San Christina Investment Co. v. City & County of San Francisco

141 P. 384, 167 Cal. 762, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 529
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6290.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 141 P. 384 (San Christina Investment Co. v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
San Christina Investment Co. v. City & County of San Francisco, 141 P. 384, 167 Cal. 762, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 529 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This is an action brought to recover taxes paid under protest for the asserted illegality and invalidity of the tax levy. A general demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and from the judgment which followed plaintiff appeals.

Chapter I, article III, section 11 of the charter of the city and county of San Francisco, contains a restriction upon the general grant of the taxing power to the municipality, which restriction is widely and popularly known as the “dollar limit.” This section excluding from its limitation certain defined taxes, declares that the annual levy “shall not exceed the rate of one dollar on each one hundred dollars valuation of the property assessed.” Section 13 of the same article and chapter is as follows:

“The limitation in section eleven of this chapter upon the rate of taxation shall not apply in case of any great necessity or emergency. In such case the limitation may be temporarily suspended so as to enable the supervisors to provide for such necessity or emergency. No increase shall be made in the rate of taxation authorized to be levied in any fiscal year, unless such increase be authorized by ordinance passed by the unanimous vote of the supervisors and approved by the mayor. The character of such necessity or emergency shall be recited in the ordinance authorizing such action, and b& entered in the journal of the board. ...”

In 1910, in preparing the tax levy for the fiscal year 1910-11, the supervisors, acting under the authority of section 13, passed two ordinances. Sections 1 and 2 of the first are as follows:

“Section 1. It is hereby recited, determined and declared that a great necessity and emergency exists within the city and county of San Francisco, which requires that the limita-i tion of taxation contained in section 11, chapter I of article III of the charter of said city and county be temporarily sus *765 pended, and that the character of such necessity and emergency is as follows, to wit:
“On the 18th day of April, 1906, a large number of the public buildings, and other structures, and much of the fire department equipment of said city and county were destroyed by fire, and on said day. a large extent of the public sewers of said city and county were damaged and destroyed by earthquake ; that a large extent of the public streets of said city and county were damaged by the combined effects of fire and earthquake; also there is danger that the bubonic plague, prevalent in 1907, may recur and provision should be made to prevent such recurrence; that it has been impossible to pave, repave, and repair streets, reconstruct and repair sewers, construct and repair the public buildings destroyed and dam. aged as aforésaid in April, 1906, from the appropriations heretofore made, and the great necessity and emergency hereby declared to exist has not been adequately provided for by previous tax levies made by the board of supervisors.
“Section 2. That by reason of the great necessity and emergency, herein set forth, large sums of money will be required to be expended by the city and county during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, for the paving, grading, repaving, and repairing of streets, for the reconstruction and repair of sewers, construction of and repairs to public buildings, for construction and equipment of fire department buildings, for the purchase of lands for fire department buildings, for the reconstruction of, repairs to, and equipment of school department buildings, for the construction and equipment of police department buildings, and for the purchase of lands for police department purposes, and for the continuation and enforcement of sanitary measures. That the large sums required for the aforesaid purposes cannot be obtained from the annual income and revenue of the city and county, and said necessary expenditures cannot be made without temporarily suspending the limitation upon the rate of taxation provided for in section 11 of chapter I of article III of the charter of said city and county.”

The ordinance further declared that for the assigned reasons the provisions of section 11 (supra) of the charter were therefore suspended, and an additional tax levy of twenty-nine cents upon the hundred dollars was authorized and de *766 elared necessary, the moneys derived from such tax being segregated for named purposes.

The second ordinance formally levied the tax. The purposes and amounts were thus set forth:

“For paving, repaving, grading and repairs to streets, for reconstruction of and repairs to sewers, and for construction and repairs to public buildings and other structures, except school buildings,
22 cents
“For construction and equipment of fire department buildings, and for purchase of lands for fire department purposes,
m cents
“For reconstruction and repairs to and equipment of school department buildings,
2 cents
“For construction and equipment of police department buildings, and for purchase of lands for police department purposes,
“For continuance of sanitary measures,
2 cents
cents.

The plaintiff in its protest and in its complaint presented three grounds of attack against the validity of the tax levy under this ordinance, which may be thus stated:

(a) The ordinance suspending the operation of section 11 was not passed in accordance with the requirements of the charter.

(b) No “great necessity or emergency” justifying the suspension of section 11 in fact existed; and

(c) A large part, if not all, of the revenue to be raised by the levy was, upon the face of the ordinance, to be devoted to objects and purposes which were not emergency or necessity purposes.

These questions may be taken up in the order indicated, for clearly if the ordinance was not legally passed there is an end at once put to the whole controversy.

(a) Appellant here contends that the people of San Francisco in adopting their charter, and the legislature in ratifying it, limited the power of the board of supervisors with great rigidity to the “dollar limit” and authorized the suspension of this limit and the levying of an additional tax *767 with extreme reluctance and with equal care. It could be done not even in the case of necessity or emergency, but only in the case of a great necessity or emergency, and then it could be done only “by the unanimous vote of the supervisors,” which should be construed under these considerations to mean the unanimous vote of all the supervisors.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P. 384, 167 Cal. 762, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-christina-investment-co-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1914.