Frasher v. Rader

124 Cal. 132 | Cal. | 1899

HENSHAW, J.

The defendants, constituting the hoard of fire commissioners of the city of Los Ángeles, granted Dennison and Tucker permission to build a blacksmith shop upon a certain piece of land within the city. Under the municipal ordinance a structure for such purpose could not be built “without a permit from the fire commissioners so to do, which permit shall be granted only upon the petition of three-fourths of the property owners in the block in which said building is proposed to be erected.” Permission was granted upon October 23, 1895. Upon October 20, 1896, this petition for a writ of review was filed. It averred that the requisite number of property owners had not petitioned on behalf of Dennison and Tucker, and that the board of fire commissioners granted the permit well knowing such to be the fact. Upon these averments it was sought to review and annul the order of, the board.

The writ of certiorari runs to review the action of an inferior tribunal, exercising judicial functions, only upon a showing that such tribunal has exceeded its jurisdiction, and that the legal remedies applicable to the case are inadequate to afford protection or relief. It cannot be used to review the acts of a legislative, executive, or ministerial body, or even the acts of a judicial tribunal, in the exercise of its discretion.

The board of fire commissioners had for its duty: 1. To determine “whether three-fourths of the property owners in the block” had petitioned; and 2. If the determination upon this was favorable to the applicant, then to decide whether to grant or refuse the permit. In neither nor in both of these acts did it render a judicial decision. In the second, it was but exercising a discretion not the subject of review. In the first (since it will not be contended that the board could pass on conflicting titles to real estate), it was but making a mathematical computation, no more judicial in its nature than is the sheriff’s determination when he executes his deed that six months have elapsed since the execution sale; no more judicial than the act of a board in *134awarding a contract to the lowest bidder. (Townsend v. Copeland, 56 Cal. 612.)

All political, executive, legislative, and ministerial boards, bodies, and officers are constantly, and indeed perpetually called upon to make decisions affecting the conduct of matters intrusted to them. They exercise their judgments in so doing, and they determine the existence or nonexistence of facts. No street in any municipality of the state may be ordered improved until the proper authorities have first decided as a fact that public necessity or convenience requires it. Such decisions, however, are not judgments pronounced by a judicial tribunal. They do not, as to be judicial decisions they must, declare the law and define the rights of the parties under it. But this subject has been discussed so recently and so fully in Quinchard v. Board of Trustees, 113 Cal. 664, and in People v. Supervisors, 122 Cal. 421, that it would be supererogatory to continue.

The judgment appealed from is affirmed.

McFarland, J., Temple, J., Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.

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