White v. Church

185 Cal. App. 3d 627, 231 Cal. Rptr. 565, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2025
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1986
DocketA035090
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 185 Cal. App. 3d 627 (White v. Church) 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
White v. Church, 185 Cal. App. 3d 627, 231 Cal. Rptr. 565, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2025 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

Upon order of the California Supreme Court we directed the Clerk of San Mateo County and the County of San Mateo (respondents) to show cause why they should not be mandated to certify the *629 results of the June 3,1986, election for the office of sheriff and why Elections Code section 1 17113.5 should not be found unconstitutional.

Section 17113.5 was enacted by Assembly Bill No. 2739 (AB 2739) which became effective May 19, 1986. This urgency legislation cancelled the June 3, 1986, election for sheriff in San Mateo County and scheduled a new election for August 26, 1986. Jim White (petitioner), a candidate for Sheriff of San Mateo County, successfully petitioned the Supreme Court to stay the law’s operation pending determination of its constitutionality. Having ordered respondents to proceed with the election but not to count the ballots, the Supreme Court transferred to us the question of its constitutionality. We hold that section 17113.5 is rendered invalid by the California Constitution’s prohibition against special legislation. (Art. IV, § 16.)

On its face AB 2739 cancels only the June 3, 1986, election for sheriff, and only those elections in which the incumbent sheriff is a candidate for reelection and is opposed by only one other candidate (excluding write-ins) and dies after the close of filing but before the election. 2 Hindsight reveals that AB 2739 applied only to the San Mateo County election for sheriff, since Sheriff Brendan Maguire was the only sheriff in California who was a candidate for reelection, who was opposed by but one candidate, and who died after the close of filing but before the election. That the Legislature had in mind but one situation is readily apparent from a glance at section 3 of the bill which sets forth the facts justifying its urgency: “An incumbent sheriff suddenly and unexpectedly has died before the June 3,1986, election. Only one other candidate’s name will appear on the ballot. . . .” 3 That singular specificity described the San Mateo situation at the time of the bill’s introduction.

*630 Common sense dictates the conclusion that the Legislature intended AB 2739 to affect the San Mateo County Sheriff’s election and only that election. 4 That conclusion, however, does not end our inquiry.

I. AB 2739 Violates the California Constitution Because a General Statute Applies to the Situation It Addresses.

For 137 years the California Constitution has provided that a local or special statute is invalid in any case if a general statute can be made applicable. 5

Can a general statute be made applicable to this situation? The very section of the Elections Code which AB 2739 follows, section 17113, 6 provides that when any candidate (not just an incumbent) for any office (not just sheriff) dies after the close of filing, but before any election (not just the June 3, 1986, primary), the deceased candidate shall remain on the ballot and the election shall be held. If the deceased candidate receives a majority of the votes cast, the board of supervisors is to appoint a temporary successor until the person elected at the next regularly scheduled election after the term begins qualifies.

It is clear that at the time of Sheriff Maguire’s death (i.e., before passage of AB 2739) the law required the election to proceed with the sheriff remaining on the ballot; should he win, the office would become vacant on January 5, 1987, and a successor would be elected at the next regularly scheduled election thereafter (see Gov. Code, § 25304.5); 7 should his sole *631 opponent, Jim White, win, then White would assume the office on January 5, 1987. Thus, long before enactment of the challenged statute, the Legislature foresaw the confusion which could result from the death of a candidate after the close of filing, but before the election, and fashioned an orderly procedure to maintain the integrity of the electoral process;

How, then, does AB 2739 change this situation? Obviously, it precludes White or anyone else (i.e., a write-in) from being elected at the June 1986 San Mateo County primary. And it provides for an election at a date earlier than would have been the case under existing law had Sheriff Maguire won the election. For under AB 2739, Sheriff Maguire’s successor would have been elected prior to, and would be able to assume office on, January 5, 1987; under existing law a vacancy would exist on that date, and an election to fill it would occur at the next regular election which, we are informed, would be in March of 1987.

In upholding the refusal of the board of supervisors to call a special election at the behest of the Ventura County Harbor District on the basis that the very legislation creating that district was special legislation, our Supreme Court, 56 years ago, spoke clearly: “It seems clear to us that if the legislature itself defines, declares and puts in operation a general law upon a subject, the courts can do nothing less than apply the constitutional provisions . . . and declare the special act invalid under the mandatory provisions of the Constitution.” (Harbor Dist. v. Board of Supervisors (1930) 211 Cal. 271, 276-277 [295 P. 6].) Therein the court recognized (1) the time-honored presumption that public officers have discharged their duties properly and that every act of the Legislature is valid until there is a judicial determination to the contrary; and (2) if there is no general law on the subject it will be presumed that the Legislature had before it the facts rendering it impractical to pass a general law. But holding that these presumptions no longer assist us when the Legislature itself has “by its own solemn act” preempted the field, the court distinguished its previous decisions upholding the validity of admittedly special statutes thusly: “. . . and other similar statutes have been upheld but in no instance have we found that, where a general law fully applicable and complete on the subject is in existence, a special law has been upheld.” (Id., at p. 278, italics added.)

The general law, section 17113, applies to any election at which any candidate for any office dies after the close of filing and before the election. Its enactment repealed the common law of California that votes cast for a deceased candidate were invalid and not to be considered for any purpose. (See Blaine v. Board of Supervisors (1934) 1 Cal.2d 486 [35 P.2d 517].) That it would apply to San Mateo County’s June 3, 1986, sheriff’s election had not the Legislature enacted AB 2739 is certain. Its application to that *632

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 Cal. App. 3d 627, 231 Cal. Rptr. 565, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-church-calctapp-1986.