The defendants, other than George L. Brander, an intervener, are the supervisors of the county of Sutter, and, as such, are ex officio members of and constitute the board of reclamation fund commissioners of levee district No. 5. The plaintiff is the holder of certain bonds of said district which were issued and sold for the purpose of securing funds to carry on improvements in such levee district. A writ of mandate is prayed for, requiring said board of fund commissioners to- take certain steps provided in the statute looking toward the levy and collection of a tax upon the property within the limits of the district, to be applied in liquidation of the principal and interest of plaintiff’s bonds.
The matters here involved are purely matters of law,
“ Sec. 21. Whenever a petition shall be received by said board of supervisors from persons in possession omore than one-half of the acres of any specified portion of said county, asking to be set apart and erected into a levee district, said board shall at once erect such territory into a levee district, and place it under the provisions of this act, to be called levee district No. 2, 3, and so on, as the case may be, provided that it shall not be required to submit the question of tax to a vote of the people of any district so erected.”
We cannot bring ourselves to the conclusion that it is necessary to enter into an extended discussion for the purpose of demonstrating the unconstitutionality of the foregoing provision of the statute of this state. That it is violative of fundamental principles of constitutional law is apparent upon the slightest inspection. It will be observed that one petitioner having the possession of a majority of the acreage of the territory which he desires to form into a levee district, has the absolute right to form such district. No notice to his neighbors is required. No opportunity for protest is allowed. No discretion is vested in the board of supervisors to reject the petition, or even change its proposed boundaries.
The duty of the board is entirely perfunctory. The lands of the petitioner’s neighbors may need no reclamation. They may consist of plateaux, where flood waters are never known. They being of great value, may be placed within the lines of the proposed district for the single purpose of bearing the brunt of the taxation which is sure to follow the creation of the district. While these matters may be considered trifles in the eyes of the legislature, yet in the eyes of the law a practice of the things countenanced by this provision involves a violation of man’s gravest constitutional
This provision of the statute was reviewed by the court in the case of Moulton v. Parks,
It is claimed that this levee district is at least a corporation de facto, and that defendants will not be allowed to set up the unconstitutionality of the law under which it was organized for the purpose of defeating this proceeding; and Dean v. Davis,
It is also insisted that respondents are estopped from disputing the validity of the bonds by retaining the benefit derived from the proceeds of their sale, and also by the payment of interest upon them for several years. We cannot assent to this view. It might possibly have some weight if the district was a corporation organized under a valid law, and these bonds were issued ultra vires, although the principles declared in Sutro v. Petit,
It is ordered that the judgment be affirmed.
Harrison, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
