County of Sacramento v. Glann

113 P. 360, 14 Cal. App. 780, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 239
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 714.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 113 P. 360 (County of Sacramento v. Glann) 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
County of Sacramento v. Glann, 113 P. 360, 14 Cal. App. 780, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 239 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from a judgment in favor of the' county of Sacramento condemning certain land for a public highway. The land is located partly in the S. E. ¼ of section 9 and partly in the S. W. ¼ of section 10, T. 5 N., R. 5 E., M. D. M. The said S. E. ¼ was owned by Peter Glann, the estate of Vincent Glann, deceased, and the estate *782 of Daniel Glann, deceased, in equal undivided shares, and the S. W. ¼ belonged to the said estates in equal shares. The action was brought against Peter Glann, individually, and in his representative capacity as executor of each of said estates. The judgment awards to each of the defendants the value of his respective interest in the land condemned and his proper proportion of the damage accruing to the part of the land not sought to be condemned by reason of the severance from the portion condemned and the construction of the road in the manner proposed by plaintiff. It is not disputed that the proceedings before the board of supervisors prior to the report of the viewers were entirely regular, but by reason of said report and the action taken thereon, it is claimed that the supervisors were deprived of jurisdiction to proceed any further toward condemnation. The basis for the contention lies in the fact that the viewers reported Peter Glann as the • owner of the land and designated him as the one to whom the entire damage should be paid for the taking of the property and the construction of the fence. After estimating the amount which should be paid him, they further declared that “Peter G. Glann, over whose land the proposed road is located, opposes the opening of the same, and declines to state the amount of damage to which he would be entitled for the right of way. It will be necessary, therefore, to condemn the right of way required.” The board of supervisors approved said report and ordered that “The amount of damages sustained by Peter Glann, a nonconsenting land owner through whose lands said road runs, is the sum of $623.50, and said sum of $623.50 is hereby awarded to said Peter Glann as such damages. It is further ordered that said sum so fixed and assessed as the amount of damage to said Peter Glann shall be set apart in the county treasury out of the funds of road district No. 5, to be paid to said Peter Glann.” The rightful ownership of the land was set forth in the pleadings and the jury found that “the value of the land sought to be taken by the plaintiff in the S. E. % of section 9 is $50 per acre and the damage to the lands not taken in said S. E. % is five dollars per acre and the value of the land sought to be taken by the plaintiff in the S. W. % of section 10 is fifty dollars per acre and the damage to the lands not taken in said S. W. 14 is nothing.” The number of acres taken in each quarter section *783 appeared and the cost of the construction of the fences was stipulated. The findings and decree of the court followed in accordance with the verdict of the jury and the admitted facts.

Of the two main contentions of appellants, the first is that the board of supervisors should have segregated and set apart to each of the two estates in question the amount to which said estate was entitled, and that “in the absence of such ascertainment, assessment, award and tender, such board was absolutely without jurisdiction to make an order establishing the road or enter the order directing this suit to be brought . . . and there being no valid order establishing the road or directing this action to be brought, no right of action arose in favor of the county, against the estate of Daniel Glann, the estate of Vincent Glann or the successors in interest of either of them.” In support of the position are cited County of Sonoma v. Crozier, 118 Cal. 680, [50 Pac. 845], County of Sutter v. McGriff, 130 Cal. 127, [62 Pac. 412], and Graham v. Bailard, 157 Cal. 96, [106 Pac. 215].

In the first of these was involved a question of pleading, and it was held that “a complaint in an action by a county to condemn the land of the defendant for a private way, which merely avers the filing of a sufficient petition and the giving and approval of the bond, and that afterward such proceedings were had that on a day specified, the board of supervisors of the county, by order duly given and made, directed the district attorney to institute condemnation proceedings, but which fails to state that viewers were appointed, or that they proceeded to lay out the road, or that they made or filed any report, or that the report was approved, or that damages awarded had been tendered to defendant and refused by him, fails to state a cause of action.” The respondent in that ease contended that the foregoing allegations were not necessary, for the reason that section 2690 of the Political Code makes the order directing suit to be brought conclusive as to the «regularity thereof, but the supreme court declared that facts must be alleged showing that the board of supervisors had jurisdiction to make said order and that said provision was not intended to obviate the necessity of pleading or proving the jurisdictional steps but it must be understood as rendering mere irregularities harmless when it appears that the board *784 has the jurisdiction to make the order. No such question can arise here, as the facts showing the compliance of the board with the requirement of the statute are fully pleaded so that it affirmatively appears by the allegations of the complaint that the board of supervisors acted within their statutory authority in making the order directing the district attorney to begin condemnation proceedings.

The judgment in the MeGriff case, supra, was reversed for the reason that there was an entire failure of the evidence to show that there was any compliance with the order • of the board directing that the amount of the damages assessed and awarded be set apart in the treasury of the county “out of the proper fund” to be paid in accordance with law. The supreme court properly said: “The statutory provisions relative to this matter provide a special form of tender which must be made to the land owner before suit in condemnation may be begun. It is essential, since the law has prescribed it, that the requisites of such tender shall be strictly complied with. In effecting the tender it is required that the amount of money shall be absolutely set apart in the treasury and held for the full period of ten days subject to the demand of the rightful owner of the land. ’ ’ It was admitted by respondent that there was no evidence that the money had been set apart and thereby made available for the payment of the damages awarded, and the only reason urged by respondent why the point should not be accorded decisive significance was that it would be presumed that the treasurer had done his duty. To this suggestion the court very aptly made reply that “No presumption can be indulged in to the effect that at the time of the order there was actually money in the proper fund sufficient and available for the indicated purposes.” It is well to observe that the sequestration of the money in the treasury is an important step in the proceeding, and no owner of property should be held in default and subject to an action of condemnation until he has been tendered the money to which the viewers have found that he is entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P. 360, 14 Cal. App. 780, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-sacramento-v-glann-calctapp-1910.