City of San Diego v. Millan

16 P.2d 357, 127 Cal. App. 521, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1932
DocketDocket No. 1038.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 357 (City of San Diego v. Millan) 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
City of San Diego v. Millan, 16 P.2d 357, 127 Cal. App. 521, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 358 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an original proceeding instituted in this court for the purpose of -compelling respondent to invest certain surplus funds, now in the treasury of the City of San Diego, in bonds of that city. Respondent has appeared by a demurrer to the petition, thereby admitting all of its material allegations.

The City of San Diego is a municipal corporation organized and existing under a freeholders’ charter. The individual petitioners are the mayor and members of the council of that city. Respondent is its treasurer.

In accordance with the provisions of an act of the legislature of the state of California, approved February 25, 1901 (iStats. 1901, p. 27, and acts amendatory thereof), which we will refer to as the Municipal Bonding Act, the City of San Diego authorized the issuance of bonds in the sum of $4,500,000. We will hereafter refer to them as the El Capitan dam bonds. These bonds were authorized and issued for the acquisition of lands, dam site, reservoir, reservoir site, rights of way, pipe-lines, conduits and a water filtering plant for a dam, and the acquisition, construction and completion of a dam “of the arched, gravity section, *524 masonry type”, on the San Diego River in San Diego County, and for the acquisition, construction and completion of a pipe-line from the dam to one of the city reservoirs in the City of San Diego “for the purpose of developing, impounding, conserving, storing and distributing the waters of the San Diego River and its tributaries, for the use of the inhabitants of the City of San Diego”. The bonds were authorized in 1924 and the petition recites that a portion of such bonds of the par value of $1,630,000 have been sold and that bonds of the par value of $2,695,000 remain unsold and in the possession of the city. We assume that an immaterial typographical error has occurred in these allegations of the petition as the total par values of the bonds sold, and the bonds unsold, do not correspond with the total par value of the bonds authorized.

All the proceedings up to the ordinance providing for the issuance of these bonds recited that their principal and interest should be payable in gold coin of the United States. The ordinance issuing the bonds and the bonds themselves provided that the principal and interest should be payable in lawful money of the United States.

The legislature in 1929 ('Stats. 1929, p. 1505) passed an act vesting in the state engineer the power to supervise the construction of all dams in the state of California and to determine the type of dam to be built by any political subdivision of the state. In accordance with this act the City of San Diego filed an application for approval of its proposed El Capitan dam. While the proceedings before the state engineer are not set forth in detail, we accept as a fact the statement of counsel for respondent during the oral arguments, that petitioners “are prevented from constructing the original type of dam by the state engineer”, which was not only not disputed by counsel for petitioners, but affords the foundation for one of their principal arguments in favor of the issuance of the writ. The record justifies the inference that the state engineer withheld authority for the construction of the arched, gravity section, masonry type dam, which dam had not been commenced prior to the taking effect of the act just referred to, and it is clear that he did approve the construction of a hydraulic, earth-filled rock embankment type of dam. The City of San Diego called a special election and obtained the consent of more than two- *525 thirds of the qualified electors to use the money raised from the sale of the El Capitan bonds for the same purposes as in the original election except that the type of dam to be constructed was described as one “to be approved by the State Engineer of the 'State of California, pursuant to the requirements of law”. The El Capitan dam bonds have been validated by three acts of the legislature. (Stats. 1927, p. 6; Stats. 1929, p. 16; Stats. 1931, p. 983.) The last validating act was passed prior to the election authorizing construction of a type of dam to be approved by the state engineer.

The electors of the City of San Diego had at some prior date authorized bonds for the purpose of constructing what is referred to as the Sutherland dam. It appears from the petition that there was the sum of $472,634.22 in the Sutherland dam fund and only $47,990.71 in the El Capitan bond project fund.

On the first day of August, 1932, the City Council of the City of San Diego passed a resolution whereby it determined that there was then in the city treasury to the credit of the Sutherland dam bond fund, surplus moneys in excess of $99,000 not required for the immediate necessities of the city or the purposes for which the Sutherland dam bonds were authorized, and directed respondent, as City Treasurer, to purchase $99,000 of the El Capitan bonds at their par value plus accrued interest with such surplus moneys from the Sutherland dam bond fund. He refused to do this and this proceeding is brought to compel him to make such purchase.

Respondent urges four principal grounds upon which he maintains the writ should be denied. He urges, first, that because in all proceedings leading up to and including the election at which the El Capitan dam bonds were authorized, the bonds and interest were payable in gold coin of the United 'States, the bonds could only be made payable in such gold coin and not in lawful money of the United States; second, that the money derived from the sale of the bonds could only be used to build a dam of the arched, gravity section, masonry type and not of the hydraulic earth-filled rock embankment type which the city now proposes to build; third, that under the proceedings at which the electors of the City of San Diego purported to authorize the use of the *526 money raised by the sale of the El Capitan bonds for the construction of the latter type dam, only such moneys in the possession of the city at the time of the election, which amounted to $47,990.71, could be used for the construction of the proposed new type dam and not money to be raised by the future sale of the El Capitan dam bonds; and, fourth, that as the issuance of the Sutherland dam bonds was authorized by the electors of the City of San Diego for a particular purpose, the funds derived from the sale of these bonds could not be used for any other purpose and particularly for the construction of the El Capitan dam.

Under respondent’s contention that the bonds could not be made payable in lawful money of the United States, he cites and relies upon the cases of Skinner v. City of Santa Rosa, 107 Cal. 464 [40 Pac. 742, 29 L. R. A. 512], Murphy v. City of San Luis Obispo, 119 Cal. 624 [51 Pac. 1085, 39 L. R. A. 444], and Peery v. City of Los Angeles, 187 Cal. 753 [203 Pac. 992, 19 A. L. R. 1044].

The Skinner and Murphy cases were decided under the provisions of an act of the legislature of March 19, 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 399, and acts amendatory thereof), the provisions of which varied in material respects from those of the Municipal Bonding Act now in force. The cases are not decisive of the questions we are considering.

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 357, 127 Cal. App. 521, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-diego-v-millan-calctapp-1932.