Pollok v. City of San Diego

50 P. 769, 118 Cal. 593, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 816
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 193
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 P. 769 (Pollok v. City of San Diego) 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
Pollok v. City of San Diego, 50 P. 769, 118 Cal. 593, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 816 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

The plaintiff, Allan Pollok, as the assignee of J. E. Deakin, an attorney at law, recovered a judgment in the superior court against the city of San Diego for the sum of sixteen hundred and thirty-one dollars and twenty-five cents, found to be a balance due tbe plaintiff as such assignee for legal services rendered to said city by said Deakin, and from said judgment tbe city appeals on the judgment-roll.

Appellant’s contention is, that the findings do not support the judgment.

The court found that on March 10, 1891, the common council of said city employed Mr. Deakin as its special counsel and attorney in a certain action then pending against the city, by adopting and recording the following joint resolution:

'■'Resolved, that Mr. Deakin be employed to conduct tbe case of San Diego Water Company v. City of San Diego, and to take sole charge, and that he he paid five hundred dollars retainer, five hundred dollars on completion in superior court, and one thousand dollars additional if taken to supreme court of state. That an ordinance be drawn to that effect, and in ease of settlement before going to trial that the five hundred dollars retainer be allowed Mr. Deakin in full payment.”

It was further found: “That said joint resolution was never presented to the auditor of said city, and did not have at the time of its passage a certificate of said auditor indorsed thereon or at[595]*595tached thereto: that the liability thereby created against said city could be incurred without the violation of any of the provisions of the charter of said city.” That on or about the 17th of March, 1891, the board of aldermen and board of delegates duly passed an ordinance embodying the terms of said resolution; that said ordinance at and before its passage had indorsed thereon a certificate of the auditor dated March 16,1891, as follows: “I hereby certify that the indebtedness may be incurred without violation of the provisions of the charter, and that the same be paid out of the general fund of 1891.”

That said ordinance was vetoed by the mayor and was never repassed by the common council.

That Deakin accepted said employment and took charge of said case, and kept and performed all the duties on his part until on or about January 7, 1893, when defendant notified him that his services were not further’required in said action; that Deakin was at all times ready, willing, and able to comply with the terms of said contract, and did not consent to said discharge.

That said action was tried in the superior court in August, 1893, and was appealed to the supreme court in January, 1894; that Deakin was paid five hundred dollars by the defendant in May, 1891, and that there was due and unpaid fifteen hundred dollars and interest from March 5, 1894.

It is contended by appellant that said resolution did not constitute a contract on the part of the city: 1. Because the auditor had not certified that the liability mentioned therein could be incurred without violating any of the provisions of the city charter; and 2. That the resolution itself contemplated further action by the passage of an ordinance to carry into effect the matters mentioned in the resolution; and it is also contended by appellant that the ordinance, though it bore the auditor’s certificate, did not constitute a contract nor have any effect for any purpose, because it was vetoed by the mayor and not repassed over his veto?

I have no doubt that the common council has power to employ special counsel, and that this power may be exercised either by the joint resolution of the two boards, or by ordinance, since the charter vests that power in the common council and does not prescribe the mode in which it shall be exercised. That the common council has such power, see chapter 5 of the charter (Stats. ■ 1889, p. 664); and as to the mode in which it may be exercised, [596]*596see Atchison Board of Education v. De Kay, 148 U. S. 591, 598, and cases there cited.

It is contended by respondent, however, that the provision ol the charter requiring the auditor’s certificate, above mentioned, is unconstitutional and void, and that, therefore, the resolution of March JOth is valid, and constitutes a contract with Deakin when accepted and acted upon by him.

The validity of said charter provision (Stats. 1889, c. 2, sec. 14, p. 659), requiring the certificate of the auditor before such resolution is passed, was considered in Higgins v. San Diego, ante, p. 524. and its validity sustained. Upon a rehearing granted in that ease this portion of the opinion has been affirmed, and, upon the authority of that case, the resolution of March 10th must be held void and ineffectual to create a contract.

That the ordinance afterward passed by the council is of no force or effect as such, because vetoed by the mayor and not again passed or acted upon by the common council, is not controverted by respondent; but he contends that conceding its invalidity as an ordinance, that it may nevertheless operate as a joint resolution, and, as the proper certificate was indorsed thereon by the auditor before its passage, it is valid as such joint resolution and constitutes a binding contract.

The argument is, that, as the charter does not provide that joint resolutions shall be approved by the mayoT, that his veto can have no operative effect; and as this ordinance “does not make or purport to make an appropriation of money, or To allow and order paid’ any sum of money, it could properly take effect as a joint resolution.”

By subdivision 40 of section 1, chapter 2 of the charter (Stats. 1889, p. 654, “to allow and order paid” the compensation of special counsel must be by ordinance, and cannot exceed in any one fiscal year the sum of five thousand dollars. The supposed contract in this case did not fix definite dates for the different payments, but these, except the first, were to be made upon the happening of certain events which might all have occurred within the year. The ordinance was presented to the auditor as required by the charter, and he certified that the indebtedness could be incurred without violation of the provisions of the charter, “and that the same be paid out of the general fund of 1891.”

[597]*597This certificate, taken in connection with another provision of the charter that: “bio expenditure, debt, or liability shall be made, contracted, or incurred during any fiscal year that cannot be paid out of the revenues for such fiscal year,” made the ordinance operate as an appropriation of so much of the fund of that year as should be necessary to pay the sums named in the ordinance.

Conceding that an ordinance, such as that here in question, may operate as a contract and also as an appropriation of funds to meet the liability incurred by the contract, it may well be that the common council did not intend to enter into a contract unless at the same time an appropriation of funds should be made which would enable the city to comply with and perform its part of the contract, and that such was the intention of the common council seems reasonably clear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P. 769, 118 Cal. 593, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollok-v-city-of-san-diego-cal-1897.