42 Cal. 541 | Cal. | 1872
The only question which we are called upon to consider in these cases is, whether in enacting the Act of April 4th, 1870 (Stats. 1869-70, p. 738), providing for the erection of a City Hall in the City of San Francisco, the Legislature exceeded its constitutional power. The Act authorizes the Governor to appoint three Commissioners to superintend the work of erecting a City Hall, and directs them to take possession of all that certain tract of land belonging to said city and county, and known as Yerba Buena Park, to grade it to the official grade of the surrounding streets, and directs how the work shall be let and paid for. It also directs that a portion of Yerba Buena Park be subdivided into lots and subdivisions, and provides for the manner of doing it, and that, after the land is laid out, the Commissioners shall immediately proceed to sell, at public auction, the lots and subdivisions in such manner as will bring the largest sum or price possible, and directs the mode of doing it, and that, upon payment of the purchase pri ce and interest, as therein provided, the Commissioners are to execute deeds, in the name of the City and County of San Francisco, to the purchasers, and that these deeds shall be prima facie evidence
In discussing the second ground on which the Act is alleged to be unconstitutional it becomes material to inquire into the tenure by which the title to this land was acquired
The last proposition urged by the appellants is, that, inasmuch as the Constitution provides for the organization of county, city, and town governments for the administration of their local affairs, the necessary implication is, that it was intended to prohibit the Legislature from usurping the functions of these municipal bodies by taking upon itself, through its constituted agents, against the will and without the consent of the municipal authorities, the performance of duties which pertain only to the municipal body itself. In support of this argument it is said that the erection of a City Hall is a purely local improvement, and that it was for the city and county to determine for itself whether it needed such an improvement, and if so, when and how it should be made, and at what cost, and how the expense should be defrayed. But it is well settled, in this State at least, that municipal corporations are but subordinate subdivisions of the State Government, which may be created, altered, or abolished, at the will of the Legislature, which may enlarge or restrict their powers, direct the mode and manner of their exercise,
In Payne v. Treadwell, 16 Cal. 233, this Court says: “The principle of the numerous cases cited is, that a municipal corporation is a public institution, created for public purposes; that the municipality is a political subdivision or department of the State, governed and regulated and constituted by public law; that the agents who administer its affairs derive their power from the Legislature, and can only act in obedience to legislative authority; that the original power- to control, as well as to create them, therefore, is in the Legislature, and that the Legislature can as well immediately direct the use and disposition of the public property, as a general rule, as it can mediately do this by appointing or providing for the appointment of agents, or giving authority for that purpose; in other words, what the Legislature can authorize to be done, it can itself do. The agents of the corporation can sell or dispose of the property of the corporation only in the way and according to the order of the Legislature; and, therefore, the Legislature may, by law operating immediately upon the subject, dispose of.this property, or give effect to any previous disposition or attempted disposition of it. The property itself is a trust, and the Legislature is the prime and original controlling power, managing and directing the use, disposition, and direction of it. Otherwise the solecism would appear of a derivative
Order affirmed.