City of Santa Ana v. Harlin

34 P. 224, 99 Cal. 538, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 708
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1893
DocketNo. 19030
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 34 P. 224 (City of Santa Ana v. Harlin) 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 Santa Ana v. Harlin, 34 P. 224, 99 Cal. 538, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 708 (Cal. 1893).

Opinions

Searls, C.

The action was brought by the city of Santa Ana, a municipal corporation, to condemn a right of way over certain laud of the defendant for the opening of Second Street in said city. The cause was tried by a jury and the damages assessed at two hundred and sixty-seven dollars, for which sum judgment was entered in favor of defendant, as well as a decree that the use of the land for the purposes of a street was a public use and the taking thereof necessary to such use. The appeal is from this judgment and from an .order denying a motion for a new trial. The final order of condemnation had not been made when the appeal was perfected.

The first error assigned is founded upon an order of the court striking out from defendant’s answer certain allegations -to the effect that the action is instituted upon the motion and at the request and for the benefit of the Santa Ana and Westminster Railroad Company, a corporation, for the purpose and benefit of said railroad company. Mahoney v. Spring Valley W. Works, 52 Cal. 159, and Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 596 (461), 3d ed., are relied upon in support of the alleged error.

Under the act of March 6, 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 70), the power to order the opening of streets in municipalities, and the method of its exercise, is conferred upon the city council or legislative department of the municipality. Provision is made whereby those interested and objecting to the improvement and to various of the measures for carrying-it out may be heard and their objections passed upon by the council, and when the several steps provided by the statute have been taken and the resolution and ordinance ordering said work have been regularly adopted, the action of the council is final and conclusive of the necessity of the improvement, and the courts may not adjudicate the question of such necessity in an action or proceeding for condemnation of lauds necessary to the improvement. (See Stats. 1889, sec. 18, p. 75; Tehama Co. v. Bryan, 68 Cal. 57; Butte Co. v. Boydstun [not reported], 11 Pac. Rep. 781; San Francisco v. Kiernan, 98 Cal. 614.)

The question sought to be raised by the portion of defendant’s answer stricken out was one going to the public character of the use and the necessity for its establishment, and as such was properly solvable by the city council.

[541]*541It follows that the court did not err in striking out that portion of the answer. (Pasadena v. Stimson, 91 Cal. 238.)

After the resolution of intention passed by the city council? declaring its intention to open and extend Second Street, and the ordinance or resolution providing for the proposed work were introduced in evidence, and plaintiff had rested its case, defendant offered in evidence all the proceedings and records in the matter of opening Second Street, for the alleged purpose of proving: —

1. That the jurisdictional facts required by section 6' of the act of March 6, 1889, had not been proven and did not exist.

2. That there was no street superintendent j that none was ever appointed; that the person attempted to be appointed was not eligible and did not qualify, and that he was at the time of the attempted appointment and pretended service, a member of the board of trustees of the city of Santa Ana.

3. That no publication of notice was ever made as required by section 3 of said act.

Objection was made to the introduction of the record evidence, and sustained by the court, and the ruling is assigned as error.

The statement fails to show in what the proffered evidence consisted, and in the absence of all information as to the contents or character of the evidence offered, we cannot say whether it was material or pertinent to any issue in the case. Error must be shown, and in the absence of all showing will not be presumed.

The bonds of Humphreys and Head, offered in evidence for the purpose of proving that the obligors were bound to pay the expense of opening the street, were properly excluded, as not within the issues. If they established anything in the case, it was that portion of the answer which had been stricken out. The mere fact that individuals have subscribed money or given a bond to a city to contribute toward the expense of laying out a street will not vitiate the proceedings, or prove that the land was taken for the accommodation of private persons, and not for public uses. (Parks v. Boston, 8 Pick. 218; 19 Am. Dec. 322; Copeland v. Packard, 16 Pick. 217; Stilson v. Board of Commissioners, 52 Ind. 213.)

There is no doubt that in many instances of attempted tak= [542]*542ing of private property for public uses, it devolves upon the courts to determine whether or not the use is a public use. (Consolidated Channel Co. v. Central Pacific R. R. Co., 51 Cal. 269; Varick v. Smith, 5 Paige Ch. 159; 28 Am. Dec. 417; Loan Ass’n v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655.) These, however, are exceptions to a general rule which recognizes in the legislative department the source of the power to determine what shall be held to be a public use, and the action of the legislature on the question is not, except in extreme cases, open to review by the courts. (Napa Valley R. R. Co. v. Napa Co., 30 Cal. 437.) That the use of land for public streets,in an incorporated town is a public use is true beyond controversy. And when, as under the statute of March 6, 1889, the duty of determining the necessity for opening such streets and where as under that statute the official declaration or order opening a street is made conclusive evidence of the necessity therefor, the field of inquiry, in proceedings for the condemnation of land for such purposes, is confined to comparatively narrow limits.

The answer contains no allegations of any defect or irregularity in the proceedings, and hence there was no issue under which such evidence was admissible. The case of Los Angeles Co. v. San Jose Land etc. Co., 96 Cal. 93, involved a like principle with that urged by appellant here, although under a different statute.

The next error assigned relates to the exclusion of evidence offered by defendant to show the uses and purposes to which the land proposed to be taken could properly be applied.

In proceedings for the condemnation of land, the present market value of the land is the measure of damages, and not its value in use to the owner or to the parties seeking to condemn it. By the term “ present market value ” is meant not what the owner could realize at a forced sale, but “ the price that he could obtain after reasonable and ample time, such as would ordinarily be taken by an owner to make sale of like property.” (Little Rock etc. R’y v. Woodruff, 49 Ark. 390; 4 Am. St. Rep. 51.)

In Boom Co. v. Patterson, 98 U. S. 403, it was said: “ The inquiry in such cases must be, what is the property worth iu the market, viewed not merely with reference to the uses to [543]

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Bluebook (online)
34 P. 224, 99 Cal. 538, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-santa-ana-v-harlin-cal-1893.