From a judgment awarding plaintiff the recovery of certain sums found to be due him as pension payments from the city and declaring his right to receive the pension in the future, both parties appeal. Defendant attacks the judgment in its entirety, while plaintiff appeals from the portion thereof which denies him recovery of pension payments for a period of sоme five years preceding the date from which the court determined the past due payments should be computed. We have concluded that plaintiff should prevail with respect to both appeals.
The facts are not disputed and findings were waived by the parties. On April 1, 1925, plaintiff became a police officer of the city of Los Angeles, and on April 1, 1945, he completed 20 years of aggregate service in the police department and became eligible to retire upon a service pension. During his period of service to the city, 4 per cent of his salary was deducted and paid into the police,, pension fund as required by section 186% of the Los Angeles city charter. *499 Some three months later, on July 4, 1945, he was arrested on suspicion of having committed bribery on the previous day, and on July 5, 1945, the chief of police relieved plaintiff from duty and filed against him charges of conduct unbecoming an officer. 1 The charges, set forth in five counts, concerned plaintiff’s conduct in connection with charges then pending against one Kelly Petillo. On July 9, 1945, plaintiff filed an application for a hearing before a board of rights on the charges against him, and on the same day applied to the board of pension commissioners for retirement upon a service pension.
In April, 1946, plaintiff was convicted of bribery in the superior court, based upon the same matters as those set out in the charges which the chief of police had filed against him. Plaintiff appealed.
Some three months later, on July 23, 1946, the board of rights, following a hearing and with the conviction in the criminal case before it, found plaintiff guilty of three of the counts filed by the chief of police and as penalty ordered that plaintiff be removed from his position in the police department. The following day the chief of police executed the order of removal, declaring it effective as of July 5, 1945 (the day the chief had relieved plaintiff from duty and filed the charges against him). 2
In May, 1947, the District Court of Appeal reversed plaintiff’s superior court conviction on the bribery charges
(People
v.
Skaggs
(1947),
On February 16, 1951, plaintiff filed with the Los Angeles city clerk and with the board of pension commissioners a claim for some $8,200 as pension payments commencing as of July 9, 1945 (the date he had applied to the board for retirement on pension), with interest thereon, and to have monthly pension payments in sums fixed by the city charter continue during plaintiff’s life. Four days later (on February 20, 1951), before the claim was acted upon, plaintiff filed this action for recovery of past accruing pension payments and to establish his right to future рayments. The court concluded that he was entitled to the pension, but that by reason of the claim provisions found in section 376 of the city charter his right to recover past installments was limited to the period commencing six months prior to February 16, 1951 (the date he filed the claim with the city clerk and the board of pension commissioners). Judgment was entered accordingly.
As grounds requiring reversal of the judgment defendant first urges the bar of the three-year statute of limitations found in subdivision 1 of section 338 (see also section 312) of the Code of Civil Procedure, which applies to “An action upon a liability created by statute, other than a penalty or forfeiture.” Although more than five and one-half years elapsed between the date the chief of police relieved plaintiff from duty and the filing of this action, it was expressly held in
Dillon
v.
Board of Pension Commrs.
(1941),
Defendant next contends that the trial court erred in receiving in evidence and considering the provisions of Los Angeles city ordinance 67778. 3 The pension provisions applicable to members of the police department are found in аrticle XVII (i. e., §§ 180-189) of the city charter. Section 181 as it read at the time plaintiff applied for retirement (Stats. 1926, p. 2008 et seq.) provided, so far as here material, “that after twenty years’ aggregate service, on request of such member [of the police department] who shall have become a member . . . prior to the taking effect of this amendment, or by the boаrd for the good of the department, such member shall be retired and paid in equal monthly installments ... a limited pension as follows: ...” Plaintiff became a member of the department in 1925, “prior to the taking effect of this amendment” in 1927.
Despite the mandate of the quoted charter provision that “after twenty years’ aggregate service, on request of such member . . . such member
shall be retired
and paid . . . a limited pension” (italics added), defendant suggests that the provisions of section 3 of ordinance 67778 are “incom
*502
petent, irrelevant and immaterial in that, despite the language therein contained, they are ineffectual for any purpose for they cannot change, limit or modify” the pension provisions of the charter. (See
Essick
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1950),
Moreover, the declarations of section 3 of the ordinance that upon comрletion of the period of service specified by the charter entitling a member of the police department to retire under its provisions, the right to retire at any time thereafter “shall be a fully matured, absolute, vested property right, reserved for such member as a constituted and granted right to retire; and no event . . . shall ever operate as a forfeiturе or divestiture thereof,” rather than being inconsistent with, appear to be merely confirmatory of, the mandatory charter provisions found in section 181 (quoted hereinabove), and in accord with established principles of law applicable to pensions.
In
Dryden
v.
Board of Pension Commrs.
(1936),
More recently, in
Wallace
v.
City of Fresno
(1954),
Here, in view of the mandatory provision (§181) under which plaintiff served, that “after twenty years’ aggregate service, on request of such member . . . such member shall be retired” on pension, it is apparent that the ordinance to which defendants object added nothing to the rights which accrued to plaintiff at the timе he completed his 20 years’ service on April 1, 1945, and that his subsequent removal from office on charges of conduct unbecoming an officer could not operate to forfeit his previously earned pension. Particularly is this true where, as here, the attempted forfeiture is not pursuant to any charter provision or specific legislation of any nature whаtsoever but is merely a refusal of the pension board to grant plaintiff’s application for retirement on pension. In
MacIntyre
v.
Retirement Board of
*504
San Francisco
(1941),
supra,
Moreover, the fact that the order removing plaintiff related back to July 5, 1945—the date he was relieved from duty and four days before he applied to the pension board for retirement on pension—does not constitute under the charter a ground for depriving him of vested pension rights which had fully matured some three months earlier. As mentioned hereinabove in footnote 1, the provisions concerning the filing of police department charges against a police officer, their consideration by a board of rights, and the penalties which may be imposed in casе the accused is found guilty, are set forth in section 202 of the city charter. Such penalties are therein expressly stated to be (subd. (12)), “either suspension for a definite period not exceeding six (6) months with total loss of pay, and with or without reprimand; or reprimand without further penalty; or of removal from office or position ...” and nowhere therein have we discovered nor has there been cited to us a provision authorizing the further drastic penalty of forfeiture of vested pension rights which had previously fully matured. On the contrary, it is declared in subdivision (18) of section 202 that “This section shall not be construed to in any way affect any other rights any officer or employee may have to pursue or assert any and all other legal rights or remеdies in relation to his office or position
or to the compensations attached thereto
. . (Italics added.) (See also
Holt
v.
Board of Police & Fire Commrs.
(1948),
With respect to plaintiff’s appeal from that portion of the judgment which limits his recovery of past due pension payments to the period commencing six months prior to February 16, 1951 (the date he filed the claim with the city clerk and the board of pension commissioners for some $8,200 as pension installments commencing as of the date he applied for pension on July 9, 1945), it appears that the trial court was of the view that such a limitation was compelled by
*505
the claim provisions found in sections 363 and 376
4
of the city charter. It has been held, however, in both
Dryden
v.
Board of Pension Commrs.
(1936),
supra,
For the reasons above stated, that portion of the judgment which limits plaintiff’s recovery of past duе pension installments is reversed with directions to the trial court to recompute the past due installments in accordance with the views herein expressed, and in all other respects the judgment is affirmed. Plaintiff shall recover costs on appeal.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Notes
Provisions concerning such charges and their consideration by a board of rights are found in section 202 of the Los Angeles city charter. (Stats. 1935, p. 2347.)
Subdivision (14) of section 202 of the Los Angeles city charter provides that “such removal shall relate back to and be effective as of the date of such relief from duty pending hearing before and decision by the Board of Bights."
Section 2 of ordinance 67778 makes it the duty of the board of pension commissioners to sign and issue a certificate to each member of the fire or police department who has served therein the aggregate number of years entitling him to service retirement.
Section 3 of the ordinance provides that “Upon the completion of the period of service mentioned in Section 181 of the Charter of the City of Los Angeles, entitling such member to retire under its provisions, such member shall be entitled to retire at any time thereafter from active service from such department in accordance with the provisions of said Section 181 hereinabove referred to, which right shall be a fully matured, absolute, vested property right, reserved for such member as a constituted and granted right to retire; and no event or occurrence of whatsoever kind or nature, whether prior, pending or subsequent, shall ever operate as a forfeiture or divestiture thereof; provided, however, that if such member shall continue in the service of said department, he shall nevertheless be entitled to all the benefits of the additional percentage as provided for by said Section 181 hereinafter referred to, in computing the aggregate number of years of service in such department up to the time of his actual retirement. ’ ’
Section 376: “No suit shall be brought on any claim for money or damages against the City of Los Angeles, or any officer or board of the city, until a demand for the same has been presented, as herein provided, and rejected in whole or in part. If rejected in part, suit may be brought to recover the whole. Except in those cases where a shorter period of time is otherwise provided by law, all claims for damages against the city must be presented within six (6) months after the occurrence from which the damages arose, and all other claims or demands shall be presented within six (6) months after the last item of the account or claim accrued. ...”
