Associated Students of North Peralta Community College v. Board of Trustees of Peralta Community College District

92 Cal. App. 3d 672, 155 Cal. Rptr. 250, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1708
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1979
DocketCiv. 40303
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 Cal. App. 3d 672 (Associated Students of North Peralta Community College v. Board of Trustees of Peralta Community College District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associated Students of North Peralta Community College v. Board of Trustees of Peralta Community College District, 92 Cal. App. 3d 672, 155 Cal. Rptr. 250, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1708 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

NEWSOM, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying a petition for a writ of mandate which sought to compel the Peralta Community College District Board of Trustees (Trustees) to keep open the Grove Street college campus, and to adopt a plan for repayment of at least $10 million in bond initiative revenues for construction of a degree-granting college on the Grove Street college site.

In salient part the background of the case is as follows.

The Peralta Community College District (District) was formed in 1963, embracing the area of Alameda, Albany-Berkeley, Emeryville, Oakland and Piedmont. A year later the Trustees created a 72-member Citizens Advisory Committee, which in 1965 made recommendations including the scheduling of a bond election to issue $47 million in bonds. Our perusal of the recommendations convinces us, as appellants argue, that all interested parties fully expected that four campuses would be built, one of them in the Berkeley-Albany area.

While the minutes of the July 12, 1965, meeting of the Trustees at which a resolution calling for the bond election was adopted do not reflect official adoption of the advisory committee’s recommendations, the record below shows that such was the intention of the Trustees. In any event, Resolution No. 65/66-01 was passed. It reads as follows, in conformity with the provisions of Education Code section 15100, which *675 defines the authority of a school district to order bond elections: “Whereas, in the judgment of this Board of Trustees of the Peralta Junior College District of Alameda County, State of California, it is advisable to call an election to submit to the electors of the said district the question whether or not bonds of the district shall be issued and sold in the amount of Forty-Seven Million and no/100 ---------- Dollars ($47,000,000.00) for the following purposes: [1Í] —The purchasing of school lots; [H] —The building or purchasing of school buildings; [U] —The making of alterations or additions to the school building or buildings other than such as may be necessary for current maintenance, operation, or repairs; [H] —The repairing, restoring, or rebuilding of any school building damaged, injured, or destroyed by fire or other public calamity; [H] —The supplying of school buildings and grounds with furniture; equipment or necessary apparatus of a permanent nature; [H] —The permanent improvement of the school grounds; and [f| —The carrying out of the projects or purposes authorized in Section 15811 of the Education Code, to wit, to provide sewers and drains adequate to treat and/or dispose of sewage and drainage on or away from school property. [II] Now, Therefore, Be it Resolved that the District Attorney of the County of Alameda be and he is hereby requested to prepare a resolution calling a bond election for the issuing of bonds in the above amount for the above purposes.”

A preelection campaign ensued, attended by considerable publicity which indicated in part an intention to build four campuses, and resulted in approval of the ballot proposition, which read as follows:

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*676 Following the election, the Trustees adopted a tentative budget which allotted $7.3 million for development of a Berkeley-Albany campus, and, as the evidence shows, every indication through at least 1971 reveals an intention to build a full-scale Berkeley-Albany campus.

But because of numerous economic obstacles, including rising land and construction costs, and steadily declining enrollment, the campus was never built.

Eventually, in 1974, pursuant to the recommendations of Chancellor Fryer, and notwithstanding their recognition of the District’s longstanding commitment to build a Berkeley-Albany campus, the Trustees abandoned this fourth campus. It was this decision that led appellants to file the instant action.

Appellants’ appeal is based upon a contract theory. In their view the Trustees breached a contractual obligation created between the District and its electors as a result of the 1965 election. Appellants’ second argument is that, even if no express contract is found, the electors have justifiably relied upon the District’s reaffirmation by conduct of its obligation to build the fourth campus. And a third argument is that, even absent an agreement, express or implied, public policy demands that the demonstrated will of the electorate be implemented.

I

The relationship arising out of a bond election has been defined in a number of California cases. California Constitution, article XVI, section 18, which prohibits a public entity from incurring debt exceeding revenue in any year, absent a two-thirds vote of qualified electors, led to a number of early decisions which found in bond elections and comparable situations a contractual relationship between the public entity and individual electors. (Cf. Merchants Bank v. Escondido Irr. Dist. (1904) 144 Cal. 329 [77 P. 937]; Skinner v. City of Santa Rosa (1895) 107 Cal. 464 [40 P. 742].) However, a later decision, now regarded as the leading case on the subject, retreated from this classification of the relationship as contractual. (Peery v. City of Los Angeles (1922) 187 Cal. 753 [203 P. 992, 19 A.L.R. 1044].) That case involved multiple actions to enjoin a city from disposing of certain bonds at less than par value, or on terms yielding greater interest than specified in the election ordinance. The court, after referring to both Skinner and Merchants Bank, concluded that it was unnecessary to consider the relationship between public entity *677 and electorate as strictly contractual, the status being merely analogous to a contract.

Since Peery, the cases have adopted one or another of these theories, some finding a contractual, others an analogous to contract, status. (Cf. Tooker v. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist. (1972) 22 Cal.App.3d 643, 649 [99 Cal.Rptr. 361]; Eastern Mun. Water Dist. v. Scott (1969) 1 Cal.App.3d 129, 135 [81 Cal.Rptr. 510].)

Whatever their view of the precise legal relationship of entity and electorate, the courts have been consistent in defining the elements which comprise it. All have agreed, for example, that the statute authorizing the creation of the bonded indebtedness is presumptively within the knowledge of each elector (Peery v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 187 Cal. at p. 761; City of Los Angeles v. Dannenbrink (1965) 234 Cal.App.2d 642, 655 [44 Cal.Rptr. 624]), and the statute which creates the bonding entity presumed known to each voter (Flood Control Dist. v. Wright (1931) 213 Cal. 335, 349 [2 P.2d 168]).

The resolution by which the bonding entity resolves to submit the issue to the District’s electors has also been regarded as part of the “contract” between the entity and its electors. (O’Farrell

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Bluebook (online)
92 Cal. App. 3d 672, 155 Cal. Rptr. 250, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 1708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-students-of-north-peralta-community-college-v-board-of-trustees-calctapp-1979.