Sheehan v. Board of Police Commissioners

206 P. 70, 188 Cal. 525, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 455
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1922
DocketS. F. No. 9938.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 206 P. 70 (Sheehan v. Board of Police Commissioners) 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
Sheehan v. Board of Police Commissioners, 206 P. 70, 188 Cal. 525, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 455 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The proceedings out of which the present appeal arose had their inception in two certain special proceedings instituted by the respondent herein in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco against the board of police commissioners of said municipality, by which, in the first of said proceedings, he sought by a writ of review to have certain orders of said board, wherein he was attempted to be dismissed from the police department thereof, reviewed and annulled; and by the second of which proceedings he sought by writ of mandate to compel his restoration and reinstatement as a disabled and retired police officer, and also to compel the issuance of a warrant by said board for the payment of his accrued and accruing pensions as such disabled and retired officer. These two proceedings were consolidated by the trial court which, upon the hearing thereon, upheld the contention of the petitioner in both of said proceedings, reviewing and annulling the said orders dismissing him from the police department, adjudging that he was entitled to have and receive his accrued and accruing pensions as such disabled and retired police officer, establishing the aggregate amount of his already accrued pensions up to the time of the rendition of its decision to be $4,600, and directing a writ of mandate to issue against the said board of police commissioners, acting ex officio as a board of police relief and pension fund commissioners, and ordering said board in that capacity to issue a warrant for said sum drawn upon the auditor and treasurer of said municipality.

*527 Prom the orders of said. court, directing the issuance of these respective writs, appeals were taken to the district court of appeal for the first district, upon the hearing of which the said orders were respectively affirmed. The history of said proceedings and of said appeals up to the time of their said affirmance is quite fully and accurately set forth in Sheehan v. Board of Police Commrs., etc., et al., 47 Cal. App. 29 [190 Pac. 51]. Upon the going dowq. of the remittiturs in each of said appeals, the petitioner and respondent therein applied ex parte to the court in which said proceedings had been initiated for an order directing the clerk of said court to issue a peremptory writ of mandate requiring the said board of police commissioners, in their said capacity as ex officio the board of police relief and pension fund commissioners, to issue a warrant to the petitioner for the payment of said sum of $4,600, “the amount of fhe pension due and unpaid to the petitioner from the first day of January, 1904, to the first day of September, 1911, together with legal interest on said $4,600 from September 1, 1911, to July 1, 1920, at the rate of seven per cent per annum; and also for the further sum of $600 per annum payable and unpaid to petitioner for his pension from September 1, 1911, to July 1, 1920, together with legal interest at seven per cent per annum thereon from the end of each year, viz., from September 1, 1912, on said sum of $600 per annum from the time the same became due and payable up to July 1, 1920; and also for the sum of $209.75, the amount of petitioner’s costs herein.” An order was made pursuant to said applications and in the above language thereof, and a peremptory writ of mandate issued in accordance with said order and in the terms thereof, as above quoted, on July 2, 1920. Thereafter, and on July 21, 1920, the defendants, board of police commissioners, gave notice of a motion to set aside said order and to quash and to recall said writ, which motion coming on for hearing on August 6, 1920, was by the trial court denied, whereupon the present appeal was taken by said defendants from the order of July 2, 1920, directing the issuance of said peremptory writ of mandate, and also from the order made on August 6, 1920, denying said defendant’s motion to vacate said former order and refusing to recall and quash the peremp *528 tory writ of mandate issued in pursuance of said former order.

Upon the hearing of this appeal, the respondent moved for a dismissal thereof upon several grounds, most of which related to informalities in the defendants’ motion to vacate the order for the issuance of said peremptory writ of mandate; and as to these, we do not perceive any merit in them. Nor do we think there is any merit in the chief ground of said motion to dismiss, which is that the order directing the issuance of the peremptory writ was one unnecessary to be made and hence not harmful to the appellants, since it was the duty of the clerk of the trial court, upon the receipt of the remittitur showing the affirmance upoií appeal of the original order of the trial court directing the issuance of a peremptory writ, to issue said writ without the necessity of any further or later order of the court. [1] The answer to this portion of the respondent’s motion to dismiss is twofold, the first being that the respondent, having deemed such further order necessary to the issuance of said writ, as shown by his ex parte application therefor, cannot now be heard to urge that the making of said order was unnecessary upon a motion to dismiss the appeal thereon; second, as to that portion of said order which requires the clerk to include interest upon both the amount of the petitioner’s claims for his pension accrued prior to September 1, 1912, the date of his original order, and the amount thereof accruing and becoming payable annually after said date, the same question arises, namely, whether the clerk had the right to include said items of interest in the terms of said writ. We think that the order of August 6, 1920, was sufficient in form to cover and deny the appellant’s motion to quash and recall said writ, and we also think that the question of the right of the clerk to include said items of interest in said writ, with or without an order of the court to that effect, is embraced within the scope of this appeal upon its merits, and hence that the respondent’s motion to dismiss the same should be denied.

[2] The single question thus presented upon this appeal is whether or not the trial court had a right to order interest payable upon the so-called “judgment” in said mandamus proceeding establishing the petitioner’s status as a *529 disabled and retired police officer and, as such, entitled to the pension provided for in chapter X of article VIII of the San Francisco charter, and ordering the issuance of a warrant by the board of police commissioners for the amount of his said accrued and accruing pension. The respondent contends that the adjudication of the trial court is such a judgment as would bear interest from the date of its entry, under the provisions of sections 1915 and 1920 of the Civil Code, and he relies as the basis for his said insistence upon the express terms and phrasing of said adjudication wherein the trial court used the following language: “Now, therefore, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that the petitioner have and recover judgment, and judgment is hereby made and given in favor of the petitioner and against the respondents as prayed for in the petition of petitioner . . .

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Bluebook (online)
206 P. 70, 188 Cal. 525, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheehan-v-board-of-police-commissioners-cal-1922.