People Ex Rel. Moore v. King

60 P. 35, 127 Cal. 570, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 698
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1669.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 P. 35 (People Ex Rel. Moore v. King) 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
People Ex Rel. Moore v. King, 60 P. 35, 127 Cal. 570, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 698 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

McFARLAND, J.

This action is brought under section 803 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure in the name of the people on the relation of W. N. Moore, to determine the right to the office of medical superintendent of the Mendocino State Hospital. The court below entered judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appealed from the judgment, and the case is presented here on the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions.

By an act of the legislature approved February 20, 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 25), the “Mendocino State Insane Asylum” was established at ITkiah in Mendocino county. It was under the general management of a board of directors, consisting of five persons, appointed as provided in the act; and it was provided that the board “shall elect a medical superintendent, whose ■term of office shall be four years, and until his successor is elected and qualified, and henceforth the directors shall elect the medical superintendent when it becomes necessary by the expiration of his term of office or by the occurrence of a vacancy in said office.” On the first day of April, 1893, the defendant King was regularly appointed to said office of medical superintendent for the term as prescribed in the act. The qualifications of superintendent under that act were that: “The medical superintendent shall be a well-educated and experienced physician and a regular graduate in medicine, and shall have practiced at least five years from the date of his diploma.” Four years from the date of his appointment had expired on April 1, 1897, but he has since held the office upon the ground that no successor has heen elected and qualified.

On March 31, 1897, an act was passed by the legislature entitled, “An act to establish a state lunacy commission,” etc., which is called in the first section thereof the “insanity law,” and which by its terms went into effect on said March 31, 1897. This act is claimed by respondent to be a revision of the entire law upon the subject of insane asylums, and, therefore, a repeal of all former laws upon that subject. It establishes certain institutions which are called “state hospitals” at the various places where institutions called “insane asylums” had been formerly established. Among others, it establishes “Mendocino State Hospital,” near the city of Ukiah, county of Mendocino, *572 hitherto known as the “Mendocino State Insane Asylum at Ukiah.” It provides for medical superintendents of these hospitals, and as to the qualifications of such superintendents its language is as follows: “A medical superintendent, who shall be a well-educated physician, a graduate of an incorporated medical college, of good moral character, and who has had not less than three years’ experience in the care and treatment of the insane.” It provides that each hospital shall he under the control of a board of five persons to be appointed by the governor, who are called “managers or trustees”; and the managers for the Mendocino State Hospital having been duly appointed by the governor, the board, in September, 1897, regularly appointed the appellant, W. H. Moore, medical superintendent of said hospital. He qualified by duly taking the official oath, and demanded possession of the office of the respondent King, who refused to deliver the same; and this action was then commenced. The court found that the appellant was not qualified for said office, because he “had not, nor had he at the time of the commencement of this action, had three years’ experience, and has not had three years’ experience in the care and treatment of the insane.” This finding is supported by the evidence, and under the said statute of 1897 makes the appellant disqualified to hold said office. The only evidence upon this point consists of the testimony of the appellant himself. This testimony merely shows that for about a dozen years he had been a physician in general practice; that in the course of his practice he had been called upon to prescribe for a number of persons suffering under different kinds of mental disease, some of whom he says were insane; that he did not claim to be a specialist or expert in the treatment of mental diseases and that he knew no reason whypersons suffering under such diseases should come to him rather than to any other general practitioner. Upon cross-examination he said: “I have no institution for the treatment of the insane myself, and have never been connected with any institution for the care or treatment of the insane. I had parties under my care just the same as other patients. I would visit them whenever I was called to do so, or whenever I thought professional calls were necessary. I attended them the same as I did persons suffering from other diseases. That is the *573 extent of the care I have given those persons. I mean by ‘hygienic treatment/ the application of remedies suitable to the trouble. I don’t know that my practice has been different from that of other general practitioners.”

In view of the facts thus established, to hold that the relator has the statutory qualifications for the office of medical superintendent would be to wholly ignore the language of the insanity law. This language is made more emphatic and pointed by the fact that it creates a new qualification, and one additional to those prescribed by all former statutes for medical superintendents of insane asylums. The former qualifications were simply that the superintendent should be “a well-educated and experienced physician and a regular graduate of medicine, and shall have practiced at least five years from the date of his diploma”; and by no admissible construction can it be held that the legislature did not intend to add another and special qualification when it further provided that he must have had “not less than three years’ experience in the care and treatment of the insane.” This latter provision cannot be “explained away.” If it could be construed to mean nothing more than former provisions on the subject, there would be no reason for its enactment, and it would have to be held that the legislature did an idle and meaningless thing. It is not necessary to determine whether or not the appointee must have been employed for three years in some asylum or institution, either public or private, used exclusively for the confinement and treatment of insane persons—although the use of the word “care” as well- as treatment of the insane very strongly suggests that conclusion; but the qualification certainly does not include a mere general practitioner, like the relator, who, in the course of his practice, occasionally meets and prescribes for a person afflicted with some mental disease, and who is not and does not pretend to be a specialist in insanity cases, and who has not made the care and treatment of the insane a special study, nor followed it, for any length of time whatever, as a special vocation. The policy of the provision under consideration is entirely a matter for legislative determination.

As the respondent was entitled to hold the office until a qualified successor should be legally elected to take his place, there *574 was no ground for a judgment that he “wrongfully usurps, holds, occupies,” etc., the said office; therefore there is no error in any part of the judgment rendered by the court below.

Eespondent contends that the managers of the hospital had no power to legally elect the appellant, even if he had been qualified to hold the office.

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155 P. 90 (California Supreme Court, 1916)
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66 P. 322 (California Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P. 35, 127 Cal. 570, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-moore-v-king-cal-1900.