Mahoney v. City & County of San Francisco

257 P. 49, 201 Cal. 248, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 467
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1927
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11177.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 257 P. 49 (Mahoney v. City & County 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
Mahoney v. City & County of San Francisco, 257 P. 49, 201 Cal. 248, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 467 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This action was inaugurated in the court below by plaintiff, Margaret Mahoney, a resident taxpayer of the City and County of San Francisco. The prayer of the amended complaint was for a decree of the court directing the delivery into court for cancellation of two certain instruments of even date purporting to be leases entered into by the Spring Valley Water Company, a corporation, and the City and County of San Francisco, upon the ground and for the reason that said instruments were in violation of article XI, section 18, state constitution, and article XVI, section 29, charter of the City and County of San Francisco, which provide generally and specifically, respectively, that said City and County shall not incur any indebtedness or liability for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors thereof voting at an election held for that purpose, and are, therefore, null and void and wholly without legal *251 effect; also, that said Spring Valley Water Company, designated in said instruments as lessor, and said City and County of San Francisco, designated therein as lessee, be perpetually enjoined from taking any further action or proceedings or exercising any right or privilege claimed to have been granted or conferred under or by virtue of said instruments or agreements, and that the City and County of San Francisco and certain of its officers be restrained and enjoined from auditing or approving any claim or demand or expending or paying out of the public funds of said City and County any sum or sums of money whatsoever claimed to be due or owing on account or by virtue of the terms or covenants contained in said instruments, and that the auditor and treasurer of said City and County be required to repay into the city treasury the sum of $24,000, with interest thereon, paid by said City and County to said Spring Valley Water Company as the first installment of rent as by the terms of one of said instruments provided and to repay any and all other sums'that may thereafter be paid, audited, approved, or allowed by the agents of said City and County under said instruments. The complaint closes with a prayer for general relief and costs. The defendants Spring Valley Water Company and the City and County of San Francisco appeared separately and demurred to the amended complaint upon general grounds. The demurrer as to each defendant was sustained with leave to amend, and, the plaintiff refusing to further amend, judgment was entered against her. The appeal is taken from the judgment thus entered.

The major question presented by the appeal is whether the terms and provisions of the instruments before us—be they agreements of purchase or leases of real property— are violative of either the organic law of the state as expressed by article XI, section 18, state constitution, or of article XVI, section 29, charter of the City and County of San Francisco, or of the letter or spirit of the law as expressed in other provisions of said charter.

Article XI, section 18, state constitution, provides: “No county, city, town, township, board of education, or school district, shall incur any indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the *252 assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors thereof, voting at an election to be held for that purpose, nor unless before or at the time of incurring such indebtedness provision shall be made for the collection of an annual tax sufficient to pay the interest on such indebtedness as it falls due, and also provision to constitute a sinking fund for the payment of the principal thereof on or before maturity, which shall not exceed forty years from the time of contracting the same; ...”

Article XVI, section 29, charter of the City and County of San Francisco, provides: “When the Supervisors shall determine that the public interest requires the acquisition of any land or lands, or the construction or acquisition of any permanent building or buildings, improvement or improvements the cost of which, in addition to other expenses of the City and County will exceed the income and revenue provided for the City and County for any one year, they must, by ordinance, submit a proposition or propositions to incur a bonded indebtedness for such purpose or purposes to the electors of the City and County at a special election to be held for that purpose only. ...”

The apportionment and setting apart of the city’s revenue and income into separate funds is mandatory, and the transfer of moneys from one fund to another or the use thereof for any purpose other than that for which the same were raised, except as specifically provided, is forbidden. (Article III, chapter II, charter.) Each demand must show the fiscal year within which the indebtedness was incurred and the name of the specific fund out of which it is payable and have written or printed upon it a statement that the same can only be paid out of the income and revenue provided, collected and paid into the proper specific fund in the treasury for the fiscal year within which the indebtedness was incurred. (Article III, chapter II, section 13.) Again, the incurring of liabilities against the treasury which cannot be paid out of the income provided, collected, and paid into the proper fund as its proportion of the same for the fiscal year or permitting liabilities or indebtedness incurred in any one fiscal year to be a charge upon or paid out of the income or.revenue of any *253 other fiscal year, is prohibited by article III, chapter II, section 13, of said charter.

With the provisions of the organic law before us, it becomes necessary, for a determination of the question as to whether or not the terms, conditions, and covenants of said instruments or agreements, or either or any of them, are violative of the state constitution and said charter, to consider in connection therewith the substance of said instruments, which are annexed to and made a part of the complaint and marked Exhibits “A” and “B,” respectively. In both instruments the Spring Valley Water Company is denominated the lessor and the City and County the lessee. For the sake of convenience we adopt the same identification references. By Exhibit “A” the lessor demises and lets unto the lessee all that certain real property situate, lying, and being in the city and county of San Francisco and described as a tract of land containing 170 acres, more or less, being a portion of that certain tract of land containing 811.13 acres of the so-called Lake Merced Ranch of the Spring Valley Water Company, adjacent to the municipal golf course as now located. The lease term is fifteen years, beginning on July 1, 1922, and terminating on June 30, 1937. The rentals for the term total $102,000 and are apportioned with reference to an ascending scale. The first installment of $2,000 became payable on July 1, 1925, and the remaining installments thereafter in gradually increasing amounts are payable on July 1st of each succeeding year, the last installment, amounting to $15,000, falling due July 1, 1936. In addition to said installments aggregating $102,000, the lessee agrees to pay annual installments equal in amount to the installments of all taxes, assessments, and other municipal or governmental charges levied upon said real property or any part thereof before the same shall become due.

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 49, 201 Cal. 248, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1927.