Martin v. Board of Election Commissioners

58 P. 932 | Cal. | 1899

Lead Opinion

This action is in some measure connected with that of Fragleyv. Phelan, involving the validity of the freeholders' charter, just decided. (Ante, p. 383.)

In the complaint of the plaintiffs it is stated: "That this action is not designed or intended to impeach the validity of the said charter in any respect, other than to have it adjudged herein that the provisions of said charter concerning the county officers of said city and county of San Francisco are in open and flagrant conflict with the constitution of the state of California, are an invasion of and an infringement upon the sovereignty of said state, are a revolutionary usurpation of power, and are a palpable violation of the law adopted by the legislature of said state, in obedience to the constitution, and entitled `An act to establish a uniform system of county and township government,' approved April 1, 1897." A demurrer to the complaint was sustained by the court below, and, plaintiffs declining to amend, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

The provisions of the freeholders' charter concerning the so-called county officers, in whose behalf this action is prosecuted, were inserted in said charter in pursuance of the amendment to article XI of the constitution, concerning counties, cities, and towns, and is entitled section 8 1/2, adopted in 1896. By that amendment it is declared: "It shall be competent, in all charters framed under the authority given by section 8 of article XI of this constitution, to provide, in addition to those provisions allowable by this constitution and by the laws of the state, as follows; 4. . . . . Where a city and county government has been merged and consolidated into one municipal government, it shall also be competent in any charter framed under section 8 of said article XI to provide for the manner in which, the times at which, and the terms for which the several county officers shall be elected or appointed, for their compensation, and for the number of deputies that each shall have, and for the compensation payable to each of such deputies."

By the act of the first legislature dividing the state into counties, passed February 18, 1850, the county of San Francisco was bounded on the south by the San Francisquito creek, and from the head of said creek due west to the ocean, *407 and three miles therein, and on the northerly end including all of the present city and county; counties lying to the south being Santa Clara and Branciforte, the latter was changed subsequently to the county of Santa Cruz.

At the same session of the legislature an act was passed April 15, 1850, to incorporate the city of San Francisco. The southern boundary line of said city, as thus incorporated, was two miles distant from the center of Portsmouth square, "and parallel to the street known as Clay street," and the western boundary was a line a mile and a half in a westerly direction from Portsmouth square, "and parallel to a street known as Kearny street." The act provided for a complete organization and a full set of officers for the city, independent of the county officers of the county of San Francisco. The acts creating the county, and also the city, were amended at subsequent sessions of the legislature, and April 19, 1856, an act was passed "to repeal the several charters of the city of San Francisco, to establish the boundaries of the city and county of San Francisco, and to consolidate the government thereof." By the first section of said act it is provided that "the corporation or body politic and corporate, now existing and known as the city of San Francisco, shall remain and continue to be a body politic and corporate in name and in fact, by the name of the city and county of San Francisco, and by that name shall have perpetual succession, may sue and defend in all courts and places, and in all matters and proceedings whatever, and may have and may use a common seal, and the same may alter at pleasure; and may purchase, receive, hold, and enjoy real and personal property, and sell, convey, mortgage, and dispose of the same for the common benefit."

By the second section it is provided that "the public buildings, lands, and property, all rights of property and rights of action, and all moneys, revenues, and income belonging or appertaining either to the corporation of the city of San Francisco, or to the county of San Francisco, are hereby declared to be vested in, and to appertain to, the said city and county of San Francisco; and the moneys in the treasury of said city, and in the treasury of said county of San Francisco, and all the revenues and income from whatsoever source arising, including delinquent taxes upon persons and property appertaining to the said city or to the said county, *408 shall be handed over, paid, and received into the treasury of the city and county of San Francisco as a part of the general fund."

The boundaries of the new municipal corporation designated as the city and county of San Francisco were fixed as at present, and there was formed out of the southern portion of the county of San Francisco the county of San Mateo; and the eighth section of the act dividing the state into counties, providing for the formation of the county of San Francisco, was repealed. It was further provided in said act that the existing provisions of law defining the powers and duties of county officers, excepting those relating to supervisors, so far as the same were not repealed or altered by said act, should be considered as applicable to the officers of said city and county of San Francisco, and among the enumerated officers to be elected for said new municipal corporation were, in addition to purely city officers, the officers formerly designated as county officers.

From the passage of the consolidation act to the constitutional convention of 1878-79 the city and county of San Francisco had been a subdivision of the state, and as such, and by that name and style, organized and existing as a body politic and corporate. Its charter — the consolidation act — had been added to and amended, but the general form and substance of the municipal government had not been changed. And since the passage of the consolidation act the county of San Francisco has ceased to exist as a body politic or corporate, independently of, and separate from, the municipal corporation created by that act, and known and designated as the city and county of San Francisco.

One of the contentions on the part of the appellants is, that although the former city and county were consolidated they were not "merged" within the meaning of the constitution. As already shown, the consolidation act repealed the various acts creating and amending the charter of the city of San Francisco, as well as the provisions of the act creating the county of San Francisco; and all the funds and property of every kind theretofore belonging either to the city or county became vested in and belonged to the new municipal corporation known as the city and county of San Francisco. It would seem difficult to more effectually merge two separate bodies into one. Besides, in the constitutional convention of *409 1878-79 the city and county of San Francisco was referred to and treated as a merged and consolidated municipal government, and it was then, as now, the only municipal government of that kind in the state. That portion of section 7 of article XI of the constitution, where merged and consolidated municipal governments are referred to has not been changed since it was reported to the convention by the committee on municipal corporations; and the debates show that the terms there used referred to a municipal government like that of the city and county of San Francisco. During the debate on the various amendments proposed to that portion of section 7 referring to the two houses of legislation (since omitted by constitutional amendment), Judge Hager, the chairman of the committee, in replying, said: "I had no idea that this section was going to create so much difficulty in the convention, or receive so much apparent opposition. The section as drawn was intended to be for the city of San Francisco." (Debates of the Constitutional Convention, p. 1058.)

These remarks of Judge Hager were not questioned by any member, and it is fair, therefore, to assume that the convention understood that when using the term "merged and consolidated into one municipal government" it had reference at that time only to the city and county of San Francisco, and also to any similar consolidated corporation that might thereafter be created. When the following section, 8 (then section 9), providing for freeholders' charters, was under debate, Judge Hager remarked: "This applies strictly and only to the city and county of San Francisco." (The section originally required a population of more than one hundred thousand to entitle the inhabitants of such city to frame such a charter.) He further said: "I cannot see that any evil will come from it; we have this peculiar government there, a consolidated city and county government. I do not agree with my friend from Sacramento, that the tendency is to multiply offices. The tendency is to reduce the number of offices. Instead of having a set of city officers and a set of county officers, they are consolidated. We have a sheriff who is the sheriff of the county and of the city. . . . We have a tax collector, and we have an auditor that acts for both; formerly, we had one for each. The tendency of a consolidated government is to reduce the offices from two to *410 one in every case, and reduce the expense in every particular, and not, as the gentleman said, for the purpose of multiplying offices."

It is further contended by the appellant that section 8 1/2 of article XI is invalid, for the reason that it was submitted to the people under the general law, passed March 7, 1883, providing for the submission of constitutional amendments, instead of being submitted specially by the legislature proposing the amendment. (Stats. 1883, p. 53.)

This contention is entirely untenable; the amendment to section 6 of the same article, by the insertion of the words "except in municipal affairs," was submitted and adopted at the same time and in the same manner as section 8 1/2, now under consideration, and the validity of that amendment has been considered and sustained by this court. Besides, there are many other amendments that have been in like manner submitted and adopted since the passage of the act of 1883. There is no constitutional objection to the passage of such an act, and that being the case, it is entirely proper for the legislature to provide by general, instead of special, legislation for submitting constitutional amendments to the people.

The causes leading up to the adoption of constitutional amendment section 8 1/2 are well known. In the freeholders' charter of the city of Los Angeles provision was made for the establishment of a police court and the election of judges thereof. In People v. Toal, 85 Cal. 333, it was held by this court that such provision of that charter was invalid, for the reason that inferior courts, including police courts, could only be established as provided by article VI, concerning the judicial power of the state, and that it is there provided that the legislature may establish inferior courts in an incorporated city or town, or city and county; and this meant that an act must be passed by the legislature in the form and manner prescribed in article IV, legislative department; and that the approval of the freeholders' charter by a vote of the two houses of the legislature was not equivalent to the passage of a law as provided in said legislative article. Hence the new section, 8 1/2, of article XI, of the constitution, subdivision 1, confers in express terms the power to provide in freeholders' charters "for the constitution, regulation, government, and jurisdiction of police courts and for the manner *411 in which, the times at which, and the terms for which the judges of such courts shall be elected or appointed, and for the compensation of such judges and their clerks and attaches." And to remove any doubt that may have previously existed concerning the status of officers of the class prosecuting this action, in merged and consolidated municipalities, it is further expressly provided in the amended section 8 1/2 that it should be competent in a freeholders' charter of such consolidated government to provide for the election of such officers for such municipality. There is no room for doubt, therefore, as to the purpose of the legislature in proposing said amended section 8 1/2, of article XI, of the people in voting upon and approving the same.

It is contended, however, on the part of the appellants that the provisions of said amended section 8 1/2 under consideration cannot be carried out, for the reason that it would conflict with the general law of the state establishing a uniform system of county and township government; in other words, that the law (and a freeholders' charter adopted as provided for in the constitution is a law of the highest grade) cannot be passed, although in pursuance of express power granted by the constitution, because it may, perhaps, infringe upon some other law. The rule of construction invoked by appellants seems to be that a provision in a law or constitution in reference to a particular matter is inoperative and void if it be inconsistent with the general provisions of said law or constitution. The direct opposite is the true construction in such cases.

"The more specific provision controls the general, without regard to their comparative dates; the two acts operating together, and neither working the repeal of the other," (Bishop's Written Laws, secs. 112-26; Desmond v. Dunn, 55 Cal. 247; Dwarris on Statutes, 765; Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 63;Commonwealth v. Council of Montrose, 52 Pa. St. 391; Coxe v.State, 144 N.Y. 396; People v. Keller, 157 N.Y. 97; State v.Kelly, 34 N.J.L. 75; McGavisk v. State etc., 34 N.J.L. 509; Statev. Inhabitants etc. of Trenton, 38 N.J.L. 64; Crane v. Reeder,22 Mich. 323.)

Under this rule of construction it would be immaterial whether the general county government act applies to the county of San Francisco or not; for although said new section *412 8 1/2 of article XI may conflict with other sections of the same article providing for a uniform system of county and township government, it would still be valid as to the particular cases for which it is intended, for in such case the particular and the general both stand together — neither abrogates the other — the former furnishing the rule for the freeholders' charter, the latter for all other cases.

But the act establishing a uniform system of county and township government does not, and never has, applied to the county of San Francisco, in the sense claimed by the appellants. The first section provides that the several counties of this state, as they now exist, and such others as may be hereafter organized, are bodies corporate and politic, and, as such, have the power specified in said act; among these are the power to sue and to be sued, to purchase and hold land within its limits, to make contracts, and purchase and hold such personal property as may be necessary to the exercise of its powers, to manage and dispose of its property as the interests of its inhabitants may require, to levy and collect such taxes as are authorized by law. The county of San Francisco, as already shown, since the passage of the consolidation act, has never, as such, owned or possessed any property or performed any of the acts of a corporate body. Further, the general law provides that "each county must have a board of supervisors consisting of five members." The county of San Francisco never has had such a board, or any board of supervisors since the consolidation act. The general county government act also provides for justices of the peace and constables in the several townships of the county, and there are no justices of the peace or constables in the township of the county of San Francisco, since there are no townships in San Francisco. In fact, it is too obvious for question or argument that the general law establishing a uniform system of county government does not apply to the city and county of San Francisco. Further, section 8 of article XI, as it now stands, declares that when said charter is approved as therein provided, "it shall become the charter of such city, or if such city be consolidated with a county, then for such city and county, and shall become the organic law thereof and supersede any existing charter, and all amendments thereof, and all laws inconsistent with such charter." As the section originally *413 stood it read: "All special laws inconsistent with such charter." The purpose of the amendment is in line with other amendments to the other sections of the article in question, and would seem to remove all doubt that such charters are not subject to existing laws, whether general or special.

Judgment affirmed.

McFarland, J., Garoutte, J., Beatty, C.J., and Harrison, J., concurred.

Temple, J., concurred in the judgment.






Concurrence Opinion

I concur in the judgment solely on the ground that the constitutional amendment — section 8 1/2 — definitely settles the question involved in favor of the contention of respondents.