City of Redondo Beach v. Barkley

90 P. 452, 151 Cal. 176, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 408
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1907
DocketS.F. No. 4638.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 P. 452 (City of Redondo Beach v. Barkley) 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 Redondo Beach v. Barkley, 90 P. 452, 151 Cal. 176, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 408 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

The city of Redondo Beach, a municipal corporation organized as a city of the sixth class under the Municipal Incorporation Act of March 13, 1883 (Stats. 1883, p. 93), filed its application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent, its city clerk, to countersign certain bonds which the petitioner proposes to issue. An alternative writ issued, whereupon the respondent demurred to the petition, and the only question is whether the statutory steps precedent to the issuance of the bonds were properly taken.

Prom the allegations of the petition, which are not disputed, it appears that the board of trustees of the city, at a regular meeting held on January 8, 1906, passed and adopted by the unanimous vote of all its members, a resolution determining that the public interest and necessity demanded the construction by the city of a septic outfall sewer system; that the estimated cost of the said improvement was eighty thousand dollars, and that said cost was too great to be paid out of the ordinary annual income and revenue of the city. This resolution was on the eighth day of January, 1906, approved by the president of the board of trustees, and was duly published. On said eighth day of January, 1906, the board of trustees adjourned the regular meeting to the fifteenth day of January, 1906, and on the latter day to the twenty-ninth day of January, at which time said board, by the unanimous vote of all its members, passed and adopted an ordinance calling a special election to submit to the qualified voters of the city the proposition of incurring a debt of eighty thousand dollars for the purpose of constructing such sewer system. This ordinance was, on the twenty-ninth day of January, 1906, approved by the president of the board of trustees, and was duly published. The special election was held as provided in the ordinance, and more than two thirds of the votérs voting at said election voted to authorize the issuance of the bonds. The board of trustees canvassed the returns, and declared that said bond issue had been carried *178 by the requisite two-thirds vote. On April 30, 1906, the board sold the bonds for par. The respondent refuses to comply with repeated requests to countersign the bonds, and this proceeding is instituted to compel him to countersign them.

It is conceded that,- except in two particulars, the steps required by the statute for the issuance of such bonds were properly taken. The objections urged-are these:—

1. The resolution determining that the public interest and necessity demanded the construction of the sewer system was passed at a regular meeting of the board held on January 8, 1906, and the ordinance calling the special election was passed at an adjournment of said meeting on January 29, 1906.' It is claimed that this was not a compliance with the statute under which the bonds were to be issued (Stats. 1901, p. 27) in that said statute requires that the ordinance calling the special election be passed at a “subsequent meeting” to that at which the resolution of public interest and necessity was adopted. Section 2 of the act in question reads, “Whenever the legislative branch of any city, town or municipal corporation shall, by resolution passed by vote of two thirds of all its members, and approved by the executive of said municipality, determine that- the public interest or necessity demands the acquisition, construction or completion of any municipal improvement, . . . the cost of which will be too great to be paid out of the ordinary annual income and revenue of the municipality, it may at any subsequent meeting of such board, by the vote of two thirds of all its members, and also approved by the said executive, call a special election and submit to the qualified voters . . . the question of incurring a debt for the purpose set forth in said resolution.” The respondent argues that an adjourned meeting is not a “subsequent meeting”; that in contemplation of law the meeting which is held pursuant, to adjournment is merely a continuation of the original meeting. It is doubtless true that an adjourned meeting is, in a sense, a part of the meeting which was adjourned, and we are cited to cases, not dissimilar to the present, in which it was so held. Thus, in Staates v. Borough of Washington, 44 N. J. L. 605, [43 Am. Rep. 402], an ordinance was introduced at a meeting of the common council held on May 2d. The meeting was adjourned to May 9, 1868, at which time the ordinance was passed. It was held *179 that this was not a compliance with a clause of the charter, providing that no ordinance (of the character of the one in question)' “shall be enacted or passed, unless the same shall have been introduced before the common council at a previous meeting.” To the same effect is Flood v. Atlantic City, 63 N. J. L. 530, [42 Atl. 829],

On the other hand, in Montgomery v. Dormer, 181 Mo. 5, [79 S. W. 913], the contestant in an election contest gave notice that he would contest the election of respondent at the next term of the circuit court, to be held on December 15, 1902. This was an adjourned session of the October term, the next regular term being in January. The notice was held to authorize a hearing at the December term under a statute providing that “the contest shall be determined at the first term of such court that shall be held . . . after service of notice of contest, ’ ’ etc. A similar ruling was made in Burkelo v. County Commissioners, 38 Minn. 441, [38 N. W. 108], under a statute providing that when a petition for opening a road is presented to the board, the county auditor shall lay it before the board “at their next session thereafter.” (See, also, State v. Ross, (Wash.) 89 Pac. 158.)

In none of these cases was the language of the statute or charter the same as that here involved, and we think the question is one that must be determined by a consideration of the precise terms employed by the legislature, read in the light of the purposes sought to be accomplished. The statute of 1901, authorizing the issuance of bonds for municipal improvements, provides for a determination by the legislative branch of the municipality that the public interest or necessity demands the improvement in question. There is no requirement that this determination shall be published, or that notice of it shall be given in any way. All that is required is that the special election at which the matter is to be submitted to the voters shall be called at “any subsequent meeting of the board. ’ ’ Such subsequent meeting may be a stated or a special meeting, and no particular time is required to intervene. The purpose of the provision seems to be that some period shall elapse between the close of the session which declares the necessity of the meeting and the opening of the session at which the election is called. The .council is not to bring up the question, pass on its necessity, and provide for *180 its submission to the voters at a single meeting. There is to be some period for deliberation between the first step and the second. But, as no particular period is specified, we see no reason why the object of the statute is not accomplished as fully where the meeting is adjourned to a stated time as where it is adjourned sine die, and a new meeting called.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 452, 151 Cal. 176, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-redondo-beach-v-barkley-cal-1907.