Capeon v. Hitchcock

98 Cal. 427
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1893
Docket19092
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 98 Cal. 427 (Capeon v. Hitchcock) 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
Capeon v. Hitchcock, 98 Cal. 427 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Vakclief, C.

— Action to enforce the lien of an assessment on the lot of defendants in the city of San Diego, for street work, alleged to have been done by plaintiff under a contract awarded to him by the city council and executed on the part of the city by the superintendent of streets. The complaint is in the usual form.

The answer, after denying the alleged contract, averred, and the court found: “ That, at all the times mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint, the city of San Diego was a municipal corporation of the fourth class, organized and existing under an act of the legislature of the state of California, entitled, ‘An act to provide for the organization, incorporation and government of municipal corporations,’ approved March 13, 1883; that at all times mentioned in the plaintiff’s complaint herein, said plaintiff, John (x. Capron, was a school trustee of the said city of San Diego, duly elected, qualified, and acting as such school trustee for the third ward of the city of San Diego.”

The court also found, generally, that all the allegations of the complaint were true, and gave judgment for plaintiff. The defendants have appealed from the judgment, and also from an order denying their motion for a new- trial.

On the appeal from the judgment, appellants contend that on the findings of fact the judgment should have been in their favor, for the reason that the alleged contract was prohibited and made void by section 628 of the said act of the legislature of March 13,1883, which provides that no officer of a city of the fourth class, organized under said act, “shall be interested in any contract to which the city is a party, and any contract contrary to the provisions hereof shall be void.” Substantially the same point is made on the appeal from the order denying a new trial, by exception to the finding of the alleged contract, the evidence, [430]*430without conflict, showing that the plaintiff was an officer of the city, namely, school trustee, at all the times mentioned in the complaint, as specially found by the court. But since this special finding of the official character of the plaintiff, so far as it affects the validity of the contract, is a controlling qualification of the general finding “ that each and all the allegations of the complaint are true,” the ground upon which the point is made sufficiently appears upon the judgment-roll.

I think the point is well taken on the appeal from the judgment, and should be sustained.

The alleged contract of the city with plaintiff was plainly prohibited and declared void by section 628 of the Municipal Corporation Act of March 13, 1883. Therefore, there was no contract to support the subsequent proceedings; and, consequently, no valid assessment upon the lot of the defendants. (Manning v. Den, 90 Cal. 610; Burke v. Turney, 54 Cal. 486; Daly v. San Francisco, 72 Cal. 154; Dougherty v. Hitchcock, 35 Cal. 512.) The city council being prohibited from- awarding the contract, the award of it to the plaintiff was a nullity and did not authorize its execution by the superintendent of streets, whose power to that end must come from a valid award of the contract by the city council.

Counsel for respondent contend, however, that the award of the contract was not a nullity, since the “ qualifications and eligibility of bidders are matters to be passed upon and determined by the council, with the single limitation that they must reject all bids other than the lowest regular bid of any responsible bidder.” The ready answer to all this is that the “limitation ” mentioned is not the only limitation upon the power of the council. They are also required to reject all bids of city officers; and the express statutory penalty of transgressing this limitation is that the contract “shall be void.”

It is further contended by respondent that the exclusive remedy for the error of the city council in awarding the contract to an officer of the city was by petition of remonstrance provided for in section 3 of the act of March 18, 1885 (Stats. 1885, p. 147), as follows: —

“ At any time before issuance of the assessment-roll all owners of lots or lands liable to assessment therein, who, after the first [431]*431publication of said resolution of intention (to do the work), may feel aggrieved, or who may have objections to any of the subsequent proceedings of the said council, in relation to the performance of the work mentioned in said notice of intention, shall file with the clerk a petition of remonstrance, wherein they shall state in what respect they feel aggrieved, or the proceedings to which they object; such petition of remonstrance shall be passed upon by the said city council, and its decisions therein shall be final and conclusive.”

In Manning v. Den, 90 Cal. 610, it was said (in relation to the effect of a failure to appeal to the.council under section 11 of said act) “ that which was void does not become valid by reason of a failure to appeal.” By parity of reason, it would seem that neither a void award of a street contract, nor a void contract upon such award, would become valid by failure to file a petition of remonstrance under section 3 of the act; and if not, that all subsequent proceedings dependent upon a valid contract must also be invalid. Besides, the construction of the provision for petition of remonstrance, contended for by counsel for respondent, would necessarily result in nullifying all limitations of the power of the council in regard to contracts for street work. If, in cases of this kind, the lot-owners have no other remedy than by petition of remonstrance, and the decision of the council upon such petition is final and conclusive, it surely follows that the council have power to award all street contracts to its own members, and then upon this coram nobis process, to conclusively affirm its own award. The possibility of such a result could not have been contemplated or intended by the legislature; nor would it follow from a proper application of the provision of the code. The provision authorizing a petition of remonstrance against the acts and proceedings of the city council was intended to be applicable only to acts and proceedings within the power of the council. Thus limited in its application, the provision has ample scope for operation and effect, without the possibility of any absurd consequence. The case of Manning v. Den, 90 Cal. 610, fully answers the contention that the defendants had an adequate remedy by appeal from the subsequent acts and proceedings of the superintendent of streets.

[432]*432It is further contended that the act of March 18, 1885, provides a complete system of street improvement, and was, therefore, intended to supersede and repeal all such parts of the Municipal Corporation Act of 1883 as pertain to contracts for street improvements. While .the act of 1883 embraces many more topics than that of 1885, both are general acts, and the latter does not expressly repeal any part of the former. Nor is it pretended that the giving of full effect to section 628 of the former act in this case

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Bluebook (online)
98 Cal. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capeon-v-hitchcock-cal-1893.