124 Cal. 80 | Cal. | 1899
Injunction. A demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained, and the court gave judgment for defendant, dismissing the action, from which plaintiff appeals. The amended complaint alleges that plaintiff is a resident' of the city and county of San Francisco and a taxpayer therein and a contributor to and beneficiary of the fund mentioned in thé complaint; on July 7, 1897, the board of police relief and pension fund commissioners of said city and county “passed and approved, to wit, forty demands on said fund, among which aré four demands which are not lawful demands on said fund, and defendant threatens to audit, and is about to audit, said four demands.” Referring to these four demands the complaint proceeds: “They are No. 878, for one hundred and sixty dollars, in favor of J. F. Moran; No. 839, in favor of John Short, for twenty-two dollars; No. 856, for one hundred and fifty dollars, in favor of G-. Clinton; No. 857, for one hundred and fifty dollars, in favor of S. Pomeroy. The Moran demand is for expenses not allowed by law to be paid out of said fund, and does not show on its face the Title, date, and section of the law under which it is drawn.’ The Short demand is seventy-two dollars in excess of the amount legally due thereon. The Clinton and Pomeroy
The complaint then sets forth that William Alvord, B. J. Tobin, and M. A. Gunst constitute said board of commissioners and allowed and approved said demands; that these commissioners theretofore allowed certain other demands to these same persons, Moran, Short, Clinton, and Pomeroy, for doing which the complaint charges that “they [the commissioners] áre liable to the said city and county”; that defendant is about to audit the demands of said commissioners for their salaries, and it is alleged : “That it is not lawful to audit said demands until said •persons shall restore or cause to be restored to said fund the moneys unlawfully drawn from said fund, with the approval and allowance of said commissioners, and they are liable therefor, under section 86 of "the consolidation act.” Upon the foregoing' allegations it is sought to restrain defendant. The demurrer was: 1. For insufficiency of facts; and 2. Want of jurisdiction of the person of defendant or of the subject matter. The latter ground is not urged.
As near as we can determine from the complaint the restraining order is asked on two grounds: 1. Because defendant is about to audit the demands of Moran, Short, Clinton, and Pomeroy; and 2. Because he is about to audit the salary demands of the commissioners.
As to the first of these demands it is alleged that “they are not lawful”; that “the Moran demand is for expenses not allowed by law to be paid out of said fund”; that “the Short demand is seventy-two dollars in excess of the amount legally due thereon”; that “the Clinton and Pomeroy demands are drawn under section 13 of the pension law of 1889, and said section is unconstitutional and void, because of special legislation and many other reasons.” These allegations are nothing more than averments of legal conclusions. There are no averments of facts from which it can be determined whether the demands an(e or are not illegal or unauthorized; there is no statement of the character of the demands from which it can be determined what they were for.
The necessity for a statement of the facts essential to a right
A conclusion of law tenders no issue, and a complaint which depends upon such allegations is insufficient and demurrable. (Branham v. Mayor, 24 Cal. 585.) The code provision requires a concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, not such statement of the law governing it. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 426.)
Appellant replies that respondent ought not to be permitted to escape investigation on what is by appellant claimed to be a purely technical objection to the complaint, and that the objections go to its uncertainty, if at all, and not to its sufficiency. Most rules of pleading are technical, but they are founded in wisdom and justice; and orderly procedure imperatively demands their reasonable enforcement. The objection of uncertainty goes rather to the doubt as to what the pleader means by the facts alleged, not to the failure to allege sufficient facts. When the facts alleged are insufficient the pleading is to be tested by general demurrer. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 430.)
As to the salary demands of the said commissioners the complaint is not less insufficient in its allegations of facts. Substantially all that is averred to support the complaint as to the commissioners is that they permitted moneys to be illegally drawn from a fund in their control, and for that reason it is unlawful for defendant to audit their claims for salary.
It was certainly essential that some facts should have been set forth showing the nature and character of the claims alleged to have been illegally allowed by the commissioners, and which would, in some degree at least, tend to show why the commissioners became “liable to the said city and county.” It was but a legal conclusion to allege that they became liable “under section 86 of the consolidation act,” even if we may assume, what is not alleged, that the consolidation act referred to related to the city and county of San Francisco. Plaintiff no doubt seeks to restrain defendant by force of section 82 of that act, which prohibits the auditor from allowing a demand against the city “in favor of any person or officer in any manner indebted there
We do not see how the court below could have done otherwise than sustain the demurrer without violating well settled rules of pleading, and therefore advise that the judgment he affirmed.
Haynes, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is affirmed. Harrison, J., Garontte, J., Van Dyke, J.