79 F. 487 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1897
This is a suit in equity, the bill in which was filed in this court August 27, 1896, not only on behalf of the complainants, hut, according to its averments, on behalf of all other property owners and taxpayers of the city of San Diego who are not citizens of the state of California. The hill alleges, among other things, that the complainant William A. Gamble is a resident and citizen of the state of Ohio, and the complainant Elvira Carver is a resident and citizen of the state of Massachusetts, and that all of the defendants are residents and citizens of the city of San Diego, state of California; that each of the complainants is the owner of real estate in the defendant city;, that the amount of taxes that each of the complainants would be compelled to pay by reason of the levying of the taxes necessary to pay the principal and interest of the bonds mentioned in the bill will exceed the sum of $2,000, and that the property owners and taxpayers of the defendant city who are not citizens of the state of California number about 700, and each of them has a direct interest with the complainants in the relief sought by them; that the population of the defendant city has never at any time mentioned in the bill exceeded 20,000 inhabitants; that the average daily consumption of water
The bill further set out the form of the ballots submitted and voted at the election, and alleged that, before the question of incurring the indebfedness was submitted to the vote as aforesaid, the common council of the defendant city had caused to he made what purported to be plans and estimates of the cost of the proposed improvement but that the purported plans and estimates were not such in fact, for various reasons specified in the bill. The bill further alleged that the contract between the defendant city and the Southern California Mountain Water Company was made and executed before the election was held, and without any notice given by the council inviting sealed proposals for furnishing the labor and materials for the proposed improvements, nor have such bids ever been made; that the notice given by the council of the special election did not set forth
All of the defendants except the Southern California Mountain Water Company joined in filing exceptions to the bill, and that company filed thereto separate exceptions, but of a similar nature. While these exceptions were under reference to a special master, all
A separate plea filed by all of the defendants jointly, except the Southern California Mountain Water Company, and also by that company, as a separate and distinct plea, alleges: That on the 29th day of June, 1896, one F. S. Nicholson, a citizen of the state of New York, and a property owner and taxpayer within the city of San Diego, state of California, exhibited her-bill of complaint in this court against the defendants to the present bill, on behalf of herself and all other property owners and taxpayers of the city of San Diego who are not citizens of the state of 'California, to obtain a decree of this' court determining and adjudging that the contract executed by and between the city of San Diego and the Southern California Mountain Water Company, referred to in the complainants’ bill of complaint in the present suit, be canceled and declared null and void, and that, the defendant city of San Diego and its officers, and the Southern California Mountain Water Company and its officers, and each of them, be forever restrained 'and enjoined from setting up any
Upon the coming on of the hearing of the motions for leave to file these pleas, all of the defendants thereto moved this court for an order dismissing the present suit'and discontinuing further proceedings therein, basing (he motion upon the records and pleadings and files in the cause, and upon a certified copy of the transcript on appeal to the supreme court of California in the case of Albert Meyer v. The City of San Diego et al., defendants, IT. I. Capron, O. M. Turner, B. Meeolls et al., intervenors, and upon certain admissions of counsel to the effect that the defendants and intervenors in the suit brought hv Albert Meyer in the superior court of San Diego county had appeared in that suit prior to the institution of the present suit in this court. At the same time the complainants in the present bill asked leave to file an affidavit of John G-. Capron, to which objections were interposed by the defendants to the present suit. That affidavit states, among other things: That on the 11th day of December, 1895, the Consolidated Water Company, a corporation organized and doing business under and by virtue of the laws of i he state of West Virginia, brought its suit in this court against the city of San Diego and certain of its officers, E. S. Babcock, and the
“Wherefore, your orators pray that they ho granted the relief prayed for in Their amended original bill herein, and that the said city and its officers, made defendants herein, bo perpetually enjoined from issuing or selling the bonds as (he result of said election, and from paying any money for the delivery of any bonds to (he said Southern California' Mountain Water Company or any one else on account c£ said contract, or in pursuance of or as performance or part performance thereof; that said contract and proceedings for the issuance of said bonds be declared illegal and void, and that the said Southern California Mountain Water Company be required to deliver up said contract for cancellation; and that the same be by this court canceled and annulled.”
The proffered affidavit of Capron further states that the cause of action set forth in the original hill filed by the Consolidated Water Company, and in its amended bill, and the supplemental hill sought to be filed by it, and the grounds upon which it was in those pleadings claimed that the proceedings of the common council of the city of San Diego were illegal and void, and the relief sought therein, were the same as in the present suit. The proffered affidavit of Capron further states: That on the 29th day of June, 1896, one F. S, Nicholson filed her bill of complaint in this court against all of the defendants named in the bill of the Consolidated Water Company, except E. S. Babcock; the object thereof being- to have set aside and de-
“(a) That the proceedings heretofore had by said common council, the mayor, and other ofjicers of said city in the passage and approval of said ordinances and ,th& election held under said ordinances to vote upon the proposition of the issuance of the bonds of said city, as set out in said ordinances, for the sum of $1,500,000, be declared illegal and void, (b) That the said pretended contract betwe'en said city and the Southern California Mountain Water Co.mpany, as set out in Exhibit G, upon the final hearing be declared and decreed to be null and void, and that said city and said water company be perpetually enjoined from carrying out the terms of said contract.”
That thereafter, and.on fhe 9th day of July, 1896, the above-named Constantine W. Benson and Henry Livesley Cole filed their petition in said suit for leave to intervene, and presented therewith their complaint in intervention, in which the same grounds for the setting aside of the contract and enjoining the issuance of the bonds were set forth as were contained in the amended bill in the suit of the Consolidated Water Company, and the same relief was asked for therein. That.thereafter, and on the 23d day of July, 1896, the complainant in the suit, by leave of the court, filed her amended bill, setting forth more fully and in detail the same cause of action, and asking for the same relief, as in her original bill. That the defendants to the' suit demurred .to the petition of the said Benson and Cole to intervene, and also filed exceptions to the amended bill of complaint of the complainant, and also- a demurrer to the bill of complaint, and that on September 7,1896, the several exceptions to the bill were referred to a master, and that all of-the matters above mentioned are still pending in this' court and undisposed of. That in each and all of the cases above mentioned the defendants thereto have contended and maintained that this court has no jurisdiction thereof, on the ground, in the cas'e of the Consolidated Water Company, that necessary and indispensable’parties resident within the state were not made parties to the suit, and, in the case of Mcholson, that the amount in controversy was not sufficient to give the court jurisdiction, and that the question-ráiséd as to- the jurisdiction of the court in both of those suits' is still under advisement and undetermined. That the suit of Albert Meyer, mentioned, in the pleas in abatement in this suit, offered, to; be filed, was commenced in the state court on the 29th day of June,:lS96, being, the same' day on which the bill of complaint of the said'. Mcholson wascfiled in this court. That other taxpayers
In support of the contention of counsel for the defendants to the present suit that the cause of action here involved is not the same as, but is entirely separate and distinct from, that involved in the; suit heretofore brough t and now pending in this court by the Consolidate! Water Company, the defendants filed an affidavit of the city clerk of the defendant city, in which he states: That he is now, and ever since the 1st elay of May, 1893, has been, such clerk. That in the month of December, 1895, pursuant to instructions from the common council of the city of San Diego, Edwin M. Capps, city engineer of that city, prepared plans and estimates of the cost of a water right to 1,000 Inches of water, to be acquired by the city from the Southern California. Mountain Water Company at a point near the Upper Otay Keservoir Site, located in the county of San Diego, and also estimates of the cost of the acquisition by the city of that reservoir and dam sib;, containing 423.13 acres, and also of the acquisition by tbe city of a right of way 20 feet wide from that dam site to the eastern boundary limits of the city, and a right Of way 20 feet wide, within the limits of the city, for a pipe line by which to distribute such water to ihe city and its inhabitants. That on the; 16th day of December, 1895, an action entitled “The Consolidated Water Company, Complainant, v. E. S. Babcock et al., Defendants,” was commenced in this court for the purpose of having declared illegal and void the proposition set forth on page 26 of the bill in that action, or any contract which might be based thereon. That on the 27th day of August, .1896, the present suit was commenced, by the terms of the bill in which action the complainants therein sought to have the contract mentioned and described therein, between the city of San Diego and the Southern California Mountain Water Company, annulled and set aside, and declared illegal and void. That the proposition mentioned on page 26 of the bill in the case of The Consolidated Water Company v. E. S. Babcock et al., upon which that action is based, is an entirely different, separate, and distinct proposition and cause of action from that upon wlneli the; present suit is based. That the proposition, as it
“All that land contained in the county of San Diego, state of California, constituting the Upper Otay Reservoir Site and the Upper Otay Dam Site, located in sections 24, 25. and 3G of township 17 south, range 1 west, and sections 19 and 30 in township 17 south, range 1 east, San Bernardino meridian, consisting of 423.13 acres. Also, a right of way from the said dam site to the eastern boundary limits to the city of San Diego, 20 feet in width, for a pipe line. Also, a piece of land along the line of said right of way, west to the west line of Sweetwater valley, 150 feet square, commencing at a point on the north line of lot 13 of Encanto, 325 feet west from the northeast corner of said lot 13, thence running south 150 feet, thence west 150' feet, thence north 150 feet, and thence east 150 feet; also a piece of land located in said county of San • Didgo, commencing at a point south 24° and 30' west 1,458 feet from the southwest comer of section 30, township 17 south, range 1 east, San Bernardino meridian, thence south 150 feet, thence west 150 feet, thence north 150 feet, thence east 150 feet to the point of beginning; and also a right of way therefrom 50 feet wide, south 33° west to the 120-foot contour line of the said Upper Otay Reservoir Site; and also a right of way 25 feet in width from the said last-mentioned piece of land 150 feet square to the northern boundary line of the Janal Rancho, thence west along said boundary line to the 120-foot contour line of the said Upper Otay Reservoir Site.”
—That the estimates of the said city engineer for the said described property were about $15,000, and that none of the said property is embraced or included in the proposition upon which the present suit is based. That the proposition upon which the Consolidated Water Company’s case is based included also the building of a dam on the said Upper Otay Dam Site 120 feet high, and sufficient in capacity to form a reservoir to impound 632,448,000 cubic feet of
In respect to the suit commenced in this court by the Consolidated Water Company on the 11th day of December, 1895, it is enough for the proper disposition of the motions iu the present suit to say t.hat: that suit, having been commenced long prior to the making of the contract or the doing of any of the acts for the annulment, of which the present suit was brought, in the nature of things, did not aud could not embrace, as part of its subject-matter, the contract and proceedings involved in the present suit; for no such contract was then in existence, and, as a consequence, no act had been done in pursuance thereof. The suit brought by F. S. Nicholson in this court oil the 25)th day of June, 189(5, was a suit by a nonresident taxpayer of the city of San Diego against: the identical defendants who are defendants to the present suit:. The acts constituting the alleged cause of action in that suit are the same acts of which complaint is made in this suit, and the same relief is prayed for in both suits. Manifestly, therefore, the Nicholson suit may be properly pleaded in abatement of the present one, if the complainants in this suit are so far parties to that one as to be bound by any judgment that may be rendered therein. It is important, therefore, to inquire whether they will be so bound. As has been seen, that suit was brought by the complainant on her own behalf, and on behalf of all other property owners and taxpayers of the city of San Diego who are not citizens of California; and, like the present suit, its main purpose, was to obtain a decree of this court adjudg
In addition to the motions already considered, all of the defendants' to the present suit move the court to dismiss it, and to discontinue further proceedings therein, upon the ground that the superior court of San Diego county first acquired jurisdiction of -the parties and subject-matter of the controversy. If the record showed such to be the fact, this court, would not hesitate to grant the motion, or at least to suspend further proceedings in the suit here until the final action of the state court; for I conceive it not only to ' be settled, but rightly settled, that, where two or more courts have concurrent jurisdiction, the one which first takes cognizance of a cause has the exclusive right to entertain and exercise such jurisdiction, to the final determination of the action and the enforcement of its judgment and decree. Sharon v. Terry, 36 Fed. 337, 354; Sharon v. Sharon, 84 Cal. 424, 430, 23 Pac. 1100; Taylor v. Taintor, 16 Wall. 366; Works, Courts, p. 68; Foley v. Hartley, 72 Fed. 570, 573; Hughes v. Green, 75 Fed. 691; Hatch v. Bancroft-Thompson Co., 67 Fed. 802; Bank v. Herrenden (N. Y. App.) 4 N. E. 332; Freem. Judgm. (4th Ed.) 118a. It needs no argument to show'that the rule stated is vital to the harmonious movement of courts of concurrent jurisdiction, exercising their powers within the same sphéres and over the same subjects and persons. It is nowhere made to appear, however, that the suit brought by Meyer
The affidavit of John G. Capron, sought to be filed by the complainants on the hearing of the present motions, containing, as it does, attacks upon the qualification of the judge of the superior court of Han Diego county who tried the consolidated case in that court, Mill not be allowed to be filed herein. With the qualification or disqualification of the judge of the state court this court has nothing whatever to do. A disqualification of the judge in no respect affects the jurisdiction of the court.
Orders will be entered (1) denying the application of the complainants to file the affidavit of John G. 'Capron; (2) allowing the defendants hereto to file their pleas setting' up the suit heretofore brought by Mcholson against the same defendants for the same cause in abatement of the present suit; (3) denying the application of the defendants hereto for leave to .plead in abatement of the present suit the suit brought by Albert Meyer against the same defendants for the same cause in the superior court of Han Diego county; and (4) continuing under advisement the motion of the defendants for the dismissal of the present suit and the discontinuance of proceedings herein, with leave to introduce further proof upon the point indicated.