Ratkovich v. City of San Bruno

245 Cal. App. 2d 870, 54 Cal. Rptr. 333, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 26, 1966
DocketCiv. 22555
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 2d 870 (Ratkovich v. City of San Bruno) 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
Ratkovich v. City of San Bruno, 245 Cal. App. 2d 870, 54 Cal. Rptr. 333, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, P. J.

In this action to recover monies paid under municipal ordinances regulating trucking on city streets, defendant and cross-complainant City of San Bruno (City) and defendant city officials appeal from a judgment 1 entered against them, after a non jury trial, awarding plaintiff the sum of $33,592.57 with interest and denying the City all recovery on its cross-complaint. 2

*874 Plaintiff is a licensed contractor doing business under the name of Ratkovich Construction Company. In June 1960 he entered into a contract with the Public Utilities Commission of the City and County of San Francisco to haul dry fill to the San Francisco International Airport (Airport) for the extension of a runway and the construction of a maintenance base area. Under the contract, the work in connection with the runway had to be completed within 160 days subject to a penalty of $100 per day for late performance and the work for the maintenance base area had to be completed within 330 days subject to a similar penalty of $50 per day. Pursuant to the contract plaintiff hauled fill from locations both inside and outside the City limits over the City's streets to the Airport. The parties stipulated that this amounted to 3,016,100.2 tons over the period from July 1960 to November 1961.

Before plaintiff entered into the above hauling contract defendant City had enacted as part of the San Bruno City Code certain ordinances regulating trucking on its streets. These in substance provide that with the exception of certain specified streets to be marked as truck routes, the use, operation or maintenance upon all remaining City streets of any motor vehicle or truck of a gross weight of 27,000 pounds or over is unlawful. Nevertheless vehicles hauling materials exceeding such gross maximum weight limits may be permitted along streets from which they are excluded upon the filing with the city clerk of an application in the form prescribed by the code, together with a minimum filing fee of $35 “to cover the cost of the city’s investigation of such application.’’ 3 The city manager shall make or have made an investigation of the facts stated in the application and within seven days of the date of its filing “shall either grant a permit with or without modification, or deny the same in whole or in part. ’ ' 4

*875 Both section 16.72 5 and section 16.74 6 of the City’s code provide for the payment by the permittee of two cents (2c) per ton for the privilege of using San Bruno Avenue.

Shortly before plaintiff started hauling under the contract he was told by an engineer at the Airport that he would have to make his own arrangements with defendant City to haul over its streets. He then consulted the city clerk who advised him of the necessity of a permit and of a fee of two cents (2c) per ton. When plaintiff protested that as a licensed contractor he had the right to haul he was told that unless he received a permit he would be subject to arrest. While plaintiff testified on direct examination that he had not considered this two cents a ton charge in computing his bid upon which the contract was awarded and that he did not learn of the existence of the charge until after the contract was awarded, he admitted under cross-examination that he was aware of state *876 regulations fixing weight limitations and also of local ordinances to the same effect. Plaintiff further testified that he felt it necessary to select the route over San Bruno Avenue because it was the shortest and most direct route and that in view of the time limitations for the performance of his contract, he “had no alternative” but to apply for a permit. It was granted on July 19, 1960.

Plaintiff thereupon carried out his hauling operations to the extent already indicated. He used “double-bottomed dumps,” that is a tractor pulling two trailers, each set of trailers holding about 25 or 26 tons of fill, making the gross weight of the entire vehicle 75,000 to 80,000 pounds. Almost every load comprising the 3,016,100.2 tons of fill was hauled down San Bruno Avenue. Plaintiff testified that at the time he applied for the permit, he did not know that he could haul to the Airport by an alternate route along Junípero Serra Boulevard to Sneath Lane to El Camino Real 7 and then to Spruce Street and through South San Francisco to the Bayshore Highway, nor was he so informed by any official of defendant City; he further stated that during the time he was hauling the fill he did not know of such alternate route.

Plaintiff paid the two cents per ton charge for 10 months until May 1961 when he refused to make further payments although he continued his hauling operations. The parties agree that payments made by him total $33,592.57. On August 24, 1961 plaintiff commenced the present action to recover the monies paid to the City together with punitive damages and in addition to secure a judgment declaring all documents pertaining to the permits applied for by plaintiff null and void and restraining defendants from interfering with plaintiff’s hauling operations. 8 Defendant City cross-complained for $32,524.05 as additional monies due under the ordinances. 9 As we have said, the court below rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $33,592.27, the total amount paid by him to the City, and denied the City all recovery on its cross-complaint.

The bases of the court’s decision as gleaned from its findings of fact and conclusions of law and from its memorandum *877 opinion may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff could not el aim the exemption from the weight limitations of the ordinance provided by Vehicle Code section 35704 10 in respect to vehicles used in the construction of a public utility, since the Airport was a public enterprise and not a public utility. However the charges made by the City under the ordinances were excessively over the amount necessary to indemnify it for any damages. Sections 16.72 and 16.74 11 are illegal and in contravention of public policy in that (a) they are not regulatory in nature but for the primary purpose of raising revenue; 12 (b) the state has preempted the field of raising revenue; (c) they Constitute an improper exercise of the police powers and are not authorized either by constitutional or statutory provision. While defendants did not act fraudulently or deceitfully, plaintiff paid the charges to the City under duress in that defendants represented to him that the permit was mandatory and that he could not use San Bruno Avenue unless he paid the specified charges.

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Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. App. 2d 870, 54 Cal. Rptr. 333, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratkovich-v-city-of-san-bruno-calctapp-1966.