Taylor v. Spear

238 P. 1038, 196 Cal. 709, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 355
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1925
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11416.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 P. 1038 (Taylor v. Spear) 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
Taylor v. Spear, 238 P. 1038, 196 Cal. 709, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 355 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The plaintiff commenced this action against the defendants, who, at the time of the commencement thereof, constituted the Board of State Harbor Commissioners, having control of the harbor of San Francisco, whereby he sought an injunction preventing the said Board from terminating his occupancy of certain space or premises within the Ferry Building, a state structure upon the waterfront of the city and county of San Francisco, under the control of said Board, and from leasing, letting, or setting apart said space or premises to any other person or from interfering with the said plaintiff’s occupancy of the same. He alleged in substance that for more than four years last past he had been the owner of a bootblack-stand and business located upon such space or premises in said building as a tenant of the state of California, paying a certain amount of money each month as rent for the use and occupation of said space or premises occupied by his said bootblack-stand and business; that he had operated and conducted his said business upon said premises during the period of his tenancy thereof in an efficient and businesslike manner and without complaint of any kind being made to the said Board of State Harbor Commissioners as to the manner in which his said business had been conducted; and that during the period of his four-year tenancy thereof *712 he had built up a large and profitable bootblack business; that during the year 1922 he had, with the permission of the said Board, caused to be erected upon said space or premises a small building at a cost of more than two thousand dollars, within which to operate and conduct his said bootblack-stand and business, and that he had ever since conducted and was now conducting his said stand and business therein; that on or about the first day of November, 1923, the said State Board of Harbor Commissioners made and served or caused to be served upon plaintiff a notice terminating his said tenancy and ordering him thereby to vacate within thirty days thereafter the said space and premises theretofore used and occupied by plaintiff’s said bootblack-stand and business. The plaintiff then proceeds to make certain averments with relation to the state of the laws of California requiring the letting or setting apart of buildings erected on property subject to the control of said Board of Harbor Commissioners by competitive 'bidding, but since such is not the law affecting the space or premises occupied by said plaintiff, these averments need not be considered. The plaintiff further alleges that certain other persons whose names are unknown to plaintiff have made application to said Board to have said space or premises now occupied by him set apart, leased or let to them, to the exclusion of plaintiff, and that said Board has agreed with such persons to so do in order to satisfy certain political obligations incurred by them in a political compaign and to recompense said persons for political services, and that unless restrained by the court the said Board threatens to and will oust said plaintiff from said space and premises and thereby ruin and destroy his said bootblack business and will issue a permit to said other persons to enter upon and occupy said space and premises to the exclusion of said plaintiff, to his irreparable injury and damage, for which he has no plain, speedy or adequate remedy at law. Wherefore he seeks an injunction to prevent said defendants in their said official capacity from doing the aforesaid acts. To this complaint the defendants presented a general and also a special demurrer upon a number of specified grounds, which the trial court overruled; whereupon the defendants answered, denying for the most part specifically the aver *713 ments of the plaintiff's complaint, except that they admit the occupancy by the plaintiff of the space or premises in question, and in that regard aver that the plaintiff's sole right to occupy the same was that acquired by him under and by virtue of the provisions of section 2524 of the Political Code, and which was terminable thereunder upon thirty days’ notice at the pleasure of said Board, and which was terminated by the giving of said notice by said Board, in' accordance with said section of the Political Code. The cause proceeded to trial upon the issues as thus framed and was submitted to the trial court for decision. Thereafter the court made and filed its findings of fact, which were generally in the plaintiff’s favor. The court found that the plaintiff had entered into the possession and occupancy of the space or premises designated in his complaint about four years prior to the inception of the action under a permission or license received from the said Board of Harbor Commissioners in the form of that set forth in the defendants’ answer, and had since continued in the use and occupancy thereof thereunder; that he had made the improvements in his structure thereon at the time and cost and with the permission and consent of said Board as detailed in his said complaint; that he had at all times conducted his bootblack-stand and business in a clean, orderly, efficient, and business-like manner and without complaint, and that he was a fit and proper person to have the use and occupancy of said premises and to conduct said business; and that he had built up a good and profitable bootblack business thereon, and had at all said times served and was still serving the public in a satisfactory manner; that on or about November 1, 1923, the said Board had served upon said plaintiff a notice terminating his occupancy of said premises and directing him to vacate the same within thirty days thereafter, which said notice to vacate was in the form set forth in the defendants’ answer to said complaint; that neither said Board nor any of its members gave plaintiff any reason for terminating his occupancy of said space or premises except that one of their number stated verbally to said plaintiff, “Well, Taylor, you ought to know the reason. You got it through politics and you are losing it through politics.” In that connection the court finds “That the said *714 Board of Harbor Commissioners have not agreed, in satisfaction of political obligations, to assign the space or premises occupied by plaintiff’s building, bootblack-stand and bootblack business to other persons to the exclusion of plaintiff, and to permit other persons to enter into possession of said space occupied by plaintiff’s building, bootblack-stand and bootblack business and exclude the plaintiff therefrom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 1038, 196 Cal. 709, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-spear-cal-1925.