People ex rel. Attorney-General v. Parvin

16 P. 490, 74 Cal. 549, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 791
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1888
DocketNo. 11929
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 16 P. 490 (People ex rel. Attorney-General v. Parvin) 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
People ex rel. Attorney-General v. Parvin, 16 P. 490, 74 Cal. 549, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 791 (Cal. 1888).

Opinions

McKinstry, J.

Section 43 of the act of March 28, 1868, “to provide for the management and sale of lands belonging to the state, ” provided that swamp and over[551]*551flowed land districts, previously formed, could reorganize under that act in the manner therein set forth. In pursuance of the section, and on the tenth day of June, 1871, Reclamation District No. 3, which was originally formed June 20, 1861, was organized under the act of 1868.

The Political Code took effect January 1, 1873, when section 3481 of that code read as follows:—

“If the holders of certificates of purchase or patents for lands within any district formed prior to May 28, 1868, and in which the lands have not been reclaimed, desire to have their lands set off from such district, they must, in addition to the petition in section 3446, show to the board of supervisors that their lands are capable of an independent reclamation.” And April 15, 1880, section 3481 was amended (if the amendatory act is valid) so as to read:—
“If the owners of lands representing more than two thirds of any body of lands within any reclamation or swamp-land district, and in which the lands have not been reclaimed, desire to have the said body of lands set off from such district, they must, in addition to the petition required by section 3446, show to the board of supervisors that the said body of lands is capable of an independent reclamation.”

On the twenty-second day of July, 1880, the board of supervisors of Sacramento County, wherein the territory included in Reclamation District No. 3 is situated, by order set apart a portion of such territory as and for a separate and independent reclamation district, called, and to be called, Reclamation District No. 366.

This action is by the people of the state for a judgment declaring that the defendants have usurped and exercised powers and franchises as trustees of the pretended Reclamation District No. 366, without authority of law; that the said pretended district has no legal existence. Decree was entered for plaintiffs in the superior court.

It is contended by respondent that the Reclamation [552]*552District No*. 366 (so called) has no legal existence, for two reasons:—

1. Because the act of April 15,1880, is not a valid law, in that the title thereof does not conform to the mandatory requirement of the constitution,—“Every act shall embrace but one subject, which subject shall be expressed in its title.” (Art. 4, sec. 24.)
2. Because neither section 3481 of the Political Code as the same read when the code was adopted, nor the section as it purports to have been amended by the act of April 15, 1880, applies to or authorizes a division of swamp-land districts, created or reorganized under the act of March 28, 1868.

1. The Political Code constitutes a single statute, thus entitled: “Title of the act,—1. This act shall be known as the Political Code of the state of California.” Whether, under the present constitution, the legislature would have power to enact a law so generally entitled, is a very serious question. But under the constitution existing when the code was adopted, the title was sufficient, and the code continues in force. The section of the constitution, after providing as above quoted, proceeds: “No law shall be revised or amended by reference to its * title ’ (that is, by reference to its title alone); but in such case-the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted, and published at length as revised or amended.” There is no question here but that section 3481 was “ re-enacted and published at length”; and the title of the act amended is very clearly referred to as the “Political Code.” With reference to a statute passed since the constitution of 1879 took effect, there can be no doubt that a section of such a statute—the statute itself being properly entitled—may be amended by referring, in the title of the amendment, to the title of the statute amended, and re-enacting the section as amended. If, in such case, the title of the original statute did not state its “subject,” both the statute and any amendment of it [553]*553would be void. But it is enough if the title of the statute is recited; it is not necessary that the subject of the particular section amended shall be stated in the title of the amendatory act. It is to be understood, of course, that-if any subject shall be embraced in a section of an act passed under the present constitution, which shall not be expressed in the title of the act, the section is void. (Art. 4, sec. 4.) It follows, also, that, under pretense of amending a particular section, the legislature cannot legislate upon a subject not embraced in the title of the original act. If it be said that the title of the amendatory act of April 15, 1880, does not express the subject, the reply is that the constitution does not require, in case of an amendment, that the subject shall be any more fully stated than it is stated in the valid statute amended.

Each article of the Political Code is preceded by head-notes numbered to correspond with the sections following, and purporting to give, in brief form, the subject of each of such sections. It would sometimes give fuller notice to the members of the legislature if the title to a bill for amending a section of the code embraced a statement of the matter contained in the appropriate headnote, or its equivalent. The head-note to section 3481, however, is “ unreclaimed lands may be set off in a separate district”; and even this does not indicate that such district may be formed within another already existing. But the constitution only requires that the title of the act which it is proposed to amend shall be clearly mentioned or recited in the act amending a particular section. This being done, the sufficiency of the title of the amendatory act depends upon the sufficiency of the title of the original act; and as the title of the Political Code was sufficient under the former constitution, we are not prepared to say that the Political Code is a void act because its title does not conform to the mandate of the constitution, adopted after the code became an operative law.

2. We are of opinion the act of April 15, 1880, does [554]*554not authorize the setting off of a new and independent district within the limits of a reclamation district formed or organized prior to the adoption of the Political Code, and not reorganized under the Political Code.

Section 3478 of the Political Code provides that districts formed under laws in force prior to May 23, 1868, may reorganize under the provisions of the code. And section 3489 provides a mode by which any reclamation districts organized, or erected prior to the code, may “reorganize and consolidate” under the code.

The provisions of the Political Code, with reference to the levy and collection of assessments, have no application to Eeclamation District No. 3. It has been so decided by this court. (Reclamation District No. 3 v. Kennedy, 58 Cal. 124.) Why should section 3481 of the same code be held to apply to and authorize a division of Eeclamation District No. 3?

True, section 3481, as originally adopted, provided for the formation of new districts only within those formed prior to May 28,1868.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P. 490, 74 Cal. 549, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-parvin-cal-1888.