239 P. 355 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *79 On October 14, 1918, the Board of Police Commissioners of the City and County of San Francisco dismissed the petitioner herein, Robert A. Curtin, as a member of the San Francisco police department, for disobedience of orders, to wit, failing to report for duty in compliance with the order of the Police Commissioners and his superior officers. Nearly three years thereafter, to wit, on September 24, 1921, petitioner applied for reinstatement, but his application was denied. About a year subsequent to such denial, and on August 24, 1922, he commenced this proceeding inmandamus, against said Police Commission and the individual members thereof, to compel his restoration as a member of said department. Judgment was given for defendants and petitioner appeals.
The findings of the trial court, which, we think, are supported by substantial evidence, disclose the following facts:
For several years prior to his dismissal Curtin had been a police officer in said city, and on September 30, 1918, submitted his resignation to said commission, protesting that he was doing so because he had theretofore applied for a leave of absence for the period of the war, but which leave was not granted. In his resignation he further stated that for the few following months he would engage in agricultural pursuits, and assist in the management of a large cattle *80 ranch, but if called in the draft he would enter the service and, at the conclusion of the war, demand reinstatement as a member of the police department. On that date, September 30, 1918, said Commissioners, for reasons which appeared to them sufficient, refused to accept said resignation and ordered Curtin to report for regular duty. Under date of October 1st, Curtin sent a second letter of resignation, this time to Captain Shea, his superior officer, stating that in doing so he was protecting his rights to reinstatement; he further added, "I will not report for duty tomorrow, October 1st, 1918." He was, nevertheless, ordered to report for duty on his regular watch commencing the next morning at 8 o'clock, which he failed to do; and thereupon, and on October 2, 1918, Captain Shea filed charges against Curtin, which were verified before Chief of Police D.A. White, charging Curtin with disobedience of orders and specifying the particular acts of such disobedience. Curtin was thereupon suspended from his position and said charges were set for trial on October 7, 1918.
On October 2, 1918, Officer John P. Collins called at Curtin's residence, number 1147 Sanchez Street, in said city, for the purpose of serving copies of said charges, notice of trial and the order of suspension, but was informed by the landlady of said premises that Curtin had departed from San Francisco for Chinese Camp, California. Thereupon said copies were left at said residence in the room occupied by the said Curtin and where his personal effects still remained. On that same day other copies of said documents were posted in a conspicuous place in the Harbor Police Station, that being the station to which Curtin was required to report for duty, and copies of said charges, together with a notice of suspension signed by the chief of police and a notice directing Curtin to appear for trial of said charges on the seventh day of October, 1918, at 7:30 P.M. of said day before the Police Commissioners were also sent by registered mail in the official envelope of said commission, bearing a return indorsement, addressed to the said Robert A. Curtin, at Chinese Camp, California, with the postage thereon prepaid. As a matter of fact, Curtin departed for Tuolumne and Mariposa Counties, on the morning of October 2, passing through Chinese Camp, in order to reach the ranch on which he afterward remained for many *81 months. On October 7, 1918, Curtin failed to appear in answer to said charges and the hearing was regularly postponed to October 14, 1918, at which time Curtin again failed to appear; whereupon said Commissioners proceeded with the hearing, received evidence supporting the charges, found Curtin guilty thereof, and by resolution dismissed him from said police department, the vacancy caused by his dismissal being shortly afterward filled by the appointment of another officer to the position. Two days prior to said hearing, to wit, on October 12, 1918, Curtin through one Carlon, a fellow police officer, sent to the office of the chief of police his star, book of rules, and club.
It appears from the evidence that Curtin did not at any time enter the military service. During the several months he was engaged in cattle raising, he visited San Francisco "very frequently, once a month or once in two or three months in three or four months," the length of these visits being "two or three days, may be one day and may be three days," but that during those visits he did not call upon or get in touch with the police department, nor did he at any time make inquiries as to the disposition of his case before said Commissioners.
Although Curtin denied ever having received said registered letter it was shown that said letter was never returned, and, for the purpose of proving that he did receive it, evidence was offered of certain circumstances showing that the Curtin family was extensively known in Tuolumne County and in the regions of Chinese Camp, also the manner in which they received their mail, and that soon after October 15, 1918, Officer Carlon, who also had relatives living in those parts, while passing through that country, delivered at the Curtin ranch certain mail he had obtained for them on the way in, although in this regard he testified he had no recollection of having delivered a registered letter. Irrespective of whether or not Curtin did receive said letter the court found that on December 2, 1918, he had actual knowledge of his dismissal, and he admits that during January or February, 1919, he learned of that fact.
Appellant contends, first, that the proceedings pursuant to which he was dismissed from the police force are void for want of jurisdiction, it being claimed that, notwithstanding the rule of the department permitting constructive *82 service of the charges and order for trial, the city charter requires personal service, and does not authorize constructive service; and, secondly, that assuming constructive service is permissible, no compliance with the constructive service rule of the police department (rule 41) has been established.
[1] Respondents urge at the outset that in view of the facts already related and the further fact that appellant's proceeding was not commenced until nearly four years after his dismissal, his cause of action, if any he had, became barred by the statute of limitations (subd. 1, sec. 338, Code Civ. Proc.), and by laches. Such were the conclusions reached by the trial court, there being express findings to the effect that said statute of limitations applied and also that the proceeding was barred by the laches of appellant in delaying the bringing of said proceeding for more than three years.
We are of the opinion that the contentions made by respondents and the conclusions reached by the trial court must be sustained (Wittman v. Board of Police Commissioners,
Between the time of appellant's dismissal and the date on which he commenced this proceeding the deaths of Chief of Police White, Captain Shea and Officer Douglass occurred, all of whom would have given material evidence to refute some of the numerous points of irregularity made by appellant against the validity of the dismissal proceedings, and the deaths of whom may be considered as having an important *85 bearing upon the application of the doctrine of laches.
We are convinced that the situation in the instant proceeding has been brought clearly within the rule of the cases above cited, which rule obviously disposes of all questions of alleged irregularity made against the validity of the dismissal proceedings, with the possible exception of the one relating to the asserted conflict between said departmental rule number 41 and the charter provision in reference to the service upon the accused officer of copies of the charges and notice of trial. Assuming that appellant may still attack the dismissal proceedings upon that ground, we are of the opinion that appellant's contention is not maintainable. [2] We believe that said rule allowing constructive service to be made under the circumstances stated in the rule, not only does not conflict with the charter provision, but is in entire harmony therewith, is reasonable in its operation and wholly essential for the orderly and efficient administration of the affairs of the police department. The charter in this respect provides that the Board of Police Commissioners has power "To prescribe rules and regulations for the government, discipline, equipment and uniform of the Department, and from time to time to alter or repeal the same, and to prescribe penalties for the violations of any such rules and regulations." (Subd. 2, sec. 1, chap. III, art. VIII.) Section 3 of this same article provides: "No member of the Department shall be subject to dismissal for any cause, or to punishment for any breach of duty or misconduct therein, except after a fair and impartial trial before the Commissioners upon a verified complaint filed with the Board setting forth specifically the acts complained of, and after such reasonablenotice to him of the the time and place of hearing as the Boardmay by rule prescribe. . . ." (Italics ours.)
Section 3 of rule 41, the validity of which is challenged, reads: "3. When, after due and diligent search, a member or employee of the Police Department is reported by competent authority as missing, and in such case as said absence prevents personal service of notice and copy of charges filed against him, and is, in itself, a violation of the Rules and Regulations of the Department, reasonable notice of the *86 time and place of hearing within the provisions of Section 3 of Chapter VII of Article VIII of the Charter of the City and County of San Francisco shall be deemed as follows: A copy of the charges, setting forth the time and place of hearing, with notice to report to answer said charges, shall be sent by mail to the defendant's last known place of residence, at least five days previous to the time set for the hearing of the charges, and a written notice addressed to the defendant ordering him to report to answer charges, setting forth the fact that charges have been filed against him; the particulars of time and place of hearing shall be conspicuously posted in the Station or place where the defendant should report for duty at least five days previous to the time set for the hearing of the charges."
[3] Besides the fact that there is nothing in the language of the charter provision indicating that only personal service is permitted, we think the peculiar circumstances of this case are sufficiently convincing to show that the requirement of personal service is not, and ought not be, necessary. Appellant was a member of the department, and therefore subject to and had knowledge of its rules and regulations. Owing to the exigencies of war the ranks of the police department were being depleted of its younger members so that a real demand for police officers existed. In open defiance of the order of the commission that appellant remain on duty as a member of the department rather than take up agricultural pursuits, he quit the department, and left the city for regions wherein it was extremely impractical, if not impossible at that season of the year, to secure personal service upon him, and knowing, too, that charges of disobedience and dismissal would necessarily follow the order of the commission refusing his resignation. If, under those or like circumstances — for instance, an officer leaving the state without permission, or embarking upon the high seas — the department were compelled to suspend action in reference to his case, and thus allow the vacancy caused by his absence to remain unfilled until personal service could be had upon the absentee, the administration of police affairs would apparently be much interfered with if not seriously impaired. As before stated, the language of the charter provision does not in terms require personal notice, and, moreover, no reason has been *87 presented to show that such was the intent or meaning thereof.
[4] There is no merit in appellant's contention that the rule upon which these charges were based was violative of the charter in that said rule failed to prescribe a penalty. Section 2 of article VIII, chapter VII of the charter itself fixes the penalties for members "guilty of any offense, or violation of rules or regulations" of the department, and one of those penalties is "dismissal from the department."
[5] The questions of the sufficiency of the verification of the charges and of the charges themselves are, at best, irregularities which, as already pointed out, may not be taken advantage of by appellant on account of his laches.
[6] The minutes of the Board of Police Commissioners, which, in effect, constitute the judgment of dismissal, contain recitals showing jurisdiction to hear and determine the charges. Every presumption is in favor of the validity thereof (Gaylord v.Pasadena,
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.