HATTIE NAUGHTON, Respondent, v. RETIREMENT BOARD OF SAN FRANCISCO et al., Appellants.
Civ. No. 11118
First Appellate District, Division One
February 28, 1941
In Inouye v. McCall, 35 Cal. App. (2d) 634 [96 Pac. (2d) 386], this point was directly involved, and it was there held to be error to refuse to permit such memoranda to be examined by opposing counsel.
In that case the refusal to produce the notes was held to be error but not prejudicial, for the entire evidence there given by the officer was cumulative and could have been stricken out and the result would have been the same. We cannot find that to be true here. In the instant case there was a clear conflict as to the length of the skid marks, which was a fact relied upon to establish speed, and was therefore an important issue in the case.
Out of fairness to the very able trial judge who presided, it should be noted this case was tried before the opinion in the case of Inouye v. McCall, supra, was written.
The judgment must be reversed. It is so ordered.
Tuttle, J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
James C. Purcell and William E. Ferriter for Respondent.
KNIGHT, J.--- Thomas Naughton, a member of the San Francisco Police Department for twenty-nine years, died June 7, 1937. At the time of his death he held the rank of sergeant. He was survived by his wife, Hattie Naughton, to whom he had been married nearly thirty years. She filed application with the Retirement Board of San Francisco, City Employees’ Retirement System, for a pension; and after hearing the evidence the board denied her application. Thereafter she petitioned the superior court for and was granted a peremptory writ of mandate directing the board to award the pension. From the judgment entered therein the board has appealed.
Naughton died from a progressive type of heart disease known as coronary sclerosis and myocardial infarcation, with which he had been afflicted for several years; and because of his impaired state of health and at his request he had been for more than two and a half years prior to May 24, 1937, assigned to inside duties at district station headquarters. On the date mentioned, however, which it will be noted was two weeks prior to his death, as a result of police reorganization he was transferred to another station and assigned to patrol duty, most of which he was required to do on foot; and he continued to fill that assignment up to the time of his death. After reporting off duty at the station at midnight on June 6th, he visited the home of an old friend, where he died; and Mrs. Naughton‘s application for pension was based upon the claim that the disease from which her husband died was aggravated and that his death was accelerated by over-exertion in attempting to perform the foot patrol duties to which he had been assigned two weeks prior to his death.
The evidence before the board consisted entirely of that produced by Mrs. Naughton, no testimony having been introduced in opposition thereto by the board; and in her petition for the writ she alleged that such evidence was free from conflict. In its answer to the petition the board expressly admitted the truth of that allegation; and at the opening of the trial counsel for the board stated to the court that the question to be determined was whether the denial of the pension by the board constituted an abuse of discretion. Therefore the proceeding was heard and determined on a transcript of the evidence taken before the board; and the court found therefrom that in denying the application for the pension the board acted arbitrarily and clearly in
In the present case the principal facts established before the board, as they are disclosed by the transcript, may be stated as follows: In 1934, after completing an assignment to “strike” duty on the waterfront, Naughton complained of illness. He was short of breath, complained of pains in his chest, and he was subject to violent coughing spells during which he would choke and turn blue in the face. In October, 1934, at his request and on account of his condition of health he was assigned to desk work at the Western Addition station, and later at the Stanyan Street station. While filling those assignments his impaired physical condition was clearly noticeable to some of his fellow officers. On May 24, 1937, a police reorganization took place, and he was transferred from inside work to patrol duty, with headquarters at the Golden Gate Park station at 37th Avenue and Fulton Street. The district covered a large area, with many steep hills. With the exception of a small part of the Sunset district, it embraced those portions of the city from the Golden Gate on the north to the south boundary line of the city, lying west from 29th Avenue to the ocean, including all of Golden Gate Park, the Legion of Honor, the Veterans’ Hospital, Fleishacker Pool and Playground, and all of the beach. As sergeant of the district he was required, during an eight-hour watch, to visit officers patrolling the district, and to ring in from police boxes located in various parts of the district. Eight of the fourteen days he was attached
During the two weeks he was stationed at the Golden Gate Park station he complained to his wife and others that his beat was too hard for him that he could not stand the walking; and in this connection Mrs. Naughton testified that his general health was not at all good during that time; that he was tired all the time, “very bluish in the face whenever he had coughing spells“, and was unable to sleep on account of pains in his chest. On June 5th he reported for work at 11 P. M. and worked until 7 A. M. on June 6th, as acting lieutenant in the station. At about 3 A. M. he had a violent attack of coughing while walking across the floor of the assembly room. It was witnessed by other of-
We are of the opinion that in view of the foregoing uncontradicted evidence, the case was brought within the doctrine of such cases as Buckley v. Roche, supra, and Peters v. Sacramento City E. R. System, supra, and that therefore the trial court was justified in finding that the board in denying the application for pension acted arbitrarily and clearly in an abuse of its discretion. Two of the principal cases upon which the court rested its decision in the Buckley case arose under the
The board contends that in the exercise of its discretion it was warranted in finding that the heart failure was precipitated by some strain other than that occasioned by walking the beat. But there is no evidence upon which such a finding could be based. To the contrary, it shows without contradiction that death was accelerated by the amount of walking the decedent was required to do on foot patrol duty, after being transferred to the Golden Gate Park station. As held in Peters v. Sacramento City E. R. System, supra, in dealing with a similar situation, wherein the same contention was made, “. . . there being no substantial evidence to support the conclusion reached by the retirement board, it had no facts upon which to base the conclusion reached, hence it exercised no discretion, and having acted contrary to the undisputed facts its act is treated and considered as arbitrary.” (See, also, Buckley v. Roche, supra.) Stated another way, the board‘s negative finding must be based on something more than mere conjecture.
The board points out that the death certificate contains the recital: “Death due to natural causes“; and it contends that therefore the certificate alone is sufficient to sustain its decision, citing Bennett v. Brady, 17 Cal. App. (2d) 114 [61 Pac. (2d) 530]). But in the light of the testimony given by Dr. Leland, by whom the entry was made, from which it appears that the walking the decedent was required to do in performing his foot patrol duties hastened his death, the only significance that can be attached to the recital above quoted is that the decedent‘s demise was not brought about by violence or accidental means. The case of Bennett v. Brady, supra, is not in point, for there a sharp conflict was presented between the testimony of two medical experts as to whether the exertion to which the officer had been subjected hastened his death; whereas here there was but one medical expert, from whose uncontradicted testimony it appears that the officer‘s life was shortened by over-exertion in performing his duties. Nor can it be successfully maintained that the doctor was misled by or that any prejudice resulted from any inaccuracies in the hypothetical question put to him. Before he answered the question he asked,
In the board‘s reply brief, much is said about the circumstances under which the decedent died. In this connection our attention has been called to the admission of Lansfield that he “used to bootleg“, and while so engaged assumed the name of Baker; also to the fact that an analysis was made of the decedent‘s stomach which disclosed the presence of “two-tenths of one per cent” ethyl alcohol; and it is intimated, although there is no testimony whatever so showing, that when Lansfield retired he left a bottle of whiskey at the decedent‘s disposal; and it seems to be contended that those were the factors which precipitated Naughton‘s death, rather than over-exertion in the performance of his duties. It is obvious, however, that Lansfield‘s former activities can have no bearing on the question at issue; nor can it be said that there was anything unusual about Naughton‘s visit that night, because, as the evidence shows, they had been friends for many years, and frequently, after reporting off police duty, he visited Lansfield before going home. With respect to the presence of alcohol in the decedent‘s stomach, Dr. Leland testified that “You certainly would not be intoxicated” by the amount there found. In fact there is no testimony whatever from which it may be inferred that the decedent indulged freely in liquor, or even that he was an habitual user thereof. It will be seen, therefore, that there is nothing in the circumstances surrounding the death of Naughton which can serve as ground for denying his widow‘s claim for pension.
The judgment is affirmed.
Ward, J., concurred.
PETERS, P. J., Concurring.—I concur in the judgment. So far as the question of remedy is concerned, I believe that either mandamus or certiorari will lie to “review” the determinations of local boards exercising judicial or quasi judicial powers. If certiorari is used, the extent of the review would be to inquire into the “jurisdiction” of the local board. So far as the evidence is concerned, that would mean that the superior court‘s power is limited to determining whether there is any substantial evidence to support the
It is my opinion that under the cases the aggrieved party has an election of remedies—he may proceed either by mandamus or certiorari, but, so far as the evidence is concerned, whichever remedy is used the power of the superior court is exactly the same—to determine whether there is any substantial evidence to support the order of the local board, if that board exercises judicial or quasi judicial power.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 29, 1941.
