Jenks v. City of Oakland

58 Cal. 576 | Cal. | 1881

Thornton, J.:

All the questions which arise in this case are passed on in Bishop v. The Council of the City of Oakland, supra, 572, save one, which we will proceed to examine.

This question relates to the salary of a Justice of the Peace of the City of Oaldand. By the provisions of section 103 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as enacted by the act of April 1st, 1880 (see amendments to the Code of Civil Procedure, p. 34), it is provided that every Justice of the Peace in any city having over ten thousand inhabitants, shall receive an annual salary of two thousand dollars per annum; and further, that all fees which are by law chargeable for services rendered by such Justices of the Peace in the cities aforesaid, shall be by them respectively collected, and on the first Monday in each month every such Justice shall make report under oath to the City Treasurer of the amount of fees so by him collected, and pay the amount so reported into the City Treasury, to the credit of .the General Fund thereof.

It is objected that it is not provided in the statute that the salary is to be paid by the City of Oakland. It is not expressly so stated, but we are of opinion that it was the intention of the Legislature that the salary should be paid by the city. This intention is in our judgment clearly manifested by the requirement that the fees of office collected by the Justice should be paid into the City Treasury.

But it is said that monthly payments of this salary are not provided for by law. The payment of salaries to public officers monthly, where not otherwise provided by law, is uni*578versal in this State. We do not know of an exception. It is so provided by statute as to officers whose salaries are paid out of the State Treasury. (Political Code, § 1029.) It is averred in the petition in this cause that it has always been the practice, usage, and custom of the authorities of the City of Oakland, ever since the organization of the city goverment, and still is, to pay all officers entitled to annual salaries out of the City Treasury pro rata monthly; that the only exception is as to the Justices of the Peace elected under the statute of 1880, to whom they refuse to pay any salary whatever. These averments are not denied in the answer.

"Under these circumstances, it is our judgment that the plaintiff is entitled to have his salary paid to Mm pro rata every month at the rate of two thousand dollars per annum, and that the judgment of the Court below and its order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial are without error and should he and are hereby affirmed.

Myrick, J., Sharpstein, J., and Morrison, C. J., concurred.

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