Coleman v. Spring Construction Co.

182 P. 473, 41 Cal. App. 201, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 410
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2819.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 P. 473 (Coleman v. Spring Construction Co.) 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
Coleman v. Spring Construction Co., 182 P. 473, 41 Cal. App. 201, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 410 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

NOURSE, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendants in an action to quiet title to *203 certain lots in the city of Larkspur. Plaintiffs attack the validity of certain street improvement proceedings which resulted in the levy of an assessment and the issuance of bonds thereunder creating a first lien upon the property involved. They asked for judgment declaring the assessment void, canceling the bonds, and quieting their title. At the close of the trial the action was dismissed as to all defendants except the Spring Construction Company, which performed the street work, the city of Larkspur and its treasurer, all of whom are the respondents on this appeal.

The facts are that on April 7, 1915, the city council of Larkspur adopted its resolution of intention for the purpose of improving Baltimore Avenue under the “Improvement Act of 1911” (Stats. 1911, p. 730). There being no newspaper published and circulated in the city of Larkspur, copies of this resolution were posted in three public places and kept so posted for a period of fourteen days. Eighteen days after the expiration of the fourteen days of posting thp city council adopted its resolution ordering the work to be done. On April 16th the superintendent of streets posted notices of the intended improvement along the line of the contemplated work. Thereafter and on May 12th sealed proposals were solicited in due time and order, a contract was executed with the Spring Construction Company, the work done, inspected, and accepted.

The assessment was levied January 16, 1916, to cover the amounts due, a warrant was attached to the assessment demanding various sums and advising the owners that nine year serial bonds would be issued for assessments remaining unpaid. This warrant was filed and recorded and thereafter delivered to the contractor. The assessment was read upon the property, demand was made, and the warrant was returned unsatisfied to the superintendent of streets within thirty days after its date with the return indorsed thereon. On March 1, 1916, after the expiration of the full thirty days from the date of said warrant and the recordation of the return thereof, bonds were issued by the city treasurer covering the assessments unpaid.

No complaint, objection, protest, or appeal was ever made or filed by the owners in writing or otherwise at any stage of the proceedings.

*204 Appellants advance five points of attack 'upon the validity of the proceedings and thea bonds issued by the city council. These will be treated in the order presented.

1. Appellants insist that the Improvement Act is not applicable to Larkspur because no paper is published and circulated in that city. The argument is that as section 6 of the act gives to the property owners fifteen days after the second publication of the copy of the resolution of intention within which to file their protests, and that where this notice is given by posting instead of publication in a newspaper there is no time fixed for the beginning of this period, the city council cannot acquire jurisdiction of any of the proceedings leading to the improvement of streets under this act if the preliminary notice is not given by publication in a newspaper.

[1] But the act is expressly made applicable to all municipalities in the state (section 1), and notice by posting in lieu of publication is provided for where no newspaper is printed or circulated in the city (section 79). The latter section also provides that “no publication, or notice, other than that provided for in this act, shall be necessary to give validity to any of the proceedings.” The . word “notice” above quoted refers to posting, and the clear purpose of the section' is to substitute posting for printing in a newspaper in cities where no newspaper is published or circulated.

[2] In this connection appellants urge that as section 79 permits posting in cities only where no newspaper is “printed or circulated,” if any newspaper of any character is distributed in the city posting cannot be had. The entire proceedings following the adoption of the resolution of intention are based upon the publication of a copy of the resolution in a newspaper “published and circulated” in said city. The same language is used throughout the act where the character of publication is specified. Therefore, when by section 79 of the act posting is permitted in lieu of publication, this method of giving notice is only available as a substitute for the character of publication required by the act. As the act does not in any single section permit the publication of any of the proceedings in a newspaper merely circulated or distributed in the city and not published therein, manifestly it is only in a city where no *205 newspaper is published as well as circulated that notice by posting alone can be given.

2. The sécond proposition is based upon the theory that the city council did not acquire jurisdiction to proceed because the running of the period within which protests could be filed was not fixed. As to this, appellants rely upon the provisions of sections 6 and 7 of the act, which read in part as follows:

(Section 6.) “At any time within fifteen days after the date of the second publication of the resolution of intention, . . . any owner of property liable to be assessed . . . may make written protest against the proposed work.”

(Section 7.) 1 ‘ When no protests have been delivered to the clerk . . . within fifteen days after the-date of the second publication of the resolution of intention . . . the city council shall be deemed to have acquired jurisdiction to order the proposed improvements.”

In a city where a newspaper is published and circulated a copy of this resolution must be published twice. This may be in a daily, semi-weekly, or a weekly newspaper. The publications may thus appear two, four, or eight days apart, according to the kind of newspaper designated by the city council for the purpose. Protests may be filed within fifteen days after the second or last publication. This time may, therefore, be sixteen, nineteen, or twenty-three days after the first publication. The time within which protest may be filed is thus fixed by the statute in an indefinite way, depending upon the periods of publication, and no notice of the time or place within which such protests may be filed was required to be given by the city council.

[3] All that the statute required the city council to do in so far as the giving of notice of the preliminary resolution is concerned was, at the time these proceedings were had, to publish twice, or to post and to keep posted for the same length of time as publication should be had, a copy of its resolution of intention. As under any circumstances the greatest period of publication would be eight days, the demands of the statute are satisfied if the notices are posted and kept posted for a like period. There is thus no more uncertainty as to the time within which protests may be filed where the notice is given by posting than where it is *206 given by publication in a newspaper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P. 473, 41 Cal. App. 201, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-spring-construction-co-calctapp-1919.