Larsen v. City & County of San Francisco

186 P. 757, 182 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 476
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 8201.
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 186 P. 757 (Larsen v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Larsen v. City & County of San Francisco, 186 P. 757, 182 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 476 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The Twin Peaks tunnel pierces the high ridge which separates the more densely populated portion of San Francisco from the large-and comparatively level region lying west of the said ridge and constituting the watershed of Lake Merced. The length of the tunnel is eleven thousand two hundred feet. It was constructed by the city and county of San Francisco under the authority of chapter VIII, article VI, of the San Francisco charter, and under the procedure provided by an ordinance passed by the board of supervisors of San Francisco, pursuant to authority given in said chapter, on October 20, 1913. For the cost of making the tunnel an *5 assessment was levied by the city in said proceeding, covering lands near both ends of the tunnel, including certain lands of the plaintiff. The present action was begun by the plaintiff under section 12 of the ordinance above mentioned, for the purpose of contesting the validity of the assessment and to quiet plaintiff’s title to the said lands against the claims of the city of San Francisco thereunder. Judgment was given in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals therefrom., [1] The mayor of the city and county and the clerk of the board of supervisors are made parties defendant. With regard to their acts and conduct under color of their said offices they will be bound by a judgment against the municipal corporation, even if they are not parties to the action. It is not claimed that either of them has done or threatens to do any unofficial act to the prejudice of the plaintiff. Consequently no good reason appears for their presence as parties and we need not notice the fact further.

An ordinance similar to the tunnel procedure ordinance of October 20, 1913, aforesaid, was under consideration by this court in Mardis v. McCarthy, 162 Cal. 94, [121 Pac. 389], and again in Hayne v. San Francisco, 174 Cal. 185, [162 Pac. 625]. In each of these cases the objections there urged against the validity of that ordinance were held to be untenable. In the present action the appellant advances certain other reasons against the validity of the ordinance of 1913. He also claims that, even if the ordinance is valid, the assessment is void because of other objections and defects which we will state in detail as we proceed.

1. The ordinance was adopted under the power conferred upon the city by chapter VIII of article VI of the charter. This chapter empowers the board of supervisors to order the construction of and construct a tunnel and levy the damage, cost, and expenses thereof upon private property “in the manner and under the procedure and powers in chapter II of this article provided for street work and street improvement. ’ ’ It further provides that the method of procedure in chapter II shall not be exclusive, but that the board of supervisors may adopt an ordinance “providing a method of procedure for such improvement, work, and assessment and for the ascertainment and payment of damages and for the manner in which protests against such assessments and damages awarded may be heard and determined, and for the manner *6 in which such assessment may be collected and paid,” and for fully and completely exercising the powers conferred by the section. In» said chapter II, after giving the city power to make street improvements, other provisions follow prescribing the procedure to be followed in exercising the power. An application of property owners to the board of public works must be made in order to start the proceeding, 1 ‘ except where otherwise provided.” The board must then pass a resolution of its intention to recommend the doing of the work and must recommend the same to the supervisors, before the improvement is ordered. The appellant insists that these provisions of chapter II are limitations upon the power therein conferred, and that by the reference aforesaid, in chapter VIII, they are carried into and become limitations upon the power to construct tunnels and also upon the power to adopt, by ordinance, the procedure to be observed in the construction of tunnels, that, consequently, such ordinance must also provide for an application of owners and a resolution and recommendation by the board of public works, as a condition precedent to ordering the tunnel construction, and that as this ordinance does not do so, it is void. To this we cannot agree. The provisions of chapter VIII differentiate clearly between methods of procedure and the grant of power, and between the grant of power to construct tunnels and the grant of power to provide the procedure therefor. The two grants are independent of each other. It is true that proceedings for assessing the cost of public improvements upon private property are to be strictly followed and that, as is often said, “the mode is the measure of the power,” so that in doing street work under chapter II the method of initiating the proceeding must be followed in order to make a valid exercise of the power there conferred. But to hold that the reference to chapter II, contained in chapter VIII, imports into the latter chapter all of the provisions for procedure provided in chapter II, as limitations upon the power conferred in chapter VIII, including the power to adopt an ordinance prescribing the procedure, would, in effect, entirely destroy the power given in chapter VIII to adopt a method of procedure,. Such an absurd result cannot be allowed unless positively necessary. Such a construction is not imperative. It is more reasonable to suppose that the reference in chapter VIII to the procedure and powers provided in chapter II for *7 street work had reference to procedure alone and did not incorporate such procedure into chapter VIII, as limitations upon the power to construct tunnels and to adopt ordinances of procedure therefor, but left the board of supervisors at liberty to adopt a procedure wholly different from that provided in chapter II. This we believe to be the true construction of the charter in this particular.

[2] The same reasons apply with equal force to the contention that the power given in chapter VIII to adopt an ordinance of procedure for the acquisition of property for a right of way and approaches for such tunnel and for levying an assessment on private property for the cost and damages must conform to the procedure prescribed in chapter II of said article. The provisions in that respect are in the same form as those relating to the construction of tunnels.

2. The resolution in question states that the public interest and convenience require the construction of the Twin Peaks tunnel “for public uses,” but do not specify or describe the particular public use or uses to which it is to be devoted. It appears from the evidence, however, that no way is provided for passage through the tunnel by persons traveling on foot or in vehicles, or otherwise than in street-cars. It is conceded by the respondents that as it exists it cannot be used except as a way upon which to lay tracks for street-ear lines and for the passage of persons through it while in such cars, and that no other use was intended. The charter provides that two or more street-ear lines, operated under different managements, may use a tunnel constructed under the power given in chapter VIII and that the city and county may use it for a municipal street-car line, either singly or jointly with another street-car line, but.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 757, 182 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsen-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1920.