279 P. 1080 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
Plaintiff sued in mandamus to require the defendants to award her a pension from the police relief and pension fund, maintained under the provisions of the municipal charter of the city and county of San Francisco. Plaintiff had judgment in the Superior Court and the defendants have appealed on typewritten transcripts.
Plaintiff is the widow of Austin J. Mogan, deceased, a former member of the San Francisco police department. On September 23, 1924, Officer Mogan was ordered by his superior officer to report to the Central Emergency Hospital in San Francisco to interview a patient who was reported to have made an attempt to commit suicide. It is claimed on the part of plaintiff that this patient suddenly became violent and that, in attempting to restrain him, Officer Mogan was injured and that such injury caused his death, which occurred soon thereafter. On the part of the defendants it is claimed that no struggle took place at the hospital and that no injury to the officer resulted, but that he died of natural causes. A full hearing was had before the commission under the terms of the charter and evidence was received tending to prove that the officer was injured in the struggle, as claimed by the plaintiff, and evidence was also received which was directly contradictory. Besides the direct testimony of the physican and of the nurse in charge that no struggle took place it was shown that no mention of a struggle was made by Officer Mogan in his report to his superior officer immediately following his return from the hospital; that no mention of a struggle appeared in the report of the nurse in attendance upon the patient; that the physician attending the officer certified that the cause of his death was lobar pneumonia and that the contributory cause was cerebral infarct; that two physicians appearing before the commission on behalf of this plaintiff testified that Officer Mogan died from a clot on the brain as a result of the attack of pneumonia, and that one of these physicians testified that the officer also appeared to be suffering from angina pectoris.
Upon this evidence the commission reached the determination that the officer's death did not result from injuries received *272 while in the performance of his duties as a police officer and denied the application for a pension. The petitioner then went to the Superior Court asking that court to set aside the finding and determination of the commission on this question of fact and to determine in its own judgment that the officer's death was the result of injuries received in the performance of his duties. On this appeal the sole question is whether the provisions of the San Francisco charter authorize the commission to hear and finally determine these disputed questions of fact or whether the court may substitute its judgment for that of the commission without a showing of an abuse of discretion on the part of the commission.
The right of the widow of a member of the police department to a pension when the officer has died from the result of injuries received in the performance of his duty arises out of section 4 of chapter X of article VIII of the charter. Subdivision 4 of this section, as amended (Stats. 1917, p. 1708), reads as follows: "Any member or members of the family of the deceased claiming to be entitled to a pension under the provisions of this section, shall file a verified petition therefor with said commission, which petition shall thereafter be heard by said board, upon such reasonable notice to the petitioner or petitioners of the time and place of such hearing, as said board may by rule or order prescribe. Said petitioner or petitioners shall be entitled, upon such hearing, to appear personally and by counsel. Upon such hearing any interested person shall have the right to introduce testimony relative to the matters set forth in said petition. The judgment of said commissioners respecting said application shall be final, unless in determining said application said commissioners commit a clear abuse of discretion."
This amendment was adopted immediately following the decision of the Supreme Court in French v. Cook,
Respondent insists that the judgment must be affirmed on the authority of Sheehan v. Board of Police Commrs.,
In the meantime, however, the electors of San Francisco adopted an amendment by adding section 14 to chapter X of article VIII of the charter, which reads as follows: "The judgment of said Board of Police Commissioners in passing upon or determining the question when the disability *275 upon which a pension has been granted has ceased shall be final, unless in passing upon or determining said question said board commit a clear abuse of discretion." (Stats. 1923, p. 1267.) This amendment was adopted November 7, 1922, and was approved by the legislature on January 19, 1923, but was not considered or referred to in the cases mentioned because it was not in effect at the time the rights of the parties arose, the acts of the board there under review having been taken on November 15, 1920. There is, therefore, no opinion of any court of this state interpreting either charter amendment and as both were manifestly passed for the express purpose of avoiding the rule of the cases cited these cases cannot be taken as authoritative interpretations of the charter as amended. We must look, therefore, to analogous cases involving the general question whether an administrative board clothed with the power to hear and finally determine a question of fact can be controlled in that determination by the courts in the absence of a showing of fraud, abuse of discretion or similar grounds.
We had occasion to consider this question in Fraser v.Cummings,
This principle is recognized in Dufton v. Daniels,
There is no claim that the hearing before the board was not fully conducted with due regard for the rights of the *277 petitioner, that the essential facts are admitted or that the evidence is susceptible to but one conclusion, that the board acted fraudulently, capriciously or arbitrarily, or that there was any abuse of discretion in any course of the proceedings. The whole case of petitioner rests on the plea that the testimony of her witnesses should have been believed and that the testimony of adverse witnesses should have been disbelieved upon the vital issue of fact. The people of San Francisco have by their charter conferred upon the board the exclusive jurisdiction to determine these questions of fact — possibly because they believed that that board is best able to judge the credibility of the witnesses in matters of this kind — and the courts are without power to set aside the judgment of the board except in the cases noted. To restate the principle of law involved, when the conceded facts show that the board has performed the duty which the law "specially enjoins," and the evidence is conflicting but sufficient to support the judgment, mandamus will not lie to compel a different form of judgment, but such relief can be had only upon a showing that there has been a "clear abuse of discretion."
Judgment reversed.
Sturtevant, J., and Koford, P.J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on September 4, 1929, and an application by petitioner to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on October 3, 1929.
All the Justices present concurred. *278