Oakland Paving Co. v. Whittell Realty Co.

195 P. 1058, 185 Cal. 113, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 526
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9134.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 195 P. 1058 (Oakland Paving Co. v. Whittell Realty Co.) 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
Oakland Paving Co. v. Whittell Realty Co., 195 P. 1058, 185 Cal. 113, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 526 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

This is an action to foreclose an assessment for the improvement of a street in Oakland. The only defense interposed is that the work was not completed within the time limited in the contract. The court found that the work had not been completed within such time and therefore held the assessment void. The case was appealed to this court and transferred to the district court of appeal (first district, division one), which reversed the lower court, holding that the curative provisions of section 26 of the “Improvement Act of 1911” (Stats. 1911, p. 730), under which the work was done, validated the assessment notwithstanding the finding that the work was not completed in time. The respondent petitioned this court for a transfer after the decision in the district court of appeal upon the ground that the decision squarely overruled a long line of decisions by this court upon the effect of the failure to complete a contract within time. The cases sol claimed to be overruled are the following: Beveridge v. Livingstone, 54 Cal. 54; Fanning v. Schammel, 68 Cal. 428, [9 Pac. 427]; Dougherty v. Coffin, 69 Cal. 454, [10 Pac. 672]; Dougherty v. Nevada Bank, 81 Cal. 162, [22 Pac. 513]; Brock v. Luning, 89 Cal. 316, [26 Pac. 972]; Palmer v. Burnham, 120 Cal. 364, [52 Pac. 664, 1080]; Kelso v. Cole, 121 Cal. 121, [53 Pac. 353], and Union etc. Co. v. Campbell, 2 Cal. App. 534, 535, [84 Pac. 305].

The petition of the respondent was granted not only because of the apparent force in its contention, but also for the reason that at the time we had under consideration a similar question arising under a street improvement procedure ordinance of San Francisco, in which ordinance the exact language of section 26 of the Improvement Act of 1911, supra, was contained.

*115 Appellant claims that the curative provisions of the Improvement Act of 1911, section 26, supra, establish the validity of the assessment notwithstanding a failure to complete the work in time. This provision appears for the first time in that act and is as follows: “Sec. 26. . . . No assessment, warrant, diagram or affidavit of demand and nonpayment, after the issue of the same, and no proceedings prior to the assessment, shall be held invalid by any court for any error, informality, or other defect in the same, where the resolution of intention of the council to do the work, has been actually published as herein provided, and said notices of improvement have been posted along the line of the work, as provided in section five of this act, before the passage of the resolution ordering the work to be done.”

Respondent in turn claims that this provision is so similar in scope and effect to that contained in previous laws, particularly that of 1871-72 (sec. 12, p. 804), that the above decisions rendered under such statutes are decisive of the question, and that the assessment is therefore void, notwithstanding the above curative clause.

The question then is this: Is the failure to complete the work under this contract an “error, informality, or other defect in the proceedings prior to the assessment” within the meaning of section 26, supra, and, if so, has the legislature the power to prohibit the courts from declaring an assessment void on that account?

In the ease at bar the contract was signed December 30, 1911. The contractor was given 150 days from the date of the contract to perform the work. That time would ordinarily expire on May 29th of the succeeding year, hut as 1912 was a leap-year, it expired May 28th. Apparently overlooking this fact the order of extension was made May 29th.

The work was accepted and an assessment issued July 5, 1912. The only evidence adduced by the respondent on the question of the completion of the work was the categorical answer “no” to the question, “Was the work completed May 29, 1912?” addressed to its witness, and the further testimony given by the same witness that on June 15, 1912, some of the contractor’s employees were working upon the street. There is no evidence whatever as to the amount of work uncompleted on May 29, 1912, or as to *116 what work was being done on June 15th. The testimony of the defendant would be entirely consistent with the fact that on May 29th some trifling imperfection in the work was not completed and that this imperfection was being completed on the fifteenth day of June next, or that the work done in June might have been the remedying of some defect which had been discovered after its acceptance by the street superintendent. Although, of course, the failure to complete the work may have been much more extensive.

In the case of Chase v. Trout, 146 Cal. 350, [80 Pac. 81], it was flatly decided that the curative provision contained in the amendment to the Vrooman Act [Stats. 1885, p. 147], sometimes called the Bond Act, making the bond conclusive evidence of the regularity and validity of all previous proceedings was valid to the extent that nonjurisdictional matters were cured by the issuance of the bond. And it was accordingly flatly held that a failure to perform the work in time was cured by the issuance of the assessment and bond. It was thereby affirmatively established that the legislature had power to embody in the statute authorizing the assessment a curative provision which would validate the assessment, notwithstanding the fact that the contract work was not completed in time. It follows from this decision that if the curative provision of the law of 1911 is broad enough to cover the same subject, it is a valid exercise of legislative power and the assessment in this case must be sustained even though we should hold that the work was not completed in time.

The above-quoted curative provision of the law of 1911 is contained in section 26, which also regulates the right of appeal to the local legislative body and declares the effect of such appeal or the failure to appeal.

It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that a failure to secure an extension of time on the exact day when the contract expired or before is a mere defect or informality in the proceedings, where the contractor has been proceeding diligently day after day as the law and contract provides, and has failed to complete the work within the time, which was fixed after his bid to do the work had been accepted. If the extension had been made on the exact day when it should have been made there would have been no *117 defect and no informality, and consequently no necessity for the operation of any curative provision.

It is, however, contended by the respondent that this proviso is very similar to, if not identical with, provisions in previous laws which have been already passed upon by the court. Without reviewing the whole course'of these decisions, it is sufficient to say that in the earlier provisions of the Consolidation Act of San Francisco, the character of defense which could be interposed in an action upon a street assessment lien was specified in the law. The Consolidation Act of 1862 (Stats. 1862, p. 398, subd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P. 1058, 185 Cal. 113, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakland-paving-co-v-whittell-realty-co-cal-1921.