Lent v. Tillson

14 P. 71, 72 Cal. 404, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 548
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1887
DocketNo. 8540
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 14 P. 71 (Lent v. Tillson) 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
Lent v. Tillson, 14 P. 71, 72 Cal. 404, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 548 (Cal. 1887).

Opinions

Temple, J.

This suit was brought to enjoin the tax collector of the city and county of San Francisco from selling certain real estate, for the collection of the tax imposed for the payment of the Dupont Street bonds issued under the act of the legislature, approved March 23,1876. (Stats. 1875-76, p. 433.) That act provided for the widening of Dupont Street, but was not to go into operation until the board of supervisors should declare by resolution or order that in their judgment it was expedient to widen the street, in accordance with and in the mode prescribed by the act.

The act specifically defined the district benefited by the proposed improvement, which should bear the burden of making it, to be assessed to the owners of land in proportion to the benefit received. The district was described as two separate parcels of land, being two strips,—one on either side of the street,—extending from Bush Street to Market. The strip on the east side in width extending half-way to Kearny, and that on the west half way to Stockton,—such streets being the parallel streets nearest to Dupont on the east and west.

In case the board of supervisors expressed their judgment in favor of the improvement, the Dupont Street commissioners named in the act, to wit, the mayor, the ,auditor, and county surveyor, were to publish a notice in two of the daily papers printed in the city of San Francisco, informing property owners along the line of said street of the organization of the board, “and inviting all persons interested in property sought to be taken, or which would be injured by said widening, to present to the board maps and plans of their respective lots, and a written statement of the nature of their claim or interest in such lots.”

The board was required to have an office in the city, and was furnished with a secretary and allowed to employ clerks, attorneys, surveyors, draughtsmen, searchers of records, etc.; and section 7 of the act defines with con[410]*410siderable particularity the duties of the commissioners and the mode of performing them. It is provided, however, that within thirty days after the publication of the notice of the organization of the board, the owners of a majority in value of the property fronting on the street may interpose their veto to the further prosecution of the work, which veto shall be final.

If the proceeding was not thus arrested, the board was to proceed, and, having completed the work of estimating damages and benefits, was to embody the result in a report, the precise nature of which is minutely defined in the act, and which apparently when so made would give full and particular information of every determination of the board which could affect the interest of any person.

This report when thus completed was to be left “ at the office of the board daily during ordinary business hours, for thirty days, for the free inspection of all. parties interested, and notice that the same is open for such time and such place,” to be published by the board daily for twenty days, in two daily newspapers printed and published in the city. At any time within this thirty days any person interested, who felt aggrieved by the action of the board, could file in the County Court his petition setting forth his grievance, and the court was empowered to ap-, prove the report or to cause the same to be altered or modified, and finally to approve as modified. When the report was finally approved, the board was to issue bonds of the city and county in a sum sufficient to pay the damages awarded, and all costs, the bonds to be paid by a tax on the district benefited. When the damages were all paid by the proceeds of the bonds, and the persons receiving the payments had conveyed to the city and county the lands taken, the board was to remove the buildings and widen the street, and it was provided that the completion of the work “ shall be deemed an absolute acceptance by the owners of all lands affected by this [411]*411act, and by their successors in interest, of the lien created by this act upon the several lots so affected.”

The complaint avers that the work was actually performed; that is, that during the first seven months of the year 1877 the street was actually widened from forty-four feet to seventy-four feet, by the removal of the buildings and the turning of the same into roadway and sidewalk; that the bonds were sold, and the money thus obtained was used for the payment of the damages and costs, but it is claimed that money was expended improperly, and a large sum retained without just authority, for costs to accure.

The objections to the proceedings are numerous, but may be included under the following:—

1. The act is unconstitutional;

2. The board of commissioners had no power or jurisdiction to act, because the board of supervisors did not properly express their judgment that it was expedient to widen Dupont Street;

8. The notices required to be given to parties affected were never in fact given as required;

4. The board was guilty of fraud and misconduct; and,

5. The report, as confirmed, shows that the damages exceed the benefits.

1. It is claimed that the act is unconstitutional on many grounds.

First, because it is an attempt by the state to exercise the power of assessment for local improvements within the limits of a municipality. (People v. Lynch, 51 Cal. 34.) In that case it was said of the statute there under consideration, “Such law is unconstitutional because it is mandatory in its nature, and deprives the board of trustees .... of all choice or discretion in reference to improvements.”

The act in question does not do that. It leaves the matter entirely to the local legislature to say whether [412]*412the work shall be done or not. True, if the board of supervisors concludes to order the work to be done, the act designates the city officers who shall act as commissioners. This power to act as a board is given to such officers and their successors in office. The mode of procedure is also prescribed. There is nothing unusual in this. Nor does it matter that the mode differed from that laid down in the consolidation act for inaugurating other improvements.

But this question is not an open one. (People v. Bartlett, 67 Cal. 156; Pacific Bridge Co. v. Kirkham, 64 Cal. 519.)

Second, it is claimed that the act is unconstitutional, because it does not provide for due process of law.

1. It is claimed that the parties to be affected had a right to be heard upon the question whether the street should be widened or not. That the proceeding is judicial in its character is, in fact, a part of the proceeding to take private property for public use, to which the persons whose property is affected must be parties. There was no provision for such hearing.

But it is plain that it is not' a judicial act in that sense. It may be said to be judicial in the sense that it is not ministerial. It is an act which rests in the sound discretion of the authority. It may act or not, or may act in such mode as it may deem best within legal limits, but it is not a determination by a judicial tribunal of the rights of parties before it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 P. 71, 72 Cal. 404, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lent-v-tillson-cal-1887.