Opinion
This is an original petition for writ of mandate, filed by the East Bay Municipal Utility District, a public agency (hereinafter the “district”), to compel respondent Nathan J. Sindelar, its treasurer, to execute certain bonds in connection with their issuance and sale by the district as authorized by its board of directors. We have concluded that the district has properly invoked the original jurisdiction of this court, that respondent’s contention that the bonds are unauthorized is without merit, and that a peremptory writ of mandate should issue as prayed.
The board of directors, ordering issuance and sale of the bonds by resolution adopted in 1970, purported to act pursuant to authorization voted by the district’s electors in 1958. As the essential question is whether the 1958 authorization reaches the current bond issue despite the lapse of time, and events before and since the 1958 bond election, we set forth pertinent historical details as follows:
The district was formed in 1923, and has functioned since, pursuant to the Municipal Utility District Act (Pub. Util. Code, div. 6 [commencing with § 11501]). At all pertinent times, it has owned and operated a water system in which, among other things, water is collected and stored in watersheds east of the San Francisco Bay Area and transmitted to the district’s water customers in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. Prior to 1958, the district undertook a study of the system’s capacity to meet the projected future water needs of its customers. The study first produced a report, published by the district’s Construction Program Committee in August 1957, which proposed a detailed construction program addressed to those needs. The report (entitled “Proposed Construction Program 1957 to 1967”) projected water consumption demands in the district’s service area as “200 million gallons daily by 1967,” presented “a program of construction to meet these needs, and an estimate of the cost, during the 10-yearperiod ending June 30, 1967.” It contained several references to- “the 10-year period to 1967” and to forecasting and programming “to 1967.” 1
Bechtel Corporation, an independent consulting firm engaged by the district for the purpose, reviewed the proposal and submitted a report, in December 1957, entitled “Engineering-Economic Feasibility Review Of Proposed Construction Program 1957 to 1967.” 2 Bechtel therein referred to the proposal as a “10-year construction program which will include additional Mokelumne River storage, a third aqueduct for increased water supply from that river, additional terminal storage reservoirs within the service area, added filtration facilities, new and enlarged pumping plants, distribution mains, local distribution storage and correlated facilities.” As the 1957 district report had done, the Bechtel report consistently referred to a “10-year construction program” and pertinent projections “to 1967.”
In February 1958, the district’s board'of directors enacted “Ordinance No. 191,” which called a bond election to be conducted, in June of the same year, for the purpose of submitting to the district’s electors the question whether the district should incur a bonded indebtedness of $252,-000,000 to finance the proposed construction program.
3
Prior to the
At the bond election conducted in June, 1958, the ballot proposition carried. The district forthwith commenced the issuance and sale of authorized bonds, and the construction program. Pursuant to the electors’ 1958 authorization, the district issued and sold bonds in “series” as follows:
The district’s “official statements” accompanying some of these issues referred to the project as a “10-year program” and as consisting of the facilities described before the 1958 election. (See text at fn. 4, ante.)
According to its present petition for mandate, “[b]y the year 1967 the District had completed most of the principal and major features of the Water Development Project for East Bay Area. . . .”
5
In April 1967,
The actual cost of the project, and the amount of bond funds required to defray it, proved to be less than the Bechtel report had estimated. For this reason, $84,000,000 in bonds authorized in 1958 remained unissued at the end of the 10-year period terminating in 1967. By 1970, district water consumption had increased to 219,000,000 gallons daily, and its service area had expanded from 230 square miles (in 1958) to 277 square miles. The district estimated that by the year 2000 its service area would include more than 400 square miles and that its water consumption would exceed 400,000,000 gallons daily. The decision was reached that additional facilities would be needed to accommodate the expanded area and the increased demands for water.
On December 8, 1970, the district’s board of directors adopted a resolution authorizing the issuance and sale of another $12,000,000 in bonds (“Series G”), pursuant to the 1958 authorization and with the proceeds to be used for the construction of further facilities. The resolution stated among other things that the proposed Series G issue was “deemed necessary and desirable ... to provide additional moneys to finance the Water Development Project for East Bay Area as authorized at . . . [the 1958 bond] . . . election.”* **** 6
The absence of an adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law was determined by our granting the alternative writ.
(County of Sacramento
v.
Hickman
(1967)
The Municipal Utility District Act limited expenditure of the proceeds of the district’s bonds authorized in 1958 to “the objects or purposes for
In identifying that purpose, though, and the extent (if any) to which it imposed any restrictions upon the expenditure of the proceeds of the bonds voted in 1958, we are to consider the language of the ballot proposition submitted to the electorate at that time.
(Mills
v.
S. F. Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist., supra,
Bond propositions may be validly submitted to the voters in broad and general terms.
(Sacramento M. U. Dist.
v.
All Parties, etc.
(1936)
Let a peremptory writ issue as prayed.
Devine, P. J., and Christian, J., concurred.
On May 4, 1971, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
In the report, however (to which we hereinafter refer as “the 1957 district report”), the following statement also appeared: “Several major additions to the District’s water system will be needed in the first several years following 1967, as water consumption continues to increase beyond the 200 million gallons daily rate forecast for that date. ... In addition to these major projects, the construction of facilities such as distribution storage, pumping plants, and pipe lines will continue at or near the rate proposed for period to 1967, depending upon the rate of increase in consumption after that date.”
We hereinafter refer to this document as “the Bechtel report.”
As stated in Ordinance No. 191 and on the ensuing ballot, the question put to the district’s electors read as follows:
“Measure: (Water Development Project for East Bay Area). Shall the East Bay Municipal Utility District incur a bonded indebtedness in the principal amount of . . . ($252,000,000] . . . for the acquisition, construction and completion of the following utility works, to-wit: Water storage, transmission and distribution facilities, works, structures and property, together with filtration plants, pumping plants, aqueducts, mains, pipe lines, tunnels, dams, reservoirs, power plants, machinery, equipment, lands, easements, rights of way, water rights, reconstruction, replacements and additions to existing facilities, and also all other works, structures, rights and property, within and without the District, necessary or convenient to carry out of the objects, purposes and powers of the District?”
The ordinance described the purpose of the proposed construction project in this language:
“The fundamental and basic objective of the Water Development Project for East Bay Area . ... is to provide an adequate system of water storage, with appropriate transmission facilities and facilities for water distribution to consumers of the District. Based upon engineering studies, reports and data of the District, it is now contemplated that an additional source of water supply will be developed and appropriate aqueducts and water transmission facilities will be constructed to deliver water through terminal and distribution reservoirs for ultimate distribution through distribution mains. Appurtenant facilities, structures, equipment and pumping plants will be provided, and provision made for the incidental use of water for hydro-electric development. The present engineering studies of the District contemplate a construction program over a period of years so as to provide an adequate and comprehensive water system based on forecasted population growth and expansion of the area to be served by the District. In view of the long range program, the exact detail of each individual item of construction in the overall comprehensive project will be left to the discretion of the Board of Directors who will be limited in their determination by the objects and purposes as set forth in the measure submited to the voters.”
The ordinance further provided that the bonds proposed “may be issued in series from time to time as may be determined by the Board of Directors [of the district] until the Water Development Project for East Bay Area is finally completed. . . .”
The district’s pre-election materials also included this description of the project’s details and the costs allocated to each:
The petition describes the completed “features” ,as “including (1) the construction of the Camanche Dam on the Mokelumne River to provide an adequate source of water
The resolution thus referred to the newly contemplated facilities as part of the “Water Development Project for East Bay Area,” but did not describe them. The district alleges in its petition that “[t]he proceeds of the Bonds of Series G are intended to be applied to the construction of additional terminal reservoir storage facilities, transmission aqueducts, pumping plant facilities, water treatment fácilities, distribution system storage facilities, distribution pipelines and related facilities to serve the expanding area of and increased consumption demands within the service area of the District in both Alameda and Contra Costa Counties; said facilities include Moraga
