Hutchinson Co. v. Coughlin

184 P. 435, 42 Cal. App. 664, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 828
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 14, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2723.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 184 P. 435 (Hutchinson Co. v. Coughlin) 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
Hutchinson Co. v. Coughlin, 184 P. 435, 42 Cal. App. 664, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 828 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BRITTAIN, J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment foreclosing the lien of a street assessment on her four lots in Oakland.

The assessment proceedings were under the Street Improvement Act of 1911 as originally adopted. The work was grading, curbing, macadamizing, and guttering one block on Brooklyn Avenue, between Lake Shore Boulevard and Newton Avenue, one block on Wesley Avenue, between Lake Shore Boulevard and Newton Avenue, and the crossing formed by the intersection of Brooklyn, Newton, and Wesley Avenues, in the city of Oakland. Newton Avenue and Lake Shore Boulevard are approximately parallel, and Brooklyn Avenue connects them, running at right angles to Newton Avenue. Wesley Avenue runs diagonally across an imaginary square, two sides of which are formed by the lines of Newton Avenue and Brooklyn Avenue, extended, the other sides being represented by lines parallel to the two extended lines. The crossing formed by the intersection of the three avenues is represented by the triangle formed between the sides of Newton Avenue and Brooklyn Avenue, extended, and the lower diagonal side of Wesley Avenue. The total cost of the work, with expenses, was $5,400.50, of which $1,630.90 represented the cost of the work on the block on Brooklyn Avenue; $1,795.99, the cost of the work on the block on Newton Avenue, and $1,855.28, the cost of the work on the crossing.

In the resolution of intention tp do the work it was declared that it was of more than local or ordinary public benefit and that the expense should be chargeable upon a district. The district included seven entire blocks and parts of four other blocks. The blocks were not uniform in size nor shape. No part of the district extended across Lake Shore Boulevard. The work done was in the southwest corner of the district, the improved portions of Brooklyn *667 Avenue and Wesley Avenue abutting on the westerly boundary of the district. In the entire district there were 162 lots, of which 23 or 24 fronted on the work. Many of the lots, by reason of the diagonal direction of Wesley Avenue, were small and of irregular shapes. Four of the lots of full size and rectangular in shape belong to the appellant. Two of them face Lake Shore Boulevard and two of them face Wesley Avenue. They extend lengthwise on both sides of the entire block of Brooklyn Avenue, which was improved. The appellant’s two lots fronting on Wesley Avenue also abutted on the crossing.

After the work was done the assessment was made, and the appellant’s lots were assessed, respectively, $419.96, $509.69, $442.19, and $576.27, aggregating $1,948.11. Of the 162 lots in the district, only four, those belonging to the appellant, were assessed for more than $276; twenty-seven for sums between ten dollars and one hundred dollars, the remainder for sums under ten dollars, of which forty were assessed for but one cent apiece. The appellant claims the assessment is void, and to show its invalidity relies upon three propositions: First, that the district established by the resolution was ignored and disregarded by the superintendent of streets, who, it is claimed, in excess of his jurisdiction, imposed a frontage system of assessment; secondly, that the assessment appears on its face to be without uniformity and regardless of benefit; and, lastly, that the assessment upon each of the appellant’s four lots is confiscatory.

The complaint is in the ordinary form in such cases. In her answer the defendant denied the essential allegations of the complaint and set forth the assessment, alleging that it “was without reference to, disproportionate to, irrespective of and contrary to any or all benefits received or to be received by each of said lots or portions thereof,” and that “said purported assessment was and is disproportionately, unequally, and unjustly placed upon the various lots or portions of lots or subdivisions of land mentioned in said diagram and purported assessment, without regard to the district declared to be benefited in said resolution of intention of the city council, and that said assessment was and is without uniformity and is confiscatory, and void.” The findings negatived the appellant’s allegations of fact, and support the conclusions of law.

*668 While the usual number of cases is cited in the appellant’s briefs, her reliance is chiefly placed upon the decision of the supreme court in Spring Street Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 170 Cal. 24, [L. R. A. 1918E, 197, 148 Pac. 217]. In that case in declaring an assessment void a statement of Mr. Justice Redfield of the supreme court of Vermont was quoted as follows: “We have no doubt that a local assessment may so transcend the limits of equality and reason that its exaction would cease to be a tax or contribution to a common burden and become extortion and confiscation. In that case it would be the duty of the court to protect the citizen from robbery under color of a better name.” (Allen v. Drew, 44 Vt. 174.)

In the Los Angeles case it appeared that the city of Los Angeles, having determined to widen one of its streets, condemnation proceedings were prosecuted to judgment to take a strip five feet wide from the lots fronting on either side of the street. The judgment in favor of the lot owners aggregated something over two hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars, of which twenty thousand dollars was awarded to the owner of one lot, which may be designated the Hamberger lot. Under the Los Angeles charter the duty of levying the assessment for the cost of the improvement rested in the board of public works. In its original assessment it charged the remainder of the Hamberger lot with $12,794.10. Protests against the assessment . having been made, the city council adopted a recommendation of its street committee that the assessments on the lots fronting on the widened street should be the same in amount as that allowed in the condemnation proceedings, and that surplus costs of the improvement should be levied in accordance with the front-foot rule upon all the lots in the assessment district. The board of public works was directed to make a new assessment, which it did in accordance with the recommendation of the committee. In transmitting the new assessment the board of public works expressed its opinion that the original assessment was correct, and called attention to the fact that under the new method certain lots which received larger benefits than others were assessed for smaller amounts. Protests against the second assessment were overruled by the council. The court determined that the reassessment was not even a gwosi-judicial act of the board intrusted *669 with the duty of making the assessment. The defense was that the property owners had had their day in court before the city council and the action of the council in overruling their protests, in the absence of fraud, should be held conclusive. Citing Chase v. Trout, 146 Cal. 350, [80 Pac. 81], and other eases in the opinion, the supreme court said the record “furnishes convincing evidence that the assessment was ordered prepared without the slightest exercise of judicial discretion, and so unwarrantedly, arbitrarily, and unjustly, as to work a confiscation of the property and to be, therefore, in no legal sense an assessment at all.” (Spring Street Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 170 Cal. 32, [L. R. A. 1918E, 197, 148 Pac.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Plymouth v. Superior Court
8 Cal. App. 3d 454 (California Court of Appeal, 1970)
Halsted v. County of Sacramento
243 Cal. App. 2d 584 (California Court of Appeal, 1966)
Maxwell v. City of Santa Rosa
347 P.2d 678 (California Supreme Court, 1959)
Raisch v. Sanitary Dist. No. 1 of Marin County
240 P.2d 48 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)
Garibaldi v. City of Daly City
147 P.2d 122 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
Aybar v. Vara Smith
51 P.R. 182 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1937)
Crawford v. County of Los Angeles
17 P.2d 1017 (California Court of Appeal, 1932)
Keller v. City of Los Angeles
11 P.2d 448 (California Court of Appeal, 1932)
Hannon v. Madden
5 P.2d 4 (California Supreme Court, 1931)
Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. Bean
293 P. 802 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
Bayside Land Co. v. Dolley
284 P. 479 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
Butters v. City of Oakland
200 P. 354 (California Court of Appeal, 1921)
H. Crummey, Inc. v. Howe
292 P. 112 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
Empire Securities Co. v. Levy
292 P. 153 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
Beck v. Ransome-Crummey Co.
184 P. 431 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 P. 435, 42 Cal. App. 664, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-co-v-coughlin-calctapp-1919.