Lucas v. City of San Francisco

28 Cal. 591
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 Cal. 591 (Lucas v. City 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
Lucas v. City of San Francisco, 28 Cal. 591 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court,

Rhodes, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs as the assignees of one Wetmore, to recover a cértain sum of money for improving Powell street in San Francisco, which it is alleged was performed by Wetmore under a contract made between him and the city. The cause was formerly appealed by the plaintiffs, and this Court reversed the judgment for the defend[592]*592ant, and remanded the cause for further proceedings. (See 7 Cal. 483.) After the return of the cause to the Court below, it was referred to a referee to try all the issues, whether of law or of fact, and report a judgment; and the cause having been heard by the referee, he reported his findings of fact and conclusions of law, together with a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and they were filed and judgment was entered October 9th, 1861. The appeal is taken from the judgment alone, and there is neither a statement nor bill of exceptions in the record.

The propositions presented on the part of the defendant are substantially that the judgment is erroneous, because no count in the complaint discloses a sufficient cause of action;' and because the findings of fact reported by the referee do not sustain any good count in the complaint, (if it is held that any count is sufficient,) but apply only to those counts which do not state a sufficient cause of action.

Upon the first proposition, the case-is in such a condition that the task of investigation and decision is far from being agreeable; and upon the second, it may not be improper to say, that the statute which we shall have occasion to comment upon, can scarcely be regarded as conducive to the precision and certainty that should characterize judicial proceedings.

When the case was formerly before the Court, it came 'up on appeal from the judgment sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. The defendant filed a general demurrer to the whole complaint, and to each count separately. Mr. Justice Burnett entered into a very elaborate discussion of the principal questions arising in respect to the contract, and matters growing out of it, upon the idea that they must arise in the future progress of the case, and would have to be settled by the appellate Court. At the outset of his opinion, after having stated what the judgment appealed from was, he says : “The objections raised by the demurrer can only apply to some of the counts, and for that reason, if for no other, the judgment of the Court below must be reversed. But it was evidently the intention of all parties to obtain the decision of this Court [593]*593upon all the points raised, as they involve interests of great magnitude that must be settled sooner or later on appeal.” The learned Judge, after holding that the corporation had power to ratify or adopt, in proper form, an act which was within the legitimate powers of the corporation, but which had been- done informally and not in the mode prescribed by law; and that an ordinance would estop the city, while acts in pais would not, stated as the only questions in the case: “ First—Was it (the contract) made in the proper mode? and, second—if not made in the proper mode, was it afterwards affirmed in the proper manner?” The conclusion attained was that the contract was made in the proper mode. The remainder of the opinion is devoted to the discussion of two questions: whether the city was responsible for the cost of the entire work, under the circumstances of the case; and whether she was liable upon the warrants issued to the contractor, on account of the work performed under the contract; and the first was answered in the affirmative, and the second in the negative. Mr. Chief Justice' Murray and Mr. Justice Terry, who joined in a special concurrence, said: “We concur in reversing the judgment of the Court below on the first ground stated in the opinion of Judge Burnett, but differ with him as to the other questions passed upon in his opinion.” We understand them to mean that their concurrence in reversing the judgment was placed on the ground that the alleged contract was made in the mode prescribed by law, for that is first the ground, and the general statement that the objections raised by the demurrer, were not applicable to all the counts, is certainly not one of the grounds assigned why the demurrer should be overruled, but is rather the result, the consequence—necessarily following from the first and second grounds maintained in the opinion.

Mr. Justice Cope when referring to the case in Argenti v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 255, has not given a different interpretation to the language of the special concurrence, but he evidently regarded the first ground discussed by Mr. Justice Burnett, that the city had entered into the contract in the proper [594]*594mode, but could not be estopped by matters in pais, as the ground upon which all the Justices concurred. He was maintaining that the city could be thus estopped, and his citation of the case, with the statement that on that point it was in “ direct antagonism to Seale v. The City of San Francisco,” would be devoid of all purpose and significance, unless he understood the meaning of the special concurrence to be as we have stated.

Whatever our views might be, if the case was now before the Court for the first time, upon the questions whether under the law as it then existed, an ordinance must necessarily precede the making of the contract, after the reception of the proposals, or whether the execution of the contract was sufficiently alleged in the complaint; or .upon the more general question whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the city, is now a matter of no moment in this case, for the decision- that some one of the counts in the complaint is sufficient, became the law of the case, obligatory not only upon the Court below, but also upon the appellate Court whenever the cause should be again brought before them. (Davidson v. Dallas, 15 Cal. 75, and cases cited; Phelan v. San Francisco, 20 Cal. 39.) It is the law of the case in the most exact and restricted sense, in which it can be claimed that the doctrine of res judicata should have application, for it is not the reasoning of the Court, nor any mere legal principles announced, but the judgment itself, which is relied on as conclusive of the question in controversy. The judgment reversed was to the effect that the complaint was insufficient, and the judgment of the appellate Court in reversing that judgment definitely established that the complaint was sufficient.

We have, then, at least one good and sufficient count in the complaint, but the case is such that we are not called upon to specify which were held to be sufficient, though we would be safe in rejecting from the number the counts based on the warrants, and including the first count, which is upon the contract, and the fourth count, which is, in substance, for [595]*595money bad and received by the defendant to the use of the plaintiffs. The counsel for the defendant substantially admit the fourth count to be sufficient, when they say : “ This count is probably good, but not sustained by the finding of fact.” There is no one of the counts which, if it is held to state a sufficient cause of action, will not support the judgment. The only material defect that counsel claim is found in the first count is, that the making of the contract is not well alleged—that the allegation in that count, in fact, showed that the city did not execute the contract.

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28 Cal. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-city-of-san-francisco-cal-1865.