Opinion
In this proceeding to determine the constitutionality of durational residency requirements imposed by the Butte County Charter for candidates for the county board of supervisors, plaintiffs (hereafter referred to for convenience as petitioners) appealed from a judgment of the trial court upholding the constitutionality of the charter provision and denying the relief requested.
After decision by the Court of Appeal, Third District, we granted a hearing in this court because the decision of the Court of Appeal appeared to conflict with this court’s holding in
Sheehan
v.
Scott
(1905)
Petitioners filed in the Butte County Superior Court a petition for writ of mandate to compel County Clerk Nelson to certify petitioner Zeilenga as a candidate for supervisor of the Third District. After a hearing, the petition was denied. This appeal followed. [ ]
By the time the superior court proceeding had terminated and this appeal had been perfected, there was not time before the June 2 election took place for this court to pass upon the problem involved in the appeal. In a sense the problem is moot because obviously the court may not require the county clerk to certify Zeilenga as a candidate at an election which has already taken place. However, the basic issue—namely, Is the county charter provision, hereinafter discussed, constitutional?—is one which deprives any Butte County resident who has not lived in Butte County five years of the right to run for county supervisor. This issue is a vital one for the people of Butte County, and is one of general public interest and should be determined before the next election for county supervisor. 1
Likewise, the issue does not become moot merely because the question is of no further immediate interest to the person who raised it. (See
Board of Education
v.
Watson
(1966)
In an additional sense the matter is not moot since the charter provision, if valid, will prevent petitioner Zeilenga from being a candidate for the office of supervisor either by election or appointment, should there become a vacancy, until August 1973, as he will not have resided in Butte County for the necessary five years before that date. [ ]
Article II, section 2, of the Butte County Charter provides in relevant part: “The County of Butte shall have a Board of Supervisors, consisting of five members, each of whom must be an elector of the supervisorial district which he represents, must reside therein during his incumbency, must have been a resident of the county for five years immediately preceding his election, and shall be elected by the electors of the district which he is to represent. . . .” (Stats. 1917, ch. 15, at p. 1793.) (Italics ours.) [ ]
[ ] Section 275 of the Government Code [does not] control over the charter provision setting forth the qualifications for the office of supervisor. That section states,
“Unless otherwise specifically provided,
every elector is eligible to the office for which he is an elector, . . .” (Italics ours.) As herein shown, so far as residence qualification is concerned, it
is
“otherwise specifically provided” in the Butte County Charter, and section 275 does not automatically qualify a person for office. To interpret that it does would fly in the face of many different residency requirements for public office found elsewhere and even in the face of section 25041 of the Government Code. (See
Jones
v.
De Shields
(1921)
This brings us then to the question of whether section 2 of article II of the Butte County Charter is unreasonably discriminatory and violates the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution as a denial of equal protection.
“[T]he right to hold public office, either by election or appointment, is one of the valuable rights of citizenship.”
(Carter
v.
Commission on Qualifications of Judicial Appointments
(1939)
In
Landes
v.
Town of North Hempstead
(1967)
And in
Gangemi
v.
Rosengard
(1965)
A classification created for legislative purposes must be reasonable and not arbitrary. (11 Cal.Jur. 2d, Constitutional Law, § 275, p. 722.) The “compelling interest” test applies if the result of the classification affects a “fundamental right.”
(Shapiro
v.
Thompson
(1969)
The problem upon which the parties to this proceeding split is whether, under modern methods of communication and traveling about the county, *722 it reasonably requires five years for a citizen to be prepared to stand for the office of supervisor.
No compelling interest has been shown why a citizen coming into- California should be required to wait five years before becoming eligible to the office of county supervisor. The difficulty of making such a showing seems self-evident when one realizes that as to general law counties the residence requirement is only one year. (Gov. Code, § 25041.) [ ] Hence, it appears to this court that the five-year residence requirement of the Butte County Charter is excessive and arbitrary and violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It denies equal protection of the laws to citizens who are required to reside in Butte County this unreasonable length of time before being eligible to the county board of supervisors.
Perhaps in the horse and buggy days the five-year requirement could have been reasonable, but in these days of modern public transportation, the automobile, newspapers, radio, television, and the rapid dissemination of news throughout all parts of the county, the requirement is unreasonable.[
2
] It excludes certain citizens from public office by a classification which is unnecessary to promote a compelling governmental interest. It is a built-in device to prevent competition against the county’s oldtimers. for the office of supervisor. Nowhere is it shown that a candidate for the office of supervisor cannot acquire competent knowledge of the county’s conditions in much less than five years to qualify him for the office, at least sufficiently to submit to the voters for their choice his knowledge thereof. Respondent has failed to show any compelling interest which justifies imposing such a heavy burden as the five-year restraining period on a resident who desires to stand for election as a supervisor. (Cf.
Keane
v.
Mihaly
(1970)
In
Westbrook
v.
Mihaly
(1970)
Since the right to run for public office is as fundamental a right as is the right to vote, we have carefully scrutinized the residence restriction in the Butte County Charter. Having done so, we are not convinced that the five-year provision constitutes “ ‘the least restrictive method of achieving the desired purpose’ ”
(Westbrook
v.
Mihaly, supra,
[Similarly, in
Camara
v.
Mellon, ante,
p. 714 [
*724 The County Clerk of Butte County is directed in future elections to disregard the residence requirement of candidates for the county board of supervisors set forth in article II, section 2, of the Butte County Charter. [ ]
Inasmuch as the issues raised by the petition for writ of mandate to compel the county clerk to certify petitioner Zeilenga as a candidate have become moot, the election having been held, the judgment is affirmed. Petitioners will recover costs herein.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
Retired Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under .assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Brackets together, in this manner [ ]
without enclosing material,
are used to indicate deletions from the opinion of the Court of Appeal; brackets
enclosing material
(other than editor’s added parallel citations) are, unless otherwise indicated, used to denote insertions or additions by this court. We thus avoid the extension of quotation marks within quotation marks, which would be incident to the use of such conventional punctuation, and at the same time accurately indicate the matter quoted. In so doing, we adhere to a method of adoption employed by us in the past. (See
Chicago Title Ins. Co.
v.
Great Western Financial Corp.
(1968)
The time between the filing of candidates’ nomination papers and the election is so short that it would be difficult to get a ruling from all the courts which might be involved, if a test is required in the future.
Sheehan
v.
Scott, supra,
[In
Lindsey
v.
Dominguez
(1933)
In
Hadnott
v.
Amos
(M.D.Ala. 1970)
