Capuchino Land Co. v. Board of Trustees

167 P. 178, 34 Cal. App. 239
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1984.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 167 P. 178 (Capuchino Land Co. v. Board of Trustees) 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
Capuchino Land Co. v. Board of Trustees, 167 P. 178, 34 Cal. App. 239 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

*240 RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment in petitioner’s favor upon a hearing of its application for a writ of review, wherein the petitioner sought to have reviewed and annulled the action of the hoard of trustees of the city of San Bruno in calling and holding an election for the proposed annexation of certain territory to and its inclusion within the corporate boundaries of said municipality.

The election was called and held under the provisions of the act of 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 358), providing a method for the inclusion of outside inhabited territory within the corporate limits of municipalities. The lands of the petitioner sought to be made the subject of such inclusion within the corporate limits of the city of San Bruno consisted of a tract of land lying adjacent to the eastern boundary of its present corporate limits, comprising 1,890 acres in one rectangular piece, and extending thence eastward to and some distance into the tide waters of the bay of San Francisco. This particular tract is entirely uninhabited, but adjacent to it, lying across the railroad tracks which run along a portion of its western line, is another and separate tract of land comprising sixty-two acres, and known as Lomita Park, which has been subdivided and sold in small lots, and which is inhabited by a population of 190 persons. The city of San Bruno was incorporated as a city of the sixth class in December, 1914. In the month of June, 1915, the board of trustees of the said city received a petition containing 111 signatures of persons asserting themselves to be and constitute the necessary one-fifth of the qualified electors of the municipality required by the statute, which petition described the territory sought to be included within the limits of the municipality through the holding of an annexaion election, and which description embraced the lands of the petitioner. The board of trustees of said city entertained said petition; decided that it was sufficient in point of signatures and description to require the calling of such election, and then proceeded in accordance with the directions of the statute to call and hold the same. The jurisdiction of said board so to do was the subject of successful assault in this proceeding before the trial court, and from its judgment annulling the proceedings for the calling and holding of such election the present appeal has been taken.

*241 The chief and vital point urged by the petitioner before the trial court and insisted upon on this appeal is that the face of the record discloses, and the fact is, that the said lands of the petitioner constitute a segregated uninhabited territory which is of such comparative area and so situated as not to be susceptible of being brought within the intent and meaning of the term “uninhabited territory” as employed in the statute of 1889; and hence that its annexation either by itself, or by the attempted inclusion within the same description with itself of another and separate inhabited area, was beyond the jurisdiction of said board of trustees of the city of San Bruno.

The answer which the appellants make to this-contention is twofold—the first being that the action of the said board of trustees in the matter of the calling and holding of the election in question is not judicial in its character, but is purely administrative, and hence not the subject of review of this proceeding, and this for the reason that the statute under which the election was called and held gives to the governing bodies of municipalities no discretion in the matter of calling’ and holding an annexation election upon the presentation of a proper petition therefor, signed by the requisite quota of electors, and containing the proper description of the territory to be embraced within the boundaries of the city; and it is therefore argued that the writ of quo warranto would be the proper and only remedy for the acts of the appellants of which the petitioner herein complains.

As to this contention we are clearly of the opinion that while it is true that the statute in question reposes no discretion in the board of trustees as to the matter of issuing its call for an annexation election upon the presentation of a properly signed and worded petition therefor, and that its acts in the premises from that time forth would be administrative, and" hence not the proper subject of review in this proceeding, yet the initial action of the board of trustees in determining whether a petition in all respects sufficient to set in motion the compulsion of the statute in the matter of calling and holding such election had been presented before it, was essentially judicial in its nature, and hence was and is the proper subject of review in this proceeding.

The controlling authorities sustaining this view are Stumpf v. Board of Supervisors, 131 Cal. 364, [82 Am. St. Rep. 350, *242 63 Pac. 663]; Great Western Power Co. v. Pillsbury, 170 Cal. 180, [149 Pac. 35, 9 N. C. C. A. 466]; People v. Oakland, 123 Cal. 598, [56 Pac. 445]; Levee District v. Farmer, 101 Cal. 178, [23 L. R. A. 388, 35 Pac. 569]; People v. Ontario, 148 Cal. 625, [84 Pac. 205].

The case of Frederick v. City of San Luis Obispo, 118 Cal. 391, 392, [50 Pac. 661], cited in the closing brief of appellants, is not in conflict with the rule adhered to in the foregoing cases, for that was a proceeding in mandamus to coiripel the holding of an election after the presentation of a proper petition therefor; and the question of the nature of the action of the city officials in passing upon the sufficiency of the petition itself was not the subject of inquiry or decision in that case.

The second and final contention of the appellants is that the question as to whether or not the territory sought to be brought within the boundaries of the city by the annexation election is inhabited territory within the meaning and intent of the statute of 1889 is a purely political question, to be determined in the first instance by the electors presenting the petition, by the board of trustees in their adoption of the proposed boundaries of the enlarged city, and finally by the voters themselves within the prescribed territory sought to be annexed; and that as to such determination the courts have no right to interfere.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 178, 34 Cal. App. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capuchino-land-co-v-board-of-trustees-calctapp-1917.