168 P. 1053 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
The petitioner, being a deputy district attorney of the county of Alameda, applied to the superior court for a writ of mandate directed to the defendant, auditor of that county, commanding him to issue and deliver to the petitioner a warrant for the amount of his salary as such deputy district attorney for the period between December 21, 1916, and the end of that month — the defendant having theretofore declined to do so, basing his refusal upon the ground that the petitioner having been elected a member of the legislature was, by section 19 of article IV of the Constitution as amended and in effect on said twenty-first day of December, inhibited from holding any office or employment under the state during the term of his legislative mandate. The trial court upheld the contention of the defendant — which was raised upon demurrer to the petition — denied leave to amend said petition, and entered judgment in favor of defendant for his costs. Petitioner appeals from such judgment.
The first contention of the appellant is that the amendment to said section of the Constitution taking effect December 21, 1916, does not apply to him, for the reason that he was holding the two offices in question at the time said amendment took effect; and that to apply it to his case would be to make the amendment retroactive.
It is unnecessary, in our view, to discuss at length this first objection of the appellant as the question was exhaustively considered by the district court of appeal for the third district in the recent case of Chenoweth v. Chambers,
It is next urged by appellant that the constitutional inhibition does not apply to him for the further reason that a deputy district attorney is not the holder of an "office, trust or employment under this state."
The language of the particular section is as follows: "No senator or member of the assembly shall, during the term for which he shall have been elected, hold or accept any office, trust or employment under this state; provided that this provision shall not apply to any office filled by election by the people." *736
While it must be conceded that a deputy district attorney is not one of the state officers provided for by the Constitution and he is what is generally known as a county officer, we think the terms of the Constitution "office, trust or employment under this state" have a much broader signification than that contended for by appellant, and that his office must be held to be covered by them. In People v. Leonard,
This second contention of the appellant must therefore be rejected, as also his third, that a deputy district attorney, if the holder of any office at all, occupies one "filled by election by the people," and therefore is not affected by said constitutional provision.
The argument in support of this last proposition is that as a deputy district attorney is the holder of no office distinct from his chief, and is in contemplation of law the district attorney, who holds by election, his deputy therefore is the holder of an "office filled by election by the people." But the Political Code of this state by providing for the appointment, the salary, and term of office of a deputy district attorney, recognizes him as an entity distinct from his chief. His office being filled by appointment, it would be absurd to regard it as one "filled by election by the people," and therefore not affected by the constitutional inhibition which we are considering.
Upon the merits of the whole case we are of the opinion that the intent and purpose of the framers in proposing, and of the people in adopting, this constitutional provision was the preclusion of members of the law-making branch of the state government from seeking or holding any appointive office or employment in or under any department or subdivision of the general state government, by the seeking or holding *737 of which his independent action as such member of the legislature might be in any wise influenced or affected.
For the reasons above set forth the judgment is affirmed.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on November 26, 1917.