Smith v. Lightston

186 P. 769, 182 Cal. 41, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 481
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 7716.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 186 P. 769 (Smith v. Lightston) 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
Smith v. Lightston, 186 P. 769, 182 Cal. 41, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 481 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action to quiet title.

The defendant, Lightston, is treasurer of the city of San Jose. The defendant, City Improvement Company, is the holder of bonds issued for the amount of an assessment against the property of the plaintiffs for certain improvements to the street fronting thereon. The City Improvement Company performed the work of improvement for which the assessment was made and it holds the bonds issued against the plaintiffs’ lots. Defendants filed an answer and cross-complaint setting forth the proceedings under which the assessment was made for which the bonds were issued. Issue was joined on the material allegations of the cross-complaint. The court, below found that the assessment and bonds were void and gave judgment quieting plaintiffs’ title to the said lots.

The respondent makes the preliminary objection that the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings cannot, under the amendments of 1915 to' the Code of Civil Procedure, be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment, where there has been no motion for a new trial. The judgment was rendered in November, 1915, and the appeal was taken on December 9, 1915; consequently the case depends on the effect of these amendments. Section 939, as enacted in 1872, and as it remained until 1915, contained this clause: “But an exception to the decision, or verdict, on the ground that it is not supported by the evidence, cannot be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment, unless the appeal is taken within sixty days after the entry of the judgment.” The word “decision” in this clause refqrs to what is commonly *43 called the findings. (Clifford v. Allman, 84 Cal. 532, [24 Pac. 292].) In the amendment of 1915 this clause was omitted from the section. The plaintiffs’ claim is that this omission eliminates the only authority for a consideration of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings where there was no motion for a new trial. There is no merit in the objection. Section 956, as amended in 1915, retains the provision previously contained therein that “upon an appeal from a judgment the court may review the verdict or decision. ” [1] This clearly gives this court authority to consider the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict or findings in every case where the evidence is properly included in the record on appeal, either by a bill of exceptions or by a record prepared as prescribed in section 953a, and without regard to the question of there having been a motion for a new trial. The code originally allowed an appeal from the judgment to be taken within one year after the entry thereof. Section 956, if not qualified by other sections, would then have allowed the sufficiency of the evidence to be considered on an appeal taken at any time within the year. The above-quoted clause of section 939 did not give the right to such review, but merely put a limitation thereon, forbidding its exercise, except when the appeal was taken within sixty days. The right was given by section 956, which, in this respect, was not changed by the amendment. When the time of taking an appeal from the judgment was reduced to sixty days, by the amendment of 1915 to section 939, there remained no reason for the previous limitation, and it was very properly omitted.

1. The work was done under the street work act, commonly known as the Yrooman Act, (Stats. 1885, p. 147), and certain supplementary provisions contained in the charter of the "city of San Jose. (Stats. 1897, p. 615, art. VIII, chap. I.) Section 1 of said chapter provides that the so-called Yrooman Act, approved March 18, 1885, “as since amended and as hereafter shall be amended, is adopted as part of this charter,” except where the provisions of said act conflict or are inconsistent with the charter. Section 2 of said chapter is as follows:

“When the estimated expense of any improvement being made under said act exceeds two dollars per front foot along each line of the street proposed to be improved, the superin *44 tendent of streets, at the time of posting along the street the notices of passage of the resolution of intention, shall cause to be deposited on the front doorstep of each dwelling fronting on the proposed improvement a copy of part I of said act,” referring to the Vrooman Ae£

The resolution of intention under consideration here was adopted on March 18, 1909.

The court found that the superintendent of streets did not deposit on the front doorstep, as provided in section 2 of said chapter, a copy of part I of the Vrooman Act. The appellant insists that this finding is not sustained by the evidence. We do not find it necessary to determine this question. The resolution of intention states that the work is of more than local or ordinary public benefit, and that the expense of the improvement should be chargeable upon a district. [2] We are of the opinion that the above-quoted section of the charter does not apply to assessments made under the district plan. The assessment here involved was for the improvement of one block on Julian Street, and one block on Devine Street, extending from the east line of Market Street to the west line of First Street, in San Jose. It did not include any intersections. Devine Street is the next street south of Julian Street. The district plan may be resorted to when the council finds that the work to be done is of more than local or ordinary public benefit,'or whenever the preliminary estimate of the .city engineer shows that if assessed upon the lots fronting on the work, the total expense of the work would exceed one-half of the total value of the lands as shown by the current assessment for general taxes. (Sec. 3.) The front foot plan requires the expense to be assessed upon the lots fronting upon the work in proportion to such frontage, and at a rate sufficient to cover the total expense of the work. (Sec. 7, subd. 1.) The district plan contemplates that the district may include lots not fronting on the work to be done or on any other part of the street to be improved. In this case it includes as much frontage on Market and First Streets as on Julian and Devine Streets. In many cases it would include lots fronting entirely on other streets, and it might include lots or parcels having no street frontage. The assessment is to be made according to area and in proportion to benefits and not in proportion to frontage. (Sec. 7, subd. 12.) *45 The requirement of the charter that the copies in question shall be deposited on the front doorstep of each dwelling “fronting on the proposed improvement,” would give the benefit of the provision to only a part of the dwellings in a district. No reason exists for this discrimination in favor of frontage on the work. If the district plan had been in mind, it is not reasonable to suppose that this language would have been used. Taken as a whole, in connection with the marked differences between the frontage plan and the district plan, the language of the section plainly indicates that it was intended to apply only when the front foot plan of assessment was used. Consequently the finding that the section was not complied with in this particular instance was immaterial to the question of the validity of the assessment.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 769, 182 Cal. 41, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-lightston-cal-1920.