Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Riley

229 P. 957, 194 Cal. 624, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 259
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1924
DocketSac. No. 3641.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 229 P. 957 (Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage District v. Riley) 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. Riley, 229 P. 957, 194 Cal. 624, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 259 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate wherein the petitioner Reclamation Board of California, acting for and on behalf of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District, as well as on its own behalf, • petitions this court for the issuance of a writ of mandate commanding the respondent herein, Ray L. Riley as controller of the state of California to authorize and direct the respondent herein, Charles G. Johnson, as treasurer of the state of California, to credit the sum of $285,147.75 to the “Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District Fund, Sutter Butte By-Pass Assessment No. 6 Emergency Fund, ’ ’ and for such other and further relief as may be meet in the premises. The foregoing sum of $285,147.75 thus sought to be applied to the particular purposes set forth in said petition was received by the state treasurer on July 1, 1923, and is now being held by him under and pursuant to an act of the legislature of the state of California approved May 27, 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 1209), appropriating the sum of $3,000,000 out of any moneys in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated, to be paid to the said Reclamation Board for the benefit of the said Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District in connection with Sutter-Butte By-Pass Project No. 6 thereof, and to be applied according to the terms of said act “as it is now or may hereafter be provided by law” by said board in connection with said project. The payments thus to be made by virtue of said appropriation were to be distributed over a period of eleven years, the first payment thereunder being the sum of $10,000 to be thus made and applied immediately upon said act becoming a law, the second of such payments, of $30,000, to be made on July 1, 1921, the third, in a like sum, on July 1, 1922, the fourth on July 1, 1923, and so on in like annual payments until the whole of said appropriation of $3,000,000 had been paid into the state treasury as provided for in said act. The *627 sum of $285,000 which is sought to he affected by the writ herein applied for consists of the main amount of the moneys so paid into the state treasury on July 1, 1923, pursuant to the terms of said act. The statute upon which the petitioner herein relies for the particular direction and purpose to which it seeks to have said sum devoted is the act of the legislature approved on June 2, 1923 (Stats. 1923, p. 640), amending section 34 of another act of the legislature also approved on May 27, 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 1130), to the terms of which original and amendatory acts a more particular reference will hereinafter be made. The respondents herein have appeared through the attorney-general to resist the issuance of the writ sought herein, basing their and each of their objections thereto upon their interpretation of the scope and effect of the same statutes upon which the petitioners herein rely; and there have also appeared herein a number of amici curiae representing the land owners, the warrant holders and the creditors generally of said Drainage District, to oppose the issuance of said writ. ' The discussion of the subject as to whether this writ should or should not issue begins appropriately with the decision of this court in the case of Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage Dist. etc. v. Johnson et al., 192 Cal. 211 [219 Pac. 442], decided October 10, 1923, in which this court indulged in an exhaustive review of the history and development of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Drainage District, and particularly of Project No. 6 thereof as disclosed by the successive legislation touching the same between the years 1911 and 1923, inclusive, together with a full consideration of the rights and liabilities of said district and of the land owners therein and of the warrant holders and creditors generally thereof down to the date of said decision. That decision is hereby approved and made by reference a part of this decision. There are four principal points decided in that case which have an important bearing upon the decision in the instant case, viz.: First, that as to the rights of whatever creditors there may be of the said Drainage District arising out of contracts for work performed prior to the enactments of the legislature in 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 252), 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 1338), and 1917 (Stats. 1917, p. 1191), empowering the Reclamation Board to proceed with the levy and collection of an assessment or assessments *628 upon the lands lying within the boundaries of said district for the purpose of paying for such work done therein as could lawfully be charged against the said lands, the rights of these creditors to payment of their claims being wholly bounded by the statutes in being providing for such payment prior to the said act of 1917; that as to the rights of contract holders for work done thereunder between the date of the passage and approval of the said act of 1917 and the dates of the passage and approval of the several acts of 1919 the rights of this class of creditors to be paid for work done under their said contracts, as well as the order of their payment, were bounded and confined by the law as it existed between said dates, and which provided for the payment of these claims with moneys to be derived solely from the assessment or assessments of the property of the land owners within said district to be levied and collected in accordance with the provisions of the said act of 1917; and that the only vested and enforceable right which the holders of claims for work done under such contracts would be the right to require that assessments be seasonably levied and collected by the Reclamation Board for the purpose of providing funds for the payment of the said claims; that as to claimants for work done under contracts entered into after the passage and approval of the several acts of 1919 the vested rights of this latter class of claimants were bounded and defined by the provisions of the act of 1917 as modified by the terms of these three latter enactments; that as against the state of California itself the holders of claims for work done at any of said times under contracts with the Reclamation Board had no right to demand from the state the payment of their claims nor the passage of any law providing for such payment nor providing a fund, for the reason that as between themselves and the state there existed no contractual relation; that whatever the state might do in the way of legislation providing funds for the liquidation of such claims or for the repletion of funds otherwise provided therefor or for the facilitation pf the means thus otherwise provided for the payment of said or any claims against the Reclamation Board was a matter of grace on the part of the state, and that it was entirely within the power of the legislature in extending such grace to couple the same with such limitations as it might deem *629 fit. Second, that the three several acts of 1919, being passed and approved contemporaneously, are to be read together; that as to the first of these acts to be therein considered, viz., the so-called “Bond Act” (Stats. 1919, p.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 957, 194 Cal. 624, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-san-joaquin-drainage-district-v-riley-cal-1924.