Summary
In Colnon v. Orr (1886) 71 Cal. 43 [11 P. 814], we denied a citizen's petition to inspect a letter filed with a state insane asylum that criticized its superintendent.
Summary of this case from Sander v. State Bar of CaliforniaOpinion
Department Two
Hearing in Bank denied.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Joaquin County.
COUNSEL:
Louttit, Woods & Levinsky, for Appellant.
F. T. Baldwin, J. C. Campbell, and P. W. Bennett, for Respondent.
JUDGES: Foote, C. Belcher, C. C., and Searls, C., concurred.
OPINION
FOOTE, Judge
[11 P. 815] E. L. Colnon preferred his petition, and made affidavit thereto, to the Superior Court of San Joaquin County, for a writ of mandate to compel defendant to allow him to inspect a document which, it is alleged, is a part of the records of the defendant's public office as treasurer and secretary of the Stockton Insane Asylum.
A demurrer was interposed, stating as grounds therefor that upon the face of his petition it does not appear that Colnon was "beneficially interested in the matters set forth therein, or that the party making the application was the person beneficially interested therein."
From the statement of facts in the petition, it appears that the document sought to be inspected was a writing filed by one Miss L. M. Jones with the board of directors of the Stockton Insane Asylum, in which the character and conduct of one W. T. Browne, the medical superintendent of the asylum, was assailed.
It is not every written charge made to a board of supervisors, a board of directors, or trustees of a college or other state institution, which, upon being filed in the office of their secretary or treasurer, or custodian of their records, becomes thereby a public record to which any citizen may have access at pleasure.
To declare such to be the law would be to say that any communication aspersing the character of a public officer, being received by the board of directors, to which he is amenable, and filed with the custodian of their records, would thereby become a public record, and be open to the idle curiosity of any and all persons.
In this way the most honorable of men might be attacked, and each individual of the whole public be permitted to inspect the document containing such attack without having the slightest beneficial interest in the matter, and actuated by no other motive than to repeat what might or might not be a slander all over a community.
Such a paper, in the absence of a positive statute making it a part of the public records, and as such to be examined by all persons whatsoever at their pleasure, within the office hours of the officer to whose charge it has been confided by a board of directors of a public institution, should not be declared a part of the public records.
While it is a right of a citizen of this state to inspect the public records at such times as the statute provides, nevertheless a writ of mandate to enforce that right cannot always be invoked.
It must be issued upon affidavit, on the application of the party beneficially interested, in all cases where there is not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy given by law, and not otherwise. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1086.)
What beneficial interest in the examination of this document, even conceding that it was a part of the public records, Mr. Colnon can have, simply for the reason that he is a citizen of California, we cannot perceive from the record, nor has he sought to allege any such interest in his petition: and therefore he has not brought himself within the purview of the law, which grants to citizens, in certain cases, this special writ.
The demurrer to the petition was properly sustained, and the judgment should be affirmed.
The Court. -- For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is affirmed.