People Ex Rel. Board of State Harbor Commissioners v. Pacific Improvement Co.

62 P. 739, 130 Cal. 442, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 859
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1598.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 62 P. 739 (People Ex Rel. Board of State Harbor Commissioners v. Pacific Improvement 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
People Ex Rel. Board of State Harbor Commissioners v. Pacific Improvement Co., 62 P. 739, 130 Cal. 442, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 859 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This action was brought by the board of state harbor commissioners, in the name of the people of the state of California, to recover possession of a strip of land thirty fe'et wide lying along the southerly side of Channel street, in the city and county of San Francisco, and constituting a portion of said street, the same being located west of the east hue of Fifth street. Defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled, and thereupon they filed an answer. It was agreed that the case be submitted upon the pleadings, and that findings be waived. The court thereupon ordered judgment for plaintiff, and this appeal is from the judgment on the judgment-roll.

The main controversy is as to whether the premises described in the complaint are part of the territory over which the jurisdiction of the state board of harbor' commissioners extends. The solution of the question depends upon the construction of certain acts of the legislature. Prior to March 15, 1878, the territory subject to the jurisdiction of the said board was described-by section 2524 of the Political Code, and did not include the premises in controversy. The language of the section, as to the portion of the description of Channel street, was: “Thence southerly along the Center of Third street, to the northerly line of Channel street; thence westerly, along the last-mentioned line, to the easterly line of Fifth street; thence southerly, along said last-mentioned line, to the southerly line of Channel street; thence easterly, along said mentioned line, to the center of Kentucky street.”

There is no claim that the premises were included within the descriptive calls of said section, or within the jurisdiction of the board, prior to the said fifteenth day of March, 1878. On the last-named date the legislature passed an act entitled “An act concerning the waterfront of the city and county of San Francisco.” (Stats. 1877-78, p. 263.) This act provided: “The inshore limit of the jurisdiction of the board of state harbor commissioners shall be and remain the same as defined in section 2524 of the Political Code.....But their juris *445 diction in and over .... Channel street .... shall extend as far as the ebb and flow of the tide water.”

The act further provided that Channel street, as far as the ehb and flow of the tide, was “dedicated to public use for the purposes of commerce and navigation, and shall be subject .... to the jurisdiction of the said commissioners.”

This act has never been expressly repealed and remains in full force unless it has been repealed by implication.

By an act approved March 21, 1887 (Stats. 1887, p. 224), section 2524 of the Political Code was amended and certain additional authority given to the board as to repairing wharves and piers and purchasing and constructing pile-drivers. In this amendment the description of the premises over which the board had jurisdiction was given as in the section prior to the act of March, 1878. The evident purpose of the amendment was to give additional powers to the board. The act of March, 1878, was in no way referred to.

The section was again amended March 19, 1889 (Stats. 1889, p. 380), and the description apparently copied from the old section without any reference to the act of March, 1878. This latter amendment was for the apparent purpose of giving the board certain other powers, and restricting their powers as to leasing, and prohibiting railroad companies from laying down tracks upon the property over which the hoard has jurisdiction. In both the amendments—of 1887 and 1889—the description is given as in the original section prior to March, 1878. In neither is there any reference to the act of March, 1878, nor anything said about any repeal of any act or section. The section as amended after the act of March 15, 1878, is no more in conflict with the said act than it was when the act was passed. The act of March, 1878, added to the territory over which the board had jurisdiction the premises in controversy. It was to be read in connection with section 2524 of the Political Code, and as an enlargement of the jurisdiction originally given by that section. We do not think it was the intention of the legislature to repeal the act of March, 1878, neither do we think it has done so. It is not contended that there is any express repeal nor any inconsistency. It is the established rule of construction that the law does not favor a repeal by implication, but that where *446 there are two or more provisions relating to the same subject matter they must, if possible, be construed so as to maintain the integrity of both. It is also the rule that where two statutes treat of the same subject, one being special and the other general, unless they are irreconcilably inconsistent, the latter, although latest in date, will not be held to have repealed the former, but the special act will prevail in its application to the subject matter as far as coming within its particular provisions. A special statute providing for a particular place, or applicable to a particular locality, is not repealed by a statute general in its terms and application unless the intention of the legislature to repeal or alter the special law is manifest, although the terms of the general act would, taken strictly and but for the special law, include the case or cases provided by it. (Bateman v. Colgan, 111 Cal. 586.) It is said by Judge Cooley (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 6th ed., 183): “The repugnancy between two statutes should be very clear to warrant a court holding that the one later in time repeals the other, when it does not in terms purport to do so. This rule has peculiar force in the case of laws of special and local application, which are never to be deemed repealed by general legislation except upon the most unequivocal manifestation of intent to that effect.”

In this case the special act added to the description the portion of Channel street where the tide ebbs and flows. No change was attempted in the amendments to the section as to the description. The special act can still stand and can be reconciled with, and read as a part of, the section amended. “Provided that the jurisdiction shall extend to that portion of Channel street as far as the ebb and flow of tide water” may be considered as a part of, and in no way ineonsistent.with, the section.

In amending section 3534 the legislature, in copying the whole section, were only following the plain mandates of the constitution: “No law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title; but in such case the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted and published at length as revised or amended.” (Const., art. IV, sec. 24.) The views herein expressed are in accord with the construction of similar acts heretofore given by this court.

In People v. Tyler, 36 Cal. 524, it appeared that the fifteenth *447 section of the judiciary act of 1863 provided that “there shall be. held in the several counties of this state terms of the county courts, commencing on the first Monda)' of January, March, May, July, September, and November of each year.” In 1864, by a special act, Nevada county was exempted from the provisions of the act and different dates provided for holding court in said last-named county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 739, 130 Cal. 442, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-board-of-state-harbor-commissioners-v-pacific-improvement-cal-1900.