Sala v. City of Pasadena

124 P. 539, 162 Cal. 714, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 586
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2873.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 124 P. 539 (Sala v. City of Pasadena) 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
Sala v. City of Pasadena, 124 P. 539, 162 Cal. 714, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 586 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an action by plaintiff against the city of Pasadena to obtain judgment for two thousand dollars in which amount he alleges that his real property fronting on Lake Avenue in said city has been damaged by the city by excavating and removing earth in said avenue along the frontage of said property. The trial court found that on July 2, 1907, the city council of defendant, in response to a petition signed by the owners of a majority of the frontage upon a portion of said avenue, duly passed and adopted an ordinance declaring its intention “to change and establish the grade” of said portion of said avenue; that said ordinance was duly published in the Pasadena Star, a daily newspaper pub *716 lished in said city, for ten days, commencing July 3,1907; that no objection, remonstrance, or petition or claim for damages or compensation on account of said proposed change of grade was made or filed with defendant city or any of its officers within ten or thirty days, after the first publication of said ordinance, by plaintiff, or any other owner of property, or until September 27, 1909, when a claim for two thousand dollars damages was presented by plaintiff to said city council; that on August 13, 1907, said city council duly passed and adopted an ordinance changing and re-establishing the grade of said portion of said avenue in accord with the terms of said resolution of intention; that in December, 1907, defendant regularly contracted with one Schilling to grade said portion of said avenue to such official grade as so changed and reestablished ; that said contractor did grade such portion of the avenue to such established grade; that this was the only interference with the earth on Lake Avenue in front of plaintiff’s premises; that no objection, remonstrance, or petition against the grading of said portion of Lake Avenue to such new grade was ever made by plaintiff; that such changing and re-establishment of the grade and the grading of such portion of Lake Avenue to the grade so established damaged plaintiff’s property in the sum of eight hundred dollars, and no more. Upon these facts the trial court concluded as matter of law that the grade was lawfully changed, and that plaintiff “has waived any and all his right or claim against the defendant for damages or compensation to his said property” on account of such change of grade, and gave judgment that plaintiff take nothing, and that defendant recover its costs.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from said judgment, and it is claimed that upon the facts found judgment should have gone for the plaintiff, in the sum of eight hundred dollars.

The freeholders’ charter of the city of Pasadena, approved by the legislature January 29, 1901, contains certain provisions relative to the matter of change of grade of the streets of the city. Sections 2 and 3 of article 9 of the charter (Stats. 1901, p. 910), are as follows:—

“Sec. 2. Whenever the city council shall deem it expedient to alter the established grade of the whole or any part of any street, avenue, lane, alley, court, or place in said city, said council shall by ordinance declare its intention to alter such *717 established grade, in which ordinance must be specified the grade that is proposed to be established; and shall publish such ordinance at least ten days in a daily newspaper published and circulated in the city of Pasadena.
“Sec. 3. Within ten days after the first publication of such ordinance, any owner of property fronting on such street, or part thereof whereon said change is proposed, may make and file with the city clerk a written remonstrance against the proposed change of grade, setting forth in detail the damage which will arise to him by reason of the proposed change of grade, and thereupon the same shall not be further proceeded with or made without compensation to such owner for any damage which may be occasioned to him by said change. The said damage shall be ascertained, if possible, by agreement between such owner and the council, and in case such agreement cannot be reached with such owner, the amount of damage justly payable to such owner shall be determined by an action in the name of the city against him, and in case there is remonstrance from more than one, all said remonstrants may be joined as defendants in said action and all of their damages determined therein.”

It is not questioned that the changing of street grades is essentially a municipal affair, and the provisions of the charter that are set forth above undoubtedly establish the procedure for changing grades of streets in the city of Pasadena. We are of the opinion that both the answer of defendant and the findings sufficiently show to support the judgment, both that there was an established grade of Lake Avenue, and that there was a sufficient compliance with the requirements of the charter provisions in the matter of the change of such grade.

Plaintiff’s claim for recovery is based on section 14 of article I of our state constitution, which provides that “private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation having been first made to, or paid into court, for the owner.” In view of the decisions relative to this constitutional provision, it is not to be doubted that plaintiff was entitled, in the absence of waiver by or estoppel on him, to recover from the city compensation for the injury done to his property by the grading of the street to the new grade, indeed to prevent the doing of the grading work until the amount *718 thereof had been ascertained and paid. (See Reardon v. San Francisco, 66 Cal. 492, [56 Am. Rep. 109, 6 Pac. 317]; Eachus v. Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co., 103 Cal. 614, [42 Am. St. Rep. 149, 37 Pac. 750]; Eachus v. City of Los Angeles, 130 Cal. 492, [80 Am. St. Rep. 147, 62 Pac. 829]; Tyler v. Tehama County, 109 Cal. 618, [42 Pac. 240]; Wilcox v. Engebretsen, 160 Cal. 288, 298 et seq., [116 Pac. 750]; Sievers v. Root, 10 Cal. App. 377, [101 Pac. 925].)

The material question is then, whether plaintiff was properly held to have waived his constitutional right to damages for the injury done to his property. His rights under this provision of the constitution, as said in Bigelow v. Ballerino, 111 Cal. 559, [44 Pac. 307], were two, “1, the right to compensation ; and 2, the right to have that compensation made or paid into court before his property is taken or injuriously affected.” It was further said therein: “Either or both these rights he may waive; that is to say, he may waive his right to any compensation, or he may waive his right to prepayment of compensation. But where there is no such waiver, the property-owner may rest secure in the protection which the constitution affords him that his property shall not be taken or damaged without compensation first made.”

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Bluebook (online)
124 P. 539, 162 Cal. 714, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sala-v-city-of-pasadena-cal-1912.