San Gabriel County Water District v. Richardson

228 P. 1055, 68 Cal. App. 297
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 1, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4713.
StatusPublished

This text of 228 P. 1055 (San Gabriel County Water District v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Gabriel County Water District v. Richardson, 228 P. 1055, 68 Cal. App. 297 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*298 CRAIG, J.

This is an original proceeding wherein the petitioner seeks a writ of mandate requiring respondent, as president of the San Gabriel County Water District, to execute certain bonds voted by electors of the district.

Petitioner is a county water district, regularly incorporated under the provisions of the act of June 10, 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 1049), as amended, providing for the incorporation, organization, and management of county water districts, and the respondent is its president. On December 19, 1922, an election was held, at which time the electors of said district and those residing within a certain described area voted to annex the territory last mentioned; and on April 17, 1923, an election was held wherein all the qualified electors of said consolidated district and those of an additional area also voted for annexation of the latter territory. It is conceded that in each instance the provisions of sections 3 and 25 of said act were complied with; the former section provides for the original incorporation of such districts, and the latter for annexation. Section 25 reads as follows, with our italics:

“25. Any portion of a county or any municipality, or both, may be added to any county water district organized under the provisions of this act, at any time, upon petition presented in the manner herein provided for the organization of such water district, which petition may be granted by ordinance of the board of directors of such water district. Such ordinance shall be submitted for adoption or rejection to the vote of the electors in such water district, and in the proposed addition, at a general or special election held as herein provided, within seventy days after the adoption of such ordinance.”

The bond election here in controversy was held December 11, 1923, and there is no contention as to the validity of any step of the proceedings therefor, but respondent contends that section 25 does not either directly or indirectly provide for any hearing by the board of directors or for any opportunity to any property owner to object to the annexation.” And it is argued that this section is therefore unconstitutional, in that it provides no “due process” for the taking- of property by levying taxes required by such bond issue; that the statute fails to properly provide for annexation, and that the attempted annexations were illegal, the bond election was *299 participated in by voters residing outside the boundaries of the original water district, and that the bonds were void and of no effect as an indebtedness against the property sought to be taxed.

Petitioner avers that section 3 of said act provides for notice to interested property owners, for objection to original organization, at a. hearing publicly held, and for publication of such notice; that inasmuch as section 25 is silent upon this subject, except that it provides for a petition to be “presented in the manner herein provided,” the legislature intended thereby to require the same method of notice, public hearing, and protest, as that pursued under section 3, for all the purposes of section 25.

In re Extension Boundaries of Crow Creek Irr. Dist., 63 Mont. 293 [207 Pac. 121], cited by petitioner, presented a similar question, and it was there held under the general rule of construction that the section attacked was not unconstitutional, the court saying:

“A statute is passed as a whole and not in parts or sections, and the division into sections is merely a matter of convenient reference. 25 R. C. L. 1009. It is true that section 7169 appears early in the statute and relates primarily to the organization of a district, but it declares the general policy of the law. . . .
“There are not any words of restriction or limitation employed. Provision is made for the hearing in the most general terms, and any objections which would be valid against the inclusion of particular lands in the district upon its creation are equally valid as against their inclusion upon an extension of the boundaries of the district. This is the reasonable interpretation of the language and avoids the conclusion that the legislative assembly provided for a hearing but did not intend that any relief might be obtained thereby.”

To sustain the respondent’s theory in the case at bar would be to say that the legislature authorized annexation of new territory to a water district by petition “in the manner herein provided,’’ but intentionally enacted an invalid statute in this respect since there is in section 25 no notice “herein provided.” But “the courts will never, if it can be avoided, impute to the legislature an intent to enact a law that is contrary to the constitution. If a particular construc *300 tion has the effect to declare the act or any part of it unconstitutional, such construction must be avoided, when it can be fairly done, for the legal presumption is that the legislature could not have so intended.’” (Estate of Potter, 188 Cal. 55 [204 Pac. 826].)

The following examples illustrate the latitude allowed in construing the word under consideration, in the instant case as well as the word “hereunder.” (Estate of Pearson, 98 Cal. 603 [33 Pac. 451], involved a will wherein the testator in the first clause devised certain lands to two aunts, and in the second clause he devised to them also all lands held by him jointly with them, and directed that in the event of one aunt dying during his lifetime, all property of whatever nature “herein bequeathed” should vest in the survivor; but should both die before his death, “the aforesaid property otherwise 'bequeathed to them shall be sold at public auction, to the highest cash bidder.” “Thus clearly indicating,” said the supreme court, “that he intended the right of survivorship to extend to other property than that which in the previous portion of the same clause he had devised to his aunts. Nor does his use in this clause of the word ‘herein’ limit the right of survivorship to the property which he had in that clause devised to them. ‘Herein,’ as used in legal phraseology, is a locative verb, and its meaning is to be determined by the context. ‘It may refer to the section, the chapter, or the entire enactment in which it is used (And. Law Dict.), and this rule is applicable to the construction of a document as well as of a statute.” Pringle v. Wilson, 156 Cal. 313 [24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1090; 104 Pac. 316], presented for construction a lease, and it was there said:

“Appellant seeks to limit the meaning of this provision by construing its last word ‘hereunder’ as referring only to liability under the particular clause (13). The word ‘hereunder’ may, it is true, refer to an entire instrument, or to only a particular part of the instrument in which it appears. In re Pearsons, 98 Cal. 603 [33 Pac. 451]. As here used, however, the word would seem necessarily to refer to the entire lease. The clause released both parties from all liability. But no liability was cast upon either party by clause 13 itself in the event of a total destruction. The only liabilities mentioned were those existing in the case of a partial

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Related

Potter v. Chambers
204 P. 826 (California Supreme Court, 1922)
Pringle v. Wilson
104 P. 316 (California Supreme Court, 1909)
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People v. Frisbie
26 Cal. 135 (California Supreme Court, 1864)
In re the Estate of Pearsons
33 P. 451 (California Supreme Court, 1893)
Welch v. O'Meara
81 N.E. 264 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1907)
In re Crow Creek Irrigation District
207 P. 121 (Montana Supreme Court, 1922)
Ex parte Helton
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Bluebook (online)
228 P. 1055, 68 Cal. App. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-gabriel-county-water-district-v-richardson-calctapp-1924.