Pasadena Sch. Dist. v. City of Pasadena

134 P. 985, 166 Cal. 7, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 277
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 3425.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 134 P. 985 (Pasadena Sch. Dist. v. City of Pasadena) 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
Pasadena Sch. Dist. v. City of Pasadena, 134 P. 985, 166 Cal. 7, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 277 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

In an agreed ease between the Pasadena School District and the city of Pasadena submitted in the superior court of Los Angeles County under section 1138 of the Code of Civil Procedure, judgment was entered in favor of the city and the school district appeals.

The Pasadena School District embraces all the territory within the limits of the city of Pasadena and a large extent of contiguous territory. The city is a municipal, the school district a quasi municipal corporation; each is a political governmental agency, and both distinct corporate entities.

The city adopted a certain ordinance establishing an elaborate building code under which buildings to he constructed in the city are classified, fire districts established, and which provides that only certain classes of buildings shall be erected in certain fire districts. Other ordinances provide for the inspection of plumbing construction and electrical wiring and *9 equipment of buildings, the issuance of permits, and the payment of fees to the city inspectors therefor, and it is made unlawful to commence the erction of any building or structure in the city (other than those erected by the United States) unless plans and specifications of the proposed building are submitted to the building inspector of the city and his permit for the erection thereof is first obtained and the requisite fees paid.

The school district was proceeding to erect a concrete and steel school building in the school district within the city of Pasadena at a cost of about four hundred thousand dollars without having submitted any plans or specifications or obtaining any permit or paying any fees to the city as provided for in said building code and ordinances. Thereupon the city threatened to arrest and prosecute the school trustees of the district and their builder and contractor. The school district claiming that it was not at all subject to the building regulations of the city and the city insisting that it was, this agreed case was made to settle that question.

In this controversy the only question for solution is one of power—Has the city of Pasadena the power to subject the school district erecting a school building within its corporate limits but which also constitutes territory of the school district, to its regulatory building ordinances and building code in the exercise of its police power?

Under the constitution of this state (art. XI, see. 11) power is conferred upon every county, city, town, or township to make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws.

Under this constitutional provision the city of Pasadena is vested with authority to make any such reasonable local police regulations, as its legislative body may deem advisable, controlled only by the limitation that they must not conflict with any general laws enacted by the legislature on the subject. As said in Ex parte Campbell, 74 Cal. 20, 26, [5 Am. St. Rep. 418, 15 Pac. 318] : “Section 11 of article XI is itself a charter for each county, city, town and township in the state as far as its local regulations are concerned; and nothing less than a positive and general law upon the same subject can *10 be said to create a conflict within the meaning of that section.”

The sole contention of the appellant school 'district is that it is an independent governmental agency of the state created under a general law which invests its trustees with the control and management of all school property within the school district, and, hence it is insisted that its authority in that respect is conferred by such general law and the district is not subject to be controlled in the exercise of its powers by the police regulations of a municipality purporting to apply to school districts in constructing buildings on its territory embraced within the municipal limits.

This claim is particularly based upon the provisions of the Political Code adopting a uniform plan for a public school system as found in title III of chapter III, thereof. The sections therein contained, as far as are pertinent to this inquiry, provide for the management and control of school property within school districts by the trustees or boards of education thereof; grants such school authorities the power to build school houses by vote of the district or under a bond issue; and requires the county superintendent of schools except in incorporated cities having boards of education to approve all plans for school houses and to enable him to do so all boards of trustees before adopting any plan for school buildings must submit the same to the county superintendent for his approval.

Under these enactments appellant contends that in harmony with the constitutional provision requiring the legislature to provide for a system of common schools it has created a scheme of complete government respecting school affairs to the extent of vesting in the trustees of such districts power to locate, devise plans for and build school houses and provide for their equipment, which necessarily confers the right to exercise the police power in the construction of such buildings, and is a general law on the subject, with the exercise of which by the school trustees, the municipality cannot interfere.

It is not claimed that there is any general law conferring police power upon the trustees of school districts except as it is insisted that these provisions of the Political Code have that effect. Nor as to these code provisions is it claimed that *11 they expressly give any power to such trustees or enjoin on them the duty of adopting sanitary or building regulations or regulations in the nature of provisions for the public health, comfort, and safety in the construction of school buildings. It is insisted only that under the general power to control school affairs and the particular authority to plan and erect school buildings there is impliedly conferred full police power as to all matters pertaining to the erection of such buildings.

We cannot agree with this view of appellant. School districts are quasi municipal corporations of the most limited power known to the law. Their trustees have special powers and cannot exceed the limit. (Denman v. Webster, 139 Cal. 452, [73 Pac. 139].) Power in the school trustees to determine for themselves all matters concerning the school structures to be erected to the exclusion of the right of the municipality to impose police regulations cannot be implied from a grant solely of power to control school affairs of the district and plan and build school houses. The constitutional right of the municipality to impose reasonable police regulations within its territorial limits, while it may be controlled by a general law, still such law must be, as is said in Ex parte Campbell, 74 Cal. 20, [5 Am. St. Rep. 418, 15 Pac. 318, 321], a positive and general law upon that subject. The power conferred on the trustees of the school district to erect school houses is to be taken only as a grant of power to effectually carry out the purpose of their creation. As a public agency of the state the trustees would have no such power unless it was specifically granted.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 985, 166 Cal. 7, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasadena-sch-dist-v-city-of-pasadena-cal-1913.