Mahoney v. Board of Education

107 P. 584, 12 Cal. App. 293, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 691.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 P. 584 (Mahoney v. Board of Education) 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
Mahoney v. Board of Education, 107 P. 584, 12 Cal. App. 293, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 10 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action brought to restrain the board of education of the city and county of San Francisco from leasing certain premises dedicated to public school purposes. The property involved is on the southeasterly corner of Fifth and Market streets in San Francisco, and is known as the Lincoln school lot. After some formal allegations the complaint alleges that said property was in the year 1858 vested in the commissioners of the funded debt of said city and county; that in said year an act of the legislature was passed and approved, authorizing and empowering that commission to convey said property to the board of education of said city and county in trust to and for the use of public schools in said city and county; that thereafter, the said commissioners did make, execute and deliver to said board of education, as trustee and in trust to and *295 for the use of such public schools, a conveyance and transfer of said property; that thereafter, by an ordinance of said city and county, known as the Van Ness ordinance, approved by an act of the legislature duly passed, the title to said property was confirmed in said board of education for the purpose of sites for sehoolhouses, and thereafter the title of said board for said purposes was, by an act of Congress of the United States, again confirmed. That said board of education, as such trustee, has ever since held, and does now hold, the title to said real property for public school purposes, and as a site for sehoolhouses, and for no other use or purpose whatsoever.

The complaint further alleges that the board of education, unless restrained", will lease that property for a term of thirty-five years to one Maurice Rosenthal, to be devoted to purposes foreign to those contemplated by the dedication; that the board of education is without power to devote said lands to any other use than that to which they were dedicated.

Then follows the prayer of the complaint.

Defendants demurred to the complaint, the demurrer was sustained without leave to amend, and judgment was rendered against plaintiff, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Plaintiff contends that to permit the defendants to lease this property as contemplated will be, as alleged in the complaint, to allow" the property to be diverted from the purposes to which it was dedicated, and that this the board of education has no power to do.

When land has been dedicated to a definite and specific purpose by grant or devise it is well settled that the property cannot, without the consent of the grantor or devisor, or his successor in interest, be used for any other purpose. (2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 650; Harter v. San Jose, 141 Cal. 659, [75 Pac. 344].)

It is also true that when dedicated land is situated within a municipality, but is set aside and reserved; by the state for certain purposes, the municipality has no authority to divert the property from such purposes. But the right of the state to do so, on the other hand, is unlimited, unless there are contract restrictions or private rights of an abutting owner or other person involved.

*296 This proposition is abundantly supported by the authorities. In the ease of Hart v. Burnett, 15 Cal. 530, at page 581, the court found that the city and county of San Francisco held the title to the land which constituted the old pueblo of Yerba Buena as the successor of the Mexican pueblo, and in trust to and for the purposes for which it was dedicated by the Mexican law. The court at- page 581 said: “We do not dispute the proposition that the legisla.ture, perhaps without the consent of the city and county of San Francisco—certainly with it—could, by virtue of its paramount political sovereignty, change the trusts upon which those lands were held. It might undoubtedly authorize another and different mode of disposing of them and by other and different agents.”

In Polack v. San Francisco Orphan Asylum, 48 Cal. 492, it was held that land dedicated for street purposes could be revoked by an act of the legislature. It was there said: “That the legislature possesses competent power to dedicate a street'in a city; that the legislature may delegate or give such power to the municipal authorities in such city; that its exercise by the municipal authorities is dependent upon the will and subject to the control of the legislature; and that after such power has been thus given to municipal authorities, the legislature may revoke it in part as well as in whole, or without an express revocation may itself exercise it in any particular instance, are propositions about which there can be no controversy in this state. ’ ’

In City of Monterey v. Jacks, 139 Cal. 542, [73 Pac. 436], 203 U. S. 560, [27 Sup. Ct. 67], the court held that the lands dedicated to the pueblo of Monterey for certain public uses were held by the city of Monterey as successor of the pueblo, subject to the same purposes. There certain lands dedicated for named public purposes were sold to an individual, which sale was approved, ratified and confirmed by an act of the legislature, and the court held the sale valid, and said that where land was not acquired by a municipality in its proprietary right the legislature had absolute power to alienate it, or when it had been sold to ratify such sale. In Payne v. Treadwell, 16 Cal. 233, the supreme court of this state said: “The agents of the corporation can sell and dispose of the property of the corporation only in the way *297 and according to the order of the legislature, and, therefore, the legislature may, by law operating immediately upon the subject, dispose of this property, or give effect to any previous disposition or attempted disposition of it. The property itself is a trust, and the legislature is the prime and original controlling power, managing and directing' the use, disposition and direction of it.” (See, also, Brook v. Horton, 68 Cal. 555, [10 Pac. 204]; San Francisco v. Burr, 108 Cal. 460, [41 Pac. 482]; Merriwether v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 472; 2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, secs. 651, 652.) These authorities undoubtedly are to the effect that where lands are held by a city, board, commission, or other entity, in trust for the state, the legislature may revoke the dedication.

According to the allegations of the complaint, the land in question, by an act of the legislature, was held by the board of education in trust, to and for the use of public schools in San Francisco, and was subject, therefore, as we have just seen, to be diverted by the legislature from such purpose, and the leasing of the property by the board of education as proposed, it is conceded, would' be a diversion of it from the use to which it was dedicated; but as it would be under a provision of the charter approved by the legislature, it would in effect be by the direction and under the authority of the legislature, and hence valid.

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Related

West v. Board of Education
184 P. 877 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
107 P. 584, 12 Cal. App. 293, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-board-of-education-calctapp-1909.