City of Los Angeles v. Lewis

167 P. 390, 175 Cal. 777, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 760
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 4591.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 167 P. 390 (City of Los Angeles 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
City of Los Angeles v. Lewis, 167 P. 390, 175 Cal. 777, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 760 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

The city of Los Angeles was the owner of a plant for the manufacture of Portland cement, located in Kern County, California. It had used the product of its factory in the construction of its waterworks. Thereafter, in 1913, [Stats. 1913, p. 669], the legislature of the state, in its enumeration of the powers of board of supervisors, added a new subdivision to section 4041 of the Political Code (subd. 9a), providing as follows: “To purchase, lease, construct or otherwise acquire, own, operate, manage and control, in any county in the state, cement manufacturing plant; and to sell the products of the same in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as to them shall be deemed proper; provided, that the state of California and municipal or public corporations of the state shall have a preferred right at the same price as the products are offered to private persons to purchase the same; and to purchase, lpase, op ptherwise acquire real op *779 personal property to be used in connection with such plant; provided, however, that no such plant shall be purchased, leased or otherwise acquired, neither shall said works be constructed on real or personal property purchased or acquired until notice of the intention to make such purchase or construct such works shall have been given for a period of thirty days by publication in a newspaper of general circulation published within the county or, if there be none, then by posting a notice for said period in a conspicuous place in three public places in the county; such notice shall contain a description of the property to be purchased or works to be constructed, a statement of the amount of money to be invested, the terms upon which it is to be invested and the time when the proposition will come before the board of supervisors to be acted upon.” Then on July 10, 1915, the city of Los Angeles and the county of Los Angeles, acting under the authority thus conferred, entered into a written contract of lease, whereby the county of Los Angeles took over the operation and control of the city’s cement plant located in the county of Kern. The lease contained a number of terms and conditions, some of which will hereinafter demand consideration. For the present it is enough to say that the rental to be paid by the county of Los Angeles to the city of Los Angeles for the use of this cement plant for the first year is twenty-seven thousand five hundred dollars, to be paid in equal monthly installments of $2,291.66 each. In time the city of Los Angeles and its board of public service commissioners made demand upon the auditor of the county of Los Angeles to indorse his approval of the first month’s installment of rent payable under this leasehold contract. Upon his refusal so to do this action in mandate was brought, and appellant M. H. Kane, as a citizen and taxpayer of the county, was permitted to intervene therein. The intervener and the auditor filed their general demurrers to the petition. These demurrers were overruled and judgment for petitioners followed. From this judgment the auditor and intervener have taken their appeals.

The first and fundamental proposition urged upon appeal is that the legislative act is itself unconstitutional, in that it clearly and designedly authorizes taxation for a private purpose, whereas under our system of govérnment taxes can be laid only for a public object—one within the purposes for *780 which governments are established. Indisputably, if the legislature has authorized the doing of this thing, its authorization, under all of the authorities, is void. (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., sec. 1351; Loan Assn. v. Topeka, 87 U. S. 655, [22 L. Ed: 455] ; Cole v. La Grange, 113 U. S. 1, [28 L. Ed. 896, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 416]; In re Opinion of Supreme Judicial Court, 58 Me. 590; In re Opinion of the Justices, 155 Mass. 598, [15 L. R. A. 809, 30 N. E. 1142]; In re Opinion of Justices, 211 Mass. 624, [42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 221, 98 N. E. 611]; Union Ice & Coal Co. v: Town of Ruston, 135 La. 898, [Ann. Cas. 1916C, 12, L. R. A. 1915B, 859, 66 South. 262]; People v. Town of Salem, 20 Mich. 452, [4 Am. Rep. 400]; In re Opinion of Justices, 204 Mass. 607, [27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 483, 91 N. E. 405]; Attorney-General v. City of Eau Claire, 37 Wis. 400; Keen v. Mayor, 101 Ga. 588, [29 S. E. 42].) Respondents in answer do not contend against the soundness of this principle, nor its applicability to the construction of the code section. They argue, however, that every court will presume in favor of the constitutionality of a legislative enactment, and wherever possible, as between two permissible constructions, will adopt that which will uphold the law, and therefore they say that this law should be construed as authorizing a county to construct, purchase, or lease a cement plant, to use its product solely for the public purposes of the county. They find confirmatory evidence of this intent in the act itself from the declaration therein contained that boards of supervisors, as to all of the powers by the legislature conferred on them, as well as to this specific grant of power, are restrained by “such limitations and restrictions as are prescribed by law. ’ ’ The power to sell, so respondents further argue, will then be “limited to an authority to sell the surplus cement incidentally produced.”

Such are the opposing views concerning the construction of this law, and to a determination of what in fact the law actually means we are thus brought. Certain phases of the matter may be at once disposed of. The general provision of section 4041 of the Political Code, which circumscribes all grants of power to boards of supervisors within “such limitations and restrictions as are prescribed by law,” neither adds to nor detracts from the force and effect of the powers granted. Even if this express language were not used, those powers would still be circumscribed by the limitations and restric *781 tions prescribed by law. It is true that where a municipal corporation is authorized to engage in a work of a public nature, and where the character of that work is like that of purveying water or the production and sale of electric light and power to its inhabitants, it has been held that an excess or surplus beyond the needs of those inhabitants, which may arise in the prudent operation of the public works, may be disposed of to private individuals. (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., sec. 1300; Clark v. City of Los Angeles, 160 Cal. 30, [116 Pac. 722]; South Pasadena v. Pasadena Land & Water Co., 152 Cal. 579, [93 Pac. 490].) But it must be plain that this rule or principle can only be invoked when it has first been made manifest that the primary and principal purpose is a public one.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 390, 175 Cal. 777, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-los-angeles-v-lewis-cal-1917.