Las Animas & San Joaquin Land Co. v. Preciado

580 P. 239, 167 Cal. 580, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 502
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1914
DocketSac. No. 2014.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 580 P. 239 (Las Animas & San Joaquin Land Co. v. Preciado) 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
Las Animas & San Joaquin Land Co. v. Preciado, 580 P. 239, 167 Cal. 580, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 502 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

The Firebaugh School District, organized in 1878, at that time and for many years thereafter lay wholly *581 within the territorial limits of Fresno County. In 1893, by legislative enactment, Madera County was carved out of the territory of Fresno County, with the result that part of the territory embraced within the Firebaugh School District remained in Fresno County and part fell in Madera County. The Firebaugh School District thereafter continued to exercise its control over the whole territory. In 1907 the Dos Palos Joint Union High School District was formed and included with other districts, all of the Firebaugh School District. Since its formation the Dos Palos High School District has asserted the right and exercised the power to tax all of the territory of the Firebaugh School District. In 1908 the county superintendent of schools of Madera County, acting under the supposed authority of section 1551 of the Political Code, reported to the supervisors of his county that the Firebaugh School District “has never by any action of the board of supervisors of the two counties, as the statutes require, been made a joint school district,” and that portion of the Firebaugh School District lying within Madera County had never •been attached to any school district within Madera County, and that from this has resulted an indefiniteness in the boundaries of the school district of Madera County. Thereupon the supervisors of Madera County made an order attaching this land to the La Vina School District of Madera County. The La Vina School District was one of the districts of the Madera High School District, and the Madera High School District in levying its taxes asserted and exercised the right to assess the lands of the Firebaugh School District in Madera County. The plaintiff is an owner of lands within the disputed area and brings an action, in its essence, to have determined in what school district the power to tax its lands really rests. In form the pleading alleges that the land is in the Firebaugh School District and the Dos Palos Joint Union High School District, and that the assessment and levy of the Madera Union High School District is void. The prayer is for an injunction to restrain the proper officers acting for the Madera Union High School District from advertising plaintiff’s property for sale and from selling it for nonpayment of the tax which that district has levied. It is conceded that in this particular instance, for irregularities and informali *582 ties, the tax levy of the Dos Palos Joint Union High School District is invalid as to the land here in question.

Sections 1577, 1578, and 1579 of the Political Code contain provisions for the creation of joint .districts. A joint school district is one whose territory lies partly within the boundaries of one county and partly within the boundaries of another. Before the enactment of these sections referred to, section 1583 of the Political Code was in existence and made distinct recognition by name of joint districts. Therefore the law recognized the existence of joint districts even before it provided a method for their creation. The contention of appellant is that such a joint district can only come into existence by following the method prescribed in section 1577 et seq of the Political Code. The position of respondent—in which we think it is clearly right—is that the law recognized and declared that a school district whose territory, by the division of a county, lay partly in one and partly in another county, ipso facto became a joint district. If a part of the territory of a regularly recognized school district was to be taken from it solely by reason of the fact that through the creation of a new county a part of the land fell into such new county, we would look for some legislative declaration to that end. (Conover v. Parker, 57 N. J. L. 631, [31 Atl. 769].) We not only find none, but to the contrary we find in section 1580 of the Political Code (adopted to be sure after the attempted incorporation of the disputed area with the Madera Union High School District) an express declaration that whenever such a condition results, the original district “shall by operation of law constitute and become established as a joint school district.” Furthermore, it is undisputed that continuously and for many years after the creation of Madera County the Firebaugh School District exercised its authority over the land in Madera County, and the statute of March, 1905 (Stats. 1905, p. 243), operates to' confirm the authority thus exercised. That statute declares as follows: “All school districts in this state that for a period of five (5) years have been acting as school districts under the laws of this state are hereby declared to be duly incorporated and to be bodies politic under the laws of this state, and as such school districts, under their appropriate names, shall have all the rights and privileges and be subject to all the duties and obligations *583 of duly incorporated school districts.” For this additional reason, therefore, it must be held that the disputed area in Madera County was a part of and within the jurisdiction of the Firebaugh district. Such being the case, the attempt of the supervisors of Madera County to deprive the Firebaugh district of it and to annex it to one of its own school districts was abortive, and the result is that neither the La Vina School District nor the Madera Union High School District has any right to exercise the taxing power upon and against plaintiff’s land.

The argument that respondent is here attacking the organization of one or more of the school districts is baseless. Respondent freely concedes the legal existence of one and all of the affected districts and, in effect, asks merely that their boundaries be delimited and defined to the end that it may know in which one its property is situated and to which one it shall pay its tax. As little force attaches to the further contention that by reason of the fact that respondent paid a similar tax assessed upon its lands and levied by the Madera Union High School District it is estopped from contesting the validity of this assessment. The proposition is completely answered by Wood v. County of Calaveras, 164 Cal. 398 [129 Pac. 283].)

There is thus left for consideration the single proposition as to the availability to respondent of the remedy which it has sought, and herein it is argued that under the authority of such cases as Savings & Loan Society v. Austin, 46 Cal. 415; Houghton v. Austin, 47 Cal. 647, and especially the case of Crocker v. Scott, 149 Cal. 575, [87 Pac. 102], the remedy by injunction is not available to respondent. It might be a sufficient answer to this to say that irrespective of the injunetional relief sought and awarded, plaintiff had the unquestioned right under section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure to have determined these conflicting lien claims asserted to affect its property, and that this being done, the fact that an injunction was also asked would be immaterial to the cause of action specifically pleaded. (Haggin v. Kelly, 136 Cal. 481, [69 Pac. 140] ; Castro v. Barry, 79 Cal. 443, [21 Pac. 946] ; Dranga v.

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Bluebook (online)
580 P. 239, 167 Cal. 580, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/las-animas-san-joaquin-land-co-v-preciado-cal-1914.