Fogg v. Perris Irrigation District

97 P. 316, 154 Cal. 209, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 323
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 2032.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 97 P. 316 (Fogg v. Perris Irrigation District) 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
Fogg v. Perris Irrigation District, 97 P. 316, 154 Cal. 209, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 323 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The above-entitled cases were before this court on former appeals from judgments in favor of the defendant and intervener in each ease, given upon sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. Those judgments were reversed. (People v. Perris Irr. Dist., 142 Cal. 601, [76 Pac. 381]; Fogg v. Perris Irr. Dist., 142 Cal. 18, [76 Pac. 1127].)

Upon the going down of the remittitur the defendant and the intervener, respectively, filed answers in each ease, the two cases were tried and submitted on the same evidence, findings and judgment in each case were made and given for the defendant and intervener, and motions of the respective plaintiffs for a new trial were denied. Appeals were then taken to this court in each case from the judgment and from the order. By stipulation all these appeals have been presented and are to be decided upon the record in the case of Fogg v. Perris Irrigation District, and we will in this opinion refer solely to that case.

The object of the action, as shown in the complaint, is to set aside two decrees of the superior court of San Diego County approving, confirming, and declaring valid the proceedings for the formation and organization of the Perris Irrigation District, under the act commonly known as the “Wright Act” (Stats. 1887, p. 29). The first decree was made on December 13, 1890, and it confirms the proceedings up to the order for the sale of certain bonds. The second was made on December 8, 1892, and it purports to confirm, not only the original proceedings for the formation of the district, but also subsequent proceedings eliminating and adding certain territory, and to approve bond sales made after the first decree. Both decrees appear to have been made in pursuance of the act of 1889 (Stats. 1889. p. 212). The attacks upon these decrees are based in part on the ground that the court did not possess or acquire jurisdiction to try the actions and give the judgments. As to the second decree it is also claimed that it was obtained by fraud.

Upon the question of. jurisdiction to pronounce the decrees, the first contention of the appellant is that the proceedings for the organization of the district were absolutely void in the ex *212 treme sense, that they were of no effect whatever, hence, that there was at the time no such district in existence, no subject-matter upon which the court could act in confirmation proceedings, and, therefore, that there could be no jurisdiction or power to confirm the proceedings or declare the validity of a district which had no legal existence. It is argued that if the court had power, in confirmation proceedings under the act of 1889, to make a lawfully organized district out of a wholly void previous attempt to form such a district, it would, in effect, be creating a district by a mere decree of confirmation, a thing which the act of 1889 does not contemplate or authorize; that the purpose of that act was merely to confirm proceedings and cure irregularities, errors, and omissions in the record thereof, but that, if the original proceeding was void for lack of jurisdiction in the board of supervisors, it is beyond the power of cure by means of a judgment confirming and declaring it valid. So far as this argument applies to a lack of jurisdiction of the original proceeding which appears upon the face of the record thereof, we can perceive no good answer to the argument. Respondent makes no attempt to answer it. Without deciding whether it is sound or not, we will for the purposes of the case assume the contention to be thus far correct.

We are of the opinion that the record of the original proceeding does not, on its face, disclose a want of jurisdiction. The only defect claimed rests upon the assertion that no petition for the organization of the district was ever presented to the board of supervisors, and that no notice of the time when a petition would be presented was ever given. The truth of this assertion depends upon the force and effect of the papers that were presented to the board. It appears that the petition and notice for the organization of the district were both contained in a single document. This document began as follows:—

“Notice is hereby given that the following petition for the organization of an irrigation district in the counties of San Bernardino and San Diego, to be known as the Perris Irrigation District, will be presented to the board of supervisors of San Bernardino County, state of California, at the court house in the city of San Bernardino, at a regular meeting of said board on the 7th day of April, 1890, at 10 o’clock a. m.

*213 “Petition eor Perris Irrigation District.”

Then follows a petition, in regular form, for the organization of the proposed district, at the end whereof is subscribed the genuine signatures of fifty-five persons who, in the petition, declare that they are freeholders owning lands in the district. A copy of this entire document was published, as the law requires, in a newspaper of the county for two weeks before the time named for its presentation. At the time thus fixed for the presentation, the original document in its entirety was presented to the board as a petition for the organization of the district, and as such it was received and acted on by the board, and the district was formed upon that as a foundation.

The contention is that this document could not legally perform the double office of notice and petition; that it was either the one or the other, but could not be both. It is urged that to constitute a valid notice and petition there must be two documents, one constituting the notice and the other the petition, and each signed by the petitioners. The argument is that as this document begins as a notice it cannot be construed to be anything else, and that, as it has been held that the notice published must bear upon its face the signatures of the petitioners, or show that it was issued by them or given under their authority (In re Central Irr. Dist., 117 Cal. 392, [49 Pac. 354]), it can constitute nothing but a notice, and that, having served that purpose, it could not afterwards be used as a petition. This argument appears to us to have little force. We can see no legal objection to this method of embodying the notice and petition in one document and using it for each purpose successively. The only notice required is a notice to be published in a newspaper. Necessarily this publication must consist of numerous printed copies, not of the one original. There is nothing in the statutes forbidding such a combination of uses, or prescribing any particular form, either for the petition or for the notice. The document was sufficient in form to answer both purposes. Its contents sufficiently show that the parties who signed it intended that it should be so used. After copies of it were published as a notice, there could be no substantial objection to the presentation of the original to the board as a petition.

*214 The other objection to the jurisdiction of the board did not appear upon the record. It was alleged on the one hand and denied on the other that forty-two of the persons who signed the petition were not bona fide

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 316, 154 Cal. 209, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fogg-v-perris-irrigation-district-cal-1908.