117 Cal. 1 | Cal. | 1897
The plaintiff filed a petition or complaint in the superior court, in which he asked for a writ of .mandate to be directed to the defendants, Swamp Land District, No. 307, and J. C. Glide, Francis T. Dwyer, and Joseph L. Monica, the present trustees of said district, commanding them “ to proceed to have an assessment levied upon the lands in said district sufficient to pay, and for the purpose of paying,” certain warrants described in the complaint. The defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint. The demurrer was both general and special, and it was sustained by the court below, and judgment rendered for defendants. From this judgment the plaintiff appeals.
The complaint contains quite a number of counts, but they are all alike, except that a different warrant is described in each count. The first count is a sample of them all. In that count it is averred that Swamp Land District No. 307 was duly organized in September, 1877, and has ever since been an existing corporation; that the other defendants, Glide, Dwyer, and Monica, are now, and for more than six months last past have been, the duly elected and acting trustees of said district; that on the tenth day of September, 1877, the said district, through its then board of trustees, issued to H. M. Hawley & Co. its certain warrant, numbered 23, upon the treasurer of Yolo county, in which county the district is situated, directing said treasurer to pay to said Hawley & Co., or order, “ from the Swamp Land Fund in the treasury of said county to the credit of said district No. 307, the sum of three hundred and seventy-two dollars
Counsel for respondent strenuously contend that the thing which plaintiff seeks to have defendants compelled to do is not a duty “which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from the office, trust, or station”; that the law does not specially enjoin the defendants to have an assessment levied upon the land in said district, and particularly, that it is not their special duty to have such an assessment levied for the purpose of paying the warrants, or either of them, mentioned in the complaint. This and many other points are pressed by respondents under that part of their demurrer which asserts that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; but we do not consider it necessary to inquire particularly into these points, because, in our opinion, the proceeding is barred by the statute of limitations.
A proceeding in mandamus betvreen two private parties to enforce a money obligation, where there is no statutory provision giving it a different character, is generally considered as a mere action at law, in which case all ordinary rules of practice, including the statute of limitations, apply. In Commonwealth v. Dennison, 24 How. 97, the supreme court of the United States say: “ It is equally well settled that a mandamus in modem practice is nothing more than an action at law between the parties, and is not now regarded as a prerogative writ. It undoubtedly came into usé by virtue of the prerogative power of the English crown, and was subject to regulations and rules which have long since been disused. But the right to the writ, and the power to issue it, has ceased to depend upon any prerogative power, and it is now regarded as an ordinary process
The judgment is affirmed.
Henshaw J., and Temple, J., concurred.
Hearing in bank denied.