243 P. 676 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
The plaintiff, as a land owner in the defendant District, brought the above-entitled action to restrain the District and its board of directors from entering into an unlawful contract obligating the District to pay certain persons a total sum of more than a million dollars. The trial court sustained defendants' demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend and entered judgment in favor of defendants. The plaintiff appealed and the judgment was reversed with direction to overrule the demurrer, and the appellant was given judgment for his costs of appeal. (Danley v. Merced Irr. Dist.,
"That it is true that said L.E. Danley did not pay directly in the first instance any of the costs in the above-entitled action, nor in the companion case of Kelsey v. Merced IrrigationDistrict, but the said Danley arranged for the payment *54 by the Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company of said costs, and said costs were paid by the Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company, and in this behalf affiant alleges that said Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company, being a land owner in said Merced Irrigation District (and said Danley being likewise an owner of land in said Merced Irrigation District, as alleged in the bill of intervention herein), agreed with the said L.E. Danley that the said L.E. Danley should institute said action and prosecute said intervention in the name of the said Danley, and that the said Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company would advance to said Danley and for his use, all the costs that said Danley should expend in said action, and that if the said Danley should recover the said costs the said Danley should pay to the Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company such sums as it had expended or incurred therein, and said Danley, who is likewise a property owner in said District and interested in prosecuting the said action, in the same manner, but to a lesser amount than the Crocker-Huffman Land and Water Company, did commence and maintain the said suit and said appeals, under said arrangement, as to payment of costs of suit and appeals.
"Affiant further alleges that prior to the printing of the transcripts in the above-entitled action and in the companion case of Kelsey v. Merced Irrigation District, affiant endeavored, through R.L. McWilliams, an attorney associated with him in said case, to secure from counsel, E.F. Treadwell, for the respondents therein, a stipulation for the printing of one transcript on appeal to be used in the two appeals, in order to reduce the expense thereof, but that said attorney for said respondents refused to agree thereto, or to join in said stipulation, and said attorney for respondents insisted that two transcripts be printed and filed, one thereof in each appeal."
The plaintiff sued to protect the District from the unauthorized act contemplated by its board of directors and the District, through the board, resisted his efforts and thereby caused him to incur the heavy expense of an appeal, and, further, by refusing to make the stipulation mentioned in the affidavit, put him to the unnecessary expense of printing two transcripts, where apparently one would have answered *55
every purpose of both appeals. The questions presented by both appeals were identical. (Kelsey v. Merced Irr. Dist.,
[3] The substance of respondents' contention is that the agreement between the plaintiff and the Crocker-Huffman Company is wholly ineffectual and by its very terms defeats the evident intention of the parties. The Crocker-Huffman Company was not an officious intermeddler in the suit. Both parties to the agreement were land owners in the defendant District and, in common with all other land owners therein, they were both interested in preventing the execution of the unlawful contract alleged in the complaint. A suit by one land owner would as effectively accomplish that purpose as a suit by all. It is not uncommon or improper for many persons who have a common interest in the subject matter of a controversy to advance the costs of a suit by one of them to protect the rights of all. This is especially true in actions by taxpayers to enjoin the unlawful use of public funds. No case has been cited holding that the plaintiff in such an action cannot recover his costs of suit on the mere ground that his obligation to repay those contributing to the expense of the action is conditional upon his recovering costs. [4] When the plaintiff and the Crocker-Huffman Company entered into the agreement stated in the affidavit, they had the right to assume that if the plaintiff prevailed in the contemplated action he would be given judgment for his costs and that payment of the amount thereof by the District could be enforced. It must be presumed that they acted upon that assumption in making the agreement. "It is not to be presumed that parties deliberately enter into an agreement which calls for an impossible condition or event as a test of performance." (Saunders v. Clark,
The order is reversed and the trial court is directed to hear and determine the motion to tax costs in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Hart, J., and Plummer, J., concurred.
A petition by respondents to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on February 25, 1926. *58