Plaintiff sued as a taxpayer, under section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure, to restrain the municipal officers of the city and county of San Francisco from paying the salary attached to the office of captain of police to one alleged to have been illegally promoted from a lieutenancy. The defendants had judgment. The plaintiff’s appeal raises a great many points which we will leave undecided as the grounds herein covered are sufficient for the purposes of the decision. These are the invalidity of the ordinances creating the position, and the right of the plaintiff to sue.
On December 11, 1933, the civil service list of eligibles for appointment to the position of captain in the police department expired by lapse of the four-year period established in section 145 of the city charter. Thereafter no valid appointment to the position of captain could be made from such list.
(Mann
v.
Tracy,
Section 1 of article IV of the Constitution provides generally for the reservation in the people of the right of the initiative and referendum. The section is long and comprehensive, and we refer to such portions only as seem to be pertinent. After defining the power so reserved and providing procedure for its operation in reference to matters of state-wide concern, the section declares: ‘ ‘ The initiative and referendum powers of the people are hereby further reserved to the electors of each county, city and county, city and town of the state to be exercised under such procedure as may be provided *419 by law. . . . Nothing contained in this section shall be construed as affecting or limiting the present or future powers of cities or cities and counties having charters adopted under the provision of section eight of article XI of this Constitution.” The section is made self-executing, and it is expressly provided that no legislation may be enacted limiting or obstructing “the powers herein reserved”. We should pause here to note that the powers, so reserved are powers resting in the people and the electors and not powers resting in the legislature or in the corporate agencies of the state. The powers resting in cities and cities and counties exercised under their respective charters, and expressly saved by the section, are the powers conferred by other sections of the Constitution and which are in nowise inconsistent with these powers reserved to the people.
In defining the operation of the power of referendum the section declares that certain urgency measures may be excepted from its restrictions, but in this connection it is expressly declared that “no measure creating or abolishing any office or changing the salary, term or duties of any officer, . . . shall be construed to be an urgency measure”.
Section 8 of article XI of the Constitution permits a city, or a city and county, to frame a charter for its own government “consistent with and subject to this Constitution”. Section 6 of the same article authorizes cities and cities and counties operating under charters so adopted “to make and enforce all laws and regulations in respect to municipal affairs, subject only to the restrictions and limitations provided in their several charters”. Section 11 of the same article gives to such bodies the power to enact local police, sanitary, and similar regulations.
Conformably with these constitutional provisions the city and county of San Francisco adopted a new charter effective January 8, 1932. (Stats. 1931, p. 2973.) Section 179 of this charter preserved the right of the electors to initiate legislation, gave the supervisors the power to refer an ordinance to the electorate, but did not provide for the exercise of the constitutional power reserved to the electors by way of a referendum (except as to ordinances granting franchises). Section 13 of this charter required that an ordinance should not be passed until11 after two readings and votes at separate meetings of the board, which meetings shall be at least ■ ten days apart. . . . Annual budget and appropriation ordi *420 nances shall be passed only after two readings, not less than five days apart.” The same section makes an exception to the first restriction mentioned in case of emergencies as defined in section 16. This section declares that no ordinance affecting franchises, grants, or bond issues shall be passed as an emergency measure and specifies as emergencies certain police regulations and “provision for the uninterrupted operation of any city and county department or office, or action required to comply with time limitations as established by law”.
We should pause here to note that, though the charter did not recognize the full reserved power in the electors declared by section 1 of article IV of the Constitution, it does specify a procedure in sections 13 and 16 for the enactment or ordinances which is somewhat similar to the provisions of the Constitution, and that, though it does define certain circumstances which may be deemed as emergencies, it does not differ from the constitutional declaration that “no measure creating or abolishing any office or changing the salary, term or duties of any officer . . . shall be construed to be an urgency measure”. On this phase of the ease it would seem to follow necessarily that, where the state reserved to the electors of the municipality the power to exercise the 'referendum on measures creating public offices and relating to the salary, term or duties of officers, and, when the municipality in its charter made no provision for the exercise of that power inconsistent with the declaration in the Constitution, that irrespective of the provisions of article XI of the Constitution specifying what the city might regulate by charter, the failure of the city to so act leaves the provision of article IV fully operative.
But we need not rest our decision upon this somewhat narrow ground that, from the failure of the city to act under article XI, it must be denied the power to legislate free from the constitutional restriction. We prefer to rest it upon the ground that the Constitution has reserved this power to the electors of the city and that all charters adopted under article XI must be “consistent with and subject to this Constitution”. For this view we have ample authority from the courts of this state, and for that reason we disregard without comment the authorities cited from other jurisdictions.
In
Hopping
v.
City of Richmond,
In full accord is
Hill
v.
Board of Supervisors,
From the foregoing it follows that when the city and county of San Francisco adopted its present charter “consistent with and subject to” the Constitution, the constitutional reservation of the power of referendum was read into and became a part of the charter with the same effect as though it had been expressly incorporated in the charter. By the same reasoning, when the Constitution declared that “no measure creating or abolishing any office or changing the salary, term or duties of any officer” should be construed as an urgency measure, it in express terms defined in part what that reserved power of referendum should be. Thus, though the city charter could extend the limitations upon the powers of the supervisors and thereby add to the reserved powers in the electors, it could not, by definition, or otherwise, limit that reserved power. This being so it follows that the ordinances under attack are invalid if they create an office or change the salary, term, or duties of an officer.
That a police captain is a public officer goes without question. This has been decided long before the adoption of section 1 of article IY.
(Farrell
v.
Board of Trustees,
The respondents make a veiled attack upon the status of appellant’s appearance herein as a taxpayer of the city and county. The allegation of the complaint to that effect was denied for lack of information and was found by the trial court to be true. His capacity to sue as such is expressly stated in section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure. Having shown that the ordinances purporting to create the new positions were void, and that the appointment of the three lieutenants to those positions was for that reason invalid, the taxpayer has made a case coming squarely within the code section because payment of compensation to these individuals under such circumstances would be an “illegal expenditure” of the public funds of the city. This conclusion rests upon the ancient doctrine announced in
Zottman
v.
City of San Francisco,
The judgment is reversed,
Sturtevant, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on July 19, 1939, and an application by respondents to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on August 17, 1939.
