Pacific Paving Co. v. Verso

107 P. 590, 12 Cal. App. 362, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 354
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 242.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 107 P. 590 (Pacific Paving Co. v. Verso) 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
Pacific Paving Co. v. Verso, 107 P. 590, 12 Cal. App. 362, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 354 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

COOPER, P. J.

This action was brought to recover separate assessments against the several defendants, fifteen in number, on a street assessment for paving and curbing “the intersection of San Jose avenue, 28th and Guerrero streets,” in the city and county of San Francisco.

The court made findings, upon which judgment was ordered and entered in favor of each of the defendants. The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and order.

The contract was entered into and all the preliminary proceedings taken under the act of 1885 (Stats. 1885, p. 147), commonly called the Vrooman act, but the work was not completed, nor was the assessment issued, until the charter of San Francisco became effective. The act provides (section 3) that “Before ordering any work done or improvement made which is authorized by section 2 of this act, the city council shall pass a resolution of intention so to do and describing the work. ...”

The resolution of intention in due form and properly adopted is the foundation and basis upon which all further proceedings must stand. It is the essential thing which clothes the city authorities with jurisdiction to proceed with the proposed improvements. The very meaning of the word “jurisdiction” is power to hear and determine; and if no *364 resolution of intention was passed substantially as required by the statute, there was no power in the municipal authorities to let the contract, issue the assessment or to take any other of the various steps by which a valid lien could be created upon the adjoining lots.

In order that what is said here may be understood, the following diagram is inserted, which shows the location of the land assessed and the place where the work was done:

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The court found that the board of supervisors passed a resolution as follows: “Resolved, that it is the intention of *365 the board to order the following street work in the city and county of San Francisco: that granite curbs be laid where not already laid on the intersection of San Jose avenue, 28th and Guerrero streets, and that the roadway of said intersection be paved with bituminous rock except that portion required by law to be kept in order by the railroad company having tracks thereon”; and further that this resolution was followed by a resolution, ordering the work to be done, as follows : ‘ ‘ That granite curbs be laid where not already laid on the intersection of San Jose avenue, 28th and Guerrero streets, and that the roadway of said intersection be paved with bituminous rock except that portion required by law to be kept in order by the railroad company having tracks thereon. ’ ’ The court further found that “At all of the times in the complaint mentioned the roadway of San Jose avenue, 28th street and Guerrero street, and of the whole thereof, were, and each and every part of it was, an open public street, and duly dedicated to public use, and the width and grade thereof officially established as by law in such cases made and provided. That San Jose avenue, 28th street and Guerrero street do not intersect; that there is no such place as the intersection of San Jose avenue, 28th street and Guerrero street in the city and county of San Francisco.”

It is claimed that the latter finding is not supported by the evidence. The diagram and plat which were annexed to the assesment, and which appear to have been used on the* trial, show the relative position of the improvement and the streets; and not only this, but the court had a right to take judicial notice of the streets, of their boundaries and of their relation to each other. (Brady v. Page, 59 Cal. 52; Williams v. Savings & Loan Soc., 97 Cal. 122, [31 Pac. 908]; Labs v. Cooper, 107 Cal. 657, [40 Pac. 1042].) The act requires that the notice of intention shall describe the work, and the courts so hold. (Richardson v. Heydenfeldt, 46 Cal. 68; Fay v. Reed, 128 Cal. 357, [60 Pac. 927]; Bay Rock Co. v. Bell, 133 Cal. 150, [65 Pac. 299] ; Piedmont Paving Co. v. Allman, 136 Cal. 88, [68 Pac. 493] ; Treanor v. Houghton, 103 Cal. 53, [36 Pac. 1081].) In the latter case it is said: “The range of the district to be included within a single improvement, and the character of the work to be performed therein within the specifications of the statute, is left to the judgment of the *366 board. The resolution of intention must, however, define alike the limits of the district and the nature of the work to be done.” Here the limits of the district were not defined or described. The only reference was to the intersection of the three streets. If we employ the word “intersection” in its broadest sense and meaning, as being the place where the three streets cross each other, or that part of the street that is-common to and a part of each of the three streets, there appears from the diagram to be only a small triangle included within the three streets, that is a small triangle north of the southerly line of 28th street extended, west of the easterly line of Guerrero street extended, and east of the westerly line of San Jose avenue, and that is a part of each of the three streets. In one sense this small triangle is where the three streets intersect or cross each other, but the area is apparently only a few square feet and a very small part of the surface of the street upon which the work was done. If the resolution of intention described this small triangle, it certainly could not be held to include a description of all that part of the street included within the exterior limits of the-crossing of Guerrero and 28th streets, and of all that part, of the street within the exterior limits of the crossing of 28th-street and San Jose avenue, nor of that part of the street included within the exterior lines of the crossing of Guerrero-street and San Jose avenue, nor of all that territory which is clearly only a part of San Jose avenue and no part of either Guerrero or 28th streets. A part of the street upon which the paving was done was San Jose avenue and not common to either of the other streets. Now, if upon the most liberal rule we called the portion of the street which is a part of each of the three streets named the intersection of those streets, we have no resolution of intention to pave any other part of the street which was paved. If we can hold that such description includes all the parts of the streets which were-paved and curbed by the plaintiff, upon the same principle we could hold that the resolution of intention described all the work if it had extended for blocks along San Jose avenue, and for blocks along 28th street and for blocks along Guerrero-street. We think the limits of the district must be defined at least to a common certainty so that a person of ordinary understanding would know what it is proposed to do. The *367

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Bluebook (online)
107 P. 590, 12 Cal. App. 362, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-paving-co-v-verso-calctapp-1910.