Harter v. Barkley

112 P. 556, 158 Cal. 742, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 440
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1910
DocketL.A. No. 2495.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 112 P. 556 (Harter v. Barkley) 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
Harter v. Barkley, 112 P. 556, 158 Cal. 742, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 440 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Appeal from a judgment entered after a demurrer to a petition for writ of mandate had been sustained without leave to amend.

The matter involved is the validity or invalidity of a certain ordinance of the city of Redondo Beach. The petitioner alleged the existence of a public sewer in front of his property in said city; and after reciting the pertinent provisions of the ordinance above mentioned, averred that he applied to the trustees of Redondo Beach and the plumbing inspector of said city offered to make connections between his property and said public sewer in a manner and with materials prescribed by ordinances and regulations of the said city, agreed to pay fifty cents for a permit to do the work, and promised to do all things required by the said trustees except the pay *744 inent of five dollars for the sewer fund and twenty dollars to the city or its agent for doing the work. He further recited in his petition the refusal of the trustees to comply with his request; stated that the charges for sewer fund and construction were unreasonable and without authority of law; and asked for a writ of mandate directing the issuance of the desired permit.

The ordinance which we are here considering, after providing that no connection shall be made with any public sewer-of the city of Redondo Beach until a permit has been obtained from the plumbing inspector, and that all connections must be made pursuant to sections 15 and 16 thereof, declares that a fee of $5.50 shall be collected by the inspector for each permit for a sewer connection, of which fifty cents shall be a Ifee for the issuance of the said permit and five dollars shall be paid into the sewer fund of the city. It does not appear in the petition what use is made of the sewer fund. Sections 15 and 16 are as follows:—■

“The city of Redondo Beach, its duly authorized agents, servants, or employees, shall have exclusive right to make connections with the public sewer of Redondo Beach, and for laying laterals therefrom through the streets and alleys of said city to the property line.
“Upon written request by the owner of any property who (has first obtained a permit for a sewer connection, as hereinbefore provided, the city of Redondo Beach, its agents, servants or employees shall forthwith make a connection with said sewer at the nearest Y branch, and place a house connection sewer therefrom to the property line of said owner. For making the connection with said sewer and laying house connection sewer therefrom to the property line of said owner, •the said owner of said property shall pay to the authorized, •agent or collector of the said city of Redondo Beach, the sum of $20. Such sum shall be payable as follows: One half (%) upon making application, and the balance ten (10) days after •the completion of the said work.”

The remaining sections declare it unlawful for any person to make any connection with a public sewer except as provided in the ordinance, and prescribe a penalty for a violation of any of the provisions of that by-law. The regulation of the right of laying sewers in public streets is unquestionably a *745 power conferred upon municipalities, partly by virtue of the provisions of section 11 of article XI of the constitution of California. The proper protection of the public health depends very largely upon the maintenance of a thorough and sanitary sewer system and the restoration of the streets after the laying of pipes is an important subject of police control. In many cities the carelessness of contractors, both in the work of connecting private residences with public sewers and in the filling of the trenches after the laying of the pipe, has become a matter of great scandal and has in some instances led to the adoption of very stringent rules for the regulation of sewer laying. It has been held, and we think very properly, that ordinances of.a municipal corporation providing for the construction, maintenance, and repairs of sewers and drains are to be sustained as a valid exercise of police power. (Taylor v. Crawford, 72 Ohio St. 560, [74 N. E. 1065].)

The power of a city to construct sewers and drains is also incident to the power to construct and maintain streets. (Kramer v. Los Angeles, 147 Cal. 674, [82 Pac. 334].)

The city of Redondo Beach is one of the sixth class and as such has power “to construct, establish and maintain drains and sewers.” (Municipal Corporation Act, par. 862, [Gen. Laws, 1910, p. 847].)

The power of maintenance of public sewers carries with it the power to provide reasonable regulations for the tapping and connection with such sewers. Upon this subject Judge Dillon in his work on Municipal Corporations (vol. 2, sec. 805) thus expresses the rule:

“Authority to a municipal corporation, by its charter, to repair and keep in order its streets, is sufficient, without special grant, to authorize it to construct dravns and sewers; and, when constructed, the corporation will incidentally possess the power to pass ordinances regulating their use and the price at which private persons may tap them, and also to protect them against injury or invasion.”

As we have before observed, the use to which the fee for connecting the sewer is applied cannot be learned from the, pleadings. We must therefore conclude that the “sewer fund” mentioned in the ordinance is lawfully expended for the benefit of the defendant’s property as well as in the interest of other owners of realty within the city. We know of no case *746 in which such a reasonable charge (and we cannot say that five dollars is an unreasonable imposition) has not been sustained. In many well-considered cases such power has been upheld. (Van Wagoner v. Paterson, 67 N. J. L. 455, [51 Atl. 922] ; Patton v. Springfield, 99 Mass. 632 ; Fergus Falls v. D. C. Edison, 94 Minn. 121, [102 N. W. 218, 70 L. R. A. 238].)

We next come to the consideration of the right of the city to reserve to itself the exclusive privilege of building the lateral sewer from the property line to the public sewer and making a uniform charge therefor. The petition shows that some lots are nearer to the sewer than others and that, therefore, the expense to the city is not the same in every case. We cannot say that this fact alone makes the ordinance so unreasonable as to be void. (Hellman v. Shoulters, 114 Cal. 146, [44 Pac. 915, 45 Pac. 1057] ; In re Zhizhuzza, 147 Cal. 334, [81 Pac. 955].)

It seems to us that the case last cited furnishes an excellent authority both for a uniform charge and for the reservation by the city to itself of the right of laying sewers in its streets from the property lines to the main public sewers. The ordinance considered in that case had reference to the disposal of .garbage by the city’s agents. Speaking of the alleged unfairness in the difference of rates charged owners of hotels and householders, this court said, as might well be said here: “A municipal ordinance must be very clearly obnoxious to such objection before it will be declared invalid.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 556, 158 Cal. 742, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harter-v-barkley-cal-1910.