical attention to prisoners; a failure to require entries to be made in *452 the warden’s prison record of corporal punishments administered to prisoners; and of permission granted for prison guards to inflict corporal floggings and cruel and unusual punishment upon prisoners contrary to the provisions of section 681 of the Penal Code.

A motion to dismiss the accusations was denied. The directors filed their answer to the charges .denying the material allegations thereof. On November 3, 1939, a hearing of the charges was commenced before the governor sitting in a quadjudicial capacity, as provided by article X, section 1, of the Constitution. The respective parties were separately represented by counsel. The hearing lasted several weeks. Three thousand pages of evidence were adduced. Most of the evidence in support of the charges was supplied by testimony from convicts in San Quentin state prison.

During the hearing of that proceeding, a petition for a writ of prohibition was filed in the Superior Court of Marin County, on December 27, 1939, seeking to restrain the governor from investigating the charges or removing the directors from office. An alternative writ was then issued by the court requiring the chief executive to show cause why he should not be restrained from ousting the members of the prison board. A demurrer to that petition, on the ground that the superior court was without jurisdiction of the persons or subject-matter, and that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, was argued and submitted for ruling on January 11,1940. Before that demurrer was determined, the respondent in this cause filed his findings April 11, 1940, sustaining most of the material charges which had been preferred against the members of the prison board, and declaring that he would “make an order of ouster at such time, and under such circumstances as may be proper in the premises”. June 21, 1940, the judge of the Superior Court of Marin County sustained the demurrer to the petition for a writ of prohibition. For failure to amend that petition within the time allowed, judgment was rendered against the petitioners in the prohibition proceeding dissolving the restraining order, and determining that they take nothing by that action. Subsequently the governor made an order formally removing these petitioners from office as prison directors, and he thereafter appointed their successors. This petition for a writ of certiorari was then filed.

*453 The respondent contends that the writ of certiorari may not issue under section 1068 of the Code of Civil Procedure to review the order of the Governor of California in removing from office the prison directors, since that act was an exercise of executive and ministerial authority which is exclusively within his province. There is no merit in this contention. In the investigation of charges. of misconduct and neglect of duty of prison directors the governor clearly acted, under the provisions of article X, section 1, of the Constitution, as an “officer exercising judicial functions.” (Sec. 1068, Code Civ. Proc.; 4 Cal. Jur. 1071, sec. 38; State ex rel. Kinsella v. Eberhart, 116 Minn. 313 [133 N. W. 857, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 785, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 788.) In the case last cited, which was a proceeding to review the order of the governor of Minnesota in removing from office a county attorney, it is said: “Proceedings for the removal of a public official by the governor are clearly of judicial character”. The constitutional provision above cited confers upon the governor, as an officer, authority in a judicial capacity to hear and determine written charges of incompetency, as distinguished from his executive power. After authorizing the governor to appoint five prison directors “who shall hold office for ten years ’ ’, the last paragraph of that section provides that “The governor shall have the power to remove either of the directors for misconduct, incompeteney, or neglect of duty, after an opportunity to be heard upon written charges”.

Section 1068 of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes the issuance of a writ of certiorari to review the proceedings of either an inferior tribunal or an officer in the exercise of judicial functions. That section provides:

“A writ of review may be granted by any court, except a municipal, police or justice’s court, when an inferior tribunal, board, or officer, exercising judicial functions, has exceeded the jurisdiction of such tribunal, board, or officer, and there is no appeal, nor, in the judgment of the court, any plain, speedy, and adequate remedy. ’ ’

The respondent insists that the preceding section is inapplicable to the circumstances of this case since the chief executive may not be deemed to be a mere “inferior tribunal”. That precise contention was disposed of adversely to this respondent in the case of Harpending v. Haight, 39 Cal. 189, at page 212 [2 Am. Rep. 432], which was a petition for a writ of mandamus under section 1085 of the Code of Civil Proce *454 dure. That section contains language very similar to the section we are here required to construe. In the Harpending proceeding a mandate was sought and granted compelling the governor to perform the purely ministerial duty of authenticating a statute which had been adopted by the legislature. It was contended, as it is in the present case, that since the governor was not an “inferior tribunal” the writ should not issue against him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.2d 8, 42 Cal. App. 2d 449, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-olson-calctapp-1941.