Spring Street Co. v. City of Los Angeles

148 P. 217, 170 Cal. 24, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 346
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1915
DocketL. A. 3322; L. A. 3325
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 148 P. 217 (Spring Street Co. v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Spring Street Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 148 P. 217, 170 Cal. 24, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 346 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

These actions, separately brought, were both for the purpose of having declared void the same special assessment based on benefits received by the land under the widening of Eighth Street in the city of Los Angeles, and so to enjoin the collection of the sums charged by the assessment against the properties of plaintiffs. The two cases involving, as they do, the same considerations of law, may be determined together. The appeals in both eases are from the judgment and from the order denying the motion for new trial.

The authorities of the city of Los Angeles decreed the widening of Eighth Street in that city for a distance of six blocks between Figueroa Street upon the west and Broadway upon the east to the easterly line of the former and the westerly line of the latter. The street was to be widened five feet upon each side, necessitating the taking of a five-foot strip from all of the property owners upon the northerly and upon the southerly side of this street between Figueroa and Broadway. An assessment district was declared, which assessment district embraced (approximately) all of the lands between Figueroa Street and Broadway to a distance of about 110 feet north and 110 feet south of Eighth Street. On Eighth Street in this district were lots of differing values—interior lots having a frontage on Eighth Street alone—other lots Ijaving a frontage upon Eighth Street and upon one or another of the intersecting streets—thus being corner lots of greater value.

*26 A suit to condemn these five-foot strips was instituted and the decree fixed the amount to be paid to the owners for their lands to be taken. These judgments aggregated $226,682.50. The Hamburger Realty & Trust Company (which alone may be considered as representing all of the other plaintiffs) was awarded damages in the sum of twenty thousand dollars. The Hamburger Realty & Trust Company’s property is situated at the southeast corner of Eighth and Broadway, having a frontage of 120 feet on Broadway within the assessment district, and extending on Eighth Street 166.75 feet. It is unquestioned and appears from the judgments given, that properties fronting on Eighth Street alone are of very much less value than properties fronting on Broadway and its adjoining street—Hill Street—which are important commercial and business streets of the city. The taking of the five-foot strip from the plaintiff was therefore a taking from all of its real estate within' the district of 166.75 feet x 5. But what was perhaps of equal consequence, it was a cutting down of the .Broadway frontage by five feet. To cover the cost of the proposed improvement, the board of public works.of the city of Los Angeles, under the charter acting in lieu of a street superintendent, prepared and filed an assessment, charging against the lands in the district certain sums based on the benefits which it was estimated they would receive by reason of the street widening and in the case of the Hamburger Realty & Trust Company charged their lands in the assessment with $12,794.10.

Upon notice given of the filing of this assessment, protests were entered against it by certain disaffected property owners. A hearing of these protests was had before the “Streets and Boulevards Committee of the Council,” which reported a recommendation that the protests be sustained, “and that the assessment be referred back to the board of public works with the recommendation that the same be modified as follows, to wit: That the assessments on lots fronting on the cross streets be as they are at present; that the lots fronting on Eighth Street be assessed the same amount as allowed for land taken and that the balance of the amount to be raised be assessed equally per front foot on the land fronting on Eighth Street.” Upon this report coming before the council it ordered, “that the board of public works be instructed to make and file a new assessment, and that the report of the *27 streets and boulevards committee be referred to the board of public works for consideration in making the said new assessment. ’ ’

Under these recommendations or directions the board of public works reported to the city council as follows: “Gentlemen:

“Pursuant to a motion made and adopted by the city council at its meeting on April 6, 1910, the assessment for the widening of 8th Street from Broadway to Figueroa Street was returned to this board with instruction to make a new assessment, and referring with said instruction the following recommendation of the committee of streets and boulevards for the consideration of this board:
“ ‘That the assessments on the lots fronting on the cross streets be as they are at present; that the lots fronting on 8th Street be assessed the same amount as allowed for land taken, and that the balance of the amount to be raised be assessed equally per foot on the land fronting on 8th Street. ’
“This board has followed that recommendation, and has shown the amounts assessed in red ink alongside of the amounts assessed in the original assessment.
“We are, however, still of the opinion, that the original assessment as made by this board is proper and correct, and beg leave to invite the attention of the honorable council to the several assessments on lots situated in the middle of blocks, and which have been assessed a comparatively small amount in this new assessment, because the amount allowed for land taken was small, whereas these inside lots are benefited more in proportion to the lots on the corners, as they only have the 8th Street frontage.”

Protests were filed to this so-called new assessment, urging that it was arbitrary, unjust, excessive, and illegal, but, after hearing, the council confirmed it in toto.

The effect of the assessment so made is not and may not be questioned. It canceled every dollar of the two hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars awarded by the court in the condemnation proceedings for the taking of this private property for a public use, under an implied omnibus finding that the property of every person whose lands fronted on Eighth Street was benefited at least to the amount of his award in the condemnation proceedings for the taking of his property, and was also benefited just a little more, that little being the prop *28 erty owner’s proportionate share of the expense of the city in the matter of its condemnation proceeding, which additional amount is contemplated by the suggestion contained in the report of the streets and boulevards committee “that the balance of the amount to be raised be assessed equally per front foot on the land fronting on 8th Street. ’ ’ Specifically, upon the property of the Hamburger Realty & Trust Company is imposed an assessment of twenty thousand dollars, in cancellation of the judgment of the court of the value of its property taken for this public use, and $115.20 being its proportionate share of the expense to which the ■ city was put in the doing of this thing.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 217, 170 Cal. 24, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-street-co-v-city-of-los-angeles-cal-1915.