Spring Valley Water Works v. San Francisco

22 Cal. 434, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 66
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 22 Cal. 434 (Spring Valley Water Works v. 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
Spring Valley Water Works v. San Francisco, 22 Cal. 434, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 66 (Cal. 1863).

Opinion

Crocker, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, C. J. and Norton, J. concurring.

The plaintiffs are a corporation organized for the purpose of introducing pure fresh water into the City of San Francisco, and they instituted this special proceeding for the purpose of condemning a certain tract of land to the uses of the company, before the County Judge of the City and County of San Francisco. The parties interested in the property appeared, and on the twelfth day of August, 1862, the County Judge appointed commissioners to report the compensation to which the owners were entitled. The commissioners reported that the owners were entitled to the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars, which was paid to the County Clerk, and the County Judge rendered a decree adjudicating the premises to the plaintiffs. The defendants moved to set aside the report, and for a new trial, which was denied, and thereupon they appealed to this Court.

The plaintiffs were organized "under and in pursuance of an Act entitled “An Act for the Incorporation of Water Companies,” approved April 22d, 1858 (Stat. 1858, 218), by Sec. 2 of which it is provided that the mode of proceeding for the appropriation of lands shall be the same as prescribed in Secs. 27-29 of the Act providing for the incorporation of Railroad Companies, passed April 22d, 1853, except that such proceedings shall be had before the County Judge of the county where the lands are situated. In 1861 (Stat. 1861, 228), this Sec. 2 was amended, by providing that, where the County Judge was interested, the proceedings should be before the District Judge. Afterwards, on the twentieth day of May, 1861, an entirely new act was passed for the incorporation of railroad companies, not foEowing the order or number of the sections of the Act of 1853, but changing them throughout, and also repealing the Act of 1853.

The plaintiffs in these proceedings foEowed the provisions of Secs. 27-29 of the Act of 1853, instead of the revised Act of 1861, and this, it is insisted, was erroneous, and it is claimed that the latter act should have eontroEed the proceedings. If the new railroad law of 1861 had been merely amendatory of the Act of 1853, preserving the sections with their numbers, there would have [439]*439been some force in the position taken by the defendants. But when we come to examine the revised law of 1861, we find the sections entirely changed, and the subject matter of these three sections of the Act of 1853 is now found in Secs. 17, and 24 to 39 inclusive, in the Act of 1861. If the plaintiffs’ proceeding is to be governed by Secs. 27-29 of the Act of 1861, they will be found entirely insufficient, without the use of other sections, to regulate the action of the officers having jurisdiction of the matter. We do not see how the Act of 1858 can be extended or construed to include these additional sections, or indeed be held to apply in any way to a law not then enacted. The Act of 1858 substantially incorporated these three sections of the Railroad Law of 1853 within its provisions, and the repealing clause of the Act of 1861 repealed the Act of 1853 so far as it applied to railroad companies, but substantially left these three sections in force, so far as they were made part of the law relating to water companies. We see no other mode of carrying out the evident intention of the Legislature. It would seem that if it had been their intention that water companies should be governed by the provisions of the new railroad law, they would have so expressed it, especially as at the same session they amended the section relating to this subject in the water companies’ act. We hold, therefore, that the proceedings were properly conducted in accordance with the provisions of these three sections of the Act of 1853.

At the hearing before the County Judge of the application for the appointment of commissioners, the plaintiffs offered in evidence a certified copy of the certificate of incorporation, to which the defendants objected: 1st, that the certificate is not in accordance with the law of April 23d, 1858; 2d, that it varies from the complaint; and 3d, because the Act of April 23d, 1358, could not authorize them to incorporate themselves. The Act of April 23d, 1858, referred to (Stat. 1858, 254), authorizes George H. Ensign and his associates and their assigns, to lay down iron water pipes in the City of San Francisco, for the purpose of furnishing fresh water to the inhabitants, and provides that 3,000 feet be laid down within one year from its passage and water furnished therefrom, and that it should not take effect unless the parties named in Sec. 1 [440]*440should within sixty days duly organize themselves in conformity with the laws regulating corporations. The articles of association of the corporation were filed June 19th, within the sixty days, signed by George H. Ensign, Henry Baker, and Edward Jones, and they refer to this Act of April 23d, 1858, and also to the Act of AprE 22d, 1858, authorizing the incorporation of water companies, as the laws under which they incorporate. In 1859 (Stat. 1859, 209) the Legislature passed an act amending Sec. 1 of the Act of AprE 23d, 1858, thereby extending the time two years for laying down the 3,000 feet of pipe.

It is insisted that the laying down of three thousand feet of pipe in one year was a condition, the non-performance of which forfeited the rights conferred by the act and vitiated the acts of incorporation, and that it was, therefore, necessary for the plaintiffs in this proceeding to prove a performance of that condition. The existence of a corporation formed under the general corporation laws of this State is proved by its articles of association or- incorporation, executed and filed in accordance with the statute. A strict literal compliance with aE the requirements of the statute is not essential, and the proceedings wiE not be held invaEd for sight defects or omissions. Thus it has been held, that an omission of the names and number of the trustees who are to manage the concerns of the company the first year is not a fatal defect (Mead v. Keeler, 24 Barb., S. C., 20.) So of a faEure to file a duplcate of the articles of association with the Secretary of State (Cross v. Pinckneyville Man. Co., 17 Illinois, 54; Mokelumne Hill M. Co. v. Woodbury, 14 Cal. 427); or where, in -the articles of association of a railroad company, the length of the line of the-road was incorrectly stated (Troy and Rutland Railroad Co. v. Kerr, 17 Barb. S. C. 581); or a faEure to pay the ten per cent, of the capital stock subscribed at the organization (Eaton v. Aspinwall, 10 N. Y. 119; Abbott v. Aspinwall, 26 Barb. S. C. 202); or a faEure on the part of the commissioners appointed to receive subscriptions to the stock to foEow the requirements of the law (McFarland v. Triton Ins. Co., 4 Denio, 392; Judah v. American L. S. Ins. Co., 4 Ind. 334) or stating the name of a city as “ the place fo business ” instead of “ the principal place of business,” as required [441]*441by the law (17 Cal. 132). It is also held that a liberal construction is to be adopted with regard to the acts required to create a corporation, and every presumption is to be indulged in favor of its legal existence after it has gone into operation. (Judah v. American L. S. Ins. Co., 4 Ind. 334; Dunning v. New Albany and Salem R. R. Co., 2 Id. 437; 17 Ill. 54; Ang. & Ames on Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Cal. 434, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-valley-water-works-v-san-francisco-cal-1863.