The City of Oakland v. Williams

103 P.2d 168, 15 Cal. 2d 542, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 245
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1940
DocketS. F. 16406
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 103 P.2d 168 (The City of Oakland v. Williams) 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
The City of Oakland v. Williams, 103 P.2d 168, 15 Cal. 2d 542, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 245 (Cal. 1940).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an application for a peremptory writ of mandate directing Harry G. Williams, as auditor of the City of Oakland, to countersign and endorse his certificate upon a certain contract for and on behalf of said city, as required by sections 125 and 131 of its charter. The proceed *545 ing comes before us on an agreed statement of facts pursuant to the provisions of sections 1138-1140, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure. Briefly, the parties hereto seek an adjudication of the validity of said contract and of the contemplated expenditure thereunder of some $60,000 for an extended survey of the sewage disposal problem of the signatories thereto, some.seven municipalities situated on the east side of San Francisco Bay.

It appears that the seven interested municipalities consist of the cities of Oakland, Berkeley, Piedmont, Alameda, Albany and Richmond, operating under freeholders’ charters, and Emeryville, a city of the sixth class, organized under the Municipal Corporation Act. These cities are contiguous and presently discharge their sewage by many outlets into San Francisco Bay, several of such outlets being jointly used by two or more cities. By reason of the proximity of these outlets, dispersion has proved highly unsatisfactory, and admittedly a grave condition exists threatening both health and property. Specifically, it is alleged that the prevailing method of sewage disposal of said municipalities has caused the illness of persons required to work in the general vicinity, has resulted in damage to near-by property and ships, and has caused a pollution of shellfish. The State Board of Public Health has by resolution declared the sewage-laden mud flats of the East Bay to be a public nuisance and has urged the several named municipalities to take action looking to the early abatement thereof.

In an effort to overcome and terminate such unhealthful and unsatisfactory condition, each of the named municipalities in 1937 appointed an official to a body known as the East Bay Executives’ Association, whose province it was to investigate and find the facts. A sub-committee of the Executives ’ Association, composed of the city engineers of the several cities, made further studies. These investigations and studies disclosed that the problem could not be satisfactorily solved by independent action of each of the municipalities, but, instead, required a joint survey and investigation of conditions in all the area and of the suitability of different methods of disposal to the peculiar circumstances there existing. It was also reported that such a survey would require approximately seven months and would involve an expenditure of $60,000. Thereupon the seven named municipalities, by appropriate *546 action of their governing bodies, approved such recommendation and respectively authorized the execution of a proposed agreement among them looking to such joint survey and study and directed the appropriate officers to execute the same on their behalf, each agreeing to pay its share of the expenses incident thereto. Williams, as auditor of the City of Oakland, is required under the charter to countersign and endorse his certificate on any contract to the effect that there remains a balance of funds sufficient to pay the expense of executing it, and no contract is binding without such endorsement. Admittedly, ample funds remain in the Oakland treasury for the performance and discharge of its obligation under the contract here involved, but Williams, as auditor, nevertheless has refused to countersign the contract on the ground generally that the City of Oakland is without authority under its charter to enter into such a contract with its neighboring cities for a joint survey of the sewage disposal problem. In support thereof he advances several reasons which under the charter assertedly preclude such a contract. They will be stated and disposed of in the order in which they are advanced.

Preliminarily, it is well to state that while it may not be wholly impossible for each of the several named cities to separately solve its sewage disposal problem, yet by reason of their geographical location and the topography of the area, with which this court is quite familiar and of which it may take judicial knowledge, any independent action of one or more of said cities looking to the solution of the problem would, because of the action of the tides and currents of San Francisco Bay, still leave unabated the obnoxious nuisance and health menace resulting from sewage deposited on the common shores by the neighboring cities continuing to discharge their sewage into the bay. This and the further fact that there is a present interlocking or common use of certain sewers and outfalls by the named cities makes it readily apparent that the proposed joint solution of the problem is the only feasible and practical one. Therefore, the Executive Association above mentioned proposed a form of contract, later agreed upon and approved by the governing bodies of the several cities, by which said cities would'contract with one of their number to do the work under certain restrictive conditions and subject to the approval and supervision of an executive committee *547 whose membership would consist of one representative from each of the contracting cities. The City of Berkeley was thought to be best adapted to carry out the work, and accordingly the agreement whose validity is here involved was entered into. By its terms the City of Berkeley will become the sponsor of the proposed survey and the depository of the funds agreed by the several signatories to be paid toward the cost and completion of such survey. All contentions of Williams to the contrary notwithstanding, it may generally be stated that by the terms of the agreement the City of Berkeley is to be the employer of all persons engaged upon the survey. It is to enter into all necessary contracts in its own name and is to disburse all funds from the Sewage Disposal Survey Fund. But, in order to give each of the cities contributing to the fund the right to approve the expenditures and to determine that the agreement is being carried out as intended, the City of Berkeley agrees that none of the money will be disbursed except upon approval of the executive committee, and that it will not enter into any contract or employ any person unless the matter is first approved by the executive committee composed, as hereinbefore stated, of one representative from each of the contracting cities. However, the executive committee itself is without authority to incur any expense, execute any contract or employ any person. The committee’s approval is merely a condition precedent to the exercise of the powers conferred by the agreement on the City of Berkeley. All acts and obligations are those of the City of Berkeley. By the adoption of an ordinance providing for the employment by it of all necessary survey employees, the City of Berkeley appears to have given to the agreement a practical construction meriting the consideration and approval of this court. We need not here further detail the many provisions of the contract, but shall refer to them as necessary in the discussion of the many assaults thereon by Williams, as auditor of the City of Oakland.

The statute under which the above contract was drafted was enacted in 1921 (Stats. 1921, p. 542) and is entitled “An act providing for the joint exercise of powers by counties, by municipalities or by municipalities and counties.

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Bluebook (online)
103 P.2d 168, 15 Cal. 2d 542, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-city-of-oakland-v-williams-cal-1940.