Stoner v. City Council of Los Angeles

97 P. 692, 8 Cal. App. 607, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 139
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 534.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 97 P. 692 (Stoner v. City Council of Los Angeles) 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
Stoner v. City Council of Los Angeles, 97 P. 692, 8 Cal. App. 607, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 139 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This proceeding was instituted in the superior court of Los Angeles county to obtain a writ of review directed to the city council of the city of Los Angeles.

The controversy grows out of the opening of Grand avenue from Temple street to California street, the proceedings for the opening of which were had and taken under the street opening act of 1903. (Stats. 1903, p. 376.) It appears from the verified petition that appellants are the owners of lots and lands located within the district established by said council as being benefited by the opening of said street, and upon which the cost of such opening was apportioned by an assessment duly made upon the parcels of land located within the boundaries thereof. The assessment and diagram were filed with the city clerk, who thereupon gave notice of such filing by publication for a period of ten days, the first publication of said notice being made on the eighteenth day of October, 1907. On November 15, 1907, and within thirty days after the first publication of said notice appellants filed objections to said assessment. It appears from said petition that no action was taken by said council upon these objections until Monday, December 23, 1907, at which time, as shown by the minutes of the proceedings of the city council as set forth in the petition, the “petitions, protests and communications were received and referred to their appropriate committees, to wit: . . . No. 1224 from the Estate of T. D. Garvin, et al., protest *609 against the assessment for the opening of Grand avenue between Temple street and California street. Set for hearing January 6th, 1908, at 11 a. m., and in the meantime referred to the city engineer for report as to frontage, and the clerk instructed to give notice in the manner required by law.” On January 6, 1908, as shown by the minutes of the proceedings set forth in the petition, the engineer made his report to the effect that the protestants did not represent a majority of the frontage in said district, and, according to the minute entry of said proceedings, “the matter of the hearing of protests Nos. 1224 and 1229, Estate of T. D. Garvin and S. A. Waldron, et al., protesting against the opening of Grand avenue from Temple street to California street, coming on regularly at this time as a special hearing, the same was taken up, and Mr. Healey moved, seconded by Mr. Clampitt, that the report of the city engineer be adopted and that the protests be denied and the assessment and diagram presented by the Board of Public Works be confirmed and adopted”; which motion was adopted by a full vote. ■ No notice of the time when said objection would be heard was served on the objectors.

Upon the filing of this petition the writ was issued as prayed for. Thereafter, instead of making a return.of its proceedings as required by said writ, said respondents filed a demurrer, alleging that the petition did not state facts showing that petitioners were entitled to the writ. This demurrer was sustained, and a motion made at the time by respondents to have the writ theretofore issued dismissed was granted; whereupon a judgment of dismissal was entered in accordance therewith, from which petitioners prosecute this appeal.

The question presented by the record is the sufficiency of the verified petition to warrant the issuance of the writ. The effect of the demurrer on the part of respondents was, for the purpose of disposing of the question raised thereby, to adopt as their return the facts alleged in the petition. The question, therefore, is whether these facts entitled petitioners to the writ.

By the provisions of section 18 of the street opening act of 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 380), the superintendent of streets, upon the completion of the assessment, is required to file the same with the city clerk, -who shall give notice of such filing by pub *610 lication for at least ten days in a daily newspaper published and circulated in the city. Said notice shall require all persons interested, within thirty days after the date of the first publication of such notice, to file with the said clerk their objections, if any they have, to the confirmation of said assessment. Pursuant to said notice so given by publication, appellants did, within the thirty days provided therefor, file with the city clerk objections to the confirmation of said assessment. No other notice of the filing of said assessment, or the hearing of objections thereto, other than this publication, is required; hence, parties filing objections are not entitled to personal notice of the time and place when a hearing will be accorded upon their objections. The law fixes the time when the objections shall be heard. Section 19 of the act provides: “The clerk shall, at the next regular meeting of the City Council after the expiration of the time for filing objections, lay said assessment and all objections so filed with him, before .the Council; and said council shall hear all such objections at said meeting, or at any other time to which the hearing thereof may be adjourned.” The objectors, therefore, were chargeable with notice that their objections would be heard at the next regular meeting of the city council after the expiration of the thirty dcuys within which to file objections, or at such other time to which such hearing might at such meeting be adjourned. It was their duty to be present at such meeting, if a hearing was then had, or, if not had, to ascertain from the action then taken the time to which such hearing was adjourned.

By reference to section 13 of article III of the charter of the city of Los Angeles, of which this court will take judicial notice (Dillon’s Municipal Corporations, sec. 83; 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 936; Bituminous etc. Paving Co. v. Fulton (Cal.), 33 Pac. 1117; People v. Potter, 35 Cal. 110; Pasadena v. Stimson, 91 Cal. 238, [27 Pac. 604]), it will be seen that the city council of said city of Los Angeles shall meet at least once a week. The first publication of the notice was made on October 18, 1907, and the thirty days accorded for filing objections expired November 17, 1907, but, as shown by the record set out in the petition, the city clerk did not “lay said assessment and all objections so filed with him, before the council” until December 23, 1907—thirty-six days *611 after the filing thereof. It thus appears that, after the objections were filed, and after the expiration of thirty days within which to file the same, they were not laid before the city council, and no action was had thereon until the expiration of a period during which, under the provisions of the charter, there were held some four or five regular meetings of said city council, and that on December 23, 1907, without notice to the objectors, their objections were taken up and referred to the city engineer to report upon the number of feet frontage in the district represented by the objectors. It is apparent that the council was proceeding upon the erroneous theory that the objections purported to be protests of the holders of a majority of the frontage against the improvement, filed under the provisions of section 4 of the act, and not objections to the confirmation of the assessment as being inequitable.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 692, 8 Cal. App. 607, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoner-v-city-council-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1908.