Trickey v. City of Long Beach

226 P.2d 694, 101 Cal. App. 2d 871, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1109
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1951
DocketCiv. 17733
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 226 P.2d 694 (Trickey v. City of Long Beach) 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
Trickey v. City of Long Beach, 226 P.2d 694, 101 Cal. App. 2d 871, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1109 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by petitioner from a judgment (de nominated judgment and order) denying him any relief, entered on the hearing of an order to show cause for a preliminary injunction in an action for a writ of mandate and an injunction.

Petitioner, a taxpayer and resident of the city of Long Beach, filed a “Petition For Writ of Mandate” against the • city of Long Beach, the members of the city council, the members of the board of harbor commissioners, the city treasurer, the city auditor, the city attorney, and two of his deputies, seeking, among other things, to compel them to “cease” transferring funds from the city’s “Gas Revenue Fund” to its “General Purpose Fund” and to retransfer funds from its “General Purpose Fund” to the “Gas Revenue Fund,” on the ground that they were trust funds which could be used only for harbor purposes and not for general municipal purposes.

*874 The petition is predicated upon the decision in City of Long Beach v. Morse, 31 Cal.2d 254 [188 P.2d 17], 1 rendered December 30,1947, which is made a part of the petition by reference. The petition alleges that after the rendition of the Morse decision the defendants “conspired to divert and appropriate funds, the proceeds of said so-called tideland oil wells, of the City of Long Beach, in disregard of the rule announced in said decision, and ever since said time have continued and have pursued a policy of causing said public funds of the City of Long Beach to be diverted and appropriated in contravention of the law established by said decision in this, that the defendants, the Board of Harbor Commissioners of said City of Long Beach have caused the dry gas from tidelands to be turned over to the City Gas Department of the City of Long Beach and said gas has been sold at a profit to the citizens of the City of Long Beach, and the proceeds of the sale of this gas, which is part of the trust funds of said City, have been transferred from said Gas Department to the General Purpose Fund of the City of Long Beach at the following times and places [amounts], as follows, to-wit: January 31, 1948, the sum of $55,000; Junes 30, 1948, the sum of $23,500; Junes 30, 1948, the sum of $26,-250.05; June 30, 1948, the sum of $2,850,000; June 30, 1949, the sum of $4,600,000”; that all such transfers of funds were done by resolution of the City Council of the City of *875 Long Beach, concurred in by all the other defendants, notwithstanding the fact that defendants knew that they could not be used for general municipal purposes but were a trust fund for harbor purposes as determined by the Supreme Court in the Morse case; that the transfer of these funds “was in violation of the terms of the trust under which the City of Long Beach holds title to the lands . . . and that the defendants . . . had no right, power or authority whatever to make said transfers and expenditures . . . and any orders or directions of said City Officials . . . purportedly authorizing said transfers and expenditures . . . was in violation of their oath of office and constitutes malfeasance on the part of the defendants ...”

The petition prayed that an alternative writ of mandate be issued requiring defendants to immediately “desist” from transferring or diverting “trust funds” into its “General Purpose Fund” for general municipal purposes “or for any purposes whatever excepting for harbor purposes in furtherance of the terms of the trust under which it holds title to certain tidelands which were the subject of the mandate proceedings” in the Morse case; to retransfer all funds heretofore paid into the “General Purpose Fund” and, in the event of any deficiency, to repay the amount which had been unlawfully transferred from the “Gas Revenue Fund” until such time as the trust has been fully restored and “all funds which properly belong td said trust fund placed in the proper fund and held exclusively for the purpose of said trust.” Although the petition is denominated one for writ of mandate, it is obvious that it seeks injunctive relief as well.

An order issued, requiring defendants to show cause why they should not be restrained from transferring from the “Gas Revenue Fund” to the “General Purpose Fund” “monies derived from the proceeds or income from the tidelands,” to be used for general municipal purposes or any purposes except those set forth in the trust conveyance and under which the city holds title to the tidelands. Defendants filed a return to the order to show cause. The return, among other matters, challenged the legal capacity of the petitioner to maintain the action and the sufficiency of the petition, and alleged that there was another action pending between the same parties for the same cause. Attached were an affidavit of the superintendent of the Long Beach municipal gas department and a specimen contract under which the city, through its board of harbor commissioners, sells the natural *876 gas derived from wells located on the tidelands and submerged lands and retains the “resulting dry gas.”

The affidavit and the specimen contract reveal the following: The municipal gas department was created in 1923. The municipal gas system serves the entire area of the city of Long Beach with both domestic and industrial gas for fuel purposes. It is self-supporting, and the gas rate structure is maintained at a sufficiently high level to insure a substantial surplus profit. Since 1932 substantial sums of surplus moneys have been transferred from the gas department fund to other city funds to .meet some of the general expenses of the city. The gas which the municipal gas department distributes to its customers is obtained from several sources. Since 1939, the city has purchased “considerable” gas from independent suppliers and, in addition, by virtue of various contracts entered into between it and purchasers of natural gas produced from wells located on city-owned land and from wells located on tidelands granted to the city by the state, it has had “available” large quantities of dry gas. “ [A]s of June 30, 1949, the City had the right to receive a quantity of dry gas equal to the resulting surplus dry gas derived from processing of the natural gas processed by the purchasers of the natural gas from 574 wells in the harbor area,” of which 506 are located on the tidelands.

Under its contracts for the sale of natural gas derived from wells located on the tidelands, the purchaser pays the city 62 per cent of the “gross proceeds derived .' . . from the sale by it of natural gasoline, liquefied gas and other products, excepting ‘resulting dry gas.’ ” Under the contracts, 2 the *877

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Bluebook (online)
226 P.2d 694, 101 Cal. App. 2d 871, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trickey-v-city-of-long-beach-calctapp-1951.