114 Cal. 605 | Cal. | 1896
A demurrer to the complaint was sustained in the court below and judgment entered for defendants, and plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
The subject-matter of this action is certain premises
The plaintiff brings this suit entirely in his capacity as a resident of, and a property owner and taxpayer in, said city of Long Beach. The material averments of the complaint are briefly these: That in 1882, J. and L. Bixby and Thomas Flint, being the owners of a tract of laud in which said Ocean Park avenue is now situated, caused the. .same to be surveyed and staked off, and caused a map to be made and filed in the county recorder’s office showing that said tract was subdivided into lots, blocks, streets, lanes, avenues, and parks, and named said tract town of Willmore; that among other streets, avenues, etc., the said Ocean Park avenue was thus surveyed and staked off; and that by these acts the said avenue was dedicated for the use of the public. It was further averred that said town of Willmore was afterward included in the territory of the city of Long Beach, and that said avenue has ever since been a public avenue by virtue of the dedication as aforesaid. It was further averred that in 1888 the said Long Beach Land and Water Company, defendant herein, without any right or title, asserted a claim as against the city of Long Beach to said avenue; that the board of trustees of said city of Long Beach entered into a conspiracy with said water
It is no doubt, under the authorities, frequently difficult to determine whether or not in a given case a person merely in his capacity of citizen or taxpayer, can maintain an action by which he seeks to control the administration of municipal government, and put himself in the place of public officers selected for the purpose of such administration. The cases cited by appellant are mostly actions brought by taxpayers directly against public officers to restrain them from increasing the burden of taxation by levying or enforcing taxes which could not be legally imposed. The rule is that the municipality, through its governing body, has control of the property and general supervision over the ordinary business of the corporation; and there would be utter confusion in such matters if every,citizen and taxpayer had the general right to control the judgment of such body, or usurp the office. Where the thing in question is within the discretion of such body to do or not to do, the general rule is that then neither by mandamus, quo warranto, or other judicial proceeding, can either the state or a private citizen question the action or nonaction of such body; nor in such cases can a private citizen rightfully undertake to do that which he thinks such body ought to6 do. It is only where performance of the thing requested is enjoined as a duty upon said governing body that such performance can be compelled, or that a private citizen can step into the place of such body and himself perform it. If, therefore, in the case at bar it was not a duty enjoined
In the first place, the main purpose of this action could not, under any view, be judicially accomplished; for it seeks to have the fee simple title of the city to said avenue quieted, and the respondents enjoined from asserting any right or claim whatever thereto; while it is clear from the complaint that the city or the public has, at best, only an easement in the premises, consisting of a right of way over it as a public thoroughfare. Then, again, it is averred that the judgment sought to be vacated is ultra vires and void; and if that be so it could never be enforced, and there is no averment that anj'one ever tried to enforce it. But waiving these points for the present, and assuming that said avenue was dedicated as claimed, in 1882, there is no averment that the use of said avenue as a public thoroughfare has pver been interrupted by respondents or any other person—no averments that respondents have put buildings upon it, or fenced or inclosed any part of it, or placed on it any impediments to travel, or obstructed in any way the enjoyment by appellant and the public of the alleged easement. On the other hand, it is expressly averred in the complaint “ that ever since said dedication aforesaid, and for upwards of twelve years last past, this plaintiff and other residents, citizens and taxpayers of the city of Long Beach aforesaid^ have continued to use the said lands as and for a public park and avenue.” Under these circumstances the proposition that it is the duty of the present board of trustees to put the city into litigation by commencing the suit indicated by appellant, and that they have no
The judgment is affirmed.
Henshaw, J., and Temple, J., concurred.