Young v. City Council

241 P. 415, 74 Cal. App. 487, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4990.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 241 P. 415 (Young v. City Council) 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
Young v. City Council, 241 P. 415, 74 Cal. App. 487, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

This is a proceeding on writ of review, and comes before this court on appeal by petitioner from a judgment affirming an order of the City Council which confirmed an assessment made for the opening, widening and extending of Fifth Street in the city of Los Angeles.

The street-opening proceedings were prosecuted under the Street Opening Act of 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 376). In connection therewith an action was brought against Dan Morris, Annie F. Young and others to condemn certain real property required for said street purposes. An “interlocutory judgment” was entered against Mrs. Young in that action. She appealed from that judgment. A decision has been rendered this day by this court, affirming said interlocutory judgment. (City of Los Angeles v. Morris et al., ante, p. 473, [241 Pac. 409].) That decision contains a history of the progress of the condemnation suit to and including the entry of said interlocutory judgment.

*489 From, the petition for writ of review, taken together with the return thereon, it appears that in the condemnation suit the compensation and damages of Mrs. Young and her mortgagee were awarded pursuant to the verdict of a jury, whereas the compensation and damages of all the other defendants were determined in accordance with a report of referees appointed under the provisions of the statute. The interlocutory judgment against Mrs. Young and her mortgagee, which was entered on the first day of May, 1923, did not include any adjudication of the rights established by confirmation of the report of the referees. A separate interlocutory judgment as to the defendants included in the report of the referees was entered on June 6, 1923. Thereafter, on July 31, 192'3, the City Council directed the city engineer to prepare a diagram or map of the assessment district, as provided for by the Street Opening Act of 1903. This diagram and map having been made and delivered to the board of public works, the board of public works proceeded to make its assessment against the real property included in the assessment district. The assessment having been completed and certified in due form and delivered to the clerk of the City Council, and notice having been given by the clerk in due form as provided by the statute, various objections and protests in writing were made by property owners in the assessment district, including Mrs. Young. The objections of Mrs. Young, as stated in her protest, need not be repeated here. It is sufficient to say that the several grounds of objection to the authority of the City Council to proceed in the matter of said assessment included all of the grounds of objection which are relied upon by her in the proceeding for a writ of review and on this appeal. The appeal of Mrs. Young from the interlocutory judgment entered against her had been taken by her within thirty days from such entry, and has so remained, pending and undecided, until the present time.

Appellant relies upon two propositions: First, that there was no power in the superior court to render two “interlocutory judgments” in an action'brought under the Street Opening Act of 1903; second, that the City Council does not have the power or right “to levy assessments” under said act, when there is an appeal pending from the inter *490 locutory judgment entered in a condemnation action brought pursuant to the provisions of that act.

The first of these contentions has been decided adversely to appellant, in the decision rendered on the appeal in the other case, City of Los Angeles v. Morris et al., supra.

The sections of the Code of Civil Procedure which deal with the manner of taking an appeal, and with the stay of proceedings (secs. 940 to 949, Code Civ. Proc.) remain unchanged since the year 1921. Since the amendments made during that year (Stats. 1921, p. 95) section 949 has been construed to mean (so far as the general rules of practice are concerned), that the perfecting of an appeal, without a bond, is sufficient to stay execution of a judgment except when a special bond is required under sections 942, 943, 944 or 945. (People v. Jackson, 190 Cal. 257, 262 [212 Pac. 4].) Respondent claims that appellant gave no stay bond on appeal in City v. Morris, supra, and that the case is one where, to stay enforcement of the judgment, a bond was required under the provisions of section 945, Code of Civil Procedure, which applies to a judgment which directs “the sale or delivery of possession of real property.” The record here, while it does not state that a bond was given, does not state the contrary. Let it be assumed that there was none. Nevertheless, we are of the opinion that the interlocutory judgment in question was not a judgment to which the provisions of said section 945 apply. In City of Los Angeles v. Pomeroy, 132 Cal. 340 [64 Pac. 477], it was so held, with respect to the final judgment following the interlocutory judgment. It follows that the appeal stayed all proceedings on the judgment, unless the provisions of the Street Opening Act of 1903 are such that they create an exception to the rule, or unless in the absence of such provision there is a like exception contained in the title on Eminent Domain (sec. 1237 et seq.) in the Code of Civil Procedure.

Here it must be noted that the orders of the City Council, against which appellant’s petition is directed, are not orders made under any execution or command of the court requiring the Council to do anything under and by virtue of the interlocutory judgment. The entry of that judgment, even if there had been no appeal, had no effect upon the Council *491 except that such entry created the condition which authorized the Council to proceed. “Upon the entry of the interlocutory judgment, the city council shall,” etc. But the act also provides (sec. 14) that the Council may abandon the proceedings at any time prior to payment of the compensation awarded the defendants.

For the purpose of further testing the merits of the case we shall assume, however, that the orders of the Council, including its hearing of protests against the assessments, and decision thereon, and confirmation of the assessments, are proceedings in the nature of a proceeding to enforce the interlocutory judgment. And since they include determinations of fact, upon evidence received, we further assume that the matters to be determined are of a judicial nature, and so are subject to attack in a certiorari proceeding.

The terms of the Street Opening Act of 1903, section 15, on their face indicate a legislative intention that the assessment proceedings shall begin immediately upon the entry of the interlocutory judgment in the condemnation action. And yet it appears, by the terms of section 13 of the same act, that thirty days are allowed, from the entry of that judgment, for taking an appeal therefrom. It is, we think, an appropriate inference from these provisions, reading them together, that the taking of the appeal is not intended to have the force of a stay of the assessment proceedings. Section 37 of the act declares that the provisions of this act shall be liberally construed to promote the objects thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 415, 74 Cal. App. 487, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-city-council-calctapp-1925.