Opinion
On June 14, 1971, appellant Joseph A. Power, Jr., filed a first amended petition alleging he had made a formal request to file charges with respondent board, against a fellow state employee. The request included 21 declarations under oath. This original request to file was summarily denied and on September 30, 1970, appellant again his request to file charges. This second request was denied on January 5, 1971, again without a formal hearing before respondent board. Pursuant to a request of respondent, the accused Robert P. Mannen and the Attorney General filed a joint letter response to the accusations, a copy of which was provided to appellant along with respondent’s denial of con
The writ was denied with the trial court holding that mandate does not lie to control discretionary acts (namely, the granting or denying of consent to file charges) the exercise of which is exclusively vested in respondent. (See Gov. Code, § 19583.5.) Further, even assuming the court could review file exercise of respondent’s discretion, such judicial review is limited to a determination of whether respondent abused its discretion. The trial court found no such abuse of discretion.
We conclude that the appeal is without merit and will accordingly affirm the judgment of the court below.
Government Code section 19583.5 provides in part: “Any person with the consent of the board or the appointing power may file charges against an employee requesting that punitive action be taken for one or more causes for discipline specified in this article.” (Italics added.)
Appellant urges that article XXIV, section 2, of the California section 18670 of the Government Cede and other statutes require the respondent board to conduct a threshold hearing or to make findings concerning the merits of charges sought to be filed, before rendering a granting or denying consent to file such charges. This is not the law. Respondent board is simply enjoined from exercising its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or fraudulent manner and from making a decision that has no reasonable basis in law or substantial basis in fact. (Bixby v. Pierno (1971)
We note that here both decisions denying consent were made after the respondent board had considered the requested investigative response of the Attorney General. Obviously, the respondent could have concluded from the response that the Attorney General had, even prior to respondent’s request, thoroughly investigated the substance of the charges sought to be filed and that no further action was required. We conclude there is no duty placed upon the respondent to do more than it did prior to the exercise of its discretion. (Faulkner v. Cal. Toll Bridge Authority (1953)
Furthermore, to require a hearing of any kind as to the veracity of the charges would establish a procedural concept exactly contrary to the language of section 19583.5. We think there is a fundamental distinction between an administrative hearing as to the truth of charges along with the attendant safeguards such a hearing necessarily involves, and an informal inquiry as to whether such charges are to be permitted to be filed in the first instance. Neither the Constitution nor the relevant statutes intended to raise a preliminary inquiry into a request to file charges to the dignity of an administrative hearing.
In Bixby, supra,
“In determining whether the right is fundamental the courts do not alone weigh the economic aspect of it, but the effect of it in human terms and the importance of it to the individual in the life situation. This approach finds its application in such an instance as the opportunity to continue the practice of one’s trade or profession—a right which induced this court’s statement in 1939: ‘it necessarily follows that the court to which the for mandate is made to secure the restoration of a professional
In this context, the right appellant seeks is a hearing into the merits of accusatory charges against a fellow state employee before the respondent board follows the law in granting or denying consent to appellant to file such charges. We hold that such “right” is nonexistent and is neither fundamental nor vested in appellant and that the trial court followed the correct criterion of judicial review in denying the writ.
Finally, we think the present scope of mandamus reaches to and forestalls the capricious, arbitrary or fraudulent abuse of administrative discretion in matters of fundamental vested rights (Boren v. State Personnel Board (1951)
Judgment affirmed.
