165 P. 698 | Cal. | 1917
This is a proceeding in mandate to compel the allowance and payment of a claim of petitioner against the city of Petaluma. The proceeding was commenced in the district court of appeal of the third appellate district, and was ordered transferred to this court because of the inability of the judges of that court to agree upon a judgment.
Petitioner's claim was for printing done by him for the city during the fiscal year 1910-11, in his newspaper, the "Petaluma Daily Courier," the contract for city printing for that year having been awarded to him as the lowest bidder for the work. The particular printing was the publication *218
in said paper of a proposed freeholders' charter, which the trustees of the city had ordered published "in the manner provided by law." When the printing was done there was sufficient money in the city treasury of the revenue of that fiscal year to pay petitioner's claim. His demand in due form for the amount alleged to be due was filed with the city clerk on March 28, 1911, but at that time the revenues provided for the fiscal year had been entirely exhausted. The claim was disallowed. Petitioner brought his action against the city thereon, and in September, 1912, obtained a judgment for the full amount of his claim. That judgment was subsequently affirmed on appeal. (Arthur v. City of Petaluma,
The claim of the city substantially is that section 18 of article XI of the state Constitution precludes payment of this claim incurred in the fiscal year 1910-11 from any of the revenue resulting from the tax levy by the city council for the fiscal year 1916-17. Whatever might be our view in the absence of previous decisions of this court, we are satisfied that the construction given to this section of our Constitution by a long line of decisions is such as to compel us to sustain this claim of the city.
Section 18, article XI, of the Constitution, so far as here applicable, reads to-day as it did when first adopted in the *219 year 1879. The language is: "No . . . city . . . shall incur any indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors thereof, voting at an election to be held for that purpose. Any indebtedness or liability incurred contrary to this provision, . . . shall be void." Certain amendments to this section made in the year 1900 permitting the city and county of San Francisco to pay unpaid claims of previous fiscal years out of the income and revenue of succeeding fiscal years, and the city of Vallejo to pay an existing indebtedness "whenever two-thirds of the electors thereof, voting at an election held for that purpose, shall so decide," if they have any bearing upon the question, would seem to be entirely in line with the previous construction given by the court to the section and to support the proposition that the limitation of the constitutional provision can only be overcome by a two-thirds vote of the electors or by a constitutional amendment to meet the particular case.
The constitutional provision was first considered by this court in San Francisco Gas Co. v. Brickwedel,
"The system previously prevailing in some of the municipalities of the state by which liabilities and indebtedness were incurred by them far in excess of their income and revenue for the year in which the same were contracted, thus *220
creating a floating indebtedness which had to be paid out of the income and revenue of future years, and which, in turn, necessitated the carrying forward of other indebtedness, was a fruitful source of municipal extravagance. The evil consequences of that system had been felt by the people at home and witnessed elsewhere. It was to put a stop to all of that, that the constitutional provision in question was adopted. The change was eminently wise. A somewhat similar provision in the old Constitution with respect to state indebtedness saved the people of the state a vast amount of money. (People v. Johnson,
In Shaw v. Statler,
The fact that petitioner has obtained a judgment against the city for the amount of his claim in an action brought for that purpose does not avoid the application of this constitutional provision. The judgment, of course, conclusively determines the question of the validity of his claim, but it still remains that, by reason of that provision, it cannot be paid out of the revenues of a fiscal year other than the one in which the liability or indebtedness was created. In Smith v. Broderick,
The legislative act of March 23, 1901, has been referred to. It purports to require the payment by the treasurer of any county, city, etc., of any final judgment "now existing or that may be obtained hereafter against any county, . . . city," etc. By it, the county clerk is required to file with the auditor of the city a list of judgments of record in his office against the city at least fifteen days before the day on which the tax levy is to be made, the auditor is required to examine and audit the same and certify the list to the treasurer, and the governing body of the city is required "to include in the tax levy for the next fiscal year a rate sufficient to pay all final judgments existing against" such city. The proceeding in regard to this claim was apparently in accord with the provisions of this act. But it is obvious that this act cannot be held available to petitioner for the enforcement of his demand against the revenue and income of a fiscal year subsequent to that in which the liability on which his demand is based was incurred. To hold otherwise would be to effect a violation of the constitutional provision. The Constitution is as binding upon the legislature as it is upon a city, and the legislature cannot require or authorize city to proceed in defiance of its terms.
The conclusions we have stated as to the various points discussed are the necessary result of the settled construction of section 18, article XI, of the Constitution. This construction has now been accepted as settled beyond question for many years. We do not feel at liberty to depart from it. The fact that great hardships result in individual cases from an observance of the rule has been recognized in several of our decisions, but as has been well said, "this fact cannot afford reason for subverting the law or frittering it away."
It was held in Lewis v. Widber,
There is no other point made that requires notice.
The alternative writ of mandate heretofore issued is discharged and the proceeding dismissed.
Shaw, J., Sloss, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred. *226