Dumbarton Land & Improvement Co. v. Murphy

163 P. 866, 32 Cal. App. 626, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 565
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1777.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 P. 866 (Dumbarton Land & Improvement Co. v. Murphy) 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
Dumbarton Land & Improvement Co. v. Murphy, 163 P. 866, 32 Cal. App. 626, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 565 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and order denying a new trial in a proceeding wherein the petitioner and appellant herein applied to the superior court of Alameda County for a writ of certiorari, in which it was sought to have reviewed proceedings of the bo'ard of supervisors of said county in relation to the formation of the Alameda Water District and the inclusion of the lands of the petitioner within the boundaries of said district.

The facts, in so far as they relate to the initial steps taken by the said board of supervisors looking to the organization of said district, are practically undisputed, and are briefly these: On November 3, 1913, there was presented to said board of supervisors a petition praying for the incorporation and organization of a county water district under the provisions of an act of the legislature .approved on June 10, 1913, providing for the organization of such districts. Said act provides that prior to the presentation of such petition notice of the time and place of the hearing thereon signed by a certain number of those who are seeking to form such water district, was first to be given for the time and in the manner required by said act. The record herein shows that such notice purports to have been given, wherein the time and place of hearing upon said petition was fixed for November 3, 1913, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. at the office of said board of supervisors “in the county courthouse of the city of Oakland.” The record further discloses that on the said third day of November, 1913, the said board of supervisors met at the hour appointed in said notice at the meeting-rooms of said board in the hall of records of said county, and that at said meeting the hearing upon said petition was regularly continued to the tenth day of November, 1913, and was then again continued to the twelfth day of November, 1913, and then to the seventeenth day of November, 1913, and thence to the twenty-fifth day of November, 1913, *628 on which last-named day a hearing was had thereon, and that after such hearing, and after the board had excepted from the first named boundaries of the proposed water district certain lands of the petitioner herein and of certain other persons, which were shown to be covered with water, but had included the portion of the lands described in the petition herein, the board ordered an election to be held within the proposed district to determine whether it was the will of the electors therein that it should be organized under the provisions of the said act; that such election was called and held on December 30, 1913, at which it was voted that said district should be organized. On the twenty-ninth day of December, 1913, the day before said election, the petitioners herein applied to the superior court of said county for said writ of review, and on said day obtained said writ, directing the board of supervisors and the members thereof to certify their proceedings in said matter to said court. This was done, and upon the hearing thereon the judgment and order were made from which this appeal has been taken.

The first contention of the appellant is that the board of supervisors never acquired jurisdiction over the matter of the formation of the said water district by reason of certain alleged irregularities and defects in the preliminary proceedings, and chiefly in the notice of the hearing upon the petition by those who were seeking to have the water district created. It appears from the record that subsequent to the inception of said proceedings for the formation of the district and to the election held pursuant thereto, and to the application for the present writ of review but prior to the hearing thereon, the legislature by an act approved April 10, 1915, undertook to validate the proceedings for the formation of said district, and it is conceded by the appellant that this validating act of the legislature did in fact operate to cure all irregularities in the said proceedings with the exception of the two jurisdictional defects which are insisted upon on this appeal. The first of these consists in the alleged defect in the notice of the hearing upon the petition for the formation of said district.

It is contended by the appellant that said notice of hearing specified as the place where such hearing would be held “the office of said board in the county courthouse in the city of Oakland,” whereas the board of supervisors has no office *629 in the county courthouse in the city of Oakland, and did not in fact meet there at the time of the first or any hearing upon said petition. . It appears, however, from the record herein, that the regular place of meeting of the board of supervisors of Alameda County is in the building known as the hall of records, which stands across the street from the structure commonly designated as the courthouse, but which building is occupied by a number of the county offices, such as clerk, recorder, auditor, treasurer and the board of supervisors. It is a matter of common knowledge—in that county at least—that said building is so located, occupied, and used, and that it is in fact one of the group of buildings in the city of Oakland devoted to such official activities and uses as are commonly conducted in courthouses. Moreover the record discloses that the petitioner herein appeared at the said meeting place of said board of supervisors at the time designated in said notice for the first hearing upon said petition, and also appeared and participated in the subsequent hearings thereon at said place without making any objection to the form or sufficiency of said notice, and was therefore in no way misled by its terms.

In view of the foregoing facts we find no merit in the present contention of the appellant as to the insufficiency of said notice to give the board of supervisors jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter thus brought before it.

The second contention of the appellant is that the lands of the petitioner which were finally included within the boundaries of the said water district, as the same was organized and incorporated under the orders of said board, were of such nature and character that they could not derive any benefit from the construction and operation of the system of waterworks to be provided and operated through the creation of said water district. It is strenuously argued by the appellant that if its lands are of the character above indicated, the board of supervisors would have no authority or jurisdiction to include said lands within said district, and hence that its proceedings and orders culminating in the inclusion of appellant’s said lands therein were and each of them is void, and that this being so, the aforesaid act of the legislature attempting to validate said proceedings was ineffectual for the reason that to give such effect to it would be to take away from the appellant property without due *630 process of law.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P. 866, 32 Cal. App. 626, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumbarton-land-improvement-co-v-murphy-calctapp-1917.