People ex rel. Macpherson v. Board of Supervisors

43 Cal. 91
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
DocketNo. 2,701
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Cal. 91 (People ex rel. Macpherson v. Board of Supervisors) 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. Macpherson v. Board of Supervisors, 43 Cal. 91 (Cal. 1872).

Opinion

[97]*97By the Court,

Wallace, C. J.:

This is an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the Board “ to pass the necessary and proper resolutions and orders, and give the notices required by law, to grade Beale street from Folsom street to Bryant street, and Harrison street from Fremont street to Main street, to the newly established grade, of said Beale street and Harrison street, between said Folsom street and Bryant street, and said Fremont street and Main street, and to proceed and execute the prayer of the petition of the property owners praying for the grading of said streets, * * * presented * * * October 24th, 1870.”

It appears that in January, 1869, a petition signed by certain persons, owners of lots in San Francisco, was presented to the Board of Supervisors, praying that a change in the grade of Beale street from Folsom, street to Bryant street, and also a correspoiltling change in the grade of Harrison street, an intersecting street, be ordered by the Board. The petition was presented under the provisions of the Act of March 28th, 1868, p. 463, authorizing the Board to modify and change the grade of streets in San Francisco, and it purported to be signed by the owners of three fourths of the property to he affected by the proposed change. In response to this petition, the Board, on the 23d day of February following, adopted a resolution reciting the substance of the petition presented, declaring their intention to accede to its prayer, designating certain limits within which the lots of land would be benefited by the proposed change, and directing that the resolution be published for the period of thirty days in the official newspaper as a notice of such intention, under Section 2 of the statute. The publication was had accordingly—the first publication being made upon the 26th [98]*98day of February, 1869—and within twenty days after such first publication, some nine persons, owners of lots of Iand5 filed their several duly verified petitions under subdivision two of Section 2 of the statute, setting forth the damages which they claimed they would respectively sustain by the proposed change of grade, and asking the appointment of Commissioners to assess such damages, etc.; of the filing of which petitions the County Clerk gave immediate notice to the President of the Board. The County Court thereupon proceeded to appoint three proper persons to be Commissioners to assess the benefits and damages growing out of the proposed change of grade. This was on the 16th of April, 1869, and on the 4th of October following the Commissioners filed their report, in which they awarded damages not only to the nine persons who had so petitioned therefor, but to divers other persons, owners of lots, who had filed no petitions in that behalf. One of the nine persons who had duly filed petitions claiming damages Vas the present petitioner, A. W. McPherson, and there was awarded ¿o him by the Commissioners in their report some thirty-three thousand dollars as damages which he would sustain by the change of grade proposed. On the filing of this report the County Clerk notified the Board of Supervisors of the fact that it had been so filed, and the Board thereafter, on the 11th of October, 1869, by its ordinance, duly passed for that purpose, confirmed the report, of the fact of which confirmation the Clerk of the Board in turn gave notice to the County Court, and the County Court thereupon by its order fixed the 1st day of November, 1869, as the day for hearing parties feeling aggrieved by reason of the proceedings.

On that day the “ Union Lumber Association,” who, as owners of certain premises, had been assessed by the report in some sixty-five thousand dollars for supposed benefits to their property by the proposed change of grade, made objections to the report upon several grounds; among others, upon [99]*99the ground that damages had been allowed to non-petitioning owners; that the damages as awarded were exorbitant in amount, and that the assessment imposed upon the property of the association for supposed benefits was excessive, etc. These objections coming on to be heard before the County Court, on the 17th of February, 1870, that Court held that the report of the Commissioners was correct in undertaking to award damages to non-petitioning owners, and that the Court had no authority to hear evidence or entertain an inquiry as to alleged errors committed in the estimates made by the Commissioners respecting benefits to be received or damages to be sustained, but that the estimates contained in the confirmed report, in the absence of fraud, were conclusive, and all objections being overruled, judgment was thereupon rendered against the several lots of land in accordance with the report on file.

From this judgment of the County Court the Union Lumber Association brought an appeal here, and this Court considering ¿that, in so far as an award of damages had been made in favor of non-petitioning lot owners error had intervened, thereupon delivered its opinion to that "effect and reversed the judgment and remanded the cause “ with directions to render judgment, omitting the damages awarded to parties not filing petitions therefor as required by the statute, and for such further proceedings as may be necessary and not inconsistent with this opinion.” (In The Matter of Beale Street, 89 Cal. 495.)

At a subsequent day, the remittitur not having issued, the counsel upon either side of that cause presented to this Court a stipulation to the effect that the judgment theretofore entered in the above entitled cause should be changed and modified so as to read as follows: “The judgment of the County Court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to render judgment in favor of the nine persons who filed petitions for damages, omitting the damages awarded [100]*100to parties not filing petitions therefor as required by the statute, and to deduct from the several assessments for benefits their respective proportionate part of the sum of two hundred and fifteen thousand and eighty dollars and fifty-seven cents, that had been awarded to persons not-filing petitions for damages, and to apportion the amount of the several awards of said nine persons, together with the expenses of these proceedings, upon the lands and premises assessed for benefits, as reported by the Commissioners, and take such further proceedings to carry out the decision of this Court, not inconsistent with the opinion herein as may be necessary,” and the order of modification was accordingly entered here.

The cause having been remanded to the County Court, that Court, on the 29th day of August, 1870, entered an order reciting the several steps which had been theretofore taken, including the proceedings had in this Court upon appeal, and thereupon, without setting aside or recommitting the report of the Commissioners, or correcting the report itself in any wise, the County Court rendered a judgment by which it awarded damages to the nine petitioning owners only, and by its judgment reduced the assessment for benefits in a like proportion, and upon the basis which had been here indicated as correct.

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43 Cal. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-macpherson-v-board-of-supervisors-cal-1872.