Judges: DANIEL E. LUNGREN, Attorney General
Filed Date: 11/21/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
DANIEL E. LUNGREN Attorney General GREGORY L. GONOT Deputy Attorney General
THE HONORABLE THOMAS JEFFRY, JR., COUNTY COUNSEL, COUNTY OF ALPINE, has requested an opinion on the following question:
May a county board of supervisors, in appointing a person to the office of district attorney to serve the remainder of the term of the prior officeholder, waive the requirement that the appointed officer be a citizen of the State of California?
The district attorney's office under consideration is an elective office. (Cal. Const., art.
"The board of supervisors shall fill by appointment all vacancies that occur in any office filled by the appointment of the board and elective county officers, except judge of the superior court and supervisors. The appointee shall hold office for the unexpired term or until the first Monday after January 1st succeeding the next general election."
A person must be a citizen of California in order to hold "civil office" in this state. Section
With respect to being a citizen of California, the Legislature has provided in section
"The citizens of the State are:
"(a) All persons born in the State and residing within it, except the children of transient aliens and of alien public ministers and consuls.
"(b) All persons born out of the State who are citizens of the United States and residing within the State."
Hence, a person who is a citizen of California must reside within the state. Here, the prospective appointee to the office of district attorney is not a resident of California, but rather a Nevada resident. (See 75 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 26, 27-28 (1992); 73 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 427, 429-430 (1990).) May the California residency requirement be waived by the board of supervisors?
Section
"Except as otherwise provided in Sections
27550.1 and27641.1 or in this section, or in Section21123 or34711 of the Water Code, or in any landowner voting district, as defined in paragraph (9) of subdivision (b) of Section10500 of the Elections Code, a person is not eligible to [hold] a county or district office, unless he or she is a registered voter of the county or district in which the duties of the office are to be exercised at the time that nomination papers are issued to the person or at the time of the appointment of the person."The board of supervisors or any other legally constituted appointing authority in a county or district may, if it finds that the best interests of the county or district will be served, waive the requirements of this section for an appointed county or district office."3
It has been suggested that under the terms of section
First, section
No other statute has been suggested that would authorize a district attorney to be a citizen and resident of another state.4 We thus conclude that a board of supervisors, in appointing a person to the office of district attorney to serve the remainder of the term of the prior officeholder, may not waive the requirement that the appointed officer be a citizen of the State of California.