Controversy Between California Toll Bridge Authority & City & County of San Francisco v. Wentworth

298 P. 485, 212 Cal. 298, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 625
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1931
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14166.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 298 P. 485 (Controversy Between California Toll Bridge Authority & City & County of San Francisco v. Wentworth) 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
Controversy Between California Toll Bridge Authority & City & County of San Francisco v. Wentworth, 298 P. 485, 212 Cal. 298, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 625 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

*300 WASTE, C. J.

The California Toll Bridge Authority, created by act of the legislature (Stats. 1929, chap. 763, p. 1489), has obtained an alternative writ of mandate requiring the respondent, as auditor of the City and County of San Francisco, to audit and approve, or show cause why he should not audit and approve, a demand for the sum of $5,000, which amount, it is alleged, has been appropriated by the board of supervisors of the city and county for the purpose of aiding in meeting the necessary costs of making a survey and preparing plans, specifications and estimates for the construction of a bridge across San Francisco bay between San Francisco and Oakland. A demand in due form for the sum of $5,000 was presented to the auditor, who refused to approve the claim on the ground that the appropriation is an illegal and unlawful appropriation of public funds, because it is in “aid of defraying preliminary expenses leading up to an issue of so-called revenue bonds to the extent of many millions of dollars under purported authority” of the act of the legislature above referred to, and therefore a violation of section 1, article XYI, of the state Constitution, which provides, in part: “The legislature shall not, in any manner, create any debt or debts, liability or liabilities, which shall, singly or in the aggregate, with any previous debts or liabilities, exceed the sum of three hundred thousand dollars, except in case of war to repel invasion or suppress insurrection,” without first submitting the particular proposition to a vote of the people.

The act in question, which marks a complete departure from the old system of constructing and acquiring toll bridges in connection with the state’s highways, declares it to be the policy of the state of California to acquire and own all toll bridges situated upon or along any part of the highways of the state, with the end in view of ultimately eliminating all toll charges thereon. It creates the California Toll Bridge Authority, a public agency of the state, the members of which are the Governor, lieutenant-governor, director of the department of public works, director of the department of finance and the chairman of the California highway commission. The Authority has power under the act, operating through the department of public *301 works, to build or acquire toll bridges and other toll highway crossings in the name of the state of California. When the Toll Bridge Authority determines to build or acquire such toll bridges, it may authorize the issuance, in its own name, of revenue bonds to provide the funds for such acquisition or construction, and fix the rates or tolls on such bridges, and in doing so shall give due consideration to the cost of operating and maintaining the bridges, and the amount required to meet the bond obligations. The toll so fixed shall never be less than sufficient to meet the operating expenses and the bond obligations. Bonds issued under the provisions of the act “shall not constitute or be a debt or general obligation of the state, and the payment of both principal and interest of all such bonds shall be secured only by the tolls or other revenues collected from the particular bridge or bridges or other toll highway crossings for which such bonds were issued, and shall be paid from such tolls or revenues, or from such other contributions or appropriations as may be made available under the terms of this Act”. (Sec. 10.) The bonds must contain on their face a recital to this effect.

Finally, it is provided that political subdivisions of the state mentioned in the act may, upon the request of the department of public works, or of the Authority, advance or contribute money, rights of way, labor, materials, and other property, toward the expense of building, acquiring, and maintaining the bridges, and for preliminary surveys and the preparation of plans and estimates of cost therefor, and other preliminary expenses. It was under this provision that the board of supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco, by resolution, appropriated the sum of $5,000, which is the subject of the controversy now before the court.

Following the enactment of the statute, the President of the United States and the Governor of California appointed a commission, known as the “Hoover-Young San Francisco Bay Bridge Commission”, to make a study of state and interurban traffic needs across the San Francisco bay, with due regard to the needs of national defense and navigation. This commission rendered its final report and recommendation to the President and to the Governor, and the depart *302 ment of public works, at the request of the commission, made its report and recommendation of a bridge site to the California Toll Bridge Authority, which latter body approved the recommendation and authorized and directed the board of public works to make the necessary surveys and to prepare plans, specifications, and estimates for a bridge across San Francisco bay as recommended. The board of public works then made a request of the City and County of San Francisco that it contribute funds in aid of the cost of making the necessary surveys and preparing the plans, specifications, and estimates for the bridge, and it was in response to that request that the resolution appropriating $5,000, payable to the Toll' Bridge Authority, was adopted by the board of supervisors, and the claim thereunder presented to the respondent auditor for approval, which approval the auditor refuses to give.

Respondent’s objection rests mainly upon the finding of the department of public works, in its recommendation to the Toll Bridge Authority, that the cost of the proposed bridge will be in the neighborhood of $75,000,000. Therefore, he contends, the issuance of revenue bonds to that amount is not only greatly in excess of the $300,000 limit placed by the Constitution, but the bonds, if issued, will constitute debts or liabilities of the state of California not authorized by vote of the people.

We are of the view that the language of section 10 of the act already quoted completely disposes of the question now before us, and that the contention of the respondent cannot be sustained. The overwhelming weight of judicial opinion in this country is to the effect that bonds, or other forms of obligation issued by states, cities, counties, political subdivisions, or public agencies by legislative sanction and authority, if such particular bonds or obligations are secured by and payable only from the revenues to be realized from a particular utility or property, acquired with the proceeds of the bonds or obligations, do not constitute debts of the particular state, political subdivision, or public agency issuing them, within the definition of “debts” as used in the constitutional provisions of the states having limitations as to the incurring of indebtedness. The decisions we shall presently cite clearly establish that to be so.

*303 While this court has had little occasion to consider the “revenue bonds” method of financing public utilities and structures, there is some precedent in this state, and we are not without ample authority from other sections of the country, where the question has, on repeated occasions, engaged the attention of other courts of last resort, notably, New York, West Virginia, Alabama, Kentucky and Arkansas.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P. 485, 212 Cal. 298, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/controversy-between-california-toll-bridge-authority-city-county-of-san-cal-1931.