13 Cal. 540 | Cal. | 1859
Terry, C. J. concurring.
This is a bill in equity filed by a municipal corporation to set aside a contract or lease made of certain franchises and real estate. The bill charges that the city of Oakland is the legal successor of the town of Oakland by Act of the Legislature, passed March 25, 1854. That the town of Oakland was incorporated by law on the 4th May, 1852, and, by the same Act, was vested Avith a title to certain lands comprising the Avater front within the corporate limits; also, with certain privileges touching the erection of wharfs, docks, etc.; that, by the Act incorporating the town of Oakland, the corporate and municipal powers were lodged in a Board of Trustees, to consist of five members, whose election was given to the qualified voters of the town, the election fixed on the second Monday in May in each year, and the term of office one year, and until their successors Avere qualified. That an election for Trustees occurred in pursuance of the Act, but only four of them qualified as Trustees; and, at a meeting of the four persons so elected and qualified, a resolution, purporting to bo an Ordinance, Avas passed, whereby the Trustees pretended to convey to one Horace W. Carpentier and his representatives the exclusive right and privilege of con
The defendants filed a demurrer to the bill. The ground is, that it does not state facts sufficient to show a cause of action, and that the claim of the plaintiff, as stated, is barred by the Statute of Limitations. Pinal judgment was rendered on the demurrer in favor of the defendants, the plaintiff declining to amend his bill.
Several important questions are raised by the record.
1. liad the Trustees of the town of Oakland power to grant to Carpentier the exclusive right and privilege of constructing wharfs, piers, and docks, at any point within the corporate limits of the town, with the right of collecting wharfage and dockage, at such rates as he might deem reasonable, for the period of thirty-seven years ?
The charter of the town of Oakland is to be found in the Acts of 1852, page 180. By Section 3d of that Act it is provided : “ The Board of Trustees shall have power to make such by-laws and ordinances as they may deem proper and necessary; to regulate, improve, sell, or otherwise dispose of, the common property ; to prevent and extinguish fires; to lay out, make, open, widen, regulate, and keep in repair, all streets, roads, bridges, ferries, public places, and grounds, wharfs, docks, piers, slips, sewers, wells, and alleys, and to authorize the construction of the same, and, with a view to facilitate the construction of wharfs
The rules in relation to the construction of charters of corporations are familiar. They are special grants of power emanating from the paramount authority. The corporation, owing its existence to the law, is precisely what the law makes it. It has no powers except those expressly given, or which are necessary to the exercise of those expressly given. The general legislative power residing in the State Government may delegate to a municipal government some portion of its own powers; but these grants are held in subordination to the general power, and are not construed as taking from that government any oiher powers or rights than those clearly granted. These delegated powers, given for local objects, are regarded as trusts confided to the hands in which they are placed, and are not subject to be delegated by the repositories of them. To this Board of Trustees, as has been seen, was given power “ to lay out, make, open, widen, regulate, and keep in repair, all streets, roads, bridges, ferries, public places, and grounds, wharfs, docks, piers, slips, sewers, and alleys, and to authorize the construction of the same.” Under these general terms it is claimed that this Board had a right to authorize Carpentier to enjoy the exclusive privilege of laying out, establishing, and constructing, wharfs within the city at pleasure, and fix the charges, for a period of thirty-seven years. It is not difficult to see that such a construction is not warranted by the provisions of this Act. The charge in the bill is not that Carpentier agreed, or was allowed, to construct a
The general power over the wharfs and docks is like the general power over the streets and highways. The corporation must exercise the general powers which the term “regulate” implies. This general power involves the determination of the questions whether a wharf shall be constructed, when, how, in what places, on what terms, how kept, and what charges shall be exacted for
The principle upon which these general views rest, has been fully supported by the United States Circuit Court for the Districts of California, in the case of Mintumrnv. Larue, involving the construction of this charter.
The power is given the Board “to regulate and to collect wharfage and dockage”; but this power is not exorcised, but ceded, by a grant allowing the grantee to regulate it as he pleases.
We see no distinction in this charter between a wharf or dock, in or upon a navigable stream, and a ferry right or bridge. They are all of the same class of interests, and the same powers over all of them are given in the same words. '
But if there was a difference, the charter giving this power and right of regulation to this corporation over the subject, it is held as a political power, and must be exercised by those to whom it is confided. The power to lay out and regulate wharfs being given to the council, cannot be exercised by Carpentier.
This view disposes of the demurrer, for it is general—going to the whole bill; and if the bill contains, in any part, a complete cause of action, the general objection to it, for want of equity, fails.
What effect the invalidity of this grant of this general privilege has upon the grant of the land, the bill does not enable us to determine. Neither the ordinance nor the deed is set out, as they should have been, in the bill. It is charged in the complaint, it is true, that the land between high tide and ship channel, and this exclusive privilege, were conveyed in the same instrument; but in what relation the land stood to this privilege, or what were the particular considerations or inducements to the grant of the land, we are not distinctly informed. If the land were conveyed merely or mainly to give effect to this illegal purpose, probably the incident would fall with its principal.
The charter is, perhaps, the most defective upon the statute book, and this is saying a great deal. A perverse ingenuity
2. It is contended by the Appellant that this ordinance and deed are void, for the reason that the Board of Trustees were not legally organized; that though five were elected, (Oarpentier being one,) all did not qualify; and that, though a majority of the members of such a public body may act after the organization, it requires all the members to make the organization.
Wc can see no reason for holding that a majority of the members elected to this Board should not as well be held empowered to act at the first, as at any subsequent, meeting of it.
3. The next question is as to the alleged fraud in procuring this grant by Carpentier. Some astute and forcible criticism is employed by the counsel for the Respondent upon the complaint. The facts are not as fully stated as is desirable in such cases. The complaint is defective in not averring fully the terms of the ordinance and the contract, and the particular injury resulting to the plaintiff from the alleged fraud; nor are the fraudulent practices of the defendant, Carpentier, in procuring the election of the first Board, or his procuring the election of the second, nor the circumstances attending the ratification of the first contract, nor the promises or agreements made by him on or as inducing the execution and delivery of the deed, fully set out. But as the bill may be amended, on the return of the cause, in these particulars, and as the general questions have been discussed, we proceed to consider them.
It is alleged that Carpentier procured men, who were his agents or conspirators with him, to be elected to this Board, for the purpose of getting them to defraud the town, for his benefit, of all this property and these franchises; and if he got himself elected to this place, in order to help the contrivance through, whether by his influence, or by keeping out some one else who might have opposed the scheme, then this was sufficient to brand the whole transaction with illegality. Nay, more, if Carpentier put himself in the position of a member elect of this Board, neither resigning nor qualifying, and took advantage of this po
If these facts be made to appear, the Statute of Limitations would not begin to run until after the corporation thus defrauded, got out of the hands of the confederates, and an opportunity were afforded innocent agents coming to the management of the affairs of the town, to look into and ascertain the true state of things. Knowledge on the part of the guilty agents of the corporation of the criminal fact is not notice to the corporation of such fraud, so as to give the advantage of this notice to the equally guilty associate of those agents. If this were the law, an agent could always protect himself by joining in a conspiracy to defraud his principal with a convenient friend, who received the principal’s property, and who might claim against the principal that the agent had notice of the fraud.
4. The next and last point is that the Statute of Limitations of three years applies and bars the claim of the plaintiff to set aside this deed. By Art. 17th, Sec. 17, (Wood’s Digest, 47,) is given the limitation of certain actions. The section is: “Actions other than those for the recovery of real property can be commenced as follows: * * * within three years. An action for relief on the ground of fraud, the cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud.”
We think that this provision has no relation to an equitable proceeding to set aside a fraudulent deed of real estate when the effect of it is to restore the possession of the premises to the defrauded party. In such a case, the action is substantially an action for the recovery of the real estate; indeed it is literally.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment below must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, in accordance with this opinion.
On petition for rehearing, Baldwin, J. delivered the following opinion—Field, C. J. concurring:
Petition for rehearing denied. The opinion modified so as to leave open for future revision the question of the validity of the contract with Carpentier, under the ordinance referred to in the opinion.