255 P. 281 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
The petitioner seeks a writ of mandate directing the County Auditor of Los Angeles County, H.A. Payne, to countersign the bonds of the Los Angeles County Water Works District No. 9. The respondent Payne and the respondent Alleman, a taxpayer of the district, have appeared by demurrer, so that for the purposes hereof we may refer to the petition for the facts. It appears therefrom that on January 11, 1926, a petition for the formation of the water works district signed by the *212 requisite number of freeholders was presented to the board of supervisors, together with the map and bond as required; that the board fixed February 8, 1926, as the time for the hearing of the petition and protests, if any; that notice thereof was given by the clerk by posting in three public places and also by publication in the "Compton News-Tribune" on January 19, 1926, and January 26, 1926. The County Water Works District Act (Deering's Gen. Laws of 1923, p. 3784) requires that "The said clerk shall also cause a notice . . . to be published at least once a week for two consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation printed and published in the county in which the proposed district is located and designated by said board for that purpose. Said notice must be posted and published, as above provided, at least ten days before the date set for the hearing of said petition." The respondents assert that the publication recited was insufficient and was not in compliance with the provisions quoted. It also appears from the pleadings here that in the petition presented to the board, the estimate of the cost of the proposed improvement and of the incidental expenses in connection therewith was set forth as follows: "The estimated cost of the improvement together with the incidental expenses in connection therewith is Seventy Thousand Dollars ($70,000.00)." The respondents take the position that this is not sufficient to meet the requirements of the act that the petition shall contain "an estimate of the cost of the proposed improvement and of the incidental expenses in connection therewith."
[1] We proceed to the inquiry with the mandate of the statute in mind that it shall be liberally construed to effect the purposes thereof. As was said by us in a recent decision, "We cannot, however apply a rule of construction where there exists no room for construction." (In re Flesher,
[6] Another objection raised by respondents is that the petition did not give an estimate of the expenses incident to the acquisition and construction of a water works system. It will be observed that in the facts heretofore recited the incidental expenses were contained in the estimate *214
of the cost of the proposed improvement, which estimate the petitioner asserts is a substantial compliance with the act. It was held in Biggart v. Lewis,
It is no answer to say that since the notice of time set for hearing does not of necessity include an estimate of the incidental expenses other than by reference to the petition that the provision was not intended for the protection of the taxpayer. Had the legislature intended that the gross cost should be sufficient why did it not say so in the natural way, to wit: An estimate of the cost of the proposed improvement, including the incidental expenses in connection therewith? The very fact that the conjunction "and" is used indicates to our mind that both are required instead of one estimate covering both. It seems to us that the recital in the petition of an estimate of the incidental expenses was necessary to the acquisition by the board of jurisdiction.
Other irregularities are pointed to by the respondents, but they are all irregularities arising out of typographical errors or a failure to properly compare the proof of the published notice with the petition, and would not arise on a resubmission of the petition to the voters, and therefore there is *215 no occasion for us to pass upon their sufficiency or insufficiency.
Writ denied.
Craig, J., concurred.
Presiding Justice Works, deeming himself disqualified, did not participate in the decision.