Hansen v. Carr

238 P. 1048, 73 Cal. App. 511, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5220.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 238 P. 1048 (Hansen v. Carr) 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
Hansen v. Carr, 238 P. 1048, 73 Cal. App. 511, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 240 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

Plaintiff brought this action as a citizen and taxpayer of the county of Humboldt against the county auditor, the county treasurer and six members of the board of supervisors of the county, one of whom had succeeded another during the time over which the controversy extended. The complaint was framed upon the theory that certain illegal claims against the county had beeii authorized by the board of supervisors, audited by the county auditor and paid by the county treasurer. The purpose of the action was threefold: To restrain the allowance, auditing and payment of similar claims against the county; to have an accounting of the moneys paid by virtue of the claims so allowed, audited and paid, and to recover for the benefit of -the county the moneys so found to have been illegally paid. The case comes to us on the amended complaint, to which the demurrers were sustained and upon which judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and the intervener, J. F. Quinn, who came into the proceeding for the purpose of defending against plaintiff’s third alleged cause of action.

This amended complaint contains three distinct and separate causes of action. The first cause involves the claims of three persons who are alleged to have been appointed or employed by the board of supervisors of the county for the purpose of advising and assisting the board in the matter of equalizing and revising property values for the purpose of taxation in the county. The second cause of action involves the legality of the employment of an assistant district attorney. The third cause of action involves the legality of the employment, under a resolution of the board of supervisors, of legal counsel to assist the district attorney in defending certain applications which had been made for the diversion of the water of Trinity River, the Middle Fork of the Eel River and Thatcher and Elk Creeks to places outside of the county of Humboldt, which diversions, it was claimed, would seriously injure the public interests of the *514 county. These three separate and distinct causes of action were all joined in the one complaint, and in each of the three causes of action three distinct grounds for relief were stated: an action for an injunction, an action for an accounting, and an action for the specific recovery of money.

The demurrer of the defendants who were joined in the amended complaint was both general and special. Among the grounds specified in the special demurrer are the want of legal capacity on the part of the plaintiff to maintain the action and the improper union of several causes of action as heretofore pointed out. Upon the grounds assigned in the general demurrer the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer was proper and the failure of the plaintiff to ask leave to amend in this respect justified the entry of judgment in favor of the defendants. In this connection we refer to the absence of any allegation of demand upon or refusal of the district attorney as a duly constituted legal officer of the county to maintain the action for the recovery of the moneys alleged to have been illegally expended and for the prevention of further illegal expenditures. Section 4005b of the Political Code provides that “Whenever any board of supervisors shall, without authority of law, order any money paid as salaries, fees or for any other purpose, and such money shall have been actually paid; . . . the district attorney of such county is hereby empowered, and it is hereby made his imperative duty, to institute suit in the name of the county ... to recover the money so paid, . . . and no order of the board of supervisors therefor shall be necessary to maintain such suit.” The same section authorizes similar proceedings on the part of the district attorney to restrain the payment of such moneys. In Burr v. Board of Supervisors, 96 Cal. 210, 213 [31 Pac. 38, 39], our supreme court affirmed an order of the superior court sustaining a general demurrer to the petition of a taxpayer seeking to review an order of the board of supervisors allowing a certain claim against the county which was alleged to be illegal. The rule of that case is that by virtue of the provisions of section 8 of the County Government Act of 1897 (sec. 4005b, Pol. Code, as quoted above) a plain, speedy and adequate remedy was available to the petitioner by complaint to the district attorney and that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to *515 constitute a cause of action in that it did not show that any information of an alleged wrong had heen laid before the district attorney or that'he had failed to perform his statutory duty. In this connection the supreme court said: “To say the least, the interest which a mere taxpayer has in the matter does not entitle him to bring suit in his own name until after the district attorney has refused to perform the duty enjoined upon him.” In Keith v. Hammel, 29 Cal. App. 131, 135 [154 Pac. 871, 872], in an action in mandamus to compel the sheriff of the county of Los Angeles to pay into the county treasury certain fees which the petition alleged had been illegally retained by the sheriff, the district court of appeal of the second district, following the rule in Burr v. Board of Supervisors, supra, held that the petition failed to state a cause of action because it was not alleged therein that demand had been made upon the proper county officers to commence and prosecute the proceeding and that they had refused to do so. In the Keith case the appellate court referred to section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure, which authorizes a taxpayer’s action against public officers to obtain a judgment restraining and preventing certain described illegal expenditures. The court pointed out the proviso in section 526a to the effect that its provisions did not affect any right of action in favor of a county, city or public officer. It was then said that “Prom the many decisions of the courts of this and other states dealing with this subject, we derive the principle that in the conduct of the ordinary business of a county or city, where the care and protection of the rights of the corporation have been committed, to public officers, the primary right goes with the duty belonging to those officers to control the ordinary business of the corporation without the interference of private citizens, even though they be taxpayers.” It was further said that it was not necessary for the court to determine whether the officers of the county were exercising wise discretion by refusing to commence the action because there was no intimation in the petition that they had refused or neglected to do so. The same may be said as to the amended complaint in the case before us. There is no intimation that the district attorney had refused to institute the action for the recovery of the alleged illegal expenditures and it is not sufficient to say that a demand upon him would have *516 been unavailing because of interest which he may have had in the second and third alleged causes of action. We are not permitted to assume that because he did not commence a similar action he thereby neglected to perform a duty which the statute imposes upon him as the official legal officer of the county. On the other hand we are required to presume that he has performed his official duty until the plaintiff alleges facts to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 1048, 73 Cal. App. 511, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-carr-calctapp-1925.