Reclamation District No. 542 v. Turner

37 P. 1038, 104 Cal. 334, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 913
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1894
DocketNo. 18248
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 37 P. 1038 (Reclamation District No. 542 v. Turner) 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
Reclamation District No. 542 v. Turner, 37 P. 1038, 104 Cal. 334, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 913 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

Haynes, C.

The plaintiff claims to he a public corporation, organized March 11,1892, under the provisions of the Political Code, for the purpose of reclaiming swamp and overflowed lands, and brought this action [335]*335against the defendant to recover the amount of an assessment made upon his lands within the district for the purpose of constructing the works necessary to reclaim the lands therein, together with certain incidental expenses connected therewith.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and findings were filed from which the conclusion was drawn that the defendant was entitled to judgment for his costs, and judgment was entered accordingly.

The appeal is from the judgment upon the judgment-roll alone.

1. The answer attacked the validity of the organization of the district, as a corporation, and alleged that it had no capacity to sue.

This court has repeatedly held that corporations similar to the plaintiff in this case are .of a quasi public •character, and that the legality and regularity of the proceedings leading up to their final creation cannot be attacked collaterally. This is the course attempted to be pursued here, and a long line of authority is opposed to it. (See Quint v. Hoffman, 103 Cal. 506, and cases there cited.)

The second and sixth findings of fact are as follows:

“2. That on or about the eleventh day of March, 1892, plaintiff employed B. L. McCoy as engineer, as' alleged in its complaint and for the purposes therein alleged, and he, thereafter, as in said complaint alleged, did survey, plan, locate, and report a- system of reclamation, and an estimate of the cost of the work necessary for the reclamation of the lands in the district and of the lands needed for right of way, and the •amounts estimated and reported by him were as stated in said complaint. That in such report said engineer .stated that there were already existing within the district a line of old levees which were adopted by him as ■a part of the system of reclamation, and which at the date of such report belonged to private persons, and were by such engineer reported to be thirty-eight thousand eight hundred (38,800) feet in length, and ho [336]*336reported that such old levees from actual measurement were worth eleven thousand one hundred and fifty-six dollars and ninety-four cents, and that such sum ought to be paid therefor, of which sum he recommended that seven thousand nine hundred and eighty-seven dollars and ninety-two cents be paid to persons acting as trustees of plaintiff, and that such sum be paid to the persons and in the amounts stated in defendant’s answer. That said old levees are upon lands within said district, and were constructed prior to the taking of any steps for the organization of plaintiff, and were at the date of said report, and still are, the property of the persons on whose lands they are situated. That the said plaintiff has no means wherewith to purchase the title or the right to use said old levees, except by the levy and collection of an assessment upon the lands within the district. That the sum of two thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars, referred to in said complaint, was made up of the several items and amounts stated in subdivision 2 of defendant’s answer. That at the time said report was made, and ever thereafter, J. M. Hoyl, William James, and E. White were trustees of plaintiff, and the said James and White were the owners of old levees adopted as part of the system of reclamation, but said James and said White had no •interests in common with said old levees. That said report of said engineer was adopted by the unanimous vote of all three of said trustees.”
“ 6. That it was at no time understood or agreed by or between plaintiff herein, or the trustees hereof, and the landowners within said district, that no landowner should receive' or be entitled to any thing or sum in excess of the amount which should be assessed against his lands for benefits thereto; nor was there at any time an agreement between said plaintiff, or its trustees, and E. White, that said White should not receive any sum in excess of the amount assessed against him for benefits.”

Section 3454 of the Political Code provides: “The board of trustees shall have power to elect one of its [337]*337members president thereof; to appoint engineers and others to survey, plan, locate, and estimate the cost of the. works necessary for the reclamation of the lands of the district; to thereafter, at any time in its discretion, modify or change such original plan or plans, or adopt new, supplemental, or additional plan or plans, when, in its judgment, the same shall have become necessary; to acquire by purchase, condemnation, or otherwise, the right of way, and the right to take material for the construction of all works necessary for the accomplishment of that object, including drains, canals, sluices, bulkheads, watergates, levees, and embankments, and to construct, maintain, and keep in repair all works requisite and necessary to that end; and to do all other acts and things necessary or required for the reclamation of the lands embraced in the district.”

Here were more than seven miles of embankment already in existence. Assuming that new embankments where none existed would complete the reclamation of the entire district, the old embankments would, nevertheless, be in fact used for the accomplishment of that work. The old embankments were private property, however, built, doubtless, for the sole benefit and protection of the lands of the owner. It would, therefore, seem unjust that they should be used as part of an entire system for the benefit of others, as well as the owners, without being taken into the account, or that the owners should be assessed for the construction of new embankments covering the same space. We do not think it could have been the intention of the legislature that the existence of embankments within the district should prevent the full reclamation of all the lands within it, or that any part of the system should not be under the control of the corporation, as must be the case if the old embankments remain private property. If the embankments did not exist, it is clear that a right of way for their construction could be acquired by purchase or condemnation; nor do we see that 'the existence of the embankments constitutes any obstacle [338]*338to the procurement of tbe right of way over the same .ground, the embankments simply adding to the value of the right of way, or, if that be doubtful, we think it may fall within the “all other acts and things requisite or necessary” to the reclamation of the lands within the district — the words “necessary or requisite” including that which is expedient. How this can be equitably adjusted between the different landholders within the district is a question that is not before us.

The second point made by respondent, viz: that two of the three trustees, being interested in the existing levees or embankments, which, according to the estimate of the engineer, constituted, in round numbers, one-half the entire cost of reclamation (aside from incidental expenses), were incapacitated by rea.son of their interest, we .think must be sustained.

The estimated value of the whole of the old embankments is eleven thousand one hundred and fifty-six dollars and ninety-four cents, and of that owned by James and White, two of the trustees, seven thousand nine hundred and eighty-seven dollars and ninety-two cents.

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Bluebook (online)
37 P. 1038, 104 Cal. 334, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reclamation-district-no-542-v-turner-cal-1894.