People Ex Rel. Webb v. Honey Lake Valley Irrigation District

246 P. 819, 77 Cal. App. 367, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 288
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 7, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3056.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 246 P. 819 (People Ex Rel. Webb v. Honey Lake Valley Irrigation District) 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
People Ex Rel. Webb v. Honey Lake Valley Irrigation District, 246 P. 819, 77 Cal. App. 367, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 288 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The defendant was organized under the Irrigation District Act of 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 254) and the amendments thereto. The organization was completed September 18, 1916. It embraced something over thirty thousand acres of land and was governed by a board of three directors. The first assessment .of the lands therein was levied September 10, 1917. Prior to that time, under the provisions of section 61 of the act, the board of directors had incurred indebtedness and had caused warrants therefor to be issued to the engineer of the district. These warrants recited that they were issued for “engineering” or “administration” expenses in accordance with the provisions of section 61, and that they were “payable January 1, 1918, and bear interest from the date thereon.” Some of them stated that they were payable “from the revolving fund”; others “from the warrant fund,” and one “from the-fund.” The Anaheim National Bank became the owner by assignment of fifteen of these warrants, of the face value of $7,425, and the City National Bank acquired six of them, of the face value of $2,600. September 10, 1917, the board of directors caused warrants to be issued to the engineer of the District in the total sum of $5,000, “for engineering expense, from the warrant fund.” These warrants recited that they bore interest at seven per cent per annum, but did not specify any date of payment. As stated by counsel for appellant Plotts, they were payable on demand. “A cause of action for money payable on demand accrues with the inception of the obligation and without the necessity of any demand.” (Miguel v. Miguel, 184 Cal. 311, 314 [193 Pac. 935, 936].) They were presented to the treasurer on the day of the issuance thereof and by him indorsed: “Funds not available for payment. This warrant bears 7% interest from date Sept. 10th, 1917.” They were there *370 after assigned to appellant Plotts. July 16, 1918, the board of directors adopted-a resolution containing the following: “It appearing to the board, and the board so finds, that it is necessary to raise the sum of $7800, as follows, to-wit: The sum of #6,300 to pay in full all unpaid warrants of the district issued in accordance with and which the board hereby finds to have been issued in accordance with the act of the legislature of the State of California, under which the district is organized and existing. ... It is ordered that for the purpose of raising said sums as aforesaid, an assess-¡ ment be levied upon all the lands within the district and that the rate of assessment be and the same is hereby, fixed' as follows, to wit: For the purpose of raising the amount! sufficient to pay all unpaid warrants as aforesaid, the sum of 102 3/10 cents on each one hundred dollars of the valuation of the said real estate as it appears upon the assessment-roll for the current year.” The sum of #2,037.04 only of this assessment was paid. The first assessment was levied at the rate of #2.80 on each #100 of assessed value and, #7,684 was paid thereon.

, The District never acquired any property and it con'structed no irrigation works. In the latter part of the year 1920, the appellants separately petitioned the Attorney-| General to institute proceedings under the provisions of chapter 356 of the Statutes of 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 751) for the dissolution of the District. February 23, 1922, the Attorney-General commenced this action in accordance with] the provisions of such statute, praying that the District be' dissolved and the amount of its indebtedness determined] Section 3 of the statute provides:

“Upon final judgment of dissolution‘in such action, the district in question shall be deemed dissolved and annulled. The court shall determine the amount of indebtedness outstanding against said district, including the costs of the court action herein provided for, and thereafter the appropriate county officers shall act as ex-officio officers of the district; the records and papers of every kind belonging to the district shall be turned over to the proper county officers. The county treasurer shall perform the duties of the district treasurer; the county tax collector shall perform the duties of the district tax collector; the county assessor shall perform the duties of the district assessor; the county *371 clerk shall perform the duties of the secretary of the board of directors; the board of supervisors shall perform the duties of the board of directors; they shall proceed to levy and collect such additional' taxes as may be necessary upon the lands embraced within such district in the same manner and with the same procedure for nonpayment that county taxes are levied and collected for the purpose of paying such outstanding indebtedness not provided for by previous assessments.”

May 17, 1922, pursuant to stipulation of all the parties, appellants filed, as their complaints in intervention, the aforesaid petitions which they had theretofore presented to the Attorney-General. Thereafter the defendant answered such complaints in intervention, alleging, among other things, that the causes of action set up therein were barred by the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 337 of th,e Code of Civil Procedure. The court found in accordance with such plea of the statute of limitations and denied the interveners any relief. They have appealed from the judgment.

All of the warrants were due and payable not later than January 1, 1918. If the statute of limitations commenced to run against them at that time, it is clear that any action thereon was barred at the time this suit was commenced. Appellants contend, however, that the warrants were made payable out of a special fund and that in such a case the statute does not commence to run until such fund has been provided. The funds upon which the warrants were drawn were in no sense special funds, to be provided in a particular way, nor were they funds created by the statute under which the District was organized. In Carter v. Tilghman, 119 Cal. 104, 106 [51 Pac. 34, 35], in discussing a similar question relating to the funds of an irrigation district, it is said: “As a matter of bookkeeping, the board may keep as many accounts or funds as deemed necessary or convenient, but such a system of bookkeeping in no way affects the rights of creditors.” Section 61 of the Irrigation Act, at the time the warrants in suit were issued, authorized the board of directors, “before the collection of the first assessment,” to incur indebtedness in a sum not exceeding fifty cents an acre and to issue warrants therefor “payable not later than the first day of January after the first assessment shall be levied.” (Stats. 1915, p. 1369.) The *372 statute does not provide for a particular fund out of which to pay such warrants, but at all times since July 27, 1917, section 39 of the act has made it the duty of the board of directors, “within fifteen days after the close of its session as a board of equalization,” to “levy an assessment upon, the lands within the district in an amount . . . sufficient to pay in full the amount of all unpaid warrants of the district issued in accordance with this act.” (Stats. 1917, p.

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Bluebook (online)
246 P. 819, 77 Cal. App. 367, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-webb-v-honey-lake-valley-irrigation-district-calctapp-1926.