Captain Charles v. Gridley Camp No. 104 v. Board of Supervisors

277 P. 500, 98 Cal. App. 585, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 25
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3823.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 277 P. 500 (Captain Charles v. Gridley Camp No. 104 v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Captain Charles v. Gridley Camp No. 104 v. Board of Supervisors, 277 P. 500, 98 Cal. App. 585, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 25 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This cause is before us upon an original application for a writ of mandate by the above-named petitioners praying for an order of this court, directed to the respondents, commanding them to admit the petitioners to the use and occupation of a certain memorial building situate at Gridley, in the county of Butte.

The record before us shows that the county of Butte has erected four memorial buildings for the use of patriotic associations, one of said buildings being located in each of the following cities: Oroville, Chico, Paradise and Gridley. The record further shows that prior to the erection of any of said buildings the Board of Supervisors of Butte County was petitioned to do so by the representatives of the various organizations of veterans of said county; that said organizations represented to the Board of Supervisors that if said memorial buildings were constructed at the expense of the county, that they would be so conducted and managed that there would be no charge against said county or the taxpayers thereof for the maintenance and care of the same; that each of said buildings would be self-sustaining and the county would not be looked to for any financial assistance on account thereof; that for some time after the erection of the memorial building at Gridley it was occupied and used only by South Butte Post No. 210, American Legion. The association or organization known as Captain Charles V. Gridley Camp No. 104, United Spanish War Veterans, was organized after the erection of the building just referred to. The memorial building at Gridley was completed in the year 1927 and dedicated on the third day of May of that

*588 year. The record shows that after the erection and dedication of said building the Board of Supervisors appointed a committee of ex-service men and a supervisor to manage and control the respective buildings, one member of the Board of Supervisors from the district in which one of the memorial buildings was situate being a member of that committee, for the purpose of controlling and looking after the building situate in the district represented on the Board of Supervisors. After its appointment the committee took charge of the respective buildings referred to, and during the year 1928 adopted the schedule of charges for the use and occupation of different rooms in the memorial buildings, based upon the expense of lighting, heating and janitor service, so calculated and adjusted that each organization or society using any particular room in any particular building would pay a sufficient sum to cover the actual expense attendant upon such use. Thus, for the main auditorium for afternoon meetings the schedule called for a payment of $15; for evening meetings, up to midnight, $15; after midnight, an additional $5 per hour. This schedule was for the portion of the year beginning with April 1st and ending with September 30th, and for the period of time between October 1st and March 31st the charge for the main auditorium was $25 both for afternoon and evening meetings. For clubrooms, afternoon meetings, $7.'50; evening meetings, $10; banquet-room and kitchen, $7.50'; for meetings of veteran societies and their auxiliaries where the hall used by such associations was regularly used for evening meetings, $2.50; after midnight, an additional charge of $1.50. The building at Gridley, according to the record and stipulation of counsel, consisted of a main auditorium capable of accommodating 1200 people ; two rooms called club-rooms, for want of a better designation, capable of accommodating about 100 persons each, a banquet-room and kitchen. These rooms were used for the regular meetings of the different organizations, the main auditorium being used only for special purposes, such as public installations, public funerals, dances and public entertainments, the banquet-room and kitchen being used when banquets were being given.

Under the management of the committee to which we have referred different rooms in the building, including the main auditorium, have been rented to other societies than those *589 composed of veterans, for entertaininents and kindred purposes. For this use compensation has been made based upon a schedule of charges calculated to make the building self-sustaining.

After the organization of the petitioners herein, one of the rooms heretofore called a club-room, but in fact a meeting-room for organizations such as the petitioners, was used by them as a meeting place. The petitioners’ organization consisting of about thirty members, continued to occupy and use one of the meeting-rooms from the date of its organization until on or about the month of October, 1928. During that time it appears that the petitioners held a public function, entertainment and dance in the main auditorium, using the same from about 1 o ’clock” one afternoon until 2 o’clock the following night, or, rather, the following morning, and in .so doing consumed, in heating and lighting of main auditorium, electric current to the value of $47.50, and also otherwise used electric current aggregating in all the value of $160. The petitioners declining to pay said electric bill, or any portion thereof, were requested to give up their key to the building, and have so done. This action seeks a judgment restoring the petitioners to the use of said building, and declaring their right to use and occupy the same without payment of any charge therefor. The contention of respondents is that the act under which the building was constructed permits a reasonable charge for the use and occupation thereof. The petitioners also pray for an injunction from this court restraining and prohibiting the use .of said building, or any room thereof, by any organization other than that composed of veterans, insisting that the expense of maintaining said building, including lighting, heating and janitor service, should be defrayed by the county of Butte out of funds raised by taxation. The respondents, on the other hand, contend that when any room in said building is not in use or occupation by any of the veteran organizations, it is permissible to rent the same to defray the expenses of lighting, heating and janitor service. In other words, to make the building self-sustaining; and that in so doing, the building is not being commercialized. In this particular our attention is called to the practice which prevails in many cities of the state where memorial buildings have been erected, to lease the main auditorium and *590 other rooms therein at such time, and for such purposes as do not in anywise interfere with the full and confortable enjoyment and occupancy of the different rooms of veterans’ organizations, the contention being that when the main auditorium or any particular room would otherwise remain vacant, it is for the benefit of the veterans’ organizations that some revenue be derived from the building rather than to permit the same to remain unused and a charge either upon the organizations composed of veterans or of the counties of which such veteran organizations are residents and taxpayers.

We do not need to further follow the allegations of the petition or to the.

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Bluebook (online)
277 P. 500, 98 Cal. App. 585, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/captain-charles-v-gridley-camp-no-104-v-board-of-supervisors-calctapp-1929.