Town of Yreka City v. Warrens

10 Cal. 776
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1938
DocketSac. No. 5182
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Cal. 776 (Town of Yreka City v. Warrens) 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
Town of Yreka City v. Warrens, 10 Cal. 776 (Cal. 1938).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This is an action by the town of Yreka City to foreclose the lien of an assessment levied for street improvements completed under the Improvement Act of 1911, for which bonds were issued under the Improvement Bond Act of 1915. Defendant V. E. Warrens owns the land involved in this action and the other defendants claim an interest in or lien on said land. From a judgment for plaintiff town defendants prosecute this appeal.

[777]*777Defendants contend that all proceedings were without jurisdiction and void for the reason that the resolution of intention to do the work was not published in a newspaper of “general circulation”, as defined in section 4460, Political Code. Under said section a newspaper of general circulation must have been published at least a year. The trial court sustained the contention of plaintiff that under the Street Improvement Act of 1911 the resolution of intention is not required to be published in a newspaper of general circulation as thus defined.

The case was tried on an agreed statement of facts. It appears therefrom that the resolution of intention was published in the “Siskiyou Times”, a semi-weekly newspaper which was first published on April 5,1927. Hence at the time of publication of the resolution of intention on July 22, 1927, and July 26, 1927, the paper had been published for slightly less than four months. At the time there were two weekly newspapers of “general circulation” in the town of Yreka City. The relative circulation of the semi-weekly compared with the older weeklies does not appear.

Section 3 of the Improvement Act of 1911 provided at the time here pertinent: “ . . . The city clerk shall cause said resolution of intention to be published twice in one or more daily newspapers published and circulated in said city; provided, if there be no daily newspaper, then the publication shall be made in one or more newspapers published and circulated therein less than six days a week, and said publication shall be had twice therein. ...” (Stats. 1911, p. 730, sec. 3, as amended Stats. 1923, p. 106; Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8199.)

Section 79 at the time of the publication of the resolution of intention herein, provided: “The notices, resolutions, orders or other matters required to be published by the provisions of this act, shall be published in a daily newspaper, in cities where such there is, and where there is no daily newspaper, in a semi-weekly or weekly newspaper, to be designated by the council of such city, as often as the same is issued, and no other statute shall govern or be applicable to the publications herein provided for; ... No publication or notice, other than that provided for in this act, shall be necessary to give validity to any of the proceedings provided for therein.” (Italics ours; subd. 4, sec. 79.)

[778]*778Subsequent to the completion of the improvement herein, the provision was amended in 1929 to specifically provide that the provisions of part four, title five, of the Political Code, which includes sections 4458 and 4460, should have no application to publications under the act. (Stats. 1929, p. 1667; sec. 79e.)

Section 4460, Political Code, defines a newspaper of “general circulation” as follows: “A newspaper of general circulation is a newspaper published for the dissemination of local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character, having a bona fide subscription-list of paying subscribers, and which shall have been established, printed and published at regular intervals, in the state, county, city, city and county, or town, where such publication, notice by publication, or official advertising is given or made, for at least one year preceding the date of such publication, notice or advertisement. A newspaper devoted to the interests, or published for the entertainment or instruction of a particular class, profession, trade, calling, race, or denomination, or for any number of such classes, professions, trades, callings, races or denominations when the avowed purpose is to entertain or instruct such classes, is not a newspaper of general circulation.”

Section 4458, Political Code, provides that “whenever any publication, or notice by publication ... is required to be given or made by the provisions of . . . any law of the state, by any officer . . . such publication, or notice by publication . . . shall be given or made only in a newspaper of general circulation, where such newspaper is published within the jurisdiction of such official ...”

Defendants contend that said Political Code sections must be read together with the provisions of the Improvement Act of 1911 to require publications under the act to be made in a newspaper of general circulation. However, section 79, subdivision 4 (now 79c) of said Improvement Act expressly provided that “no other statute shall govern or be applicable to the publications herein provided for”. In view of this plain and unequivocal declaration it cannot be held that it was the legislative intent that sections 4458 and 4460, Political Code, should apply to proceedings under said act. The provisions of the act and the Political Code are otherwise inconsistent. If there is no paper of general circulation published in the city, section 4458, Political Code, requires publication “in a newspaper of general circulation, published nearest [779]*779thereto”. Section 3 of the act permits publication under such circumstances in any “newspaper published in the county in which said city is located”. Under section 79 of the act the necessity of publication where there is no newspaper published and circulated in the city is dispensed with in some circumstances, and posting required in lieu thereof. The act requires publication in a daily newspaper in preference to a semi-weekly or weekly, although the daily has not been published for a year, and hence is not a newspaper of “general circulation”, as technically defined by section 4460, Political Code.

Under the act publication of the resolution of intention twice in a newspaper is not the sole means provided for giving notice of a contemplated improvement. In addition the street superintendent is required to post notices of the passage of the resolution at not more than three hundred feet in distance apart along the line of the contemplated improvement, or if the work is chargeable upon a district, on all open streets within the district. (Sec. 5.) At the time of the proceedings herein it was also provided in section 5 that the council, if it deemed it advisable, might direct the clerk to mail notices to the owners in the district. This provision is now mandatory.

Other improvement acts and street opening acts likewise do not provide for publication in a newspaper of general circulation as defined in the Political Code. (Stats. 1889, p. 70, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8195; Stats. 1903, p. 376, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8198; Stats. 1885, p. 147, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8194; repealed Stats. 1933, p. 948; Stats. 1913, p. 954, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8205.) The statutes of 1889 (see. 23, subd. 8) and 1903 (sec. 34) provide, as does the act before us, that “no publication or notice other than that provided in this act shall be necessary to give validity to any proceedings had thereunder”.

The Improvement Acts of 1901 and 1933, on the other hand, have required notices to be published in a newspaper of general circulation. (Stats. 1901, p. 34, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8197, repealed Stats. 1933, p. 1274; Stats. 1933, p. 1458.)

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