People v. City of Montebello

221 P. 207, 192 Cal. 489, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 375
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1923
DocketL. A. No. 7747.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 221 P. 207 (People v. City of Montebello) 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 v. City of Montebello, 221 P. 207, 192 Cal. 489, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 375 (Cal. 1923).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action of quo warranto commenced in the superior court of Los Angeles County by the attorney-general upon the relation of Walter P. Temple, to determine the validity of the proceeding leading to the incorporation of the city of Montebello as a city of the sixth class, under the Municipal Corporation Act of 1883 (Stats. 1883, p. 93). After decision rendered in favor of defendants, judgment was entered that plaintiff “take nothing by this action. ’ ’ From this judgment plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff contends that the incorporation order is illegal and void, basing its contention upon the single ground that the published notice of the hearing of the petition for *490 the incorporation not being signed, was legally insufficient to vest the board of supervisors with jurisdiction to hear the petition. The defendants’ position is, (1) that the published notice shows on its face that it was given by the petitioners, and fully complies with the Municipal Corporation Act, supra; (2) that the proceeding for the incorporation of a city of the sixth class is a legislative act, therefore the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors is not open to attack in a quo warranto action.

Section 2 of the Municipal Corporation Act, supra, as amended, provided that the incorporation proceedings shall be initiated in the following manner:

“A petition shall first be presented to the board of supervisors of such county, signed by at least fifty of the qualified electors of the county, residents within the limits of such proposed corporation, and the affidavit of three qualified electors residing within the proposed limits, filed with the petition, shall be prima facie evidence of the requisite number of signers. The petition shall set forth and particularly describe the proposed boundaries of such corporation, and state the number of inhabitants therein, as nearly as may be, and shall pray that the same may be incorporated under the provisions of this Act. Such petition shall be presented at a regular meeting of such board, and shall be published for at least two weeks before the time at which the same is to be presented, in some newspaper printed and published in such county, together with a notice stating the time of the meeting at which the same will be presented. . . . ” (Stats. 1889, p. 371.)

• Plaintiff alleges in its complaint that late in August and early in September, 1920, there was published in the “Montebello News,” a newspaper of general circulation in the county of Los Angeles, the following notice:

“Notice.
“Incorporation of the ‘City of Montebello’ as a City of the
Sixth Class.
“Notice is hereby given by the undersigned that the following petition will be presented to the board of super-i visors. ...”

There was also published, together with and following said notice, a petition in the following terms:

*491 “Petition for the Incorporation of the Proposed ‘City of
Montebello. ’
“To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of the County of Los Angeles, State of California.
“We, the undersigned petitioners, respectfully represent that we are qualified electors of the county of Los Angeles, state of California, and reside within the limits of the hereinafter proposed municipal corporation. ...” (Here follows the names of said petitioners.)

On the day designated in the notice the petition was presented to the board. Thereupon, and after an election had been held, in which 401 out of the 473 electors of Montebello had voted in favor of incorporation, such proceedings were had, that, on the 11th of October following, by ah order entered upon its minutes, the board declared said territory to be a municipal corporation of the sixth class, under the name of Montebello. A certified copy of this order was filed in the office of the Secretary of State; and from that time on the city of Montebello has exercised all the functions of a municipal corporation.

We are of the opinion that the published notice was sufficient, and that consequently the record shows a compliance with the statute. To sustain its contention that the notice was insufficient the plaintiff relies chiefly upon the case of In re Central Irr. Dist., 117 Cal. 382 [49 Pac. 354], in which this court held that the notice therein published did not comply with section 2 of the Wright Act (Stats. 1887, p. 29), providing for the organization of irrigation districts. This statute, so far as the question of notice is concerned, is identical in wording with the Municipal Corporation Act of 1883, supra. In In re Central Irr. Dist., supra, the court, in commenting upon the notice, said: “It was shown that there were published for two weeks in the Weekly Colusa Sun, the petition, with the names of the signers thereto, and immediately below this the following: ‘The foregoing petition will be presented to the honorable board of supervisors of Colusa county on Monday, October 10, 1887, at 10 o’clock a. m. of that day.’ The notice was unsigned. It did not bear upon its face any showing of authority. It did not appear from it that it was given by the petitioners, who alone could issue the process. Indeed, from *492 all that is shown, the so-called notice may have been but the declaration of the editor of the newspaper, and the publication of the so-called notice may have been but the statement in the paper of a bit of news. It is essential to the validity of a notice that it shall bear upon its face evidence that it has been given by the person authorized so to do, and this evidence is shown by the signature of the officer or other person charged with the duty.” It is clear from this quotation that the court did not intend to lay down a hard- and-fast rule that the published notice must in all cases be signed. To the contrary, it was simply a decision that the notice published must bear upon its face the signatures of the petitioners or show that it was issued by them or given under their authority.

In the present case the notice comes first (while in In re Central Irr. Dist., supra, it came last) and reads: “Notice is hereby given by the undersigned. ...” Following this is printed the petition, beginning with the words, “We, the undersigned petitioners, respectfully represent . . . , ” and at the end of the publication appear the signatures of the petitioners. Surely, this notice could mislead no one. It gave full and detailed information in regard to the time and place at which the petition would be presented to the board of supervisors. No one could believe that the newspaper was publishing this formal document, separated from the rest of the contents of the newspaper by a heavy black line, and covering over ten pages of the printed manuscript, as a bit of news.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P. 207, 192 Cal. 489, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-city-of-montebello-cal-1923.