Keller v. City of Los Angeles

11 P.2d 448, 123 Cal. App. 99, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 874
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8255.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 448 (Keller v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Keller v. City of Los Angeles, 11 P.2d 448, 123 Cal. App. 99, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 874 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JAMISON, J., pro tem.

Plaintiffs brought this action to have declared void the assessment based upon benefits received by the land under an ordinance of the City of Los Angeles, opening an alley between Flower and Figueroa Streets, and extending from Eighth Street to within 170 feet of Seventh Street, and to restrain defendants from proceeding further with the said assessment, and to recover from defendants the portion of said assessment paid by plaintiffs under protest, as shall be found unlawfully assessed against them.

Demurrers were sustained to the complaint, the amended complaint and the second amended complaint, and thereupon plaintiffs filed a third amended complaint and a second amended supplemental complaint, to which defendants de- ' murred upon the grounds, first, that said complaints did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and second, that said complaints are uncertain in that it cannot be ascertained therefrom in what manner the defendants acted without jurisdiction or contrary to the rights of plaintiffs, or whether or not plaintiffs availed themselves of the right *101 given them by the statute to file objections with the city clerk, or whether or not there was any hearing of any objections on the part of plaintiffs by the city council, or what right plaintiffs had to question the validity of the assessment proceeding, and that for the reasons aforesaid the complaints are ambiguous and uncertain. This demurrer was also sustained and plaintiffs, refusing to further amend, judgment was rendered against them and from this judgment plaintiffs have appealed.

The proceeding’s for the opening of said alley were had pursuant to the Street Opening Act of 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 376). The complaint alleges that the council of the City of Los Angeles adopted an ordinance declaring its intention to order the opening of an alley from a line 170 feet southwesterly from the southwesterly line of Seventh Street to the northeasterly line of Eighth Street in said city and specifying the boundaries of the district to be benefited, and to be assessed to pay the expense thereof, and to be known as the assessment district, said ordinance being designated as Ordinance No. 50709. Prior to the initiation of this ordinance proceedings were pending for the opening of an alley 20 feet wide from Seventh Street to Eighth Street in the center of the block between Flower and Figueroa Streets; that in the meantime a corporation known as Barker Bros., Incorporated, leased all the property fronting on Seventh Street between Flower and Figueroa Streets and extending southerly 170 feet, said lease being for a term of 99 years, and erected a building thereon 150 feet high. The proceedings to open the said alley from Seventh to Eighth Streets were then abandoned and the proceeding under Ordinance No. 50709 was instituted. Said Barker Bros, now owns and maintains, and at the time of levying said assessment owned and maintained, one of the largest retail furniture stores in this country, and that all of the three frontages on Seventh, Figueroa and Flower Streets have ornate and elaborate entrances to the ground floor of said building for the use of pedestrians and customers, but that there is no means of ingress to or egress from said building for the delivery thereunto or therefrom of furniture or express except by means of said alley. Said assessment was not based upon any consideration of, or in proportion to, the benefits to the property located in said *102 assessment district from said improvements, but that the primary purpose was known to defendants to be for the benefit of said property of Barker Bros.; that plaintiffs’ property is of the assessed valuation of $150,290 and has been assessed in this proceeding to the amount of $34,100; that the property occupied by Barker Bros, has a total assessed value of $2,436,250 and has been assessed in this proceeding to the amount of $13,642; that more than ninety per cent of vehicles or pedestrians using said alley have been vehicles or pedestrians going to or from the Barker Bros.’ building; that defendants arbitrarily and with total disregard of rights of the property owners, or the benefits accruing to them from the opening of said alley, assessed the cost of said opening upon the front-foot basis.

One of the contentions of appellants is that the assessment of the property was in violation of law and therefore void, for the reason that section 16 of the Street Opening Act of 1903 provides that the assessment shall be in proportion to the benefits to be received from the said improvement. They claim that instead of following the plain requirements of this law and proceeding to estimate the benefits that would be received by the property from opening this alley, to save the trouble of doing so, or in order to favor Barker Bros., they adopted the front-foot method and by doing so sidestepped this duty which the law imposed upon them.

Section 16 .of said Street Opening Act provides that objections in writing to the assessments shall be filed with the clerk and laid before the next meeting of the city council, and it shall thereupon hear such objections and pass upon same, or if there are no objections the said city council shall confirm the assessments and the action of the council upon such objections and assessments shall be final and conclusive. It does not appear from the complaints that appellants filed any protest against their assessment with the city clerk or that they made any objections to the city council regarding same. Apparently as a reason for not doing so, appellants allege in their complaint that prior to the expiration of the time for filing objections they were informed and believed that the respondents arbitrarily agreed among themselves that all protests on file at the time of the hearing would 'be overruled, and therefore protesting would *103 be an. idle act and would not receive consideration; that respondents arbitrarily overruled objections filed by others at said hearing and confirmed the assessments as originally made.

Passing upon statutes similar to the Street Opening Act of 1903 the decisions of the Supreme and Appellate Courts have been uniform in holding that appellants cannot make any objection to the assessment in this action that they could have made before the city council at the time provided by section 19 of said act for hearing of protests. The failure to so object rendered the decision of the city council conclusive against appellants, in the absence of fraud, or arbitrary action amounting to fraud, in matters which the council could have remedied or corrected. (Blake v. City of Eureka, 201 Cal. 643 [258 Pac. 945]; Farley v. Reindollar et al., 174 Cal. 703, 707 [165 Pac. 19]; McGarry v. Ellis, 54 Cal. App. 622 [202 Pac. 463]; Harney v. Benson, 113 Cal. 314 [45 Pac. 687]; O'Dea v. Mitchell, 144 Cal. 374 [77 Pac. 1020].)

The case of Spring Street Co. v. Los Angeles, 170 Cal. 24 [L. R. A. 1918E, 197, 148 Pac. 217], relied upon by appellants, is not in point upon this question, for in that case it appears that the plaintiff filed its protest with the city council and the same was denied.

In City Construction Co. v.

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11 P.2d 448, 123 Cal. App. 99, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1932.