Kahn v. Board of Supervisor

21 P. 849, 79 Cal. 388, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 738
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1889
DocketNo. 11765
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 21 P. 849 (Kahn v. Board of Supervisor) 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
Kahn v. Board of Supervisor, 21 P. 849, 79 Cal. 388, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 738 (Cal. 1889).

Opinion

Thornton, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court, asldng for a writ- of mandate to compel the board of supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco to levy a tax for the payment of interest on the Montgomery Avenue bonds. The action is brought by the holder of several of the bonds mentioned, and the levy sought to be ordered is to be made on a certain district of land, situate in the city and county aforesaid, described in the fourth section of an act of the legislature of this state,, approved the 1st of April, 1872, passed for the purpose of opening and establishing a public street in the city and county of San Francisco, to be called Montgomery Avenue, etc. (Stats.-1871-72, p. 911.)

For the purpose of opening and establishing the street, a strip of land was- described in the first section of the act, to. be taken to. that end. By the fourth sec[393]*393tion of the act, the district on which the cost of opening the street was to be assessed was fixed and described.

The street improvement above mentioned was to be carried out through the agency of a board of public works, which was created by section 19 of the act, and consisted of the mayor, the tax-collector, and tne city and county surveyor of the city and county of San Francisco. This board so constituted was authorized, empowered, and directed to perform all and singular the duties enjoined by the act upon the board of public works.

It was prescribed by the fifth section of the act that whenever the owners of a majority in frontage of the property described in section 4, “as said owners are or shall be named on the last preceding annual assessment roll for the state, city, and county taxes, shall petition the mayor of said city and county in writing, for the opening of Montgomery Avenue, according to the provisions of this act,” the board of public works “ shall proceed to organize by the election of a president.” Upon this organization having been made, the board was required to proceed to the work designated in the statute.

In section 6 of the act it was provided that the “ board shall also proceed to ascertain and determine and separately state and set down in a written report a description of the several subdivisions and lots of land included in the district defined in section 4 of this act, following, when possible, the descriptions and deeds and other instruments filed with said board; and opposite to such description shall set against each lot or subdivision the sum or amount in which, according to the judgment and determination of said board, the said lot or subdivision has been or will be benefited by reason of the taking and opening of said avenue relatively to the benefits • therefrom accruing to the other lots or subdivisions respectively within said district. Said board shall also set [394]*394against each lot or subdivision as aforesaid the names of the owners, occupants, and claimants thereof, so far as the same can be ascertained conveniently by said board. The said board shall adopt a general map or plan of the said Montgomery Avenue, and of the lands herein declared to be benefited thereby, and it shall also adopt a map or maps of each block or piece of land taken for said avenue, and also the property injured thereby, and also each lot and subdivision of land liable to be assessed to pay the costs and expenses of opening said avenue as the same are defined in this act. Such report, as soon as the same is completed, shall- be left at the office of said board daily, during ordinary business hours, for thirty days, for the free inspection of all parties interested, and notice that the same is so open for inspection for such time and such place shall be published by said board daily for twenty days in two daily newspapers printed and published in said city and county.”

It is provided by section 7 that “any person interested in any piece or parcel of land situated within the district defined and described in section 4 of this act, or in any of the lands taken for said avenue, or in any improvements damaged by the opening of said avenue, feeling himself aggrieved by the action or determination of the said board, as shown in said report, may, at any time within the thirty days mentioned in section 6 of this act, apply by petition to the county court of the city and county of San Francisco, setting forth his interest in the proceedings had before said board, and his objections thereto, for an order on said board requiring it to file with said court the report of said board, and such other documents or data as may be pertinent thereto in the custody of said board and used by it in preparing said report. Said court is hereby authorized and empowered to hear said petition, and shall set the same-down for a .hearing within ten days from the date of the filing [395]*395thereof; and the party filing said petition shall, on the day he files the same, se^ve a copy thereof on at least one of the members of the board of public works, and said board may appear, by counsel or otherwise, before said court in response to said petition. Said board may file a written answer to said petition with said court. Testimony may be taken by said court upon said hearing, and the process of the court may be used to compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of books or papers or maps in the custody of said board or otherwise. It shall be in the discretion of said court, after hearing and considering said application, to allow said order or deny the same; and if granted, a copy thereof shall be served on said board, and it shall proceed to obey the same according to the terms of the order to be prescribed by the court. But in case no such petition shall be filed with said county court within the time above limited for the filing thereof, the said report shall be presented by the said board to the said county court, with a petition to the court that the same be approved and confirmed by the court.”

The section (seventh) then proceeds to declare that the court mentioned above shall have power to approve and cónfirm said report or refer it back to the board with directions to alter or modify the same in the particulars specified by the court, and the board shall thereupon proceed to make such alterations and modifications, and when so made, the county court should approve or modify the report. By the same section an appeal was allowed to this court within a specified time by any party dissatisfied with, said report, or any part thereof, who shall have filed a petition to the county court as above provided.

After the passage of the act above mentioned a petition in writing was presented to the mayor of the city and county for the opening of Montgomery Avenue. This petition was signed by several thousand persons [396]*396who were owners of frontage of the property described in section 4, above referred to, as said owners were named on the assessment roll referred to in section 5 of the said act.

On the presentation of this petition to the mayor, he made and attached it to a certificate that it had been signed by the names of a majority in frontage of the property, as required by the act of 1872. This certificate bore date on the nineteenth day of June, 1872, and on the next day the board of public works was organized by the officials-above named.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P. 849, 79 Cal. 388, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-board-of-supervisor-cal-1889.