Hooker v. East Riverside Irrigation District

177 P. 184, 38 Cal. App. 615, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 150
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 12, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2602.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 177 P. 184 (Hooker v. East Riverside Irrigation District) 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
Hooker v. East Riverside Irrigation District, 177 P. 184, 38 Cal. App. 615, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 150 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

MYERS, J., pro tem.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment of the superior court entered upon an order sustaining defendant’s demurrer to her amended and supplemental complaint (hereinafter referred to as “the complaint”) without leave to amend. The demurrer is both general and special, the latter presenting numerous grounds, of which we deem it necessary to consider here only those which plead the statute of limitations. All of the special statutes of limitation which may be appropriate thereto are pleaded by the demurrer to any and every cause of action alleged in the complaint.

Prom the allegations of the complaint the following facts appear: The defendant and respondent East Riverside Irrigation District is a municipal corporation duly organized and existing under the provisions of the “Wright Act,” [Stats. 1887, p. 29], and in 1890 had duly taken all of the steps necessary under the act for the creation of a bonded indebtedness in the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Thereupon its board of directors instituted in the superior court of San Bernardino County, wherein it was situate, an action in rem pursuant to an amendment to said act, wherein, in December, 1891, a decree was entered confirming the proceedings theretofore taken in the organization of the district and authorization of said bond issue, and adjudging that the district “at the date of said decree was a duly and legally *617 organized irrigation district, possessing full power and authority to issue and sell from time to time the bonds of said district in the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and that the bonds of said district theretofore issued in said sum were legal and valid.” (It is manifest that the word “issued” as used in said decree, as well as in said act, is used in the sense of “authorized,” rather than in the sense of “executed.” (Wright v. East Riverside Irr. Dist., 138 Fed. 313, 323, [70 C. C. A. 603].) The bonds here in question were not executed until more than a year thereafter.)

Thereafter, in January, 1892, the district entered into a contract with appellant’s testator, J. D. Hooker, whereby Hooker agreed to furnish and deliver a completed and constructed pipe-line, four thousand feet in length, more or less, to be connected and laid in trenches and to form a part of the irrigation works and system, at the agreed price of $2.50 per lineal foot, payable one-half in cash and one-half in such bonds at their par value. Hooker duly performed this contract and there became due thereon the sum of $20,642.94, instead of the ten thousand dollars originally contemplated. Whereupon, at the request of the district, Hooker agreed to accept five thousand dollars in cash in lieu of one-half cash, and also agreed to accept, “as a medium of payment” of the. balance, bonds at par value. These bonds were then executed and delivered to Hooker and the five thousand dollars paid to him on January 27, 1892, pursuant to a resolution of the board of directors. The bonds as then issued bore the signature of W. R. McCully, who was then secretary of said district, whereas the interest coupons thereto attached bore the engraved signature of J. A. Van Arsdale as secretary, Van Arsdale having been secretary at the time the bonds were authorized and at the time the bonds and attached coupons were engraved, at which time his engraved signature was appended to the coupons pursuant to a resolution of the board.

In the latter part of 1892 Hooker sold and delivered the bonds for a valuable consideration to C. G. Hooker, warranting them good and valid and agreeing to take them back if they should prove otherwise. Thereafter, prior to June 29, 1901, C. G. Hooker sold and transferred them for a valuable consideration to C. O. Hooker and Robert G. Hooker, and C. O. Hooker and Robert G. Hooker then sold and delivered *618 them for a valuable consideration to R. Percy Wright; all of these sales being under the same warranty.

The interest coupons were duly paid at maturity, up to and including January 1, 1897, since which time no further payments have been made thereon, or upon the principal, which was payable in installments. Wright presented for payment the interest coupons then due, and payment was refused. Thereafter, and on June 29, 1901, Wright (a citizen of the British empire) commenced an action at law in the United States circuit court in and for the southern district of California, against said East Riverside Irrigation District to recover judgment for the amount then due and unpaid upon said coupons. Said defendant appeared and filed its answer, alleging that said bonds and the coupons attached thereto were null and void, specifying, among other defects, the following: That on June 27, 1892, Van Arsdale, whose name appears upon the coupons, was not the secretary of said district, and that MeCully, whose name appeared upon the bonds themselves, was not the secretary at the date appearing upon the bonds, to wit, December 30, 1890. Thereafter, on May 16, 1904, judgment was entered in said action, adjudging each and all of said bonds invalid and void for the reason above specified. Thereafter the plaintiff, Wright, was allowed a writ of error from the United States circuit court of appeals, which resulted, May 29, 1905, in a decision by the latter court affirming the judgment. Thereafter a petition for a writ of certiorari to review said decision was presented to the United States supreme court and denied on January 29, 1906.

Pursuant to the covenants of warranty, the bonds were re-transferred by mesne assignments from Wright back to J. D. Hooker," who again became the owner thereof on or about June 15, 1909. He then again demanded payment of the interest and principal installments then due, which was refused; whereupon he demanded payment of the sum of $15,642.94, the amount remaining unpaid under the original contract, or the return of said pipe-line, which demand was also refused. Thereupon he demanded that the directors of the district cause the property therein to be assessed for taxes to provide funds for the payment of the amounts due, which was refused; whereupon he commenced this action June 29, 1909.

*619 The complaint presents several different aspects which are illustrated by the prayer, which is as follows: First. That the bonds be adjudged valid and the plaintiff have judgment for the amount due thereon. Second. In the event they be held not valid, that they be reformed so as to become enforceable obligations and that plaintiff have judgment for the amount due thereon as so reformed. Third. In the event they be held invalid and not susceptible of reformation so as to render them valid, that they be held valid and enforceable promissory notes or obligations of defendant district, and that plaintiff have judgment for the amounts due thereon. Fottrth. In the event that the three former prayers be denied, that the obligation of the original pipe-line contract be held to have been suspended by the issuance of the bonds as conditional payment thereof, and that plaintiff have judgment for the amount due under said original contract, with interest. Fifth. That any judgment awarded be decreed to be a lien upon the real property within the district.

Much is said in the briefs concerning the “ethics” and “natural justice” of plaintiff’s claim.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 184, 38 Cal. App. 615, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooker-v-east-riverside-irrigation-district-calctapp-1918.