Inglin v. Hoppin

105 P. 582, 156 Cal. 483, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 352
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1909
DocketSac. No. 1715.
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 105 P. 582 (Inglin v. Hoppin) 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
Inglin v. Hoppin, 105 P. 582, 156 Cal. 483, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 352 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate directing the board of supervisors of Yolo County to set aside a specific order heretofore given by them in the matter of the petition of plaintiffs to have certain lands situated in Reclamation District No. 730 of said Yolo County set off and erected into an independent district, by which order the petition was denied, and to enter an order granting the petition. To this application a general demurrer was interposed and sustained. The question presented therefore is; accepting as true the facts stated in the application for mandate, is any ground shown for the issuance of the writ?

The petition filed by and on behalf of Inglin and his co-plaintiffs herein with the board of supervisors sought to have their lands in Reclamation District No. 730 set off from said district pursuant to the provisions of sections 3446, 3472, 3481, et seq. of the Political Code. Their complaint here avers that they took all the steps and proceedings to that end required by law, and upon the hearing of their petition established all of the facts required by law by uncontradicted, material, sufficient, and competent evidence, but that notwithstanding this the board of supervisors arbitrarily denied their petition. Section 3449 of the Political Code requires that if the board of supervisors find on the hearing of the petition that its statements are correct, they must make an order approving the same. The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint here is that with sufficient competent and uncontradicted evidence establishing the statements of their petition to be correct, the board of supervisors arbitrarily denied, instead of approving it. Upon this state of facts they apply for mandate, succinctly .stating their contention in the following language: “Where the peti *485 tioners are entitled upon the admitted facts to the relief demanded, may the board of supervisors arbitrarily deny it ?”

The general demurrer was sustained upon the ground that the creation of reclamation districts is referable to the legislative branch of the government, and is therefore beyond the control of the action of the courts; that exclusive jurisdiction to détermine these questions has by the general legislature been vested in one of its subordinate agencies—the board of supervisors— and that in the exercise of its powers to determine facts, the board of supervisors may not be controlled; and, finally, that the board of supervisors having acted by denying the petition, mandate will not run against it to force an avoidance of its former order and the entry of another and different order.

It has been repeatedly held by this court, and is unquestionably true, that the creation of reclamation districts and the setting off of lands and the delimiting of the boundaries of such districts are legislative acts. (Bixler v. Supervisors, 59 Cal. 698; Glide v. Superior Court, 147 Cal. 21, [81 Pac. 225]; People v. Sacramento Drainage District, 155 Cal. 373, [103 Pac. 207].) The creation of such districts is legislative in the true sense that the legislature has the power, as it has in the case of any civil or penal law, to create or to withhold creation. No other power of the government can compel the legislature to act in such a matter or to refrain from acting, or, when it has acted, to control the action, other than to declare whether or not it may have been taken within constitutional limitations. This right to act or to withhold action within the discretion or, indeed, within the arbitrary whim of the lawmaking body, is an essential attribute of its powers. But from this it does not follow that where legislative action is not itself complete, where the legislature intrusts the determination of a fact or the doing of an act to some one or another of its agents or mandatories, this act itself takes on the attributes of legislation and becomes legislative in the sense that its due performance may not be controlled by the courts. For to so hold would, in many instances, thwart rather than give effect to the legislative will. Thus the granting of state lands is a legislative power and prerogative. But if, in a proper case, the legislature should ordain that a grant *486 be made of lands to an individual, and direct the issuance of that grant in the name of and on behalf of the state by some agent appointed thereto, such agent could not resist mandate upon the ground that the act, performance of which was sought to be compelled, was legislative in character, even if the agent were himself an officer of the state as provided by section 14 of article Y of the constitution. The question was considered and this principle announced in State v. Elder, 31 Neb. 169, [47 N. W. 710], where the law declared the speaker of the assembly should open election returns, and declare the result. A writ of mandate directed against him to compel the performance of this duty was resisted upon the ground that he was a legislative officer exercising judicial functions, but the court declared that the law made no distinction in the persons to be compelled to perform an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office on account of any one of the three departments to which the person may belong. So, here, the legislature has provided a plan of which landowners may avail themselves for the formation of reclamation districts. It has declared that when the facts exist, and are shown to exist within the method prescribed by the law, the supervisors shall make an order accordingly, by virtue of which order a reclamation district is created. There is a broad distinction to be recognized between the control by courts over the general legislature acting within its powers, and the control which may be exercised over inferior boards and tribunals charged with the performance of an act enjoined by the legislature. As was pointed out in People v. Sacramento Drainage District, 155 Cal. 373, [103 Pac. 207], where the legislature has itself spoken in the creation of a district such as this, and where the legislative determination may be deemed to have depended upon a question of fact, it is conclusively presumed that the legislature took evidence in its determination, and the decision which it reached will not be subject to review by the courts. But this doctrine has no application, or, at the most, a much modified application, when applied to subordinate agencies of the legislature, charged themselves with the duty of executing the legislative will. The same exemptions" from judicial interference apply to all inferior legislative bodies, so far as their legislative discretion extends, but no further. (Alpers v. San Francisco, *487 32 Fed. 503; Davis v. Mayor etc. New York, 4 Duer, 451.) Where discretion other than legislative is vested in such a subordinate officer or tribunal, the exercise of that discretion will be subjected to correction if it be abused. Where the act is in its nature ministerial and depends upon the existence or non-existence of facts, if the jurisdiction to determine the fact be vested, in the first instance, in such inferior tribunal, its determination made upon conflicting evidence will not be reviewed.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 582, 156 Cal. 483, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inglin-v-hoppin-cal-1909.