Williams v. Bergin

41 P. 287, 108 Cal. 166, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 839
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1895
DocketNo. 15689
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 41 P. 287 (Williams v. Bergin) 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
Williams v. Bergin, 41 P. 287, 108 Cal. 166, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 839 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

Action upon a street assessment. After the work had been completed to the satisfaction of the superintendent of streets, that officer made an assess[169]*169ment therefor May 6, 1892, by which the land described in the complaint was assessed in the sum of six hundred and fourteen dollars and thirty cents. Within thirty days thereafter, viz., May 14th, the contractors to whom the assessment was issued, deeming that they were entitled to receive a larger sum, appealed therefrom, by filing in the office of the clerk of the board of supervisors a notice of their appeal, in which their objections were stated in writing; and the board of supervisors fixed Monday evening, June 6th, as the time for hearing the appeal, at which time they passed a resolution setting aside the assessment, and directing the superintendent of streets to make and issue a new assessment in accordance with the claim of the contractors. The present action is brought upon the assessment made under this direction of the board of supervisors.

Section 11 of the Street Improvement Act (Stats. 1885, p. 156), after providing for an appeal from any act of the superintendent, declares: Notice of the time and place of the hearing, briefly referring to the work contracted to be done, or other subject of appeal, and to the acts, determinations, or proceedings objected to or complained of, shall be published for five days.” In the present case the board of supervisors fixed the time and place for hearing the appeal by the following resolution:

“Resolved, That Monday evening, June 6, 1892, at 8 o’clock p. m., be fixed as the time for hearing said appeal by this board, in their chamber, at the New City Hall, at which time and place all appellants are required to appear, when they will be heard in relation to said appeals.
“And the clerk is hereby directed to publish this resolution in the San Francisco Daily Report newspaper, for five days, as and for the notice required by law.”

This resolution was published as therein directed, and was the only notice of the hearing of the appeal authorized or given by the board of supervisors.

The act of the superintendent in making the assessment is in the nature of a judgment by a tribunal of [170]*170special and limited jurisdiction. After its judgment has once been exercised its power is exhausted, and, in the absence of statutory authority for its revision, the judgment cannot be changed. By the original assessment the land of the owner is charged with a lien of a specified amount, and, if the amount of this lien is to be increased, it is essential that the owner shall have notice thereof, and have an opportunity to be heard thereon. This notice is in the nature of process by which the board of supervisors may acquire jurisdiction to act upon the appeal and change the assessment. It is the only means which the law has provided to warn the owner of the intended increase of the lien upon his property, and must be followed in order to effect such increase. (Cruger v. Hudson River R. R. Co., 12 N. Y. 201; Scammon v. Chicago, 40 Ill. 146 ) The mode which the statute prescribes for a revision of the assessment is the measure of the power, and, unless that mode is followed, any attempted revision will be nugatory. Where a statute prescribes the mode of acquiring jurisdiction the mode must be complied "with or the proceedings will be a nullity. In State v. Jersey City, 25 N. J. L. 309, under a provision in the charter of Jersey City requiring notice to be given, in terms similar to those of the statute under consideration, the notice specified that the council would hear any objections that might be presented “in writing.” It was held that, by reason of this departure from the direction of the charter, the council did not acquire jurisdiction to pass the ordinance, saying: “ It may be that this departure from the direction of the charter was not calculated seriously to interfere with the rights of the property holders whose lands were to be taken, yet, in point of fact, the power delegated h> the common council was not strictly pursued in this particular, and their jurisdiction to pass the ordinance therefore fails.” In City of Lowell v. Wentworth, 6 Cush. 222, the officer was required, before making an assessment, to give to each person liable to be assessed a notice in writing, appointing in the notice a time and place in [171]*171which all persons interested might appear and be heard in relation to the assessment. Instead of so doing he notified some of the persons interested to appear at one time, and others at a different time. This was held to be such an omission to comply with the ordinance as to render the assessment void. Notice, when required by a statute, is not the equivalent of knowledge, and the supervisors gain jurisdiction to act upon the appeal only by giving the notice that the statute requires, and in the manner that is required, and not by the fact that the parties interested may have knowledge of their intended action. The term “notice” of itself imports that the information given thereby comes from an authentic source, and is directed to some one who is to act or refrain from acting in consequence of the information contained in the notice. (See Fry v. Bennett, 7 Abb. Pr. 355; Minard v. Douglas County, 9 Or. 210.) A notice which, by its terms, is directed to A is ineffectual as a notice to B, even though it is delivered to B and he is thereby informed of its contents-In the absence of any provision in the statute for the mode of giving the notice it would be necessary that every person who might be affected by the appeal should receive personal notice of the matter appealed from, as well as of the time and place fixed for hearing the same. The provision that the notice shall be given by publication for five days merely changes the mode of giving the notice, but does not change the character of the notice to be given. The publication of the notice takes the place of personal notice, but can have no greater effect as a notice than would a similar one if personally delivered to him who is to receive it. In either ease it must indicate the person who is to be notified, as well as the matter of which notice is given, the object of giving the notice being to enable those to whom it is to be given to be heard upon the appeal. “ It must be very plain language which will justify the court in holding that the legislature meant to substitute by way of a published advertisement any thing less explicit [172]*172than' would be required in a written notice actually delivered to the person whose property was meant to be affected.” (State v. Mayor of Newark, 31 N. J. L. 364.)

The only “ notice” that was given in the present case is that contained in the resolution aforesaid, and the only portion of this resolution that has any of the qualities of a notice is contained in the clause, “ all appellants are required to appear, when they will be heard in relation to said appeals.” All else is only the fixing the time and place for hearing the appeal, and directing the clerk to publish the resolution.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P. 287, 108 Cal. 166, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-bergin-cal-1895.