Miller & Lux, Inc. v. Board of Supervisors

258 P.2d 570, 119 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1174
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1953
DocketCiv. No. 8347
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 P.2d 570 (Miller & Lux, Inc. v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Miller & Lux, Inc. v. Board of Supervisors, 258 P.2d 570, 119 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1174 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

Petitioners below appeal from a judgment in certiorari affirming in all respects the proceedings taken before the Merced County Board of Supervisors to form the Central California Irrigation District. Miller & Lux Incorporated, a corporation, The San Joaquin Canal Company, a corporation, John N. Bettencourt, Manuel V. Bettencourt, George A. Zimmerman, William S. Koda and Edward K. Koda have dismissed their appeals.

Stated briefly, the Water Code, division 11, part 2, lays down the following requisites to the formation of an irrigation district. A petition for the formation of such a district must be prepared and circulated; the petition must contain, among other things, generally, a description of the land proposed to be included, a statement as to the source or sources of water supply and the signatures of the requisite number of qualified petitioners. (Wat. Code, § 20720 (a) and (b).) The requisite number of petitioners is either a majority in number and assessed value of the landowners or at least 500 petitioners, each of whom is an elector residing in the proposed district, or the holder of title to land therein, and who in the aggregate own not less than 20 per cent in assessed value of the land proposed to be included within the contemplated district. (Wat. Code, § 20700.) After the petition has been prepared, circulated and signed by the requisite [32]*32number of qualified persons, the petition, together with the notice of a hearing thereon before the board of supervisors must be published for at least two weeks, in newspapers of general circulation within the counties wherein the land lies. (Wat. Code, § 20740.) Following such publication, a preliminary formation hearing is held before the board. (Wat. Code, § 20800.) At this hearing the petition is presented to the board. (Wat. Code, § 20801.) Evidence is received in support of and in opposition to the sufficiency of the petition and the publication thereof. (Wat. Code, § 20802.) At the conclusion of this hearing the board determines by resolution whether or not the petition and the publication are sufficient. (Wat. Code, § 20804.) If it finds that they are it adopts what may be called the preliminary formation resolution. Following the adoption of this resolution a copy thereof is sent to the State Department of Public Works which has already received a copy of the petition. (Wat. Code, §§ 20821, 20820.) The department then makes a feasibility investigation of the irrigation project proposed in the petition and reports thereon in writing to the board of supervisors. (Wat. Code, §§ 20822, 20823.) Upon receipt of a report from the department the board of supervisors then sets, and gives notice of, the final formation hearing. (Wat. Code, §§ 20840, 20842.) At this hearing the board hears any newly discovered evidence against the sufficiency of the petition and the publication, and evidence in rebuttal thereof. (Wat. Code, § 20846.) At the conclusion of the final formation hearing the board of supervisors, if still so minded, adopts a final formation resolution which, among other things, reaffirms the sufficiency of the petition and the publication and describes the boundaries of the proposed district. (Wat. Code, §§ 20847, 20848.) The board then calls for an election to determine whether the qualified voters residing within the proposed district do or do not desire the district’s formation. (Wat. Code, §§ 20890, 20527.)

In the matter of the formation of Central California Irrigation District these procedural steps were taken, and the election having resulted favorably, the district was duly declared by the board to have been formed. Thereafter the trial court, responsive to petition for certiorari, rendered the decision from which this appeal is taken, affirming and approving in all matters the proceedings had in the formation of the district.

Appellants here contend for reversal of the judgment appealed from as follows: That there was no evidence before the [33]*33board of supervisors to establish the jurisdictional facts necessary to sustain the board’s authority to adopt and pass the formation resolutions. Specifically they urge that jurisdiction on the part of the board was lacking, because: (a) It did not have before it a sufficient petition in that the description of the proposed district is indefinite and uncertain, with the consequence that the lines of the proposed district cannot be ascertained; (b) It did not have before it any evidence as to the genuineness of signatures of persons purportedly signing the petition as landowners; (c) The petition and notice were not published in Madera County, such publication being required as the petition included lands in Madera County; (d) There was a failure to prove at the preliminary hearing that the petition had been signed by holders of title to not less than 20 per cent in value of the land to be included within the proposed district.

We will treat, first, of the matter of the sufficiency of the description. It appears that the San Joaquin Canal Company is and was at all times during the proceedings for the formation of the district a public utility engaged in supplying water to lands approximating 150,000 acres in extent and lying generally on the westerly side of the San Joaquin Valley within the counties of Fresno, Merced and Stanislaus. The petition stated 11 That a general description of the land proposed to be formed into a district is all that land embraced within the present service area of the San Joaquin Canal Company, a public utility, together with the land presently occupied by canal rights of way and head-works and lands immediately adjacent to said headworks, all of said public utility, but excluding from said service area the lands of Hamburg, et al., . . . , as having limited water service rights only.” The petition then stated that there followed a written description of the boundaries of the proposed district as sealed from a certain map entitled “The San Joaquin Canal Company, Map of Service Area,” said map being further identified by dates and by the name of the civil engineer who sponsored the map. The petition stated that the written description so prepared had been modified to show an exclusion of land from said service area which had been made by order of the Public Utilities Commission in a designated decision, and it was further stated that the map referred to had been filed for record in the offices of the county recorders of the three named counties, the recording [34]*34data being given. There then followed a metes and bounds description of the exterior boundaries of the various non-contiguous parcels of land proposed to be included within the district. There was also a description of lands proposed to be placed within the proposed district, but which lay-outside of the service area of the utility and a description of certain lands proposed to be excluded from the proposed district which lay within said service area. The petition then stated, “The said land is situated in the following three counties: Fresno, Merced and Stanislaus; and the greatest portion of the area of the land is situated in the county of Merced.” (Under the provisions of the Water Code the Board of Supervisors of Merced County, that being the “principal” county, was given jurisdiction to act in the formation proceedings (Wat. Code, § 20518).) Those proposing the formation of the irrigation district employed a licensed civil engineer to undertake the preparation of the description of the land proposed to be included.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P.2d 570, 119 Cal. App. 2d 29, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-lux-inc-v-board-of-supervisors-calctapp-1953.