Biggart v. Lewis

192 P. 437, 183 Cal. 660, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 454
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5196.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 192 P. 437 (Biggart v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biggart v. Lewis, 192 P. 437, 183 Cal. 660, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 454 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

The plaintiff in this action sought to restrain by injunction the defendants, Lewis and Hunt, respectively auditor and treasurer of the county of Los Angeles, from auditing and paying a' demand purporting to have been allowed by the supervisors of said county in favor of the defendant Gibbon for services claimed to have been rendered by him in the promotion and organization of “Los Angeles County Water Works District No. 3.” Following an order sustaining a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint without leave to amend, judgment was rendered and entered for the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

Briefly stated, the pleaded facts of the plaintiff’s case, in so far as they are pertinent to- a discussion and decision of the points presented on the appeal, are these: Los Angeles County Water Works District No. 3 was duly created by the board of supervisors of said county on November 16, 1914, and ever since has been in existence and operation under and by virtue of the provisions of an act entitled, “An act to *663 provide for the formation, management and dissolution of county irrigation districts” etc. (Stats. 1913, p. 785.) The plaintiff was at all times involved in the subject matter of the action a resident taxpayer within said waterworks district and was the owner of certain designated property of the alleged value of $16,750, situated therein, which was subject not only to the lien and encumbrance of the district’s bonds, but also to the lien and encumbrance of any and all taxes and assessments which might, from time to time, be levied for the maintenance of the district. The defendant Thomas E. Gibbon, an attorney at law, presented, on or about the sixth day of June, 1916, to the board of supervisors of the county of Los Angeles, a demand against the district which, as shown by an "amended claim” set forth in the body of plaintiff’s complaint, was in the sum of ten thousand dollars. The claim was “for services rendered to Los Angeles County Irrigation District No. 3. (1) Negotiating and deciding upon the plans and specifications for the main distributing pipe-lines for said district as to size of pipe, method of construction, length of pipe and particularly the cost to be borne by said district of .the Franklin Canyon, Glendale, and Chatsworth main lines, which plans were; necessary to ascertain the probable cost to the district of the proposed distributing system. Also negotiating and deciding whether the said district should include in its plans and specifications a portion of the cost of the Chatsworth reservoir. (2) Advice to freeholders concerning all matters arising by reason of the proposed organization of said district. (3) Checking and passing upon the description of external boundaries of said district and on the cost of same. (4), Preparation of the petition for the organization of said district and the issuance of bonds thereby.” The board of supervisors on the 8th of January, 1917, by resolution purported to approve and allow said demand to the extent of and for the sum of five thousand dollars, and ordered a warrant to be drawn upon the defendant Walter A. Lewis, as county auditor, requiring him to approve and allow said demand in the sum of five thousand dollars, and, by the same resolution and order, directed the defendant John N. Hunt, as county treasurer, to pay said demand to the extent of the sum allowed thereon out of the funds of the district.

*664 The plaintiff’s complaint by appropriate allegations proceeded upon the theory that the demand of defendant Gibbon was not based upon the rendition to the district. of any services contemplated by the legislative enactment permitting the formation of irrigation districts; that, inasmuch as none of the services which were made the basis of the demand are provided for in said legislative enactment, or elsewhere, the same are not and cannot be made a legal charge against the district; that, therefore, the purported and partial allowance of said claim was and is wholly illegal and void and of no effect. The plaintiff instituted the action on his own behalf and upon behalf of all of the residents, taxpayers, and freeholders within the district. The defendants’ demurrers were general and based solely upon the ground of the insufficiency of the facts pleaded in the plaintiff’s complaint to state a cause of action, and they were apparently sustained by the court below primarily upon the theory that -the services upon which defendant claimed compensation were services rendered to the water district, or at least provided for by the act under which the district was organized, and that, therefore the allowance of the claim by the board of supervisors of Los Angeles County was a matter within its jurisdiction, and also upon the ground that, when passing upon and allowing the claim, said board was acting in a quasi-judicial capacity and, as a consequence, its judgment of approval and allowance of the claim could not be reviewed and disturbed by a court of law.

The demurrers were not well taken and should have been overruled. [1] It is conceded at the outset, as indeed it must be, that the plaintiff, as a taxpayer of and resident within the district, has the legal right to invoke the remedy of injunction to restrain the expenditure of the funds of the district if it can be said that such expenditure finds no sanction in the law, [2] and the case coming here as it does upon a judgment rendered upon an order sustaining demurrers to the plaintiff’s complaint, the question of the legality of the claim, as well as the legality of its allowance by the board of supervisors, must be determined by the consideration of the scope and effect of the allegations of the complaint. The complaint specifically and affirmatively alleges, among other things, that the services claimed to have been rendered to the district' by the defendant Gibbon, and *665 which constituted the basis of his demand against the district, were not the services provided • for or contemplated by the legislative enactment (Stats. 1913, p. 785), permitting and providing for the organization of the district; that said Gibbon did not in fact perform or render any services in connection with the district subsequent to its formation or at any time when it had a legal existence; that said defendant did not in fact perform any services for said district or for the use and benefit of said district. These allegations of the complaint are fortified by the recitals of the demand made upon the district by the defendant Gibbon, which was incorporated in the complaint. These recitals make manifest that the services rendered by the defendant Gibbon and for which the board allowed him compensation in the sum of five thousand dollars were performed at a time when the district was but a proposition—incipient and inchoate—and that the precise nature of said services consisted in the furnishing of aid in connection with the preparation and filing of the petition for the formation of the district. Consequently the complaint sufficiently shows, as against a general demurrer, that such services were performed at a time prior to the formal formation of the district into an organized and existing corporate legal entity.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 437, 183 Cal. 660, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggart-v-lewis-cal-1920.