Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Johnson

219 P. 442, 192 Cal. 211, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 341
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1923
DocketS. F. No. 10735.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 219 P. 442 (Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Johnson) 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
Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Johnson, 219 P. 442, 192 Cal. 211, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 341 (Cal. 1923).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J., pro tem.

The petitioner herein applied to this court for a writ of mandate commanding the respondents herein, as state treasurer and state controller, to cancel certain bonds issued under and in accordance with the act of the legislature approved May 27, 1919, entitled “An Act to Authorize the Issuance and Sale of Bonds of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District” based upon assessments levied by the reclamation board upon lands in said district (Stats. 1919, p. 1092), to the extent and in the sum of $610,000, and further commanding said state treasurer to credit the sum of $610,000 to the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District Fund, particularly designated as “ Sutter-Butte By-pass Assessment No. Six, Emergency Fund,” and further commanding the respondent Ray L. Riley, as controller of the state of California, upon compliance with the above commands on the part of the state *215 treasurer, to issue a warrant drawn on the state treasury in the sum of $7.67 in favor of the reclamation board and payable out of said sum of $610,000 when credited to said emergency fund, and directing the said treasurer to pay said warrant out of said fund. The foregoing acts on the part of the respondents are sought to be compelled under and in compliance with the provisions of an act of the legislature adopted on June 2, 1923, purporting to amend section 34 of the Reclamation Board Act, which latter act was originally adopted at the extra session of the legislature in 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 117), and has been from time to time amended, as will hereinafter appear. An answer to said petition has been presented by the respondents which raises the question of law as to the sufficiency of said petition and which further proceeds to set forth certain facts which do not contradict, but rather amplify, the facts set forth in the petition, and which answer also advances certain deductions on the part of said respondents furnishing reasons why, as a matter of law, said petition should not be granted. The chief issue presented for our consideration by these pleadings involves the validity of the said act of the legislature approved June 2, 1923.

In order to a clear comprehension of the issues thus presented it will be necessary to have in mind the history and course of state legislation upon the subjects of reclamation and flood control in the region affected by the course and overflow of the Sacramento River, and particularly of that portion thereof which now constitutes the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District. The history of the conditions which evoked such legislation, beginning with the year 1911 and occupying the attention of every legislative session between that time and the year 1923 inclusive, is quite clearly set forth in our decision in the Matter of the Proceedings to Validate Sutter-Butte By-Pass Assessment No. 6, etc., 191 Cal. 650 [218 Pac. 27].

The basis of respondents’ refusals, respectively, to do the acts required by the resolutions and orders of the reclamation board relative to the retirement of the unsold bonds of assessment district No. 6, to the amount and extent of” $610,000, and the deposit of the money so applied to the redemption of said bonds in the emergency fund in the state treasury upon which the warrant of the petitioner has *216 been drawn, is that the statute of 1923, which proposes to legalize such a diversion of moneys of the state from the purposes and specific funds to which it is claimed that they had been devoted by previous legislation, is void for the reason, chiefly, that prior thereto and pursuant to such previous legislation, contracts had been entered into by the reclamation board, the execution of which had resulted in the creation of claims against said drainage district, which had tallen on the form of warrants drawn upon the specific funds of said district and made payable out of such funds by the express provisions of such previous legislation; and that the diversion from said funds of the specific moneys provided for by the act of 1923 above referred to would amount to a violation of the obligations of said contracts and would thus be void under the federal and state constitutions. A brief résumé of the particular legislation and of the acts of the reclamation board thereunder in pursuance of which said contracts were entered into, said claims created, and said warrants drawn will be necessary in order to determine the merits of the foregoing contention.

The work of flood control of the waters of the Sacramento River and its tributaries, of improvement of navigation, and of the reclamation of the lands susceptible to overflow from said river and its tributaries had its inception in the act of the legislature passed at the extra session of 1911, to which reference has above been made. This act was amended and supplemented by the act of 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 252) whereby the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District was created and its boundaries defined, and by which also the powers of the reclamation board called into being by the earlier act were greatly enlarged. By the terms of said last-named act the reclamation board was empowered to proceed by purchase, condemnation, or other lawful means, with the acquisition of all lands, rights of way, and other property and material necessary or requisite for bypasses, weirs, cuts, canals, levees, overflow channels, and other ways and means for achieving the purposes of the act; and was also empowered to make contracts and to do all other things necessary .to the accomplishment of such purposes. In order to the exercise of these powers and the achievement of these purposes the reclamation board was, by section 13 of said act of 1913, directed to levy and col *217 lect an assessment upon the lands within said drainage district. All moneys collected by means of such assessment were in the first instance to be paid to the county treasurer of the county within which the lands affected thereby were situated and were by him to be deposited in the state treasury to the credit of said drainage district in a fund to be designated and known as the “Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage Fund,” and which moneys when so deposited were to be paid out upon warrants of the state controller issued upon said fund whenever drafts drawn upon said fund were presented by the reclamation board and when there was sufficient money in said fund to pay the same. The act expressly provided that all moneys raised by such assessment should be expended only for works of reclamation and other expenditures beneficial to the lands so assessed. In case there was not sufficient moneys in said drainage district funds to pay said warrants drawn for such purposes when presented, the state treasurer was directed to indorse on said warrants the date of presentation and to register the same and thereafter such warrants were to bear interest at the usual rate and were to be paid in the order of their registration, and were to be considered as contracts in writing for the payment of money by said district. Under the foregoing provisions of the statutes of 1911 and 1913, as further amended and amplified by the act of 1915 (Stats. 1915, p.

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Related

Beckley v. Reclamation Board
205 Cal. App. 2d 734 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
Reclamation District No. 1500 v. Sutter Basin Corp.
263 P.2d 348 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
Reclamation Board v. Riley
284 P. 668 (California Supreme Court, 1930)
Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Riley
229 P. 957 (California Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
219 P. 442, 192 Cal. 211, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-san-joaquin-drainage-district-v-johnson-cal-1923.