In 1946 the City of Auburn adopted an ordinance establishing parking meter zones. In 1965 the city completed proceedings for the establishment of a vehicle parking district in the downtown area. The 1965 proceedings were taken in conformity with the Vehicle Parking District Law of 1943. (Sts. & Hwys. Code, § 31500 et seq.) As permitted by section 31860 of the parking district law, the city council adopted an ordinance pledging parking metеr revenue of $7,500 per year to the purposes of the parking district.
Following the 1965 parking district proceeding, petitioner and other sponsors circulated and filed an initiative petition рroposing the repeal of Auburn’s existing parking meter legislation. Petitioner then sought a writ of mandate directing the city authorities to process the initiative and present it to the electors. The trial court denied relief, holding the proposed measure to be outside the scope of the municipal initiative power. Petitioner appeals.
Consideration of governing statutory and case law demonstrates the correctness of the trial court’s action. The decision in
Mervynne
v.
Ackcr,
The Mervynne decision was followed by the amendment of section 22508 at the 1961 legislative session. 2
*52
■ Petitioner argues that the
Mervynne
ease was incorrectly decided and should not be followed. To the contrary,
Mervynne
is doubly impressive, both for its keen insight into law of state-municipal relationships in California and for the faсt that the Supreme Court rejected an application for hearing in the ease. The Supreme Court’s denial of a hearing after a Court of Appeal decision may be regarded as an approval of the decision, although not necessarily of all its reasoning.
(DiGenova
v.
State Board of Education
(1962)
Petitioner contends that the 1961 amendment of section 22508 was a statutory alteration of the Mervynne decision, exрressing the Legislature’s intent to classify parking meter regulation as a subject of local rather than statewide concern. The last paragraph of section 22508 evidences a much narrower purpose. It expressly announces application of the municipal referendum power to an ordinance establishing a parking meter zone or fixing fees, but refrains from any assеrtion whatever of the initiative power, the latter having been rejected in Mervynne. On its face, the last paragraph of section 22508 exhibits a legislative plan to designate the city council as the exclusive agency (immune from the initiative) to propose or abolish a parking meter system, while giving the electors (via the referendum) a veto power over city council action рroposing a parking meter system or zone.
If there is any ambiguity in the 1961 amendment of section 22508, it is quickly resolved by a comparison of the original and amended versions of the legislative bill (Assembly Bill 2981) which resulted in the amendment. As introduced, the bill would have made the initiative and referendum processes equally applicable. Before enactment, however, the bill was *53 amended to eliminate аll reference to the initiative process. 3 The amendment of Assembly Bill 2981 displays a legislative intent entirely consistent with a fair reading of the statute’s last paragraph.
Petitioner cites statemеnts defining the spheres of state and city regulation when the city has a charter empowering it to deal with “municipal affairs,” e.g.,
In re Hubbard,
Petitioner suggests that the Legislature cannot constitutionally confer the power of direct legislation in piecemeal fashion. The Legislature’s power to exercise exclusive control over automobile traffic on public highways, including city strеets, has been recognized for many decades. (See eases cited,
Mervynne
v.
Acker, supra,
• Petitioner “filed” in the court below a paper entitled “Declaration of James R. Mills.” Mr. Mills declares that he was аn Assemblyman, one of the authors of Assembly Bill 2981 at the 1961 legislative session. In a general way the paper declares Mr. Mills’ belief or opinion that the amended bill, equally with the original bill, would override the Mervynne decision. This declaration was filed in the trial court after the hearing on the mandamus application and after the trial judge had issued his memorandum opinion adverse to petitioner. It is ostensibly included in the clerk’s transcript on appeal. Petitioner points to Mr. Mills' declaration as evidence of the legislative intent underlying the 1961 amendment of section 22508.
The declaration is substantively аnd procedurally inacceptable. The statement of an individual legislator as to his intention, motive or opinion regarding a particular piece of legislation is inadmissible.
(In re Lavine, 2
Cal.2d 324, 327 [
.Judgment affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 11, 1967.
Notes
At that time and prior to its amendment at the 1961 legislative sеssion, Vehicle Code section 22508 declared:
“Local authorities may by ordinance provide for the establishment of parking meter zones, and cause streets and highways to be marked with white lines designating parking spaces and requiring vehicles to park within the parking spaces, except that an ordinance is not effective with respect to any state highway until the proposеd ordinance has been submitted to and approved in writing by the Department of Public Works. The proposed ordinance shall be submitted to the department only by action of the local legislаtive body and the proposed ordinance shall be submitted in complete draft form.”
As amended in 1961, Vehicle Code section 22508 now reads:
“Local authorities shall not establish parking meter zones or fix the rate of fees for such zones except by ordinance. An ordinance establish *52 ing a parking meter zone shall describe the area which would be included within the zone.
' ‘ Local authorities may by ordinance cause streets and highways tо be marked with white lines designating parking spaces and require vehicles to park within the parking spaces.
“No ordinance adopted by any local authority pursuant to this section with respеct to any state highway shall become effective until the proposed ordinance has been submitted to and approved in writing by the Department of Public Works. The proposed ordinance shall be submitted to the department only by action of the local legislative body and the proposed ordinance shall be submitted in complete draft form.
“Any ordinance adopted рursuant to this section establishing a parking meter zone or fixing rates of fees for such a zone shall be subject to local referendum processes in the same manner as if such ordinance dеalt with a matter of purely local concern. ’ ’
The last paragraph of Assembly Bill 2981, as originally introduced, provided:
“Any ordinance proposed or adopted under this section shall be subjеct to local initiative or referendum processes in the same manner as if such ordinance dealt with a matter of purely local concern. ’’ (Italics supplied.)
Before enactment the bill was amended to reflect the language now found in the last paragraph of section 22508 (fn. 2, supra).
We do not imply that a different decision would be reached were Auburn a chartered city.
