184 P. 857 | Cal. | 1919
In this case the following opinion, prepared by Mr. Justice Richards, was filed in the district court of appeal of the first appellate district, division one.
"Application for a writ of mandate, whereby the petitioner seeks to have the respondents, who are the properly constituted officials of the city of Richmond, commanded to include in the tax levy of said city for the current year, an amount sufficient to pay a judgment which the petitioner holds against said city for the sum of seventeen thousand dollars with interest.
"The facts out of which the claim of said petitioner, which ripened into said judgment, arose are practically undisputed and are briefly as follows: On the twenty-second day of June, 1913, the city of Richmond commenced an action in the superior court of Contra Costa County against the Atchison, Topeka
Santa Fe Railway Company, Julian E. Cary, the petitioner herein, and certain other defendants, to condemn certain lands described in the complaint in said action for the purpose of constructing a highway from the central portion of the city of Richmond to the outer harbor. The line of said highway, according to the averments of said complaint, ran across certain lands of the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway, of which the said defendant Cary was in *445
possession under an arrangement with the railway company, which permitted him to use said lands for or in connection with a brickyard. After the inception of said suit and in order to expedite the construction of said highway a stipulation was entered into between the attorneys of record for the parties to said action, by the terms of which the city was permitted to immediately proceed with the construction of said highway over the lands described in said complaint as belonging to said railway company and as occupied by said Cary, without first ascertaining the amount of damages to be paid to the said defendants for the taking and use of said lands. By the express terms of the stipulation entered into between the attorneys of record for the plaintiff in said action and the attorneys of record for said defendant Cary 'the question of the amount of damage which shall be sustained by said J.E. Cary by the taking of said property and the construction of a highway thereover by the city of Richmond as described in said complaint is to be determined at the trial of said cause, and said plaintiff hereby agrees that it will pay to said J.E. Cary promptly the amount of any judgment which may be awarded and fixed as the damage herein and without appeal therefrom, unless plaintiff should abandon said proceedings within the time and in the manner provided by section 1255a of the Code of Civil Procedure of the State of California.' Subsequent to the making of said stipulation the city of Richmond, being unable to make satisfactory terms with Cary as to his claim for damages, a resurvey of the line of the highway was made which removed its route from the lands occupied by Cary, and the construction of said highway proceeded to completion along its new alignment. In the meantime the said plaintiff, the city of Richmond, made a settlement with the railway company by which it agreed to pay a certain sum for the damages caused by the taking of such portion of the lands of said corporation as were occupied by the highway according to its new alignment. Having thus disposed of the claims both of the railway company and of said Cary in so far as these related to the taking of the lands owned or held in use by either for the purposes of said highway, the condemnation suit was not pressed to trial, and was in fact practically abandoned, since the purposes for which it was instituted had been fully subserved. There remained, however, certain claims for damages which *446
were insisted upon by Cary as having been suffered by him through the construction of said highway, and which were asserted by him to have arisen by reason of the destruction of a spur-track connecting his brickyard with the main line of the Santa Fe Railroad, and also by reason of the interruption in his business and the restriction of his storage facilities and certain other items of incidental damage resulting from such construction. These various elements of alleged damage were itemized in seventeen specific claims which he presented against said city, and upon which apparently he threatened to bring an action against the municipality. In order to arrive at an adjustment of these claims as between itself and said Cary the city of Richmond, through its duly constituted officials, entered into an agreement for the arbitration thereof. This agreement of arbitration, which was executed by the respective parties thereto on the twenty-ninth day of July, 1916, proceeded to recite the fact of the institution of said condemnation suit and of the making and substance of the aforesaid stipulation therein, and then provided that 'Whereas said highway has been constructed and completed, and disputes and differences have arisen and still exist between the parties hereto as to the amount of damage which said city should in justice pay to said Cary as sustained by him by reason of the construction of said highway or boulevard, whether the matter of his said claim for damages be strictly involved in said action above named or not. Now, therefore, it is hereby agreed that all said disputes and differences shall be referred to arbitration.' It then proceeds to appoint arbitrators and to set forth such other matters as may be properly provided for in arbitration agreements in pursuance of section
"Upon the execution of this agreement of arbitration the arbitrators named therein duly qualified and proceeded to hear and determine the matters which were by its terms submitted to them, and having taken a considerable amount of evidence with respect to the asserted claims of said Cary against said city, proceeded to make an award, and in so doing allowed to said Cary the sum of seventeen thousand dollars as the aggregate amount of his damages, which award was, in accordance with the terms of the arbitration agreement, duly filed with the county clerk of the county of Contra Costa in pursuance of the aforesaid section of the Code of Civil Procedure. *447 Thereafter the city of Richmond, being dissatisfied with the amount of said award, moved the superior court of said county for an order vacating the same, and, after said hearing, being submitted to the judge of said court for decision, was decided against the contention of the said city of Richmond and in favor of said Cary. From the decision thus rendered an appeal was taken to the supreme court, which was later, on motion, dismissed, and the judgment of the said arbitrators and the order of the superior court confirming the same thereby became a finality and became in force and effect a final and general judgment in favor of said Cary and against the said city of Richmond, and is still in full force and effect as such. The said judgment; not having been paid by said city, and no steps having theretofore been taken looking to the satisfaction thereof, the petitioner herein instituted this proceeding whereby he seeks by a writ of mandate to compel the properly constituted officials of the city of Richmond to include in their tax levy for the current year an amount sufficient to pay said judgment.
"This action upon the part of said petitioner is predicted upon the provisions of the act of the legislature approved March 23, 1910, entitled, 'An act to provide for the payment of judgments against counties, cities, cities and counties and towns.' (Stats. 1901, p. 794.)
"The respondents in this proceeding have appeared sad filed an answer, setting forth in substance the facts above recited, and also undertaking to set forth certain facts impeaching the good faith and proper conduct of the arbitrators in said arbitration proceeding and also assailing their award as excessive, unjust and fraudulent. The said respondents also in their answer assert that the said agreement for arbitration was and in void for the reason that the making of the same was beyond the power of the city of Richmond or its officials.
"As to these latter contentions, they may be briefly disposed of. [1] With respect to the integrity of the judgment itself, we are of the opinion that the award of the arbitrators, having been duly filed in the superior court of the county of Contra, Costa in pursuance of the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to arbitrations, and having been there assailed by the said municipality upon the various grounds of misconduct, fraud, error, and excess in amount which are set forth in the answer of the respondents herein, and the said *448 award having upon hearing as to these various matters before said court been sustained, and the decision of said court thereon having become final upon a dismissal of the appeal, the integrity of said award and said decision sustaining the same can no longer be made the subject of assault, and that, therefore, in so far as the portions of the respondents' answer herein, which undertake to assail the same, are concerned, we are not at liberty to consider them.
[2] "As to the contention of the respondents herein that the action of the city of Richmond through its regularly constituted officials in agreeing to submit to arbitration the claim or claims for damages insisted upon by the petitioner herein, and which might otherwise have been the subject of a civil action, was ultra vires, we are of the opinion that a municipal corporation, like an individual, has power to submit to arbitration any controversy which might be the subject of a civil action against it. Section
"This brings us to the main contention of the parties to this proceeding. On the part of the petitioner herein it is contended that the claims which he asserted against the city of Richmond and which were made the subject of arbitration between himself and it were claims for damages for a tort or series of torts arising by reason of the construction by the city of Richmond of that certain highway which was originally the subject of the condemnation suit, and that the judgment based thereon, having its foundation in tort, is such a judgment as may be enforced through the processes provided by the statute of 1901. On the other hand, it is the contention of the respondents herein that the claims of the petitioner which ripened into said judgment were claims arising solely out of a stipulation entered into in the aforesaid condemnation suit and out of the agreement to arbitrate which was predicated thereon, and hence that the said judgment which the petitioner holds is one having its foundation in contract, and that this being so it comes within the inhibition of section 18 of article XI of the state constitution, and is therefore, a judgment the superior court of Contra Costa County had no power to enter, and one which the petitioner herein has no constitutional right to have enforced, either under the provisions of *449 the statute of 1901 or in any other manner against the said municipality.
[3] "We are of the opinion that the contention of the petitioner herein must be sustained. In the recent case ofMetropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Deasy (Cal.App.),
We are entirely satisfied with this opinion and adopt the same as part of the opinion of this court.
[4] The transfer to this court was ordered because we were of the opinion that the writ of mandate directed by the judgment of the district court of appeal was too broad in its terms, in view of the provisions of the act under which the writ was sought. ("An act to provide for the payment of judgments against counties, cities, cities and counties, and towns," approved March 23, 1901, Stats. 1901, p. 794.) Under these provisions the officers having authority to levy taxes may provide, at their option, for the payment of the judgment in successive years in annual installments, with the proviso that no fractional levy and payment shall be less than one-tenth of the whole amount of the judgment. We see no good reason to doubt the validity of this part of the act. Any writ issued should leave the officers free to exercise this option. The petitioner asked for a writ requiring the inclusion of the whole amount of the judgment in this year's tax levy. The judgment of the district court of appeal was that "the writ issue as prayed for."
It is ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue requiring respondents to provide in accord with the provisions of this act for the payment of the judgment referred to, together with interest thereon.
Angellotti, C. J., Wilbur, J., Shaw, J., Olney, J., Lawlor, J., Lennon, J., and Melvin, J., concurred. *452