Opinion
Plaintiff/appellant First Interstate Bank appeals a judgment in favor of defendants/respondents State of California and the Board of *631 Governors of the California Community Colleges (Board) after the trial court sustained without leave to amend respondents’ demurrer to appellant’s complaint grounded in, inter alia, breach of contract and negligence. Appellant contends the trial court erred in its basic conclusion that respondents are not liable as a matter of law for the acts of a particular community college district.
The rules governing our review of a judgment sustaining a demurrer are long-settled and require no elaboration. Basically, the allegations in the complaint are regarded as true and are liberally construed, the plaintiff is assumed to be able to prove all facts as alleged, and while a demurrer admits all material facts properly pleaded, it does not admit contentions, deductions, or conclusions of law.
(Dale
v.
City of Mountain View
(1976)
On November 1, 1982, the Lassen Community College District (District) entered into a lease-purchase agreement with Bankers Leasing and Financial Corporation (Bankers). Pursuant thereto, the District leased a five acre site to Bankers on which Bankers agreed to construct a cogeneration and training facility (the project). The District in turn agreed to lease the project from Bankers, with an option to purchase it. The agreement obligated the District to make semi-annual lease payments beginning October 15, 1984.
Pursuant to the lease-purchase agreement, Bankers entered into development and construction contracts. It assigned all its rights under these contracts to the District which, as agent for Bankers under the lease-purchase agreement, began construction.
To finance the project Bankers arranged for issuance and sale to the public of $7,150,000 worth of certificates of participation in the lease payments to be made by the District to Bankers under the lease-purchase agreement. Appellant, the District and Bankers entered into a trust agreement whereby the net proceeds of the certificate sales were deposited with appellant as trustee, and appellant agreed to disburse monies for construction, accept the lease payments from the District pursuant to the lease-purchase agreement, and make disbursements to the certificate owners.
*632 Bankers assigned its rights under the lease-purchase agreement to appellant for the benefit of the certificate owners. The District failed to make the required payments due October 15, 1984, and April 15, 1985, and this action followed.
Specific to its cause of action for negligence appellant alleges that as designed, planned and operated by the District the project could never have generated sufficient funds to cover its operating expenses, and as constructed by the District it could not function safely. As a result, it contends, the District has been unable to make lease payments from the project’s operating profits to the foreseeable detriment of the certificate holders and appellant as trustee. It contends the Board breached its duties under Education Code sections 71028 and 81800 et seq., 1 by approving the District’s plans for the project and by failing to properly supervise the District in the construction of the project and in complying with its obligations under the agreements.
Specific to its cause of action for breach of contract appellant alleges that respondents owe $660,405 plus interest under the lease-purchase agreement for unpaid rental payments, that the District and respondents received insurance proceeds of approximately $2 million, which constitute trust funds under the trust agreement, and that respondents have a duty under the agreements to pay those funds to appellant as trustee for the certificate owners.
I
Appellant first contends that the construction and maintenance of school buildings is a sovereign and nondelegable duty of the State and the Board, and that the District was acting merely in an agency capacity on the project. Community colleges are part of the public school system provided by the state Constitution. (Cal. Const., art. IX, §§ 6, 14.) The Constitution requires the Legislature to provide for boards of education in each county. (Cal. Const., art. IX, § 7.) Pursuant to this mandate, the Legislature has authorized the creation of community college districts, to be managed and
*633
controlled by a governing board elected by the residents of the district. (Ed. Code, §§ 72010, 72020 et seq., 74000 et seq.) The community college districts may sue and be sued, hold and convey property, construct facilities, exercise the power of eminent domain, enter into contracts, appoint legal counsel, and accept gifts. (Ed. Code, §§ 72201, 72287, 72300, 72419;
Ward
v.
San Diego School Dist.
(1928)
Respondent Board is established by Education Code section 71000. Its primary purpose is to “provide leadership and direction in the continuing development of community colleges .... [Its work] shall at all times be directed to maintaining and continuing, to the maximum degree permissible, local autonomy and control in the administration of the community colleges.” (Ed. Code, § 71023.) It is empowered to set minimum standards entitling districts to receive state aid (Ed. Code, § 71025), establish minimum academic and employment standards (Ed. Code, §§ 71066, 71068), represent community colleges before state and federal boards (Ed. Code, § 71071), administer state and federal support programs (Ed. Code, § 71072), and establish a uniform system of budgeting and accounting for the districts (Ed. Code, § 71073), and generally coordinate and oversee the various districts.
Because education is a matter of statewide concern (Cal. Const., art. IX, § 1), school districts are considered agencies of the state for the local operation of the state school system.
(Hall
v.
City of Taft
(1956)
Government liability is confined to “rigidly delineated circumstances.”
(Williams
v.
Horvath
(1976)
Appellant has cited no statute authorizing the Lassen Community College District to enter into trust agreements on behalf of either respondent. It does not allege liability under a joint powers agreement. As previously noted, the District is specifically authorized to contract in its own name and is liable for its own obligations. Neither the State of California nor the Board is a party to any agreement in the instant case, nor do any of the relevant agreements or documents directly or indirectly indicate a basis for respondents’ liability thereunder. There is no evidence that the District was authorized to represent or act on behalf of the State or the Board, nor that it purported to do so. Appellant has not alleged any conduct or acts by respondents, independent of the District’s actions, which would render them liable as principals for the District’s contractual obligations at issue herein.
II
Appellant next contends respondents are liable under implied contracts resulting from their receipt of money and the use of the project and project site, and for inverse condemnation of the project and project site. Appellant contends the $2 million the District received in insurance proceeds constitutes trust funds under the trust agreement, which in turn *635 constitutes money and/or value had and received by respondents for the use and benefit of appellant as trustee for the certificate owners. It also contends respondents are obligated to appellant in the amount of $660,405, the unpaid lease payments, which also constitutes money and/or value had and received by respondents for appellant’s benefit.
The essential elements of an action for money and/or goods had and received are (1) a statement of indebtedness of a certain sum, (2) the consideration made by the plaintiff, and (3) nonpayment of the debt. (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) pleading, § 508.) However, “no recovery for money had and received can be had against a defendant who never received any part of the money or equivalent thing sued for. [Citation.]”
(Rains
v.
Arnett
(1961)
Respondents are also not shown to have any interest in the unpaid lease payments. The agreements provide for appellant to apply the proceeds from the sale of the certificates to construction costs and then disburse to certificate owners their proportionate share of the lease payments which the District is required to make to appellant as trustee. Consequently, respondents have never had any right, claim or interest in or to the lease payments.
Appellant contends for the first time on appeal that the complaint states a cause of action for inverse condemnation. A party may change its legal theory of recovery on appeal if the change presents only a question of law on the facts in the record.
(Ward
v.
Taggart
(1959)
Ill
Appellant contends respondents were negligent because they breached their mandatory statutory duties, specifically Education Code section 81836, subdivisions (c) and (e), which require the state community college chancellor to establish standards for community college facilities and “[r]eview plans and specifications for all construction in those community college districts that have submitted plans and specifications therefor to the chancellor for approval,” and either to approve the plans or return without approval and with recommendation for change any plans not conforming to established standards. Appellant alleged that respondent Board breached this duty by approving a project which could never have generated sufficient funds to cover the project’s operating expenses, and by failing to properly supervise the District.
“Where a public entity is under a mandatory duty imposed by an enactment that is designed to protect against the risk of a particular kind of injury, the public entity is liable for an injury of that kind proximately caused by its failure to discharge the duty unless the public entity establishes that it exercised reasonable diligence to discharge the duty.” (Gov. Code, § 815.6.) In order to establish liability under this section, the duty must be mandatory, not discretionary, the enactment must be intended to protect against the kind of risk of injury the plaintiff suffered, and breach of the duty must be the proximate cause of the injury suffered.
(Posey
v.
State of California
(1986)
IV
Finally, appellant contends respondents are estopped from asserting as a defense any failure by appellant to comply with the Tort Claims Act. As we have already resolved, respondents have not been shown to be liable under the facts and theories alleged. Consequently, any issue concerning the claim filing requirements of the Tort Claims Act is irrelevant.
Affirmed.
Low, P. J., and King, J., concurred.
Notes
Education Code section 71028 states, in pertinent part, that the Board “shall review and approve . . . master plans for facilities for each community college district.”
Education Code section 81820 requires each community college district to submit to the chancellor of the state community colleges by February 1, 1981, a five year capital construction plan for community college purposes. Section 81830 provides that a district “may submit a proposed project to the chancellor for review and approval or disapproval. The proposed project shall be an element of the district’s plan for capital construction.” Section 81836, subdivisions (b) and (c) require the chancellor to establish standards for community college facilities and review all construction plans submitted to him.
