292 P. 985 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
The appeal in this case is from a judgment entered in the lower court following the sustaining of a demurrer without leave to amend, to a petition in certiorari, seeking to review the acts and proceedings of the Board of Trustees of the city of Southgate in annexing to said city of Southgate certain territory known as the fifth addition to the city of Southgate.
[1] The facts alleged in the petition show that all of the steps for annexation required by the annexation act of 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 587, and amendments thereto) have been taken, including the passing of "an ordinance declaring the result of the election and approving the annexation . . . and it is hereby ordered that a certified copy of this ordinance giving the date of its passage under the seal of said City of Southgate be submitted to and filed with the Secretary of State of California from and after the date of which filing the annexation of said territory to the City of Southgate shall be deemed to be complete and thenceforth said annexed territory shall be to all intents and purposes a part of the City of Southgate". The petition is silent as to whether the certified copy of the ordinance had been filed with the Secretary of State. We must presume that the city clerk of Southgate performed his official duty and that therefore same has been filed with the Secretary of State.
The petition was filed after the city of Southgate assumed to exercise dominion over the annexed lands. The demurrer filed in the lower court was both general and special and by the demurrer it was urged, among other matters, that the proceedings for annexation involved could not be reviewed on a writ ofcertiorari, but that it was necessary to test their validity by a writ of quo warranto. [2] An examination of the authorities shows that after all the steps for annexation have been taken, even though there may be some irregularity therein, the municipal corporation exercises dominion over the annexed lands in at least a de facto capacity. [3] The authorities hold that before such de facto character has attached, that certiorari will lie at the instance of a citizen or taxpayer to secure the annulment of irregular proceedings. On the other hand, *216 the decisions likewise hold that after a de facto character has attached certiorari is not the proper remedy; that the proceedings must then be tested by quo warranto.
Section
In Beaumont v. Samson,
"Certiorari to ministerial boards or officers is not the proper remedy to try . . . the right to exercise corporate functions. Quo warranto is the only remedy which affords complete relief." Jaques v. Board of Supervisors,
In Tulare Irr. Dist. v. Shepard,
"Being a de facto corporation, the general rule is that none but the state can call its existence in question. The *217
courts of California agree that such is the rule." (Citing cases. See, also, Van Wagener v. McFarland,
We do not feel that anything in the decision in Miller Lux
v. Board of Supervisors,
In view of the foregoing conclusions it is not necessary to discuss any of the other points raised by appellant.
Judgment affirmed.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred.