167 P. 377 | Cal. | 1917
James P. Dolan was the duly elected and qualified sheriff of Mono County. In July, 1915, he was called to a ranch, where depredations had been committed. While looking for the offenders, he encountered two men, whom he accosted. They opened fire, and inflicted fatal wounds upon him. The commission made an award in favor of his widow and against the county. Upon the petition of *753 Mono County, this court issued a writ of certiorari to review the award.
Assuming for the moment that the sheriff is an "employee" of the county within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act (Stats. 1911, p. 796), we see no merit in the petitioner's contentions that the injuries received by Dolan did not arise out of or in the course of his employment, or that they were caused by his willful misconduct. The only question worthy of consideration is whether he was an "employee" within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act. The statute, as it read on July 26, 1915, contained these definitions:
"Sec. 13. The term 'employer' as used in sections twelve to thirty-five, inclusive, of this act shall be construed to mean: The state, and each county, city and county, city, school district and all public corporations therein, and every person, firm, voluntary association, and private corporation, (including any public service corporation) who has any person in service under any appointment or contract of hire, or apprenticeship, express or implied, oral or written, and the legal representatives of any deceased employer. [Stats. 1915, p. 1081.]
"Sec. 14. The term 'employee' as used in sections twelve to thirty-five, inclusive, of this act shall be construed to mean: Every person in the service of an employer as defined by section thirteen hereof under any appointment or contract of hire or apprenticeship, express or implied, oral or written, including aliens and also including minors, but excluding any person whose employment is both casual and not in the usual course of the trade, business, profession or occupation of his employer, and also excluding any employee engaged in farm, dairy, agricultural, viticultural, or horticultural labor, in stock or poultry raising or in household domestic service, . . ." [Stats. 1915, p. 913.]
Under these sections, the essential condition of the relation of employer and employee is "service under any appointment or contract of hire, or apprenticeship." Does this language describe the status of an officer, like a sheriff, holding his office by virtue of an election, taking an official oath, giving an official bond, and having a tenure fixed by law? Certainly such an officer is not in service under any contract. "It is well settled that salaried public offices, *754
created by the legislature, are not held by contract." (Miller v. Kister,
The only other ground upon which the sheriff may be brought within the terms of our statute is that he is in service under an "appointment of hire." To so hold would, however, require us to read the word "appointed" as equivalent to "elected," or as including both "appointed" and "elected." There is a clear and well-understood distinction between appointment and election. In Wickersham v. Brittan,
Attention is directed to the fact that the original Employers' Liability Act (Stats. 1911, p. 797, sec. 6), after defining "employee" in the language used in section 14 of the present act, expressly excludes from the definition "any official of the state, or of any county . . . who shall have been elected or appointed for a regular term of one or more years, or to complete the unexpired portion of any such regular term." This exception is not incorporated in the act now in force. It is argued that by expressly excluding elected officials, the legislature of 1911 indicated its understanding that without such exception the general language would have included the excepted class. And, so the argument proceeds, when the legislature of 1913, in re-enacting the same general language in the new act, failed to exclude elected officers, it showed its intent that they should be covered by the law. It is, no doubt, the general rule that provisos or exceptions may be construed as indicating that, in their absence, the preceding general language would have covered the matter included in the proviso or exception. (San Francisco v. PacificTel. Tel. Co.,
The amendment of 1915 to section 14 (Stats. 1915, p. 913), excluding from the definition of employee certain classes of deputies, was not in force at the time of Dolan's death. It can throw no light upon the proper interpretation of the section enacted in 1913. Furthermore, we do not think that the exception tends to show anything more than that, in its absence, deputies of clerks, sheriffs, or constables would be included in the definition of employees.
The award is annulled.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.