County of Los Angeles v. Jones

59 P.2d 489, 6 Cal. 2d 695, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 575
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1936
DocketS. F. 15624
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 489 (County of Los Angeles v. Jones) 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
County of Los Angeles v. Jones, 59 P.2d 489, 6 Cal. 2d 695, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 575 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This proceeding was instituted to test the validity and constitutionality of the 1935 amendment (Stats. 1935, p. 1999) to the “Assessment Bond Refunding Act of 1933”. In the year 1931 the legislature passed an act providing for the refunding of certain classes of improvement bonds (Stats. 1931, p. 1861.) This act was declared unconstitutional by this court in the case of County of San Diego v. Childs, 217 Cal. 109 [17 Pac. (2d) 734], on the ground that it impaired the contract rights of the landowners by subjecting them to certain burdens not imposed upon them at the time the original bonds were issued. In 1933 the legislature enacted a statute along the same general lines of, but much broader in scope than, the act of 1931, declared unconstitutional in the Childs case. This act is known as the “Assessment Bond Refunding Act of 1933” (Stats. 1933, p. 1915). We will refer to this act hereinafter as the Refunding Act of 1933. It was also declared unconstitutional by this court in the case of County of Los Angeles v. Rockhold, 3 Cal. (2d) 192 [44 Pac. (2d) 340, 100 A. L. *699 R. 149], on the ground that it impaired the contract rights of both the landowners and the bondholders. It impaired the rights of the former by subjecting them, without their consent, to certain burdens not imposed upon them by the act under which the bonds were originally issued, and it impaired the rights of the bondholders by materially changing the form of their security without their consent. The amendment of 1935 was designed to meet the objections to the 1933 act, which this court held in the Rockhold case were fatal to its validity. It will not be necessary for us to again review the legislative history of this state relative to the formation of special assessment districts for the purpose of paying for improvements therein constructed by the issuance of bonds against the property within said districts. Nor need we refer to the decisions of this and the appellate courts of this state in which the various acts of the legislature have been reviewed and the law applicable thereto construed and applied. These matters are thoroughly covered in our decision in the Rockhold ease, which should be read and considered in connection with our discussion of the questions involved in the present proceedings.

The purpose of the legislation enacted by the three statutes just referred to was an attempt on the part of the legislature to relieve the situation existing in a large number of improvement districts in the state where improvement bonds have been issued and made payable by the levy of an ad valorem tax upon the property in the entire district. The condition brought about by this system of taxation is aptly described in the Rockhold case. The plan proposed by each of said relief or refunding statutes was to eliminate the ad valorem method of taxation and substitute in its place, under conditions set forth in said respective statutes, the system in vogue in many improvement districts, of a specific assessment upon each parcel of land within the district in proportion to the benefits which such parcel receives by reason of the improvement. This assessment, under said refunding statutes, in ease it is not paid in cash, is to be evidenced by a bond issued against the specific parcel of land described in said assessment. The 1931 act was made applicable only to bonds issued under the Acquisition and Improvement Act of 1925. The two later acts were made applicable to all improvement districts where the *700 bonds issued were made payable by the levy of the ad valorem tax.

The refunding proceedings now under review, like those considered in the Eoekhold case, were instituted to refund bonds of Improvement District No. 67 of the County of Los Angeles. The same conditions existed in said district at the time said refunding proceedings were instituted as were shown to exist at the time the refunding proceedings involved in the Eoekhold case were instituted as set forth in the decision in that case, except that the amount of delinquency on the bonds of said district had increased from the sum of $43,185.26, the amount delinquent at the time the proceedings in the Eoekhold case were instituted, to the present sum of $45,512.50.

The present refunding proceedings were commenced by the adoption by the board of supervisors on the 18th day of November, 1935, of a resolution declaring its intention to refund the outstanding indebtedness of Acquisition and Improvement District No. 67, pursuant to the provision of the Eefunding Act of 1933 as amended by Statutes of 1935, chapter 729 thereof. The resolution set forth all the requirements of the statutes then in force, and no question is raised as to any informality, irregularity or illegality existing in said resolution, and we will therefore assume its correctness. The plan proposed by said resolution provided that the County of Los Angeles would pay one-third of said delinquency, the bondholders would forego and cancel one-third of the amount due them upon the bonds of said district, and specific lien bonds would be issued and sold to pay the other third of said delinquency. The resolution fixed a time and place when and where any objections against the proposed refunding plan might be made by any person interested or by any owner of property within said district. At the time fixed for the hearing of said matter, no protest or objection having been made to the proposed refunding plan, it was ordered by the board of supervisors of said county that the refunding of the outstanding indebtedness of said district be made in accordance with said resolution of intention. It was further ordered at said hearing that the county surveyor of said county make a diagram of the property upon which a reassessment was to be levied and prepared a reassessment for the purpose of refunding the outstanding indebtedness of *701 said district in pursuance of the Refunding Act of 1933 as amended in 1935. The county surveyor refused to comply with this order and this proceeding was instituted for the purpose of compelling compliance on the part of said county surveyor with said order.

The 1933 act was held in the Rockhold ease to be unconstitutional in that it impaired the obligation of the contract of the landowners by changing such owners’ obligations in certain respects without their consent. That act contained a provision that the question of refunding the indebtedness of the district should be submitted to a vote of the electors thereof, and if a majority of the qualified electors voting at such election voted in favor of such proposition, then the legislative body which ordered the holding of the election would have jurisdiction to proceed with the refunding of such indebtedness as provided in said act. It was contended by the. petitioner in said action that as such an election was held in said district and a majority of the qualified electors thereof voting at such election voted in favor of the proposition to refund said indebtedness, the non-consenting landowners were bound by the majority vote cast at such election. We disagreed with this contention for the reason that the original bonds of Acquisition and Improvement District No. 67 were not issued in response to or under any provision of law calling for a majority vote of the electors of said district and, therefore, the rule in Mulcahy v.

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Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 489, 6 Cal. 2d 695, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-los-angeles-v-jones-cal-1936.