Silva v. Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control
Before: Shenk, Gibson, Traynor
Opinion
51 Cal.2d 885 (1958) MANUEL SILVA et al., Respondents,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL et al., Appellants.
S. F. No. 20056. Supreme Court of California. In Bank.
Dec. 12, 1958. Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General, and Wiley W. Manuel, Deputy Attorney General, for Appellants.
Golden & Stefan, Theodore Golden, Robert N. Stefan and J. Bruce Fratis for Respondents.
Memorandum
SHENK, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court, Alameda County, ordering a writ of mandate directing the respondent board to set aside an order dismissing appeals from decisions of the department and to consider an application for relief from an alleged clerical or inadvertent error in the preparation of a notice of appeal from decisions of the department.
A similar question was involved in Pesce v. Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, this day decided (ante, p. 310 [333 P.2d 15]).
On October 18, 1956, the department rendered two separately numbered decisions in file 42022. In the first, numbered 9560, the petitioners' wine and beer license was ordered revoked for violation of section 25601 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act. In the second, numbered 1166, the license was suspended for fifteen days for violation of section 25658 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act. The decisions were [886] mailed to the licensees on October 18, 1956, and received by them at their place of business on October 19, 1956. On November 28, 1956, the forty-first day after notice of the department's decisions was mailed to the licensees, the licensees delivered a notice of appeal to the board. The notice stated that an appeal was taken from the decision of the department in the proceeding numbered "file no. 4202, reg. no. 1166." It thus appears that the notice of appeal incorrectly designated the file number and referred only to the proceeding in which the petitioners' license was suspended for 15 days. On January 16, 1957, the licensees filed a "Correction and Clarification of Notice of Appeal." They alleged that their failure to properly identify the file number and to include in the notice of appeal the number of the proceeding in which their license was revoked was the result of typographical error and inadvertence.
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