Thе proceedings out of which the present appeal arose had their inception in two certain special proceedings instituted by the respondent herein in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco against the board of police commissioners of said municipality, by which, in the first of said proceedings, he sought by a writ of review to have certain orders of said board, wherein he was attempted to be dismissed from the police deрartment thereof, reviewed and annulled; and by the second of which proceedings he sought by writ of mandate to compel his restoration and reinstatement as a disabled and retired police officer, and also to compel the issuance of a warrant by said board for the payment of his accrued and accruing pensions as such disabled and retired officer. These two proceedings were consolidated by the trial court which, upon the hearing thereon, upheld the contention of the petitioner in both of said proceedings, reviewing and annulling the said orders dismissing him from the police department, adjudging that he was entitled to have and receive his accrued and accruing pensions as such disabled and retired police officer, establishing the aggregate amount of his already accrued pensions up to the time of the rendition of its decision to be $4,600, and directing a writ of mandate to issue against the said board оf police commissioners, acting ex officio as a board of police relief and pension fund commissioners, and ordering said board in that capacity to issue a warrant for said sum drawn upon the auditor and treasurer of said municipality.
*527
Prom the orders of said. court, directing the issuance of these respective writs, appeals were taken to the district court of appeal for the first district, upon the hearing of which the said orders were respectively affirmed. The history of said proceedings and of said appeals up to the time of their said affirmance is quite fully and accurately set forth in
Sheehan
v.
Board of Police Commrs., etc., et al.,
Upon the hearing of this appeal, the respondent moved for a dismissal thereof upon several grounds, most of which related to informalities in the defendants’ motion to vacate the order for the issuance of said peremptory writ of mandate; and as to these, we do not perceive any merit in them. Nor do we think there is any merit in the chief ground оf said motion to dismiss, which is that the order directing the issuance of the peremptory writ was one unnecessary to be made and hence not harmful to the appellants, since it was the duty of the clerk of the trial court, upon the receipt of the
remittitur
showing the affirmance upoií appeal of the original order of the trial court directing the issuance of a peremptory writ, to issue said writ without the necessity of any further or later order of the court.
If wе were to regard the form of this adjudication as decisive of the question before us, it might well be held sufficient as such a judgment as, entered in an appropriate action or proceeding, would come within the terms of sections 1915 and 1920 of the Civil Code; but the question presented herein lies deeper than the face or terms of this adjudication and involves the nature of the proceeding, the parties before the court, the fund from which the petitioner’s pension was аnd is payable, and the powers of the trial court both in the making of such original adjudication and in the issuance of its subsequent order and writ for the enforcement of its terms. It may be conceded at the outset of this discussion that the petitioner and respondent herein has sufficiently established his right to be the recipient of a pension amounting to the sum of $600 a year, dating from the first day of January, 1904, and continuing down to September 1, 1911, and that such pension was passable from the police relief and pension fund collected and maintained by said municipality for the payment of pensions to disabled police officers or, in the event of their death in service, to their relatives; and that such pension to which the petitioner was thus entitled had remained unpaid down to and after the time of the inception of the original proceedings herein by means of which he sought to compel the allowance and payment of Ms said accumulated pensions. The police relief and pension fund of said municipality is provided for in chapter X of article VIII of the San Francisco charter. By the terms of said chapter, the board of police commissioners of said municipality are constituted ea> officio a board of police relief and pension fund commissioners and, as such, are made the trustees of said fund. The moneys which supply and maintain the same, derived from various sources, are deposited with the treasurer of the municipality and are paid out by said treasurer to those persons who are entitled thereto upon warrants issued by the said board of police relief and pension fund commissioners and presented to the auditor to be by the latter official audited and ordered paid. The only function which the board of police commissioners, *531 acting ex officio as the hoard of police relief and pension fund commissioners, have to perform in relation to said fund is that of determining who, among the members of the police department of said municipality, by reason of age, infirmity, or physical disability, are entitled to retirement upon pension, or the relatives of whom, by reason of his death in service, are entitled to receive such pension, and for what length of time the same shall be paid: Having determined these matters, the only further function of said board of police relief and pension fund commissioners is to issue the warrant for the amount of pеnsion to which the pensioner has thus become entitled, and which warrant when issued is to be presented to the auditor for approval and to the treasurer for payment. The petitioner herein, being, as we have seen, entitled to his pension in the sum of $600 per annum from a date not long after his original disability and retirement on „ account thereof, and his right to such pension having been accordingly fixed and awarded, demanded the issuance of his warrant for the aggregate аmount thereof by said board; and this demand being refused, he commenced the original proceedings herein wherein he sought a writ of mandate to compel the issuance of said writ. In so doing, he was acting strictly within the scope and terms of section 1085 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides for the issuance of writs of mandate “to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office, trust or station.” In seeking this aрpropriate remedy, the petitioner was bound to allege and prove that he was entitled to the said pension and to the aggregate amount thereof then due him and for the payment of which such warrant should issue; but that fact did not give to the proceeding the nature or qualities of a civil action so as to render the adjudication by the court in such special proceedings that the petitioner was entitled to said writ, such a judgment as would be obtainable in a сivil action. The petitioner could not, in fact, have obtained such a judgment in said special proceeding, since he would not have been entitled to sue the board of police commissioners in a civil action' to recover the amount due him on account of his said pension.
*532
We are reinforced in this conclusion by the uniform current of authority in this state as to the scope and functions of writs of mandate. In the early еase of
Davis
v.
Porter,
In the case of
Barber
v.
Mulford,
In the case of
Howe
v.
Southrey,
In the recent case of
Engebretson
v.
City of San Diego,
The eases cited and relied upon by the respondent are not at variance with the views above expressed. They are, in each instance, cases wherein the judgment relied upon as bearing interest was one obtained in a direct civil action against the municipality or individual owing the debt or directly liable for the amount of the demаnd. No case of a writ of mandate directing interest to be allowed upon a claim not founded upon such a judgment has been called to our attention. The ease of
Fuller
v.
Aylesworth,
It follows from the foregoing review of the authorities that the petitioner and respondent herein neither had nor could obtain such a money judgment in this mmdamus proceeding as would bear interest under the provisions of sections 1915 and 1920 of the Civil Code, and hence that the trial court was in error in its ex parte order of July 2, 1920, in so far as it undertook to direct the issuanсe of a writ of mandate to the appellants herein, which should include the allowance of interest upon the aggregate amount of the petitioner’s pension due and unpaid prior to Sep *536 tember 1, 1911, the date of its original order, from and after said date and up to July 1, 1920; and was also in error in providing therein for the inclusion of interest at the legal rate upon the annual amount of the petitioner’s pension to which he had become entitled between September 1, 1911, and July 1, 1920; and was also in error in its refusal to vacate and set aside its said order of July 2, 1920, in so far as the same related to and required the payment of such interest, and in refusing to recall and quash the writ of mandate issued in accordance with said order.
The orders are reversed, and the trial court is hereby directed to recall and quash the writ of mandate issued in conformity therewith in so far as the same directs the drawing of any warrant or warrants for the payment of ' interest upon the petitioner’s pension demands.
Shaw, C. J., Wilbur, J., Shurtleff, J., Sloane, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred.
