Mines v. Del Valle

257 P. 530, 201 Cal. 273, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 469
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8197.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 257 P. 530 (Mines v. Del Valle) 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
Mines v. Del Valle, 257 P. 530, 201 Cal. 273, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 469 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff, a taxpayer of the city of Los Angeles, against certain officers of said city to compel the repayment by said officers into the treasury of said city of certain sums of money which plaintiff alleges were illegally paid out by said officers. The defendants are the members of the board of public service commissioners, the controller of the public service department, the auditor and treasurer, respectively, of the city of Los Angeles. The complaint sets forth that on the fourteenth day of May, 1923, the city council of said city of Los Angeles, by the passage of the resolution provided by law, called an election, at which there was submitted to the the electors of said city the proposition of incurring a bonded indebtedness in the amount of $35,000,000 for the purpose of the acquisition, construction and completion by *276 said city of certain municipal improvements, to wit, works for supplying the said city and its inhabitants with electric energy for the purpose of light, heat, and power, including the construction and acquisition of works for the development of electric energy and of substations, transmission lines, distributing lines, conduits and other works for transmitting said electric energy, and the acquisition of land, water rights, rights of way, machinery, apparatus and other works and property necessary therefor. It is further alleged in said complaint that after the passage of the resolution submitting said proposition to a vote of the electors of said city, there was filed with the said board of public service commissioners certain claims against said city of Los Angeles for labor performed, materials furnished, and services rendered said municipality and said department of public service, which claims were audited and approved by said board of public service commissioners and by the said controller of said public service department, and thereafter audited and approved by the auditor of said city, after which they were paid by the treasurer of said city out of the public funds of said city then in said city treasury. The complaint, and the amendment thereto subsequently filed (we will hereafter refer to both pleadings as the complaint), set forth that twenty-two of such claims were presented to said board and by said board, said controller, and said auditor, audited and approved, and thereafter paid by said treasurer from the funds of said municipality; that the aggregate amount of these claims was the sum of $12,415.15. These several claims are separately set forth in twenty-two separate counts, and in the main were for printing cards, banners, automobile windshield stickers, automobile banners, labels, circulars, handbills, dodgers, and postal cards; for distributing and circulating the same; for constructing a float; and for advertising in certain newspapers in said city; that all of the labor performed, the materials furnished and the services rendered, which were the basis of said claims, were performed, furnished, and rendered to the said department of public service between the date of the resolution of said council calling said election and the date of said election, and that said department of public service purchased said cards, banners, and other materials and used the same and paid for the circulation thereof and caused *277 said advertising to be inserted in said newspapers for the purpose and with the intent of influencing the electors of said municipality to vote in favor of said bond issue. A further allegation of said complaint sets forth that plaintiff had notified said department and the said treasurer of said city after the auditing of each of said claims, and prior to its payment, that the same was an illegal charge against said city, and in the event it was paid by said treasurer plaintiff would institute proceedings in court to compel the repayment thereof; furthermore, that after the payment of said several claims as aforesaid plaintiff filed with the city council of said city a written request and demand that said city institute proceedings against said defendants to recover from them, and to require them to pay into the city treasury the sums of money paid out upon said claims, but that said city council had denied said request and demand and refused to institute any action to recover said sums of money or any of them or any part thereof. ° The complaint also contains an allegation that plaintiff is the owner of property situated in said city, and that by reason of the acts of defendants in paying out said sums of money the burden of taxation will be materially increased upon his land and property within said city and upon the lands and property of other taxpayers in said municipality.

The defendants jointly answered said complaint and denied that they had unlawfully approved, allowed, or ordered paid any claim against said city or had unlawfully paid out of the treasury of said city any funds of said city upon any claim mentioned in said complaint. They also denied that by reason of any action on their part as alleged in said complaint the burden of taxation had been or would be materially or otherwise increased on the lands or property of plaintiff located in said city or upon any of the lands or property of the taxpayers therein. As a special defense defendants set up in their answer that the city of Los Angeles was then, and for more than five years prior thereto had been, the owner of, through the department of public service, of which the board of public service commissioners had charge and control, and during said time, through said department, had been and was then engaged in the business of operating, a system consisting of works and plants located inside and outside of said city for the generation of hydroelectric energy, lines *278

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 530, 201 Cal. 273, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mines-v-del-valle-cal-1927.