Severance v. Ball

268 P. 1068, 93 Cal. App. 56, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 733
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1928
DocketDocket No. 3603.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 P. 1068 (Severance v. Ball) 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
Severance v. Ball, 268 P. 1068, 93 Cal. App. 56, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 733 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This matter is before us upon the application of the petitioner praying that a writ of mandate be issued directed to the respondent as treasurer of the county of Glenn, to pay certain claims allowed by the board of supervisors of said county. Omitting exhibit “A,” which is not properly before us, the claims involved in this proceeding are as follows:

Exhibit “B”—Claim of A. A. Millsaps, for the sum of $5 for labor as levelman on county roads in Glenn County;

Exhibit “C”—Claim of S. Severance, Jr., for the sum of $5 for one day’s labor as rodman in taking levels, elevations and setting grade stakes, etc., in the construction of the Wood Street road;

Exhibit “D”—Claim of August J. Hoever in the sum of $10 as transitman running levels on Villa Street in West Willows, in said county;

Exhibit “E”-—Claim of Bayard Knock, county surveyor of Glenn County, $5 for expense in hiring levelmen on fieldwork survey;

*58 Exhibit “F”—Demand of Thomas Myers, work for county surveyor taking yardage on Culver Bead, 2 days’ work as chainman at $5 per day;

Exhibit “G-”-—Claim of Heloise Dahlgren for $10 for typing specifications of four corners on Princeton Boad;

Exhibit “H”—Claim of A. A. Millsaps for the sum of $80 for services as chainman measuring rods for map of county, 16 days’ work at $5 per day. (All of the claims, except those of the petitioner, being assigned to him.)

The respondent refused to pay the claims on the ground that they were not proper charges against the county, and constituted items of expense for labor that should have been performed or paid for by the county surveyor of Glenn County.

Section 4214 of the Political Code provides that “the Surveyor must be a licensed land surveyor of the State, and must make any survey that may be required by order of the court or of the Board of Supervisors,” etc.

Section 4267a of the Political Code (as added by Stats. 1927, p. 1122), which applies to the County of Glenn, provides that on and after December 31, 1927, the surveyor of the county of Glenn shall be paid, in equal monthly installments, a salary of $2,700 per annum for all work performed for the county, and in addition thereto he shall receive his actual traveling and other necessary expenses incurred by him while engaged in work in the field for the county.

Section 9 of article XI of the state constitution specifies: “That the compensation of any County, City, town or municipal officers shall not be increased after his election or during his term of office,” etc.

' While there is no express provision in any section of the Political Code requiring the board of supervisors to direct the performance of any particular work by the county surveyor, the question is presented in this case whether in employing or paying persons for doing work that comes within the purview of what is contemplated as a surveyor’s duty, does not indirectly do what the board of supervisors would be prohibited from directly doing, to wit, increase the compensation of the county surveyor. The section of the Political Code fixing the compensation of the surveyor of the county of Glenn specifies that it shall be compensation for all work *59 performed for the county. In addition to this compensation, however, he is allowed his traveling expenses and other necessary expenses incurred by him while engaged in work in the field for the county. Section 4214 of the Political Code refers to the qualifications of a surveyor, to wit: “He must be a licensed land surveyor of the State.” Webster’s International Dictionary defines “surveying” as follows: “The operation of finding and delineating the contour, dimensions, position, etc., as of any part of the earth’s surface, whether land or water; . . . also, a measured plan and description of any portion of county, or of a road or line through it.” And “surveying,” as “the act or occupation of making surveys; that branch of applied mathematics which teaches the art of determining the area of any portion of the earth’s surface; the lengths and directions of the boundary lines; the contour of the surface,” etc. A surveyor necessarily would be one who ascertains these facts or performs the duties necessary to their ascertainment.

Whenever a board of supervisors employ or approve the claim of anyone who has been employed either by themselves or by the county surveyor of the county of Glenn, to do the work which the law contemplates that the surveyor of that county should perform, then and in that ease the same principle is involved as where an attempt is made to pay a deputy or an officer where the law does not provide for the employment of such a deputy but casts the duty of performance upon the principal officer. It has been frequently held that the compensation of an officer cannot be increased by the method of allowing compensation to deputies or assistants. (Sarter v. Siskiyou, County, 42 Cal. App. 530 [183 Pac. 852]; Welsh v. Bramlett, 98 Cal. 219 [33 Pac. 66]; Humboldt County v. Stern, 136 Cal. 63 [68 Pac. 324]; Humiston v. Shaffer, 145 Cal. 195 [78 Pac. 651].) Other eases might be cited, but these are sufficient to illustrate the rule applicable here.

We do not deem it necessary to take up and consider at length the general powers of boards of supervisors as presented by counsel for the petitioner, for the simple reason that the general powers of boards of supervisors to make employments must be exercised in the light of constitutional provisions prohibiting the increase of the compensation of county officers either directly or indirectly. If an *60 officer of the county is paid to perform certain work, it is his duty to perform such services, and the board of supervisors, under the constitutional provision prohibiting the increase of an officer’s salary by way of relieving an officer either of doing the work himself or bearing the expense of hiring assistants, possesses no power to employ or approve the claim of anyone whose employment results in the acts prohibited.

With these premises laid down, we have only to consider the legality of the claims as they appear upon their face. Exhibits “B,” “D” and “E,” upon their face, show that they are for services that should have been rendered by the county surveyor of Glenn County. They are for services which come within the definition of the duties of a surveyor, which we have set forth herein, to wit: Taking levels, services as a transitman, which is a part of the services of a surveyor in taking levels, and of hiring a level-man on field survey work, which is explicitly within the definition of the duties incumbent to be performed by the county surveyor. All of such work involved the taking of dimensions, positions, measuring, the plans, description or length of any particular portion of the earth’s surface, running lines upon roads, contour lines of the surface, etc. Thus the claim of A. A. Millsaps for five dollars as a level-man, the claim of August J. Hoever for services as a transitman, and the claim of Bayard Knock for expense in hiring a levelman on field survey work, must be held invalid.

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Bluebook (online)
268 P. 1068, 93 Cal. App. 56, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/severance-v-ball-calctapp-1928.