Nelson v. Oro Loma Sanitary District

225 P.2d 573, 101 Cal. App. 2d 349, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 1950
DocketCiv. 14365
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 225 P.2d 573 (Nelson v. Oro Loma Sanitary District) 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
Nelson v. Oro Loma Sanitary District, 225 P.2d 573, 101 Cal. App. 2d 349, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1126 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

In a representative action for declaratory relief to declare void a reassessment levied, and to enjoin the issuance of bonds thereon by defendant sanitary district, the court held the reassessment and bonds valid. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment in favor of defendants.

Question Presented

The primary question is whether the trial court and this court may go behind the board’s finding of jurisdiction to make the reassessment.

Pacts

In 1945, the district, in order to acquire rights of way and construct certain storm drainage work and improvements, levied an assessment of $118,501.86 against the property of plaintiffs and approximately five hundred other landowners within a special assessment district. Of this sum, $12,720.64 was paid in cash and the balance, $105,781.82 was raised by *351 the issuance of bonds. The assessment was levied and the bonds issued under the provisions of the Municipal Improvement Act of 1913, Act 5215, Leering’s General Laws. Contracts were let for the doing of the work. As frequently happens in public work, the cost of the project exceeded the estimates and the amount raised by the assessment. It is unnecessary to detail the reasons. The district paid out of its general fund the sum of $71,084.55 over and above the amount of the assessment. To recover this amount for its general fund the district made the reassessment under attack here. This reassessment was made pursuant to section 18 of the 1913 act. No attack is made on the regularity of the reassessment proceedings so far as the mechanical steps and procedures required are concerned. It is claimed, however, that the reassessment is void as the board had no jurisdiction to levy a reassessment for the reason that the original assessment proceedings were valid. The trial court found the reassessment valid and that bonds might be issued thereon; that the amounts of the reassessment were not arbitrary, discriminatory or unfair; that plaintiffs are barred from obtaining relief because of failure to appear and protest at the reassessment hearings; that this action is barred by sections 6 and 18 of the Municipal Improvement Act of 1913.

Applicable Sections op Impeovement Acts

Section 18 of the 1913 act provides that the original assessment shall be recorded in the office of the district engineer of the district “in the manner and with like force and effect as provided in the Improvement Act of 1911 and the Improvement Bond Act of 1915, and the assessment therefor shall have the priority, and the proceedings shall he subject to all of the curative clauses and powers of reassessments, provided in those acts. ...” (Emphasis added.) Pursuant to this section the district followed the reassessment provisions of the 1911 and 1915 acts as they then existed. The Improvement Acts of 1911 and 1915 have been incorporated into the Streets and Highways Code. * Some of the pertinent portions follow: Section 5500 provides: “If any assessment heretofore or hereafter made, issued or filed in the office of the clerk is void or unenforceable for any cause or if bonds have been or are issued to represent or be secured by any assessments and such issuance was or is not effective through the curative provi *352 sions in relation thereto, or any curative act that may be passed by the Legislature in relation thereto to make them valid and enforceable, then, in any of such events a reassessment therefor may be issued.” Section 5501 provides: “The true intent and meaning of this chapter is to make the cost and expense of any work made through an attempted compliance with this division payable by the real estate benefited by such work by making a reassessment therefor. ’ ’ Section 5502 will be discussed later. Then follow sections setting forth the reassessment proceedings. Section 5366 provides for an appeal by any interested person to the district board from a reassessment. (While it does not specifically refer to reassessments, it includes them.) Section 5367 authorizes the board upon such appeal' to correct or amend the assessment in any particular. Section 5368 provides: “All the decisions and determinations of the legislative body, upon notice and hearing as aforesaid, shall be final and conclusive upon all persons entitled to appeal to the legislative body, as to all errors, in-formalities, and irregularities which the legislative body might have avoided, or have remedied during the progress of the proceedings or which it can at that time remedy.”

If bonds are to be issued upon an assessment and after notice is given and a hearing had of protests, section 8596 provides: “If at the hearing the legislative body determines that any assessment is void and unenforceable, it shall order a reassessment. ...”

Section 8702 is practically identical with section 5500 except that the last sentence of section 8702 does not appear in section 5500. That sentence reads: “The reassessment shall be made upon the demand of the owner or holder of bonds aggregating one-third of the principal amount outstanding and shall be made in the manner and form provided by the law pursuant to which the work was done.”

, Jurisdiction oe Board

In resolution 354, entitled “Directing Making of Reassessment, ’ ’ the board found that the original assessment and bonds issued thereon were irregularly levied and unenforceable'. Plaintiffs contend that the record of the original assessment- proceedings shows on its face that the assessment and the bonds issued thereon were valid and enforceable, and hence the board did not have jurisdiction to make a reassessment. (The trial court found the particular steps taken by the board in the original assessment proceedings, but made *353 no finding as to their validity.) Defendants contend that the board’s finding of jurisdiction is final and conclusive in a collateral attack of this kind, particularly against one who failed to protest the reassessment proceedings. Thus, we are required to decide whether in the absence of allegations of fraud or arbitrary action, the courts in a collateral attack may go behind the jurisdictional finding of the. board. The authorities hold that the courts may not do so. The early case of People v. Hagar, 52 Cal. 171, was an action to collect an assessment levied by a swamp land district. In upholding the trial court in striking from the answers of the property owners who were contesting the assessments, certain denials of facts found by the board of supervisors in establishing the district, which facts the superior court found to be jurisdictional, the latter court stated that it was the duty of the board to pass upon these facts and having done so its judgment is conclusive, stating (p. 183) : “These were jurisdictional facts which the Board necessarily determined in approving the petition, and its action is not open to attack in a collateral action. ‘Whenever the jurisdiction of a Court not of record depends on a fact which the Court is required to ascertain and settle by its decision, such decision, if the Court has jurisdiction of the parties, is conclusive, and not subject to any collateral attack.’ (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 523; Bigelow on Estoppel, p. 142.) ” This rule was followed in Spaulding v. North San Francisco Homestead etc. Assn., 87 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 P.2d 573, 101 Cal. App. 2d 349, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-oro-loma-sanitary-district-calctapp-1950.