Borchard v. Board of Supervisors

77 P. 708, 144 Cal. 10, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 649
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3670.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 77 P. 708 (Borchard v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Borchard v. Board of Supervisors, 77 P. 708, 144 Cal. 10, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 649 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Petitioner sues out this writ of review to test the validity of the proceedings of the board of supervisors of Ventura County, resulting in the incorporation of the city of Oxnard. The proceedings were had under the Municipal Incorporation Act of 1883.

The board of supervisors made return showing the proceedings had before them. Petitioner has filed affidavits attacking the return so made, and asks us to consider these affidavits, and, in effect, amend the return. This we may not do. Where the jurisdiction of an inferior tribunal turns upon a disputed question of fact, and the evidence before that tri *14 bunal is not made a part of the return, the court of review may call upon the inferior tribunal to certify the evidence upon which'it acted (Whitney v. San Francisco Fire Dept., 14 Cal. 478, 501; Los Angeles v. Young, 118 Cal. 295; 1 In re Madera District, 92 Cal. 296; 2 Stumpf v. Supervisors, 131 Cal. 364 3 ), and the findings of fact prepared by the inferior tribunal and voluntarily sent with the record may be resorted to when the proper disposition of the case renders their consideration necessary. (Blair v. Hamilton, 32 Cal. 49; Lowe v. Alexander, 15 Cal. 300; 4 Ency. of Pl. & Prac., p. 265.) But this is the limit to which the court will go under this writ. The record returned imports absolute verity, and evidence aliunde will not be received to contradict it. (De Pedrorena v. Superior Court, 80 Cal. 144; In re Grove Street, 61 Cal. 443; Ex parte Sternes, 77 Cal. 156 ; 4 Roe v. Superior Court, 60 Cal. 93; Hoffman v. Superior Court, 79 Cal. 475; Sayers v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 642; Deer v. Highivay Commrs., 109 I11. 319; Rutland v. Worcester, 20 Pick. 71; Mendon v. Worcester Commrs., 5 Allen, 13; Spelling on Extraordinary Relief, see. 2021.)

It is too well settled to require the citation of authorities that the writ of review runs to inferior tribunals, boards, or officers exercising judicial functions solely to correct errors in excess of jurisdiction, or, in other words, to confine such tribunals and officers, exercising judicial functions, to their proper jurisdiction. It may not be used to correct errors or irregularities within the jurisdiction of the inferior tribunal, nor will it ever lie to review a purely legislative or executive act. (Farmers and Merchants’ Bank v. Board of Equalization, 97 Cal. 318; White v. Superior Court, 110 Cal. 60; Quinchard v. Trustees of Alameda, 113 Cal. 664.)

Under section 2 of the Municipal Incorporation Act of 1883, as amended March 19, 1889, (Stats, of 1889, p. 371,) the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors is obtained by filing a proper petition, therein mentioned, together with the affidavit of three qualified electors residing within the limits of the proposed corporation, as prima facie evidence of the requisite number of bona fide signers to the petition, and the publication of such petition for at least two weeks before *15 the time at which it is presented, in some newspaper printed and published in such county, with a notice stating the time of meeting of the board at which the petition will be presented. It may be conceded, but only for the purposes of this case, that the board of supervisors, in determining that a proper petition has been so presented, supported by a proper affidavit that notice was published, acts judicially, or at least quasi-judieially, and that its determination upon these matters is therefore subject to review. (People v. Town of Linden, 107 Cal. 94.)

Objection is made to the petition presented to the board of supervisors.

1. That the number of inhabitants residing within the boundaries of the proposed corporation was not stated “as nearly as may be, ’ ’ and in this regard it is said that no facts are given as a basis for the number stated, no census seems to have been taken, and that the petition in terms says that “more than 500 and not to exceed 3,000 persons reside within the proposed boundaries, herein above particularly described. . . . And that -the number of inhabitants therein, according to the best knowledge, information and belief of your petitioners, is 2,000.” It is argued that the clause “as nearly as the same can be stated by your petitioners” is not a compliance with the terms of the law, which requires the number to be stated “as nearly as may be.” But as the law contemplates that the petitioners are the ones who shall state the population “as nearly as may be,” and when they have stated it as nearly as it “can be stated by them,” they would seem to have strictly complied with the law. Indeed, the declaration in this regard is much more definite than that in People v. City of Riverside, 70 Cal. 461, where this court declared that stating the number of inhabitants to be “about 3,000” sufficiently conformed to the requirement of the act.

2. Objection is made to the sufficiency of the affidavit of the three electors. In this the sufficiency of the affidavit as to form and substance is not disputed, but it is urged that, as the affidavit was dated upon March 13, 1903, and filed with the petition upon April 7th following, it does not comply with the requirements of the Municipal Incorporation Act, because it only establishes the conditions existing upon March 13th. It is shown, however, by the affidavit that seventy-six *16 electors residing within the proposed corporation had signed the petition on the 13th of March, and the presumption is that the state of facts thus shown to exist continued. It was incumbent upon the opponents of incorporation to have made proof upon the hearing that, by death or departure from the district, the number had been reduced below that requisite under the law. (Kidder v. Stevens, 60 Cal. 414; Windhaus v. Boots, 92 Cal. 617.) Moreover, while the petition was presented upon April 7th, the board of supervisors continued the hearing of all matters connected with it from time to time until the sixteenth day of May, when, as the record shows, in regular session it “proceeded to the further hearing of said petition, and took evidence oral and documentary upon the allegations thereof, and also heard the protests and objections of various and sundry persons interested therein objecting to the proposed boundaries and limits of said proposed corpora^ tion. . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

(PS)Seneka v. County of Yolo
E.D. California, 2021
Peart v. Board of Supervisors
301 P.2d 874 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Meyers v. Board of Supervisors
243 P.2d 38 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)
Rose v. Superior Court
194 P.2d 568 (California Court of Appeal, 1948)
Gunn v. Superior Court
173 P.2d 328 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
Middlebrook v. Superior Court
134 P.2d 241 (California Supreme Court, 1943)
Estrin v. Superior Court
96 P.2d 340 (California Supreme Court, 1939)
Skinner v. City of Phoenix
95 P.2d 424 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1939)
Security-First National Bank v. Board of Supervisors
26 P.2d 862 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Swanson v. City of Orange
275 P. 889 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
Goodrich v. Superior Court
268 P. 669 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Norman v. Cogswell
255 P. 251 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)
Broyles v. Mahon
237 P. 763 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)
Garvin v. Chambers
232 P. 696 (California Supreme Court, 1924)
Halpern v. Superior Court
212 P. 916 (California Supreme Court, 1923)
Dolan v. Superior Court
190 P. 469 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
Austin v. Eddy
172 N.W. 517 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)
Faulkner v. Board of Supervisors
149 P. 382 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1915)
Cole v. Board of Supervisors
150 P. 784 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)
Hoffecker v. Board of Supervisors
138 P. 371 (California Court of Appeal, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 P. 708, 144 Cal. 10, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borchard-v-board-of-supervisors-cal-1904.