*946 Opinion
When persons owning a majority of assessed valuation of land within the proposed City of Rancho Palos Verdes filed a written protest, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, pursuant to Government Code section 34311, refused to call an incorporation election. The crux of petitioners’ plea to us is that section 34311 violates the Constitution; upon this basis they seek mandate to compel the board to resume incorporation proceedings. We have concluded that the section is, indeed, unconstitutional under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the correlative provisions of the California Constitution. (Cal. Const., art. I, § § 11, 21; see
Serrano
v.
Priest
(1971)
In the opening paragraph of their study of California’s municipal incorporation laws, Professor Hagman and Instructor Disco say “In California and in many other states of the nation, provisions for municipal incorporation and for changes in the boundaries of local jurisdictions are archaic abominations dominated by the ‘horse and buggy’ concepts of our rural past. . . . Legislation in many states still reflects outdated patterns where the property tax was virtually the sole source of local government revenue and outdated beliefs that the people in an area, however small, should have virtually absolute control over their ‘turf’ as demarcated by city and other local government boundaries.” (Hagman and Disco, One-Man One-Vote as a Constitutional Imperative for Needed Reform of Incorporation and Boundary Change Laws (1971) 2 Urban Law. 459.)
These observations serve as a fitting background for the analysis of this case.
1. California procedures for incorporation of a city.
Before stating the facts of this case we summarize the procedural steps involved in the incorporation of a city. Proceedings begin when the proponents of the new city file an application with the county executive officer. (Gov. Code, § 5479l.) 1 This officer sets and gives notice of a hearing before *947 the local agency formation commission of the county (§ 54793), which is a five-man board empowered to approve, amend, condition, or disapprove proposals for incorporation of cities, and for formation of other local agencies. (§ 54790.) 2 Section 54796 3 sets forth the factors to be considered by the commission; they include the population, the land, the area, the topography, the need for organized community services, the present cost and adequacy of government services, and the effect of the incorporation upon neighboring communities. No petition for incorporation may be circulated or filed with the board of supervisors without the approval of the local agency formation commission.
Once such approval has been attained, the proponents may file with the board of supervisors a notice of intention to circulate the incorporation petition; this notice must be signed by 25 to 50 owners of real property within the proposed city. (§ 34302.5.) Within 120 days after filing of the *948 notice, the proponents must file their petition for incorporation, signed by at least 25 percent of the landowners in the proposed boundaries, representing at least 25 percent of the assessed value of land within those boundaries. (§ 34303.) 4
Upon the verification of the signatures on the petition, the board of supervisors publishes a notice of hearing. (§ 34310.) Section 34311 then requires the board to hold hearings, and provides that “[i]f upon the final hearing the board of supervisors finds and determines that written protests to the proposed incorporation have been filed with the board, signed by qualified signers representing 51 percent of the total assessed valuation of the land within the boundaries of the proposed, incorporation, the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors shall cease; no election shall be called and no further petition for the incorporation of any of the same territory shall be initiated for one year after the date of such determination.” 5
If the filed protests are insufficient to divest the board of jurisdiction, *949 it decides upon the boundaries (§ 34315) and name (§ 34314.5) of the proposed city, and gives notice of an election to determine whether it should be incorporated (§ 34318). All registered voters who have resided, within the designated boundaries for the specified period are eligible to vote (see § 34324). The board of supervisors canvasses the vote (§'34325), and if a majority favors incorporation, the board declares the city incorporated (§ 34326), and files a certified copy of its order with the Secretary of State (§ 34327). 6
2. The history of the present litigation.
This case presents no disputed issues of fact. The Palos Verdes peninsula borders the Pacific Ocean in the southwest comer of Los Angeles County. The peninsula contains three small cities—Palos Verdes Estates, Rolling Hills, and Rolling Hills Estates—but most of the area is unincorporated. Petitioners in the present action reside in the unincorporated area. Petitioners Curtis, Derbes, Hackworthy and Ruth own homes in this area; petitioners Federici and Narevsky own no land. All petitioners are registered voters.
The petitioners proposed that the unincorporated land of the peninsula be incorporated into a fourth city, tentatively named Rancho Palos Verdes, The proposed city would have an area of 12.688 square miles and a population of 38,885 by the 1970 census. 7 This area is primarily developed with single-family housing; it also includes large amounts of undeveloped land and commercial holdings of Standard Oil Co. of California and Marineland of the Pacific, Inc. In 1970 the area counted 16,763 registered voters; 8 most of these voters own real property within the city boundaries, but *950 over 1,000 do not. 9 The assessed value of land within the city, as of the fiscal year 1970-1971, was $66,836,080. The largest landowner is Great Lakes Properties, Inc., which owns unimproved land valued at $5,802,840, followed by Marineland of the Pacific, Inc. with land valued at $1,337,500. Improvements within the city command an assessed value of $67,827,920, but the record does not indicate the value of specific improvements. 10
Petitioners filed an application for incorporation of Rancho Palos Verdes on February 8, 1970. After hearing, the local agency formation commission approved the application on April 22, 1970. On May 5 petitioners filed a notice of intention to circulate a petition and on June 25 submitted petitions bearing signatures of about 63.6 percent of the landowners within the proposed boundaries, representing about 42.8 percent of the assessed valuation of land. The board of supervisors verified the signatures and scheduled a hearing for September 8. At this hearing, however, opponents of incorporation filed written protests representing over 55 percent of the assessed value of land. Determining that it had no jurisdiction to proceed further, the board declined to establish boundaries for the proposed city or to call an incorporation election.
Although petitioners commenced this action in the appellate courts without first addressing the superior court for relief, this is a case in which “the issues presented are of great public importance and must be resolved promptly” and thus the action permits the exercise of original jurisdiction by the appellate courts,
(County of Sacramento
v.
Hickman
(1967)
*951 3. The standard of equal protection: in order to comply with the requirement of the equal protection of the laws the classification of section ■ 34311 must rest upon a compelling state interest and must be necessary to further any such interest.
We set forth, first, the legal principles of equal protection of the laws that control the instant situation. Municipal corporations are political subdivisions of the state. Subject only to its own laws and constitution, the state may create, expand, diminish, or abolish such subdivisions, and “all this may be done, conditionally or unconditionally, with or without the consent of the citizens, or even against their protest.”
(Hunter
v.
Pittsburgh
(1907)
In determining the validity of legislative distinctions, this court and the United States Supreme Court apply a two-level test. (See, e.g.,
Weber
v.
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.
(1972)
The strict standard particularly applies to classifications involving voting rights. The decisions of the United States Supreme Court have established that, “[B]ecause of the overriding importance of voting rights, classifications ‘which might invade or restrain them must be closely scrutinized and carefully confined’ where those rights are asserted under the Equal Protection Clause.”
(McDonald
v.
Board of Election
(1969)
Respondents contend, however, that section 34311 does not involve voting rights because the section’s protest procedure does not provide for an “election.” We find it unnecessary to decide whether that procedure constitutes an “election”; our obligation of “active and critical analysis”
15
is not limited to statutes establishing electoral qualifications as such, but extends to laws which “touch upon” or burden the right to vote. Thus the United States Supreme Court has applied the strict equal protection, test not only to laws which deny persons the right to vote (e.g.,
Kramer
v.
Union School District
(1969)
In
Williams
v.
Rhodes
(1968)
The court in
Williams
observed that “the state laws place burdens on two different, although overlapping, kinds of rights—the right of individuals to associate for the advancement of political beliefs, and the right of qualified voters, regardless of their political persuasion, to cast their votes effectively.” (
Although California predicates the formation of a new city upon a favorable vote in an election in which all adult residents within the proposed boundaries cast one vote each (§§ 34324-34326), section 34311 grants to the landowners within those boundaries the prior power to bar this election. That grant plainly does not proceed upon any theory that the landowners constitute a state administrative agency; the section provides for no hearing before the landowners, no standards for making decisions, and no duty upon any landowner to disregard his own pecuniary interest and cast an impartial vote. To- the contrary, the Legislature has clearly endowed landowners with this power because it recognizes that they are individuals who financially and politically are interested, in the question of whether a new city should be formed, and thus in. whether an election should be called for that purpose.
Section 34311 excludes from its coverage all residents who- own no land, although these persons admittedly are also financially and politically interested in whether an election will be called. The section allocates power to the landowners in proportion to the assessed value of their land, so- that the persons owning less land, or land of lower valuation, suffer a limitation in power and choice. The allocation, moreover, takes no account of the value of improvements. If one resident owns vacant land worth $40,000, and his neighbor has placed a $30,000 house on land worth $10,000, they pay the same real property taxes, but the resident with ««improved land has four times the voice of the other. The statute thus draws a threefold distinction: between those who own land and those who do not, between those who own more valuable land and those owning less valuable parcels, and between owners of unimproved land as against, owners of improved land.
Thus section 34311 grants to- owners of land, as such, the special power to prevent the incorporation election. 16 They can thereby deny to residents *955 the right to vote on the issue of incorporation. Since nonlandowners cannot protest the decisions of the landowners under section 34311, and since the interests of nonlandowners play no part in determining the sufficiency of a protest under that section, the section 34311 procedure may totally deprive them of any voice on the matter of incorporation. We conclude that a statute which confers power to halt an election, and thus to prevent all qualified voters from casting their vote, must be considered to “touch upon” and to “burden” the right to vote, and therefore must be examine^, under the strict equal protection standards. 17
4. Application of the standard of equal protection: the classification of section 34311 does not rest upon a compelling state interest and is not necessary to further any such interest.
Respondents must demonstrate that the classification of section 34311 meets the strict equal protection standards: that it rests upon a compelling state interest and is necessary to further any such interest. To do- so respondents contend that “property owners have a unique interest in the incorporation process” of a city because the exercise of the powers of the city in financing itself by taxing real property and in regulating the use and development of real property may be particularly inimical and disadvantageous to such property owners. The state, they conclude, retains a compelling interest in structuring some procedure to protect this interest of the property owners.
The United States Supreme Court, however, has not accepted the con *956 tention that property owners and taxpayers, as such, enjoy a special or unique interest that gives them a preferred place in the exercise of the franchise. That court has held unconstitutional the limitation, of the franchise in school board elections to owners and lessees of real property and parents of school-age children; it has refused to permit the denial of the franchise to residents of a federal enclave because they do not pay property taxes; it has rejected the restriction of the franchise in bond elections to property holders.
In
Kramer
v.
Union School District
(1969)
Following Kramer, other cases of the United States Supreme Court have extended this reasoning beyond the context of school board elections. In
Evans
v.
Cornman
(1970)
Similarly, in
Cipriano
v.
City of Houma
(1969)
In
Phoenix
v.
Kolodziejski
(1970)
Finally, in
Stewart
v.
Parish School Bd. of Parish of St. Charles
(E.D.La. 1970)
*958
Contrary to respondents’ contention, we do not find that this line of authority has been vitiated by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Gordon
v.
Lance
(1971)
Turning from federal to California cases, respondents contend that the Court of Appeal decision in
Schindler
v.
Palo Verde Irrigation Dist.
(1969)
In contrast to the irrigation district, which is composed of landowners who pursue their special interests in the reclamation of their land, the City of Rancho Palos Verdes consists of those who pursue the overall interests of citizens in their government. Rancho Palos Verdes will constitute a city of general governmental powers; its actions plainly concern nonlandowners as well as landowners; neither the benefits of city government nor its burdens can fairly be said to be directly proportional to the assessed value of land or to the special interests of landowners. (See
Burrey
v.
Embarcadero Mun. Improvement Dist.
(1971)
*960
In this connection respondents lay particular emphasis on special districts of limited powers, pointing to some 42 statutes which restrict the right to sign petitions or instruments of protest to landowners. We point out that for the most part these statutes involve special districts that cater to, and express, special interests. Our holding in the instant case pertains to the validity of a restricted franchise as to the formation of a city of general powers and does not necessarily apply to special districts, whose design, powers and methods of financing are more closely related to ownership of land. (See
Avery
v.
Midland County
(1968)
From our review of these cases we draw a general principle: that all residents share a substantial interest in the government of their state, city, county, school district, and other agencies of general governmental power, and in the issuance of bonds by these entities. Consequently the special concern of the landowners as to the level of taxes upon real property cannot justify exclusion of the nonlandowner nor the proportionate reduction of the vote of owners of less valuable property.
Respondents, however, observe that the present case differs from all previous cases in that it involves the creation of a new governmental entity and that it arguably does not involve a vote upon a restricted franchise. Neither distinction renders the stated general principle inapplicable to the present case. 21 We can discern no reason, and respondents suggest none, why landowners enjoy a greater interest, or nonlandowners a lesser interest, in the formation of a city of general powers than in its governance, or its issuance of general obligation bonds. Nor do we find a reason, and again respondents suggest none, why the interest of landowners becomes more compelling, more worthy of special protection, in a protest proceeding than in an election.
We conclude that the principle established in Kramer, Cipriano, Kolodziejski, and other cases applies fully to the present case. Nonlandowners share an equal interest with landowners in the formation of a city which *961 could provide police and fire protection, maintain roads, acquire and develop parks, and furnish other public services. Moreover, cities derive revenue from many sources besides property taxes. 22 Property taxes are levied on land and improvements, not land alone, and their burden includes tenants as well as landowners. Zoning laws and land use regulations affect not only the landowner but his neighbors; and their direct effect on the landowner cannot be measured in terms of assessed value. Thus no compelling state interest requires that nonlandowners be excluded from the group empowered to decide whether an election to incorporate a city be called, and no compelling interest is served by allocating power within that group on the basis of assessed value of land.
We turn now to respondents’ final contention that both residents and landowners have an interest in the subject of incorporation; that since only residents may vote in the incorporation election, section 34311 is necessary to give the landowners a voice on the issue of incorporation. In other words, they argue that the California statutory plan does not exclude any interested person, but instead conditions the formation of a city upon the concurrent approval of the two interested groups—the residents who vote in the incorporation election, and the landowners who express their views in the protest procedure of section 34311.
The concept of concurrent majorities is not much discussed in the cases.
23
Two decisions have held state constitutional provisions requiring concurrent geographical majorities invalid under the Fourteenth Amendment.
State
v.
State Canvassing Bd.
(1968)
*962
More closely on point is the argument of Mr. Justice Stewart’s dissenting opinion in
Phoenix
v.
Kolodziejski
(1970)
Nevertheless, Supreme Court decisions to date do not automatically mandate the unconstitutionality of state laws providing for concurrent majorities, and we must therefore inquire whether such provisions in the present case are necessary to serve a compelling state interest. Insofar as the state interest lies in protecting the interests of individual resident landowners, the answer is clear; these landowners can vote in the incorporation election, and we see no compelling reason to afford them two opportunities to express their disapproval of the proposed incorporation.
Respondents point out, however, that nonresident landowners also have an interest in whether the city shall be incorporated, but have no right to vote in the incorporation election. Section 34311, however, cannot be upheld upon a theory that it is necessary to secure a state interest in giving nonresident landowners a voice in incorporation. The problem is that section 34311 does not merely grant such landowners a concurrent voice in the incorporation of a city; it gives them a veto.
25
Yet it is the residents of a region, not the nonresident landowners, who as a class are the more deeply concerned with its government.
(Burrey
v.
Embarcadero Mun. Improvement Dist.
(1971)
Moreover, section 34311 allocates power among the landowners in a manner which bears no rational relationship to any state interest. 26 Despite respondents’ concern for property taxes, the fact remains that such taxes are levied on the assessed value of land and improvements, not land alone. 27 By distributing voting power on the basis of assessed value of land alone, section 34311 grants disproportionate power to ranchers and developers who own large tracts of land, and less weight to residents and businesses who own small developed parcels. We perceive no rational basis for this discrimination, and no legitimate state purpose' to be served. 28
*964 5. The unconstitutional provisions in section 34311 are severable from the remainder of that section and from the other provisions of divi-. sion 2 of title 4 of the Government Code.
As stated in
Blumenthal
v.
Board of Medical Examiners
(1962)
We may reasonably presume that the Legislature would prefer to preserve a procedure for the incorporation of cities in California, absent the landowner veto provision, rather than totally to ehminate such procedure so that no city at all could be incorporated. (See
Franklin Life Ins. Co.
v.
State Board of Equalization
(1965)
*965 6. Conclusion
The practical effect of the classification of section 34311 is that a city cannot be formed in Rancho Palos Verdes, or in many other areas of the state, without the tacit consent of the relatively few owners of large tracts of land. The present case presents a spectacle where the desires of the 63 percent of the resident landowners who signed the petition for incorporation would be overridden by a protest composed primarily of nonresident and absentee corporate owners. Thus under a literal application of section 34311 the right of the residents of a region to self-government, to establish and enjoy the amenities of civic life, would be subordinated to a few persons whose economic interests lie in maintaining low property taxes and lax land use regulations. The perpetuation of this condition cannot realistically nor constitutionally be described as a compelling interest of the State of California. 31
The philosophic reach of the decisions of the United States Supreme Court has been to afford to each individual citizen a maximum democratic participation in political matters upon an equal basis. The decisions have intimated that special voting rights, premised upon such criteria as land ownership, may be afforded, if at all, only to those who have been able to demonstrate a special and unique interest that justifies such extraordinary status. To meet the standards of the equal protection of the laws a statute so classifying voters must rest upon a compelling state interest and must be necessary to further any such interest. In the instant case the interest of the property owners is not so unique that such owners acquire some special status; their interest merges with the interests of the citizens as a whole.
The ideal of maximum participation in democratic decision-making particularly applies to participation in the affairs of the city. One of the most striking and encouraging phenomena of our times has been the *966 deep and renewed interest of citizens in local community matters. To frustrate the endeavor of individuals to fix the unit of their local governance and to repose that power in land, not people, would be to stifle that self-determination. The seeds of democracy lay in the Greek city-state; we would be reluctant to stay the fruition of that democratic expression in the city of today. Neither the state nor federal Constitution sanctions such negation; each compels the opposite.
The peremptory writ of mandate as prayed shall issue.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
The petition of respondents Somers and Great Lake Properties, Inc. for a rehearing was denied October 25, 1972.
Notes
Hereafter, unless otherwise indicated, section .references are to- the Government Code.
Before the organization of the local agency formation commissions under statutes effective in 1963 and 1965, no public body had authority to prevent an incorporation or annexation which was not in the public interest, although as a practical matter the board of supervisors could so alter the boundaries of a proposed city as to render incorporation unfeasible (see
Peart
v.
Board of Supervisors
(1956)
•’Section 54796 reads as follows: “Factors to be considered in the review of a proposal shall include but not be limited to:
“(a) Population, population density; land area and land use; per capita assessed valuation; topography, natural boundaries, and drainage basins; proximity to other populated areas; the likelihood of significant growth in the area and in adjacent incorporated and unincorporated areas, during the next 10 years.
“(b) Need for organized community services; the present cost and adequacy of governmental services and controls in the area; probable future needs for such services and controls; probable effect of the proposed incorporation, formation, annexation, or exclusion and of alternative courses of action on the cost and adequacy of services and controls in the area and adjacent areas.
“(c) The effect of the proposed action and of alternative actions, on adjacent areas, on mutual social and economic interests and on the local governmental structure of the county.
“(d) The definiteness and certainty of the boundaries of the territory, the non-conformance of proposed boundaries with lines of assessment or ownership, the creation of islands or corridors of unincorporated territory, and other similar matters affecting the proposed boundaries.
“(e) Conformity with appropriate city or county general and specific plans.”
Section 34303 reads in part “Proceedings are initiated by filing with the board of supervisors at a regular meeting a petition signed by at least 25 percent of the qualified signers, representing at least 25 percent of the assessed value of the land included .in the proposed city limits, . . “Qualified signer” is defined by section 34301 as the “owner of an interest in fee” or the purchaser of land under a written agreement to buy. “Assessed value of the land” for purposes of section 34303 does not include the value of improvements.
(Krouser
v.
County of San Bernardino
(1947)
Section 34311 in its entirety reads as follows: “The board shall hold a hearing at the time fixed, and may adjourn the hearing from time to time, for periods not to exceed two months in all. If at the time set for the first hearing, there are insufficient written protests filed with the board to terminate further proceedings, the meeting shall be recessed not less than 14 days, and supplemental protests may be filed within 10 days after the first hearing.
“If upon the final hearing the board of supervisors finds and determines that written protests to the proposed incorporation have been filed with the board, signed by qualified signers representing 51 percent of the total assessed valuation of the land within the boundaries of the proposed incorporation, the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors shall cease; no election shall be called and no further petition for the incorporation of any of the same territory shall be initiated for one year after the date of such determination.
“For the purposes of this section written requests for exclusion shall be deemed to be protests.
“Except to the extent that proof to the contrary has been submitted to it, the board of supervisors, in ascertaining whether protests have been signed by qualified signers may assume that the assessees on the last equalized assessment, roll of the county are the qualified signers as herein defined.
“Proof of qualifications as a signer shall be in writing, filed with the protest, and, except for copies of instruments of title, shall be verified. Where there is more than one qualified signer with respect, to a parcel, the signature of any one qualified signer shall be sufficient to include the entire assessed value of the parcel.”
Some California statutes on annexation of territory to a city, or exclusion of territory from a city, also include provisions for a landowner protest. The statutes exhibit, however, a curious lack of uniformity in measuring that protest. When a city annexes inhabited territory under the Annexation Act of 1913 (§35100 et seq.), the protest is based on the value of land alone (§ 35121). If it annexes uninhabited property, the protest is based on the value of land and improvements (§ 35313). If it annexes territory of another city, or territory completely surrounded by the annexing city, then, whether or not the territory is inhabited, the protest is based upon the value of land and improvements (§§ 35275, 35414). If a city excludes inhabited territory previously within its borders, the statutes provide no means for landowner protest; an exclusion of uninhabited territory can be defeated by the protest of owners of more than one-half of the land (the statute does not specify whether the protest is measured by area or value) or by any owner of a single tract of land exceeding five acres. (§ 35555.)
Local Agency Formation Commission of Los Angeles County, survey of April 22, 1970, prepared for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, page 3.
Id.
Affidavit of Alice Hackworthy, filed in support of plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment in Curtis v. Board of Supervisors, United States District Court for the Central District of California, Civil Action File No. 70-2004-FW. All exhibits filed in that proceeding have been submitted to this court for consideration in the instant action.
Figures on assessed valuation are drawn from the affidavit of Phillip E. Watson, County Assessor of Los Angeles County, filed in the federal district court action, except for the figure as to Great Lakes Properties, Inc., which comes from exhibit B to the 1971 application for incorporation of the City of Rancho Palos Verdes.
Respondents cite cases which hold that municipal annexation is a political question, and that state annexation procedures are not subject to any federal constitutional limitations.
(Deane Hill Country Club, Inc.
v.
City of Knoxville
(6th Cir. 1967)
For exposition of the standard of equal protection in cases in which neither fundamental rights nor suspect classifications are involved, see
McDonald
v.
Board of Election
(1969)
This standard is illustrated by a collection of cases cited by respondents, exemplified by
Thomas Cusack Co.
v.
City of Chicago
(1917)
Accord,
Serrano
v.
Priest
(1971)
See
Dunn
v.
Blumstein
(1972)
Westbrook
v.
Mihaly
(1970)
We recognize that the United States Supreme Court at one time acknowledged that a state may constitutionally provide procedures for incorporation of cities in which the issue is never submitted to popular vote. (See
Hunter
v.
Pittsburgh
(1907)
In
Adams
v.
City of Colorado Springs
(D.Colo. 1970)
See also
Turner
v.
Fouche
(1970)
In
Surrey
v.
Embarcadero Mun. Improvement Dist.
(1971)
The applicability of the one-man, one-vote rule to special districts is presently
In
County of Riverside
v.
Whitlock
(1972)
The present case differs from
County of Riverside
v.
Whitlock
in three respects. First, the formation of a city has an important effect upon
all
residents within its boundaries; the decision to levy assessments in
County of Riverside
v.
Whitlock
“is not one which affects all citizens in the county in ‘important ways’; within the ‘district’ the impact on the landowners to be assessed is ‘disproportionate’ to any remote effect it may have on resident nonlandowners; . . .” (
Respondents quote
Gray
v.
Sanders
(1963)
“In 1968/69, California cities on the average received only 32 percent of their general city revenue from the general property tax. In the nation, considering all forms of local government in Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, the average government in those areas received only 44.6 percent of its revenue from property taxes, and received 32.4 percent of its revenue by way of intergovernmental transfers from the state or federal governments. In Los Angeles County, 23 of the 77 cities have no city property taxes whatever.” (Hagman & Disco, supra, 2 Urban Law. at p. 464 (fns. omitted).)
0ne law review article, Hagman & Disco, supra, 2 Urban Law. 459, 470-472, is the only work we have discovered which discusses the constitutionality of laws requiring a concurrent majority of residents and landowners.
Cf.
Gray
v.
Sanders
(1963)
Cf.
Reynolds
v.
Sims, supra,
Consequently, section 34311 is unconstitutional in part even when examined under the more liberal “rational relationship” test applied to classifications which are not suspect and do not affect fundamental rights (see fn. 12, supra).
Respondents’ attempt to rationalize this discrimination is ingenious but unconvincing. They do not contend that the present value of land is itself a reasonable measure of a landowner’s interest, but argue that the present land value portends the future value of land and improvements. They assert: “The Legislature must be presumed ... to have found that in the normal course of events, vacant land will be improved, . . . that there is a positive correlation between the values of various parcels of land and the values of such parcels as improved from time to time during the existence of the city." Giving the example of two parcels, one with vacant land worth $25,000 and another with improved land worth $25,000, they argue that it is “probable" that the vacant land will be improved, for example, with a building worth $100,000. Respondents conclude that “if petitioners’ contentions were sustained, this owner of the $125,000 property would have no more say than the 'homeowner’ whose property is worth but $25,000 merely because of the fortuitous circumstance that at the time of the assessment in effect at the date of the hearing he has not yet built."
This argument is invalid unless one adds an additional and a very doubtful presumption that the man who now owns the unimproved land will continue to own that land after it is improved. But even after this array of questionable presumptions, the argument still lacks rationality. Certainly some vacant land will be improved, but during that period of time some improved land will be converted to other improvements, some improvements will appreciate and some depreciate, various persons will die or move away and others will attain majority or acquire property. The Legislature could not rationally believe or presume that, the present value of land accurately predicts the true future value of land and improvements for the area for all times extending into the indefinite future, nor that the present owners
See discussion in Hagman & Disco, supra, 2 Urban Law., at page 464. *964 of unimproved land suitably represent the interests of the future owners of improved land. We doubt that the Legislature intended such an exotic method of evaluating the landowners’ interest; it is more plausible that the Legislature simply intended to effect an unconstitutional discrimination in favor of owners of unimproved land and against owners of small improved lots.
Government Code section 23 states that “If any provision of this code, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the remainder of the code, or the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances, shall not be affected thereby.” “The rule is well settled, where such a severability clause is included, that the valid portion of a statute or ordinance which is partially unconstitutional will be upheld if the remaining portion is severable and constitutes a completely operative expression of the legislative intent.”
(In re Portnoy
(1942)
Section 34303 provides that proceedings before the board of supervisors are initiated by a petition signed by at least 25 percent of the landowners representing at least 25 percent of the assessed value of land. (See fn. 4, supra.) We perceive no constitutional objection in permitting a group composed of 25 percent or more of the landowners, whether or not they represent 25 percent of the value of land; to initiate incorporation proceedings, and consequently we find no constitutional impediment to the board of supervisors acting on the petition for incorporation of Rancho Palos Verdes. We note that serious constitutional issues may arise from the failure of section 34303 to permit incorporation proceedings to be initiated by 25 percent of the residents, without regard to their ownership or value of land; such issues, however, are not before us in the present action.
Our holding that the protest procedure of section 34311 is unconstitutional does not leave the nonresident or corporate landowner bereft of statutory protection. He may appear before the local agency formation commission to oppose incorporation and request exclusion from the proposed city (§54795). These commissions may, and often do, disapprove unsound incorporation proposals or require the revision of proposed boundaries. (See Goldbach, Boundary Change in California: the Local Agency Formation Commissions (1970, Inst, of Governmental Affairs, U.C. Davis).) The landowner may again appear before the board of supervisors to oppose incorporation or request exclusion (§§ 34311, 34315). Finally, if his lands are agricultural he may be able to avoid any tax increase by contracts or agreements under the California Land Conservation Act of 1965. (§ 51200 et seq.)
The difference between these remedies and the protest procedure of section 34311 is that they confer upon the landowner no right to veto incorporation, but extend to him only the opportunity to persuade a public body that nonincorporation, exclusion, or- lower taxation is in the public interest.
