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HARRY A. PHILLIPS et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v.
F. H. SEELY, JR., as Auditor, etc., et al., Defendants and
Respondents; JEROME E. WARREN, Intervener and Respondent
43 Cal.App.3d 104
Civ. No. 13635.
Court of Appeals of California, Third Appellate District.
November 15, 1974.
(Opinion by Carter, J., with Richardson, P. J., and Janes,
J., concurring.) {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 105}
COUNSEL
Blade, Farmer & LeClerc, Blade & LeClerc, Robert V.
Blade and Raoul J. LeClerc for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Daniel V. Blackstock, County Counsel, for Defendants and Respondents.
Skow & Jones and Charles A. Skow for Intervener and Respondent.
{Page 43 Cal.App.3d 108}
CARTER, J.
Plaintiff taxpayers appeal after a court trial from a judgment
upholding the validity of a contract entered into between the
County of Butte and intervener Jerome E. Warren for the rendition
of legal services by Warren to certain indigent defendants in
criminal matters, indigent juveniles and conservatees in need
of and entitled to legal assistance at public expense. The judgment
further ordered the defendant, F. H. Seely, Jr., as Auditor of
Butte County to pay warrants to Warren pursuant to the contract.
Plaintiffs contend on appeal:
1. Defendant board of supervisors lacked authority, express
or implied, to contract with Warren to represent indigents;
2. The contract is invalid because it fails to allocate between
"services" and "investigatory expenses" the
gross monthly payment to Warren;
3. The contract was the result of solicitation on the part
of Warren and is void as violative of public policy;
4. Public policy requires competitive bidding for the contracted
services;
5. The contract is contrary to public policy because of a
conflict of interest;
6. The board of supervisors failed to give adequate notice
of the scope and action to be taken at the board meeting regarding
the contract.
Defendants contend that the appeal is moot and since plaintiffs
failed to comply with Code of Civil Procedure sections 860-870,
they are precluded from challenging the validity of the contract.
Facts
In early May of 1971, a news article attributable to the County
Administrator of Butte County indicated the existence of a problem
of providing funds for court-appointed counsel for indigent persons
in Butte County. As a result of this article, Warren discussed
the matter with Jack McKillop, a member of the Butte County Board
of Supervisors. McKillop suggested that Warren submit a proposal
regarding legal services, an idea in which John Schroder, an
attorney, and Robert Mueller, the Butte County District Attorney,
were interested as well. On May 24, 1971, Warren submitted a
proposal to the board for the rendition of legal services to
indigents which {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 109} was accepted, with minor
changes, on that day. A written contract was executed by the
duly authorized chairman of the board, Jere E. Reynolds, and
by Warren. Thereafter, Mueller resigned his position as district
attorney, and, along with Schroder as associates of Warren, has
represented indigents pursuant to court assignment in Butte County.
The agreement provided, among other things, that Warren was to
assume full responsibility for furnishing with associate counsel
the required legal services on a daily basis in two departments
of the superior court, the Chico Municipal Court and the Oroville,
Gridley, Paradise and Biggs Justice Courts. The county retained
the right to cancel the contract upon 10 days' written notice,
if for any reason other than a conflict of interest any of the
judges of the superior court declined or refused to appoint Warren
as defense counsel for indigents.
On August 6, 1971, 73 days after execution of the agreement,
plaintiffs filed their complaint to enjoin defendant F. H. Seely,
Jr., Auditor of Butte County, from expending public moneys for
or as a consequence of services rendered pursuant to the contract.
Copies of the summons and complaint were served on the various
defendants. Answers were filed, and on December 14, 1971, the
case proceeded to trial. At the beginning of the trial the defendants
and intervener Warren orally moved to dismiss, contending plaintiffs
had failed to comply with Government Code sections 53510 and
53511 and Code of Civil Procedure sections 860-870. Without holding
a hearing on whether good cause existed to excuse plaintiffs'
noncompliance, the court took the motion under advisement. After
the case was tried, briefed and submitted, the trial court held
that Code of Civil Procedure sections 860-870 did not apply.
Discussion of Contentions
1. Failure of Plaintiffs to File Their Complaint Within 60
Days of Execution of the Contract on May 24, 1971, Was Not Jurisdictional.
There is no dispute that plaintiffs' complaint was a taxpayers'
action seeking to challenge the validity of a contract between
a public agency (Butte County Board of Supervisors) and Warren.
Government Code section 53510, relating to validating proceedings
provides: "As used in this article [art. 5, pt. 1, div.
2, tit. 5] 'local agency' means county, city, city and county,
public district or any public or municipal corporation, public
agency or public authority."
Government Code section 53511 provides: "A local agency
may bring an action to determine the validity of its bonds, warrants,
contracts, obligations {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 110} or evidences
of indebtedness pursuant to Chapter 9 (commencing with Section
860) of Title 10 of Part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure."
Code of Civil Procedure section 860 provides: "A public
agency may upon the existence of any matter which under any other
law is authorized to be determined pursuant to this chapter,
and for 60 days thereafter, bring an action in the superior court
of the county in which the principal office of the public agency
is located to determine the validity of such matter. The action
shall be in the nature of a proceeding in rem."
Code of Civil Procedure section 863 provides: "If no
proceedings have been brought by the public agency pursuant to
this chapter, any interested person may bring an action within
the time and in the court specified by Section 860 to determine
the validity of such matter. The public agency shall be a defendant
and shall be served with the summons and complaint in the action
in the manner provided by law for the service of a summons in
a civil action. In any such action the summons shall be in the
form prescribed in Section 861.1 except that in addition to being
directed to 'all persons interested in the matter of [specifying
the matter],' it shall also be directed to the public agency.
If the interested person bringing such action fails to complete
the publication and such other notice as may be prescribed by
the court in accordance with Section 861 and to file proof thereof
in the action within 60 days from the filing of his complaint,
the action shall be forthwith dismissed on the motion of the
public agency unless good cause for such failure is shown by
the interested person."
On April 2, 1970, Justice Mosk, in City of Ontario v. Superior
Court, 2 Cal.3d 335, 339-344 [85 Cal.Rptr. 149, 466 P.2d 693],
carefully summarized the statutory history of Code of Civil Procedure
sections 860-870, and the consequences which resulted from the
enactment of sections 53510 and 53511 of the Government Code
in 1963. The Supreme Court stated: "If, as the City here
argues, the word 'contracts' in section 53511 is taken to mean
any contract into which the agency may lawfully enter, the farreaching
expansion of the statute becomes apparent. The vast majority
of such an agency's dealings are necessarily undertaken by means
of contracts; some involve routine ministerial matters, but others
embody important policy decisions affecting the public at large.
"The public's opportunity to challenge those decisions,
moreover, is commensurately restricted by this legislation. Section
863 of chapter 9 provides that if the public agency does not
initiate validating proceedings, 'any interested person may bring
an action within the time and in the court specified by Section
860 of this chapter to determine the validity of such matter.'
This seems innocuous enough, until one reads section 869: 'No
{Page 43 Cal.App.3d 111} contest except by the public agency
or its officer or agent of any thing or matter under this chapter
shall be made other than within the time and the manner herein
specified.' (Italics added.) In other words, while section 863
says that an interested person 'may' bring such an action, section
869 says he must do so or be forever barred from contesting the
validity of the agency's action in a court of law. Yet no such
restriction is placed on the agency itself, which is in effect
authorized by section 869 to disregard the 60-day statute of
limitations imposed by section 860.
"The practical consequence of this statutory scheme should
be clearly recognized: an agency may indirectly but effectively
'validate' its action by doing nothing to validate it; unless
an 'interested person' brings an action of his own under section
863 within the 60-day period, the agency's action will become
immune from attack whether it is legally valid or not. Indeed,
in the case at bar the City concedes this to be so. Thus a statute
which begins by providing a remedy to be pursued by public agencies,
expressly declaring it to be 'in the nature of a proceeding in
rem' (§ 860), concludes by making it unnecessary for such
agencies to do anything at all, and the incidental or derivative
remedy of an 'interested person' turns out to be controlling.
This is truly a case of the tail wagging the dog." (Id.
at pp. 341-342.) (Original italics; fn. omitted.)
Our research has failed to disclose any legislative action
which has sought to extend the 60-day period of time in which
an action may be brought by "interested persons" to
challenge the validity of public agency contracts of the kind
subject to the provisions of sections 860 and 863. We hold that
the trial court correctly concluded that the contract for rendition
of legal services to the county by Warren was not subject to
sections 860 and 863, and thus the question of "good cause"
for failure to publish summons is of no significance. (City of
Ontario v. Superior Court, supra, 2 Cal.3d 335; Arnold v. Newhall
County Water Dist. (1970) 11 Cal.App.3d 794, 803 [96 Cal.Rptr.
894].)
In City of Ontario, supra, at pages 343-344, the court stated:
"On its face, section 53511 would seem to be applicable.
It lists, as matters for validation under chapter 9, 'bonds,
warrants, contracts, obligations or evidences of indebtedness'
(italics added). There is no limitation or qualification on the
word 'contracts,' and it would therefore appear to include a
multipurpose municipal contract such as the Ontario Motor Stadium
Agreement. Yet the legislative history of the statute suggests
a contrary result. First, the Legislative Counsel's digest of
the bill proposing section 53511 characterized the measure as
one allowing 'a local agency to bring an action to determine
the validity of evidences of indebtedness.' Second, {Page 43
Cal.App.3d 112} section 53511 was enacted as part of chapter
3 of part 1, division 2, title 5, of the Government Code. Chapter
3 is entitled 'Bonds,' and deals exclusively with the power of
local agencies to sell their bonds, replace defaced or lost bonds,
and pledge their revenues to pay or secure such bonds. If section
53511 was intended to be a provision of general application,
logically it should have been placed in article 4 ('Miscellaneous')
of chapter 1 ('General') of the same part, in which a group of
such unrelated matters are collected. Third, the key language
of section 53511 -- 'bonds, warrants, contracts, obligations
or evidences of indebtedness' -- was taken directly from section
864 of chapter 9; under well-known canons of statutory interpretation,
it should ordinarily be given the same meaning as it had in the
earlier statute. But as a perusal of the companion 1961 legislation
reveals, when chapter 9 was adopted it was made applicable only
to such matters as the legality of the local entity's existence,
the validity of its bonds and assessments, and the validity of
joint financing agreements with other agencies. If section 53511
was intended to reach any and all contracts into which an agency
may lawfully enter, the restricted language of section 864 was
inappropriate for that purpose. Finally, that language is peculiarly
inapt for expressing such a general meaning in any event, as
it lists the word 'contracts' in the midst of four other terms
which all deal with the limited topic of a local agency's financial
obligations."
In the matter before us, plaintiffs sought an injunction to
prevent the alleged illegal expenditure of public funds, an action
expressly authorized by section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure,
and to compel restitution, both remedies predating the enactment
of section 53511 of the Government Code. [1] We hold that while
the agreement to pay Warren the sum of $12,500 per month for
legal services of course involves a public agency financial obligation,
it is not the kind of financial obligation contemplated to be
automatically validated absent a challenge within the 60 days
proscribed in sections 860 and 863 for instruments, such as bonds
and assessments, whose very marketability may well depend upon
their prompt and automatic validation upon the passing of the
60-day period.
2. Authority of the Board of Supervisors to Contract for Rendition
of Legal Services to Indigents.
Plaintiffs urge there are but two methods whereby public funds
may be disbursed by a county to attorneys for legal services
rendered to indigent persons in criminal, juvenile or mental
health matters, namely, pursuant to Government Code section 27700
or Penal Code section 987.2.
[2] In the area of criminal proceedings the right of an accused
person, whether indigent or otherwise, to the immediate and effective
assistance of {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 113} counsel is settled law
in California. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 13; U.S. Const.,
6th Amend.; In re Williams (1969) 1 Cal.3d 168 [81 Cal.Rptr.
784, 460 P.2d 984]; People v. Ibarra (1963) 60 Cal.2d 460 [34
Cal.Rptr. 863, 386 P.2d 487]; Pen. Code, § 987.) [3] Legal
services for indigent persons at public expense are also mandated
in juvenile and mental health matters where a charge of wrongdoing
is involved or restraint of liberty is possible. (Welf. &
Inst. Code, §§ 634, 5111; In re Joseph T. (1972) 25
Cal.App.3d 120, 126 [101 Cal.Rptr. 606].)
Section 27700 of the Government Code provides in part as follows:
"The board of supervisors of any county may establish the
office of public defender for the county." (Italics ours.)
The duties of the public defender if the office is so established
by the board, whether elective or appointive, are specifically
defined in Government Code section 27706.
The agreement of May 25, 1971, did not establish the office
of public defender in Butte County but was merely a contract
between the county and Warren, whereby the latter agreed to provide,
with a few exceptions, the usual and customary public defender
legal services enumerated in Government Code section 27706 to
indigent persons in Butte County for an agreed sum of $12,500
per month.
Plaintiffs urge that since a public defender's office was
not established, the board of supervisors was without authority
to enter into the subject contract with Warren, because Penal
Code section 987.2 is the only remaining basis upon which counsel
for indigents may be assigned and a reasonable compensation determined
and disbursed from public funds.
Penal Code section 987.2 reads: "(a) In any case in which
a person, including a person who is a minor, desires but is unable
to employ counsel and in which counsel is assigned in the superior
court, municipal court, or justice court to represent such a
person in a criminal trial, proceeding or appeal, such counsel,
in a county or city and county in which there is no public defender,
or in a case in which the court finds that because of conflict
of interest or other reasons the public defender has properly
refused to represent the person accused, shall receive a reasonable
sum for compensation and for necessary expenses, the amount of
which shall be determined by the court, to be paid out of the
general fund of the county.
"(b) The sum provided for in subdivision (a) may be determined
by contract between the court and one or more responsible attorneys
after consultation with the board of supervisors as to the total
amount of compensation and expenses to be paid, which shall be
within the amount of {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 114} funds allocated
by the board of supervisors for cost of assigned counsel in such
cases.
"(c) The board of supervisors may by contract provide
that any public defender duly appointed or elected may charge
reasonable fees to the Department of Corrections for representing
inmates of prisons under its control, and the Department of Corrections
may upon approval by the court pay such fees into the county
treasury to be placed in the general fund of the county.
"(d) Counsel shall be appointed to represent, in the
municipal or justice court, a person who desires but is unable
to employ counsel, when it appears that such appointment is necessary
to provide an adequate and effective defense for defendant."
[4a] As we have seen, the contract between the board and Warren
expressly reserved to the board the right to cancel the agreement
upon 10 days' notice, "in the event the Superior Court or
any of the judges thereof declines or refuses to appoint attorney
as defense counsel for indigents as provided for herein for any
reason other than a conflict of interest ...."
Plaintiffs forcefully urge that if a public defender's office
has not been established in the county, then in those instances
where private counsel is assigned to represent an indigent person
under section 987.2 of the Penal Code, the court must fix a reasonable
sum as compensation and expenses for such legal services.
This court, in referring to the fixing of reasonable compensation
in court-assigned cases under section 987a (now § 987.2),
held in Halpin v. Superior Court (1966) 240 Cal.App.2d 701, 706
[49 Cal.Rptr. 857]: "To substitute for the independent exercise
of discretion of the court in each case where counsel is assigned
to represent a criminal defendant under section 987a, the order
fixing compensation dated November 16, 1965, may conceivably
in some cases constitute an abuse of judicial discretion ...."
Thus the trial court could not refuse to exercise its discretion
by simply adopting a daily rate of compensation which had been
previously established by the board of supervisors for court-assigned
attorneys. [5] In substance, where assigned counsel for an indigent
person questions the reasonableness of the compensation to be
allowed, it is for the court and not the board to make that determination.
In addition, since Halpin, section 987.2, subdivision (b), was
amended to provide that the reasonable sum for compensation of
court-assigned counsel to represent indigents "may be determined
by contract between the court and one or more responsible attorneys
after consultation with the board of supervisors as to the total
{Page 43 Cal.App.3d 115} amount of compensation and expenses
to be paid, which shall be within the amount of funds allocated
by the board of supervisors for the cost of assigned counsel
in such cases."
In Ingram v. Justice Court (1968) 69 Cal.2d 832, 842 [73 Cal.Rptr.
410, 447 P.2d 1391], the Supreme Court stated: "In short,
the fundamental flaw in the People's position is its unstated
assumption that the courts are the guardians of the county coffers.
In our system of government this is not, and should not be, their
role. The Constitution and the statutes commit that responsibility,
more appropriately, to the board of supervisors, assisted by
such officers as the district attorney, the county counsel, the
treasurer, the controller and auditor, and the inquisitorial
body of citizens, the grand jury."
[6] Consideration of the statutory and case law impels the
conclusion that where a public defender's office has not been
established in a county, the matter of reasonable compensation
of court-assigned counsel for indigent persons understandably
involves some degree of cooperation between the court and the
board of supervisors. The availability of a reasonable sum of
money to reasonably compensate assigned counsel where required
by law is the responsibility of the board of supervisors; whether
indigent persons entitled to counsel at public expense are being
adequately represented by reasonably compensated counsel is for
the court to determine. Where the court is required to determine
the reasonableness of compensation, section 987.3 of the Penal
Code enumerates the factors which the court shall consider.
In substance, plaintiffs really urge that sections 987.2 and
987.3 create a right in every member of the Bar in a given county
to be appointed to represent indigent persons at public expense
where there is no established public defender's office. [7] Such
contention is not necessarily consistent with the purpose of
providing reasonable compensation for counsel assigned to indigent
persons. That purpose is to insure indigent persons the legal
services of competent attorneys who are at least reasonably compensated,
and thereby contribute to the ultimate objective of the people
of this state, who are the source of the compensation, to provide
equal justice under the law to any accused person regardless
of financial condition.
The record indicates that the instant controversy arose because
the Board of Supervisors of Butte County was rightly concerned
with the possible increased cost of compensation and expenses
which would be incurred for court-assigned counsel to defend
indigent persons during the ensuing fiscal year. While the board
has the duty to provide the money to reasonably compensate defense
counsel for indigent persons in Butte County, the people of {Page
43 Cal.App.3d 116} Butte County are entitled to expect their
elected representatives, both the board of supervisors and the
courts to act with fiscal responsibility. The saving of substantial
public funds without diminishing the quality of reasonably compensated
defense counsel in indigent cases is not only prudent, but tends
to enhance the public's respect for our judicial system.
It is apparent the agreement between Warren and the board
of supervisors would be of little impact if the courts in which
Warren agreed to provide counsel for qualified indigents refused
to assign him to act. Thus to the extent that the court remains
the final authority for assignment of counsel, the court retains
the inherent means and carries out its contracting responsibility
of passing on the matter of reasonable compensation for assigned
counsel in indigent cases. [4b] The judicial act of assigning
counsel with knowledge of the compensation contract between the
board of supervisors and Warren constitutes judicial approval
and ratification of reasonable compensation under the circumstances.
Finally, subject to the foregoing rule that the court is to
determine whether indigent persons entitled to counsel at public
expense are being adequately represented by reasonably compensated
counsel, we think authority for the challenged contract is found
in section 31000 of the Government Code (as it then read); "The
board of supervisors may contract with and employ any person
for the furnishing to the county, or to a county officer, or
for any court within the county, or for and on behalf of any
district within the county for furnishing to the district, of
special services and advice in financial, economic, accounting,
engineering, legal, medical, or administrative matters, or in
matters related to the courts, by any persons specially trained
and experienced and who is competent to perform the special services
required.
"The authority herein given to contract shall include
the right of the board of supervisors, to contract for the issuance
and preparation of payroll checks.
"The board may pay from any available funds such compensation
to any such expert as it deems proper for the services rendered."
While the last sentence of the foregoing code section may
appear to be inconsistent with the ultimate responsibility of
the court in determining reasonable compensation for court-assigned
counsel, the exercise of this duty by the court arises where
there is no contract between the board of supervisors and counsel
assigned by the court to represent indigents or where assigned
counsel challenges the adequacy of compensation sought to be
set by the board (see Halpin, supra). {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 117}
If in the judgment of the court a particular counsel possesses
the requisite ability to represent adequately an indigent person
in the particular matter before the court, and such counsel is
satisfied with the compensation contractually arrived at between
himself and the board of supervisors, there is generally no need
for judical intervention to fix reasonable compensation under
the particular circumstances. This is the case at bench.
Accordingly we hold that the Board of Supervisors of Butte
County had the authority pursuant to Government Code section
31000 to enter into the agreement with Warren.
3. Allocation of Compensation Between Services and Investigatory
Expenses.
[8] Paragraph 6 of the agreement provides that the cost of
criminal investigators is to be borne by Warren. Plaintiffs urge
this creates a "conflict of interest in the ultimate[,]
[n]o matter how conscientious and ethical such counsel may be,"
and "thus, the attorneys representing the indigents face
the cruel dilemma resulting from the fact that every dollar spent
for investigation means a dollar less for the three attorneys."
We see no dilemma or conflict at all, since an attorney's
duty runs to his client, not the attorney's pocket. We reject
plaintiffs' contention that a mere possible opportunity for misconduct
is a legal basis to void the contract. It is a judgmental matter
for defense counsel to decide how much time and expense required
for investigatory or research effort may be reasonably productive
for the defense based upon the particular case. An attorney is
duty bound to explore reasonably and seek to verify possible
defenses in order to meet the constitutional standard of adequate
defense counsel. (People v. Ibarra, supra, 60 Cal.2d 460.)
Our Supreme Court has expressed in broad language the principles
applicable to appointed criminal defense counsel: "[W]hen
the public defender is appointed to represent a defendant accused
of a crime, he becomes the attorney for said defendant for all
purposes of the case and to the same extent as if regularly retained
and employed by the defendant. The judge of the trial court has
no more authority or control of him than he has of any other
attorney practicing before his court. The public defender is
free from any restraint or domination by the district attorney
or of the prosecuting authorities. He is as free to act in behalf
of his client as if he had been regularly employed and retained
by the defendant whom he represents. Were it not so his client
would not be afforded the full right 'to have assistance of counsel
for his defense' which the Constitutions, both state and federal,
give to one accused of crime. With such plenary powers given
a public {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 118} defender when appointed to
defend one accused of crime, it necessarily follows that no act
of his in advising his client or in defending the latter upon
the charge against him can be considered in any different light
than if such act were performed by an attorney regularly employed
and retained by the defendant." (In re Hough (1944) 24 Cal.2d
522, 528-529 [150 P.2d 448].)
Finally, we think the interest of the accused indigent, his
counsel and the public may well be better served by the employment
of a full-time investigator by Warren, rather than on a case-by-case
basis.
4. The Contract Was Not the Result of Solicitation by Warren.
Plaintiffs urge that since the board of supervisors did not
take formal action to invite Warren's offer before it was submitted,
the offer to furnish legal services to indigents in Butte County
amounted to solicitation of business by an attorney in violation
of Business and Professions Code sections 6152 and 6153. The
record shows that a news article reflected the board's concern
with anticipated increasing costs of court-appointed counsel
in the various courts of the county, and in fact Warren was requested
by a member of the board to submit an offer for consideration
by the board respecting such matter. [9] There is no evidence
that the idea to submit the offer originated with Warren (see
People v. Levy (1935) 8 Cal.App.2d Supp. 763, 769 [50 P.2d 509]),
and we find no "solicitation of business" by Warren
within the meaning of the Business and Professions Code.
5. Competitive Bidding Was Not Required.
[10] Plaintiffs seek to bring the agreement to render legal
services to indigent persons within the purview of public works
contracts. They cite no authority for such position, and our
research fails to disclose any. Here the service to be rendered
at public expense was professional in nature. Since the board
has a responsibility both to the public and to the indigent person
in need of counsel, the board is entitled to rely upon its own
knowledge and judgment as to the reputation of counsel in the
county in order to equate the experience, reputation and skill
of counsel with the amount of funds to be allocated to the defense
of indigent cases, and thus contribute in cooperation with the
courts to the ultimate goal that indigent persons be adequately
represented by adequate counsel.
6. There Was No Conflict of Interest.
[11] Plaintiffs urge next that because the District Attorney
of Butte County resigned and became an associate of Warren rendering
legal services {Page 43 Cal.App.3d 119} to indigent persons,
a conflict of interest was created. None of the conflict cases
cited by plaintiffs are applicable since all involved situations
where defense counsel, at the time of representation of the accused,
maintained directly or indirectly a continuing relationship with
the prosecutor's office, or held a confidential attorney-client
relationship with the accused and later became the prosecutor.
In People v. Rhodes (1974) 12 Cal.3d 180, 186 [115 Cal.Rptr.
235, 524 P.2d 363], our Supreme Court recently disapproved of
the appointment of a city attorney with prosecutorial responsibilities
to represent an indigent defendant. The case at bench is clearly
distinguishable since the record before us fully establishes
that Mr. Mueller, the former district attorney, resigned from
office and severed his connections with the prosecutor's office
before he undertook assignment to represent indigent persons
in Butte County. In addition, such assigned services were rendered
on a per diem basis to indigent persons whose case arose after
Mueller left the district attorney's office, thus eliminating
even the appearance of impropriety. (Rhodes, supra, at p. 185.)
Section 6131 of the Business and Professions Code provides
in part: "Every attorney is guilty of a misdemeanor and,
in addition to the punishment prescribed therefor, shall be disbarred:
"* * *
"(b) Who, having himself prosecuted or in any manner
aided or promoted any action or proceeding in any court as district
attorney or other public prosecutor, afterwards, directly or
indirectly, advises, in relation to or takes any part in the
defense thereof, as attorney or otherwise, or who takes or receives
any valuable consideration from or on behalf of any defendant
in any such action upon any understanding or agreement whatever
having relation to the defense thereof."
Plaintiffs do not urge that Mueller violated section 6131,
subdivision (b), supra, nor does the record before us even support
such an inference. Finally, we note that the agreement was between
Warren and the board of supervisors. Whom Warren engaged to assist
him in the performance of his to-be-assigned duties did not affect
the validity of the agreement.
7. Adequacy of Notice of Board's Action.
[12a] There is no dispute that the meeting of May 25, 1971,
at which the subject agreement with Warren was considered, approved
and executed, was a regular meeting of the Butte County Board
of Supervisors. The agenda item made it clear that the board
was to hear and consider an offer to supply {Page 43 Cal.App.3d
120} public defender services to the county. There is no evidence
that the agenda was not properly posted as required by Government
Code section 25151 and it must be thus presumed that the county
clerk duly performed his duty. (Evid. Code, § 664.)
The subject matter and contract were not of such nature as
to require special statutory notice. Plaintiffs' reliance on
Carlson v. Paradise Unified Sch. Dist. (1971) 18 Cal.App.3d 196
[95 Cal.Rptr. 650], is misplaced. [13] In Carlson, we stated
at page 199: "There has been a long and vigorous battle
fought against secrecy in government. [Citations.] It is now
the rule that local governing bodies, elected by the people,
exist to aid in the conduct of the people's business, and thus
their deliberations should be conducted openly and with due notice
with a few exceptions not applicable here. (See Gov. Code, §
54950 et seq.; cf. 3 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (1960) Constitutional
Law, § 116, p. 1919; 70 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 113.)"
We strongly reaffirm the foregoing rule, with the observation
that where the subject matter is sufficiently defined to apprise
the public of the matter to be considered and notice has been
given in the manner required by law, the governing body is not
required to give further special notice of what action it might
take. [12b] The agenda item made it clear that under the heading
of public defender there had been an offer to supply public defender
services to the county by Jerome Warren and John Schroder, two
local lawyers who were interested in supplying such services
to the county. We hold that the definition of the subject matter
and notice given were sufficient to meet due process standards.
Judgment affirmed.
Richardson, P. J., and Janes, J., concurred.
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