Los Angeles Athletic Club v. Board of Harbor Commissioners

20 P.2d 130, 130 Cal. App. 376, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 900
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8756.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 130 (Los Angeles Athletic Club v. Board of Harbor Commissioners) 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
Los Angeles Athletic Club v. Board of Harbor Commissioners, 20 P.2d 130, 130 Cal. App. 376, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 900 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

GEARY, J., pro tem.

Appellant herein commenced its action against the above-named defendants to quiet its title to a leasehold estate derived from respondent City of Los Angeles; to remove a cloud from its title to said leasehold estate consisting of an order of respondent Board of Harbor Commissioners declaring appellant’s lease forfeited, and for declaratory relief. From the judgment of the trial court denying appellant the relief prayed for and quieting the title of the city against appellant the latter prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant herein is a California corporation with its principal place of business in the City of Los Angeles. Prior to November 27, 1920, appellant applied to respondent Board of Harbor Commissioners for a lease of a yacht harbor. On November 27,1920, the respondent Board of Harbor Commissioners passed its order No. 571 approving said application and transmitted the same to the city council of Los Angeles, where it was approved and embodied in ordinance No. 41220 (N. S.). Thereafter said ordinance was approved by the mayor of the city, duly published as required by law, and its operation was not suspended by the referendum provision of the charter of Los Angeles. Said order No. 571 and its terms were accepted by appellant in the time and manner therein provided. The order of the Board of Harbor Commissioners and the ordinance above mentioned will be hereafter referred to as order No. 571; and the Board of Harbor Commissioners as “respondent Board” or “Board” unless otherwise expressly stated.

By its terms, order No. 571 purported to grant to appellant a thirty-year lease on certain harbor lands on the sea *380 ward side of Terminal Island in said harbor, parcel one thereof to be used by appellant for the erection thereon of a clubhouse and buildings of similar nature, and parcel two thereof for the mooring of yachts. At the time order No. 571 was granted and the ordinance approving the same passed parcel one was under water. In the order it was provided that the respondent Board would fill parcel one and bring it to grade behind a seawall or jetty, which it was to construct, and it was further provided therein that the work of constructing the improvements above mentioned to be erected thereon by appellant should be committed within ninety days from and after the date the respondent Board notified appellant that parcel one was filled and ready for occupancy. The order further provided that appellant should spend not less than $50,000 upon all improvements within three years from and after said date. The respondent Board obligated itself in said order to dredge parcel two to a depth of ten feet below mean lower low water, and appellant upon its part was required at its own cost and expense to inclose parcel two by a good and substantial breakwater sufficient to insure quiet water within parcel two. Rental was fixed at $300 per quarter for the first ten years, and appellant was required within fifteen days after the effective date of the ordinance to pay the rental in advance for the first three months after service of notice by the Board that the premises were ready for occupancy. This rental was properly paid by appellant. After the granting of the order the work of filling parcel one—to be performed by the respondent Board—progressed slowly. Frequent letters were written by appellant to the Board urging completion of the fill agreed upon, but as the actual work of filling was to be done by the contractor for the United States government, control of the project was not actually in the Board. The Board did, however, raise and repair the seawall or jetty and the same was completed in November, 1925. Thereupon, on November 12, 1925, the Board notified appellant that the seawall was completed and called upon appellant to commence the construction of the breakwater and other improvements. It was stipulated that this notice was intended to be the notice specified in order No. 571, by the terms of which the ninety-day period was to start, in which appellant should commence the erection of the improvements *381 to be constructed by it. Appellant, upon receipt of the aforesaid notice, took the position that the same was premature in that parcel one had not been filled to grade and hence was not ready for occupancy. Appellant offered to permit rental to begin but objected to the construction of its clubhouse on parcel one until such time as parcel one had been properly filled. Appellant likewise agreed to proceed with the construction of its wharf on parcel two, to which reference will be hereafter made. Appellant thereafter made application to the district engineer, United States War Department, in charge of federal government work in Los Angeles harbor, for a permit to construct the rock-filled breakwater in parcel two in conformity with order No. 571, subdivision two of section two thereof. Objection to the granting of this application was made by respondent Board, the effect of which was to prevent appellant from complying with this requirement of order No. 571. Reference will likewise hereafter be made to certain facts in regard to this matter. As the construction of the breakwater and the dredging of parcel two were more or less dependent one upon the other, respondents have not performed the dredging provided for in order No. 571. As a result of the Board’s opposition to the construction of the breakwater by appellant, on August 25, 1926, the Board duly passed its order No. 1059, the effect of which was to amend its order No. 571 by relieving appellant of its obligation under the earlier order to spend the sum of $50,000 for improvements within three years after November 12, 1925. At the same time the Board adopted its order No. 1060 granting to appellant temporary use of an anchorage behind the rock jetty in the harbor. It is apparent that it was the purpose of said orders to relieve appellant of its obligation to construct the breakwater and at the same time afford it a temporary anchorage until such time as the respondents could determine when and whether the United States would construct a breakwater. Nothing further occurred with reference to the construction work on parcels one and two by either of the parties thereto. On November 24,1926, respondent Board leased a parcel of water frontage some 675 feet distant from parcel one to Ocean Products Corporation for the purpose of erecting and operating thereon a fish fertilizer plant. The plant was erected and its operation commenced, *382 which naturally (according to the testimony) resulted in the creation of a stench, which was carried—at least to some extent—across parcel one. This lease was later surrendered and a new lease made of the water frontage and fertilizer plant to another corporation, the Board reserving therein the right to cease the operation thereof in the event objectionable odors were disseminated.

On or about December 28, 1928, the respondent Board, without previous notice to appellant, passed a resolution that its order No. 571 be declared forfeited by reason of appellant’s failure to comply with the terms thereof. Upon appellant’s objection the matter was continued, but on February 6, 1929, the Board passed its order No. 1164, declaring the lease to appellant forfeited by reason of appellant’s failure to erect a clubhouse upon the premises or to use any part of the premises for the operation of a clubhouse thereon. Thereupon appellant brought this action.

The complaint is in three counts.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 130, 130 Cal. App. 376, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-athletic-club-v-board-of-harbor-commissioners-calctapp-1933.