Weaver v. City & County of San Francisco

43 P. 972, 111 Cal. 319, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 582
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1896
DocketNo. 16017
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 43 P. 972 (Weaver v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Weaver v. City & County of San Francisco, 43 P. 972, 111 Cal. 319, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 582 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

The plaintiff, in the months of November and December, 1892, performed certain labor in plumbing, gasfitting, and tinning upon certain engine-houses of the defendant, under an employment by the officers in charge of the fire department of the city, amounting in value to the sum of $4,517.17. Itemized demands therefor, duly verified, were presented to the officers of the defendant, and approved by the standing committee on the fire department of the board of supervisors, but the auditing committee of said board refused to allow the claims, and they were never audited or allowed. The present action was brought to recover judgment against the defendant for the amount of these demands. The complaint was filed May 9, 1893, and the answer upon which the case was tried was filed February 21, 1894. In its answer the defendant sets forth facts showing the sources and amount of the income and revenue of the city and county for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1893, and the different modes in which this income and revenue had been disposed of and expended; and that, not only had this entire revenue and income been exhausted, but that for debts and liabilities incurred during that fiscal year there had been allowed and audited by the proper officers of the city demands against the city amounting to upwards of $200,000 in excess of the amount of this income, and that this deficiency was represented by allowed, audited, and registered demands for the payment of which im money had been provided; that in addition to this deficiency there [322]*322were outstanding demands against the general fund amounting to the further sum of upwards of $100,000, which had never heen audited, and that the demands of the plaintiff were payable only out of this general fund, and had never been allowed, audited or registered; that at the time this action was commenced, viz., May 9, .1893, the audited and registered demands against the city payable out of the general fund, together with the preferred claims for salaries during the remainder of the fiscal year, far exceeded in amount the income and revenue of the fiscal year then remaining in said general fund, and that on said ninth day of May, 1893, there was not and had not since been any money in the treasury of the defendant, or in any of the funds thereof, which could be applied to the payment of the plaintiff's demands. The cause was tried by the court, who made findings in accordance with these averments of the answer, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff has appealed directly from the judgment upon the findings contained in the judgment-roll.

The principles governing the decision of this case, as well as the provisions of law applicable thereto in support of the judgment of the superior court, have been so frequently pointed out by this court that it is only necessary to cite a few of the cases in which they are found. (San Francisco Gas Co. v. Brickwedel, 62 Cal. 641; Shaw v. Statler, 74 Cal. 258; Schwartz v. Wilson, 75 Cal. 502; Lewis v. Widber, 99 Cal. 412; McGowan v. Ford,, 107 Cal. 177; Smith v. Broderick, 307 Cal. 644.)

In addition to the provisions in the constitution (art. XI, sec. 18) referred to in the foregoing cases, the consolidation act or charter of the city and county of San Francisco contains provisions applicable to the present case. By section 71 of that act the board of supervisors is directed, when making the levy of taxes for the fiscal year, to apportion and divide the taxes so levied and to he collected and applied to the several funds therein named, one of which is the general fund, and at the close of each fiscal year “ the said board shall direct the [323]*323treasurer to transfer all surplus moneys of all funds excepting the school fund, after liquidating or providing for all outstanding demands upon said funds, to the general fund.” Section 76 declares: “ The general fund consists of all moneys in the treasury not designated and set apart by law to a specified use, and of the over-plus of any special fund remaining after the satisfaction of all demands upon it.” A surplus fund' is also provided for, which is defined in section 76 to consist of “ any moneys belonging to the general fund remaining in the treasury after the satisfaction of all demands duo and payable which are specified in the first fourteen subdivisions in section 95.” This surplus fund is further defined in the fifteenth subdivision of section 95 to be the surplus of money that shall remain in the treasury “ at the end of each fiscal year, and after every lawful demand on the treasury then due and payable, or to accrue for that year, shall have been actually paid, taken up and canceled, and record thereof made in the proper books, or cash in the treasury have been set apart and reserved equal to the amount of said demands that may then be outstanding or to accrue for that year.” It is further provided in this subdivision of section 95 that payments of demands on the treasury of said city and county may be made for “ expenditures previously authorized by the board of supervisors, in the lawful exercise of their powers, for objects other than those specified in the preceding fourteen subdivisions of this section, out of this surplus fund as specified in sections 97 and 98, but not otherwise.” The claim of the plaintiff is not included within the preceding fourteen subdivisions of this section. Section 97 declares that the powers of the board of supervisors enumerated in this act, so far as the exercise thereof may involve the expenditure of money otherwise than for the objects enumerated in the first fourteen subdivisions of section 95, “ shall be deemed to extend only to authorizing the appropriation and application of any surplus moneys remaining in the treasury during any one fiscal year to the objects [324]*324specified in such enumeration of powers after the demands mentioned in the first fourteen subdivisions of section 95, due and payable during such fiscal year, shall have been paid”; and section 98 provides: “If any expenditures not authorized by this act be incurred, they can never be paid out of the treasury, nor shall they be deemed to constitute or lay the foundation of any claim, demand, or liability, legal, equitable, or otherwise, against the said city and county. If expenditures be incurred which are authorized by this act to be paid out of the surplus funds in the treasury, but not for the preferred objects specified in section 96 (those enumerated in the first fourteen subdivisions of section 95), such expenditures can only be paid out of such surplus funds and revenues strictly appertaining to the fiscal year in which such expenditures have been ordered, or the contracts therefor entered into, and cannot be carried forward and paid out of any revenues accruing and receivable into the treasury for any subsequent year.”

The court finds that the board of supervisors, at the-time of levying the tax to provide for the expenses of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1893, estimated the expenses of the general election to be held November 8, 1892, to-be $140,000, and provided that sum and no more for that purpose; but that claims and demands for the expenses of said election, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $293,998.23 had been allowed and paid by the treasurer out of the general fund.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 P. 972, 111 Cal. 319, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1896.