Higgins v. City of San Diego

58 P. 700, 126 Cal. 303, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 718
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1899
DocketL.A. No. 577.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 58 P. 700 (Higgins v. City of San Diego) 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
Higgins v. City of San Diego, 58 P. 700, 126 Cal. 303, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 718 (Cal. 1899).

Opinions

CHIPMAN, C.

—Plaintiffs bring the action for themselves and all other taxpayers of the city of San Diego. Certain de *306 fendants answered the complaint and the defendant, the,water company, filed a cross-complaint. Upon the filing of the answer the plaintiffs dismissed their action, “leaving the contest to be waged between the water company on one side and tlie city and its officers on the other.” The issues are fully stated in the opinion of the chief justice on the first appeal (Higgins v. San Diego Water Co., 118 Cal. 524); from which it will lie seen that the cause was tried upon the issues presented by the' cross-complaint of the water company. The court held that the water company could not recover- except for the reasonable value of the use of its plant during the time it had been used and held by the city. The demand of the water company is for a money judgment, the amount o-f which is the only question to be determined. This amount will depend upon whether the » claims of the water company accrued at a time when there were unappropriated revenues to meet them, and the answer to the question, When did the claims of the water company equal the amount "of unappropriated revenues for the respective fiscal years during which the city had the use of the water company’s plant? In the opinion filed by the court, on rehearing, the principle that no indebtedness or liability incurred in any one year shall be paid out of the ordinary income and revenue of any future year, as held in McBean v. Fresno, 112 Cal. 159, 53 Am. St. Rep. 191, and other cases, was reaffirmed; but it was suggested that “future provision might be made for the payment of a debt, although there might be no revenues of the fiscal year in which the debt was incurred out of which it could be satisfied—as, for instance, by the adoption by the people oE a proposal to pay it, or by other methods that might possibly be suggested.” The opinion first rendered was also modified in this, that it was held that the court could not order judgment upon the findings for the reasonable value to the city of the water company’s plant and of the water supplied, “because it docs no t* appear that the claims o-f the water company all accrued at a time when there were unappropriated revenues for the respective fiscal years during which the city had the use of the water company’s plant.”

The plaintiffs having dismissed their action, and this court having decided that the portion only of the cross-complaint of *307 the water company counting on quantum valebat presented any ground for relief, the cause came on for hearing before the Honorable J. W. Hughes and E. S. Torrance, judges of the superior ■court, sitting in Bank, upon the motion of the water company for an order that the judges of this court secure the services of some other judge of another county to preside at the trial of said cause, or that the judges of this court change the place of trial of the said action to some other county. The motion was heard upon the affidavit of J. M. Howells, president of the defendant water company, in its support, and upon the counter-affidavit of H. E. Doolittle, Esq., one of the attorneys for the ■city, and upon the oral examination of affiant Howells, called .as a witness by the city. The court made an order denying the motion, from which the water company appeals. The .grounds of the motion were: 1. The judges were disqualified by reason of pecuniary interest in the Tesult of the action; and 2. That they were disqualified by reason of bias and prejudice ■entertained toward appellant.

1. Upon the question of interest the undisputed statement in Howells’ affidavit is, that there are but two judges of the superior court in San Diego county, and that they “are, and ■each of them is, and was at the times mentioned in the pleadings in this action, resident property owners and taxpayers in said city of San Diego, and their and each of their property in said city will be liable to taxation for any amount that may be found due the water company, if it shall be held that a tax ■shall be levied therefor,” and said judges are, therefore, disqualified to try the action.

The inquiry to be made is, whether there were unappropriated revenues to meet the water company’s claim, and to ascertain “as the basis of its judgment against the city just when the claims •of the water company .... equaled the amount of unappropriated revenues for the respective fiscal years during which the city had the use of the water company’s plant.”

The question as to the liability of the city has already been determined on the first appeal contingent upon the fact that when the claim accrued there were funds in the treasury applicable to its payment. The water company will be entitled to •a general judgment, and it was so ordered by this court, should *308 the facts show the legal basis, whether or not the funds are. still available to pay it. The amount of the judgment—that is, the reasonable value of the use of the water company’s-plant—must be determined by the trial court and the further-fact as to the basis of the liability. In such state of the case, is the judge disqualified because he is a taxpayer?

The rule was thus stated in Meyer v. San Diego, 121 Cal. 102, 66 Am. St. Rep. 22: “Where, in any litigation, there is any certain, definable, pecuniary or proprietary interest or relation which will be directly affected by the judgment that may be: rendered, in every such case, without exception, so far as an exhaustive examination of the authorities goes, the disqualification of the judge is held to exist.”

In Oakland v. Oakland Water Front Co., 118 Cal. 249, the-court said: “In our opinion, the word ‘interested,’ as used in the-section of the code relied on (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 170), embraces only an interest that is direct, proximate, substantial and certain.....We cannot conceive that the legislature meant to declare that the mere contingent possibility that some future supposable financial condition of a municipality might,, in a slight degree, affect a judge as a taxpayer would strip him of all his personal judicial qualities.”

In North Bloomfield etc. Co. v. Keyser, 58 Cal. 315, it was said that the code provision “should not receive a technical or strict construction, but rather one that is broad and liberal”; and the meaning of the court was shown by its adoption of what was said in Stockwell v. Township Bd. of White Lake, 22 Mich. 350, namely: "The court ought not to be astute to discover refined and subtle distinctions to save a case from the operation of the maxim, when the principle it embodies bespeaks the propriety of its application.”

In further statement of the rule the court said in the Keyser case: “Undoubtedly) the prohibition does not extend to cases where the interest is simply in some question or questions of law involved in the controversy, or when it is indirect and remote.” These expressions fairly state the rule and the spirit in which it must' be applied.

Appellant relies on Meyer v. San Diego, supra, as decisive of the question. In that case the plaintiff sought to set aside as *309

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 700, 126 Cal. 303, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-city-of-san-diego-cal-1899.