Sarracino v. Superior Court

529 P.2d 53, 13 Cal. 3d 1, 118 Cal. Rptr. 21, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 189
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1974
DocketL.A. 30309
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 529 P.2d 53 (Sarracino v. Superior Court) 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
Sarracino v. Superior Court, 529 P.2d 53, 13 Cal. 3d 1, 118 Cal. Rptr. 21, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 189 (Cal. 1974).

Opinions

Opinion

WRIGHT, C. J.

Petitioner Ernest James Sarracino seeks a writ of mandate to compel vacation of orders rendered against him by a superior court commissioner presiding as temporary judge at a consolidated hearing on applications for temporary support and related relief in (1) a proceeding for dissolution of marriage brought by petitioner’s wife, Dorothy Sarracino, and. (2) an action for support brought by petitioner’s adult daughter, Jane Sarracino, by her guardian ad litem, Dorothy Sarracino. Having failed to appear at the hearing, petitioner challenges the commissioner’s power to act as temporary judge on the ground that the required “stipulation of the parties litigant” (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 21) was signed only by the wife and guardian ad litem. Petitioner also questions the authority of the guardian ad litem to act in the absence of any adjudication of the daughter’s incompetency apart from the order granting the guardian ad litem’s ex parte petition for appointment under Code of Civil Procedure sections 372 and 373, subdivision 3.

On November 24, 1972, petitioner was personally served in both the dissolution proceeding and the support action with summonses, initial pleadings, and notices of a hearing to be held on December 4, 1972, on the wife’s and daughter’s respective applications for temporary support. Petitioner did not appear at the hearing, which proceeded before the commissioner on the date stated in the notices. Stipulations for the appointment of the commissioner as temporary judge in each matter were signed by Dorothy Sarracino and her counsel; she was sworn and testified; and the commissioner rendered the orders now before us.1 Thereafter petitioner [5]*5appeared by filing responsive pleadings in both matters and moved to vacate the orders.2 These motions were denied by a judge of respondent court.3 An alternative writ of mandate issued requiring the granting of the motions to vacate unless good cause is shown to the contrary.4

Petitioner challenges the respondent court’s jurisdiction to make the temporary support orders on two grounds: (1) that the stipulation was ineffective to empower the commissioner to act as temporary judge in either matter because it was not signed by petitioner, who claims to have been a party litigant (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 21) at the time of the hearing because his time to file a pleading after service of summons had not yet expired; and (2) that the order appointing Dorothy Sarracino as Jane Sarracino’s guardian ad litem was void because of an alleged lack of adjudication of Jane’s incompetency. For reasons which follow we conclude that neither objection is valid.

Sufficiency of Stipulation to Authorize Commissioner to Act as Temporary Judge

Court commissioners are appointed under the authority of section 22 of article VI of the California Constitution which permits the Legislature to provide for the appointment by trial courts of record of commissioners “to perform subordinate judicial duties.” However, a major part of the assistance which commissioners give to the courts is rendered not in performing subordinate judicial duties under article VI, section 22 but in [6]*6presiding as temporary judges under the distinct provisions of section 21 of article VI. (See Rooney v. Vermont Investment Corp. (1973) 10 Cal.3d 351, 365, fn. 11 [110 Cal.Rptr. 353, 515 P.2d 297]; People v. Oaxaca (1974) 39 Cal.App.3d 153, 165 [114 Cal.Rptr. 178].) Section 21 states: “On stipulation of the parties litigant the court may order a cause to be tried by a temporary judge who is a member of the State Bar, sworn and empowered to act until final determination of the cause.” (Italics added.) The statutory power of a commissioner “[t]o act as judge pro tempore when otherwise qualified so to act and when appointed for that purpose” (Code Civ. Proc., § 259a, subd. 4) is subject to this constitutional provision, and accordingly a commissioner cannot act as a temporary judge except “on stipulation of the parties litigant.” (People v. Tijerina (1969) 1 Cal.3d 41, 48-49 [81 Cal.Rptr. 264, 459 P.2d 680].)

Petitioner concedes that the commissioner who made the temporary support orders was a duly qualified appointee of respondent court. Furthermore, petitioner does not question that the stipulations under which the commissioner purported to act were sufficient in form for that purpose but contends that they were ineffective because they were signed only by petitioner’s adversary and her counsel and not by petitioner or his counsel. We are thus faced with the question whether petitioner was a “party litigant” within the meaning of article VI, section 21, at the time of the hearing of December 4, 1972.

Section 21 was adopted in 1966 in place of former article VI, section 5, paragraph 3, which similarly authorized appointment of temporary judges (then referred to as judges pro tempore) to try causes in the superior and municipal courts on “stipulation of the parties litigant.” Referring to the former provision, this court said in Estate of Kent (1936) 6 Cal.2d 154 [57 P.2d 901]: “ ‘Under the customary rules of constitutional interpretation each word should be given some value. In the constitutional provision the word “litigant” qualifies the word “parties” and the two words must be given some value beyond the one word “parties.” Obviously the phrase “parties litigant” means the parties who are taking part in the litigation,—those who have appeared therein. There are many causes at law and in equity where the rights of parties are determined although the parties themselves do not conduct the litigation. These actions, where contested, proceed under the direction of parties to the controversy who have appeared—who are “parties litigant.” At the same time the proceeding determines the rights of other parties in interest but not litigant. Among such cases are receiverships, representative suits, actions by and* against trustees, and, assuming that nonappearing heirs and devisees and [7]*7creditors are parties, then the several proceedings in probate.’ ” (Id., at p. 162, italics added.)

The Kent decision upheld the authority of a commissioner to hear a probate matter as a judge pro tempore on the stipulation of all the parties who had appeared in the proceeding but without the stipulation of the heirs, devisees, and creditors of the estate who had not appeared. Although the facts of Kent suggest considerations peculiar to in rem proceedings (see Lilienkamp v. Superior Court (1939) 14 Cal.2d 293 [93 P.2d 1008]), its reasoning has been applied to deny “litigant” status under the former constitutional provision to a person named as a party in the pleadings and served with process. In Barfield v. Superior Court (1963) 216 Cal.App.2d 476 [31 Cal.Rptr. 30], a commissioner sitting as judge pro tempore rendered an interlocutory judgment of divorce against a defendant whose default had been duly entered. The appellate court held that the defendant was not a “party litigant” and therefore a stipulation signed by the plaintiff alone was constitutionally sufficient to empower the commissioner to act.5

The Kent and Barfield

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Bluebook (online)
529 P.2d 53, 13 Cal. 3d 1, 118 Cal. Rptr. 21, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarracino-v-superior-court-cal-1974.