Watson v. Fouch

205 P. 58, 55 Cal. App. 765, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2356.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 205 P. 58 (Watson v. Fouch) 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
Watson v. Fouch, 205 P. 58, 55 Cal. App. 765, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 126 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment awarding a peremptory writ of mandate directed to the defendants, as members of the board of trustees of the town of Williams, Colusa County, California, compelling them to call an election for the disincorporation of said town of Williams. '

The findings, which follow the allegations of the complaint, show the facts of the controversy which is the subject of this litigation to be, in substance, as follows:

The town of Williams is a municipal corporation of the sixth class, having been organized under and by virtue of the Municipal Corporation Act of California. The board of trustees of said town constitutes the legislative or governing board or body thereof, and the defendants are the regularly elected and duly qualified trustees of said town and members of said board. The petitioner is and was, at all the times herein mentioned, a resident and property owner and taxpayer of said town.

On the first day of October, 1920, a petition, in due legal form, and signed by 150 or more qualified electors, which number of electors constituted “more than half as many electors as voted at the last municipal election in said town,” *767 was presented to said board of trustees, the defendants herein, asking that an election be called for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said town the question of dis-incorporating the same. After the filing of said petition with said board of trustees, and on the sixth day of December, 1920, said board, after canvassing the same, by a vote of the members of said board, and upon a motion for that purpose duly made and seconded, granted the prayer of said petition, and ordered an election to be held on January 18, 1921, on the said question of disincorporating said town of Williams. After so ordering an election, and at a meeting held in the said month of December, and prior to the institution of this action, the said board of trustees, by a vote of said board, rescinded the said action of December 6, 1920, calling an election for the purpose stated, “and did then and there refuse, and thereafter refused, and still continue to refuse to call such election, and said board refuse to take any further action in relation to said election, since said last named day.”

It was stipulated at the trial that the only election ever held prior to the commencement of this proceeding in mandamus affecting or appertaining to the town of Williams as a municipal corporation was the election at which the electors of said town voted upon the question of the incorporation of said town as such a corporation.

The determination of the controversy presented here is dependent upon the construction of certain provisions of the act of 1895 (Stats. 1895, p. 115) and subsequent acts amendatory thereof in relation to the disincorporation of municipal corporations of the sixth class. (See Stats. 1897, p. 17; Stats. 1899, p. 13, and Stats. 1915, p. 982; Henning’s Gen. Laws, p. 1937.)

The provisions of the law prescribing the method of disincorporating a; city of the sixth class are contained in section 1 of the act above referred to. So much of said section as is necessary to be considered in the determination of this appeal reads as follows:

“A municipal corporation of the sixth class may disincorporate after proceedings had as required in this act. The council, board of trustees, or other legislative body of such corporation shall, upon receiving a petition therefor, signed by not less than half of the qualified electors thereof, as *768 shown by the vote cast at the last municipal election held therein, submit to the electors of such corporation the question whether such municipal corporation shall disincorporate. ’ ’

The appellants, in the court below and here, challenge the legal sufficiency of the petition filed by the respondent with the board of trustees for the disincorporation of the town of Williams, and this constitutes the single point presented and discussed in the briefs. The contention of the appellants is that the election at which was submitted the proposition for the incorporation of the town of Williams was not a “municipal election,” within the meaning of that phrase as it is employed in the statute in question; that the “municipal election” referred to in the statute is an election at which officers are elected in and for a municipality and held subsequent to the act of incorporating a city or town as a municipality. It is hence argued that the election at which the electors of the town of Williams voted upon and carried the proposition of incorporating said town, being the only election ever held pertaining to said town with respect to its corporate character (no municipal election ever having been held therein after the incorporation thereof), there was not, and could not.be, at the time of the preparation and filing of the petition for the disincorporation of said town, a legal basis or standard for such a petition or for determining whether the requisite number of qualified electors of said town have or have not signed the petition asking for the disincorporation thereof.

The precise question presented here is new, so far as we are advised by the briefs or by such independent investigation as we have been able to make. The solution of the controversy would appear, upon first blush, to be fraught with no little difficulty; yet, upon full reflection and a consideration of the principles which should govern in determining a question which, like the one submitted here, in no small measure involves the fundamental right of petition and in full measure the right conferred upon the citizens of a particular community themselves to say whether they shall or shall not be subject to the burdens and the mandates of a local or municipal government, the solution of the problem is not so difficult as it might appear to be.

*769 It may be conceded that the election for the incorporation of a town under the provisions of the general Municipal Corporation Act is not, in the stricter sense in which the phrase “municipal election” is usually understood, a municipal election, since such an election is generally one held within and for the purposes of the municipality after its organization as such; still no sound reason can be assigned for holding that the phrase “municipal election” should be subject to a hard-and-fast rule of interpretation and its meaning thus limited to that in which it may ordinarily be understood in a case, such as this, where the right of the electors of a particular locality to determine for themselves whether they shall or shall not be subject to local self-government is made contingent upon what such interpretation may be. The rule is, it is true, that, in the organization of municipal corporations, either under the constitution, by way of a freeholders’ charter, or under the Municipal Corporation Act, the procedure therefor as prescribed must be followed with substantial strictness—that is to say, that any substantial departure from the procedure so prescribed would vitiate the proceedings looking to the framing of a freeholders’ charter or the organization of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P. 58, 55 Cal. App. 765, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-fouch-calctapp-1921.