Southwick v. City of Santa Barbara

109 P. 610, 158 Cal. 14, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 328
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1910
DocketL.A. No. 2561.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 109 P. 610 (Southwick v. City of Santa Barbara) 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
Southwick v. City of Santa Barbara, 109 P. 610, 158 Cal. 14, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 328 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This case involves the question of the validity of certain proceedings for the doing of street work in the city of Santa Barbara had under the act of February 26, 1901, known as “The Local Improvement Act of 1901” (Stats. 1901, p. 34). It is an action by certain property-owners assessed for the contemplated street improvements to enjoin the further carrying on of the proceedings on the ground that because of alleged failures to comply with certain provisions of the statute, the assessment made for the improvement is void. A portion of plaintiffs’ complaint was stricken out on motion of defendants, and a demurrer to the complaint was sustained. Judgment was thereupon given for defendants, and plaintiffs appeal from such judgment.

*16 The general scheme in the act involved is as follows: The legislative body of the city or town may include in one proceeding thereunder practically any of the street work described in the general street law known as the Vrooman Act, to be done upon “one or more streets.” Before ordering any work done it must, by resolution, refer the proposed work to the city engineer, instructing him to make a report in writing containing his recommendations as to the best method of doing the work. The engineer is required .to file such report, and annex to it certain exhibits, showing, among other things, a description of the exterior boundaries of the district which will be benefited by the proposed improvement and should be specially assessed to pay the cost thereof, an estimate of the expense of said improvement, a map showing the district above referred to and also the subdivisions of the property therein as ascertained by the engineer, each of which subdivisions shall be given on said map á separate number in red ink, a list referring to said subdivisions by said numbers and showing the names of the owners if known, the valuation of each as the ■same appears on the last assessment-roll or as estimated by the engineer, also “the dimensions, areas, and his estimates of th benefits which the respective parcels will receive from said improvement.” “After the report” has been filed, the legislative body shall consider the same and “have the power” to adopt it as filed or as modified by it and “levy the assessment accordingly.” The legislative body must by the same resolution give all parties interested an opportunity to be heard by fixing a day, hour, and place “when and where all persons may appear before the legislative body and show cause . . . why said improvement provided for in said resolution should not be carried out in accordance therewith,” which shall be at least thirty days after the passage of the resolution, and shall also give therein a description of the exterior boundaries of the district declared by it to be benefited by the improvement and assessed therefor. Notice of this resolution must be posted and published, which notice shall contain, among other things “a description of the district covered by the resolution by the exterior boundaries thereof ... in bold face type.” Any person objecting must file his verified written objections, stating the ground thereof. A hearing must be had thereon, at the close of which the legislative body shall pass a resolution set *17 ting aside, modifying, or confirming the previous resolution. Where the same is confirmed or modified, the lien of the assessment provided for therein shall immediately become attached to the respective parcels of land in accord with the ■confirmed or modified resolution. “Any action to contest an .assessment” must be commenced within thirty days thereafter. "Upon the expiration of said thirty days if no such action has been brought, or upon the determination of such actions as are so brought, the clerk shall transmit the map and list, as modified by the legislative body, to the tax-collector, who shall proceed to collect the amounts shown due thereby. The act makes elaborate provision for the collection of such amounts, providing for the sale of the property for non-payment or the taking of installment agreements from the owners, which agreements include a waiver of all objections to the proceedings, and against which installment agreements bonds may be issued and sold. When, as a result of these proceedings, the funds for the work are actually in the hands of the treasurer, contracts for the work may be let. If the first assessment prove insufficient a second may be made, and if an assessment shall realize a larger sum than is necessary, the excess shall be refunded pro rata, to the parties by whom it was paid. It appears to be •conceded that this action was commenced within thirty days after the making of the order disposing of objections filed and confirming the assessment as modified by the legislative body, and it is in effect an action to contest the assessment. ■

In plaintiffs’ brief several particulars are referred to as alleged in the complaint wherein the proceedings are claimed to have been at variance with the requirements of the act to an extent sufficient to require the whole proceedings to be held invalid. •

It appears from the complaint that the engineer reported as “the district to be benefited by said improvement,” which improvement consisted of grading, curbing, guttering, and paving, two separate and distinct sections of the city that are not contiguous, and that are alleged to be separated at their nearest points to one another by nearly one half of a mile, giving the exterior boundaries of each section. It is further alleged that the portions of some of the streets on which the work is to be done are wholly within one of these sections, and the remainder wholly within the other section. It is further alleged *18 that these two sections have no community of interests, and that the real property of either one of said sections will not receive any benefit from street improvement made in the other. The city council adopted this part of the engineer’s report, apportioning the total cost of the proposed work on all the streets as estimated by him, $104,793.29, to the real property in the two sections. In this connection it is further to be noted that the complaint shows that the character and cost of work to be done on some of the streets in one section was different from that in the other section. For instance, there was to be grading on some streets and none on others, and the cost of grading on-different streets was different, and there was to be asphalt paving on some of the streets and petrolithie paving at less than half the cost on others.

We are satisfied that the inclusion of these two widely separated sections of the city in one assessment district, all the property of which is to be specially assessed to pay the aggregate cost of all the improvements proposed, was not authorized by the act.

It was never designed by the authorization to “include one or more streets in the same proceeding” to empower the legislative body to so include in one proceeding street work in widely separated sections of a city as to result in imposing a portion of the cost of improving a street in one of such sections on property not benefited thereby, situated in the other section, simply because it is benefited to some extent by an improvement made upon another street in the section in which it is. located. That this might well be the result under the procedure here adopted is very clear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P. 610, 158 Cal. 14, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwick-v-city-of-santa-barbara-cal-1910.