33 Cal. 134 | Cal. | 1867
This is one of a large class of cases, usually called the “ City Slip Cases,” which are brought by the purchasers of certain lots from the city, to recover back the purchase money. Most of the material facts in this case are the same as those in McCracken v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 621; Grogan v. San Francisco, 18 Cal. 610; Pimental v. San Francisco, 21 Cal. 351; and Satterlee v. San Francisco, 23 Cal. 314. Those cases received the most careful and laborious consideration of the Court, and deservedly so, for they involved important questions touching the powers, rights and liabilities of the corporation, and upon their decision depended property of great value. It was determined by the Court in those cases, that the ordinance of the city, Ho. 481, passed December 5th, 1853, authorizing the sale and conveyance of the lots, was a nullity; that the sales made and the deeds executed under the ordinance were void; that the sales were not ratified, and were incapable of being ratified by the passage of Ordinance Ho. 493, passed on the day of sale of the lots; that the sale and conveyance of the lots by the city to the purchaser, and his payment of the purchase money to the officers of the city, did .not pass to him any right, title or interest in or to the lots; that the purchase money having been paid into the City Treasury, and the city having appropriated the same to municipal purposes, she became liable to the purchaser therefor, in an action for its recovery.
The course of reasoning by which those conclusions are reached, is quite fully stated in the very able and elaborate opinions in those cases, after the most searching and exhaustive argument of able counsel; and although some propositions are laid down and remarks made, that were not necessary to the decision of the points involved in those cases, yet we see no good reason for questioning the soundness of the conclusions drawn from the facts in those cases; and if we were not fully satisfied with them, the current of authority is
This cause was submitted to this Court, together with several others of the same character, in some of which the city was the appellant, and in others the respondent; and the causes have been argued mainly on the points made by the city—the respondent in this case.
The first point is: “ The conveyance of the lots of land, by the City of San Francisco to the appellant, was not void, but only voidable, and might ripen into a title. The appellant therefore had no cause of action until he made a reconveyance and surrender of that property to the city.”
Regarding the conveyance as voidable, doubtless the proposition could be successfully maintained; but concurring as we do in the decisions on this point, in the cases mentioned, that the sale and conveyance were void, we are bound to hold that the conveyance could not ripen into a title, and did not nor could vest in the purchaser any right, title or interest in the lots; and that the purchaser having acquired from the city by virtue of the attempted sale neither the title nor the possession of the lots, he is not required to convey or transfer either to the city, prior to the commencement of an action to recover the purchase money.
The second point is: “If the city is liable in this action, it is only because she has appropriated the moneys of the plaintiff.” There can be no doubt that this position is correct beyond a peradventure, for it is sustained both by reason and authority. The cases cited proceed distinctly on that theory, and in each of them, unless in the case of Satterlee, the appropriation of the money by the city was found as a fact. And the language of Mr. Chief Justice Field is very pointed and forcible. In Pimental v. San Francisco he says : “We do not appreciate the morality which denies in such cases any rights to the individual whose money or other property has been thus appropriated.” In McCracken v. San Francisco his language is: “ She [the city] cannot appropriate to her own use the property of others and screen herself from
The plaintiff places the liability of the city upon the fact
But it is said that the authorities have a general jurisdiction over her claims to money; that her control of her money matters is as general as that of a citizen, with some unimportant exceptions, and that she has generally the power to receive money, and this she may do without any ordinance, the same as could a private person or a banking corporation. This is not true as a general proposition. While there is conceded to the city the power to receive money, the exception is broader than the rule. A municipal corporation is the creature of the statute, invested with such power and capacity only as is conferred by the statute, or passes by necessary implication from the statutory grant. All powers outside of those limits are as much beyond her reach as if she had never been created. Her artificial existence is absolutely bounded and circumscribed by those limits. She has not all the powers of a natural person except as restricted by the statute, but she possesses none except such as are imparted to ' her by the charter of her existence. She may receive a conveyance of real estate, in trust, if so authorized by the charter, but without such authority the title would not pass to her. And so in relation to the receiving of money. The statutes authorize the corporation to levy and assess taxes, licenses, etc.; and she has power to receive money paid for those purposes, but she cannot receive money paid as duties upon imports, because of the utter want of
But it is insisted that if the corporation can act upon the general subject to which the particular act belongs, this is enough; and although the particular act is forbidden, yet when done by her agents, she is bound, because of her general jurisdiction over the subject. The proposition stated more narrowly, so as to be applicable to the case, is : that as the city has the general power to receive money, the receipt by her agents in her name, of money paid for any purpose, will bind her. But this proposition to be true must be more limited in its terms. The city has neither the general power to sell lands, nor to receive money. She must have the capacity then and there to sell the land, or to receive the money for the purpose for which it is offered, or the acts of her agents will not bind her. This must be so, otherwise the restrictions and limitations imposed upon her by the charter, and which constitute an essential part of her artificial being, are idle and meaningless. The City Treasurer, conceiving that it would be advantageous to the city to have the treasury replenished, might go through the form of selling the City Hall to one who was willing to loan to the city his money, at the legal rate of interest, and upon the Treasurer’s receipt, of the money, the city would be liable for its repayment, with interest, because under the proposition as stated, she can act upon the general subject of the receipt of money.
It is generally true that the acts of the officials of the city falling within the general scope of the authority conferred upon them, will bind the city, and she will be responsible for all the legitimate consequences of those acts. It is on this principle that several of the cases cited by the plaintiff depend. For example : The city may levy a tax for municipal purposes, and it is the duty of the Assessor to make the assessment, and of the Collector to collect the taxes. The
It should not fail to be noted that there is a clear distinction between most municipal corporations, as they exist in Great Britain, and those of more recent date in the United States. The former depend upon prescription for their existence and capacity; while the latter find every element of their jurisdiction- within their respective charters. Under the system of charters created by the Legislature, defining the corporate powers and the mode of procedure of the corporate authorities, it would be altogether out of the question for the corporation to be bound by acts such as were found in De Grave v. The Corporation of Monmouth, 19 Eng. Com. Law C. P. 109. In that case it was held that the examination of the weights and measures, which were the subject of the alleged contract, at a meeting of the corporation, and the subsequent use of some of them, were the exercise of acts of ownership over them, and that by so doing, the corporation recognized the contract for their purchase. In Zottman v. San Francisco, 20 Cal. 96, after a contract had been made for the erection of an iron fence around Portsmouth Square, according to certain plans and specifications, the President of the Board of Aldermen and a special committee from that body and certain other officers of the city, considering that it would be more advantageous to the city to have a stone base
The liability of the city cannot be deduced from the principle, that if her authorities, while discharging any of the functions pertaining to them by law, inflict an injury upon any one, she is held liable for the tort to the person injured. In the forcible language of the counsel for the plaintiff: “ Responsibility everywhere accompanies privilege.” The authority to open the street, or to levy and collect the tax, or to sell the tract of land—which constitutes the privilege— being given, the responsibility attaches for the acts of her agents in the performance of the duties committed to them in respect to those matters. But if her agents should enter upon some undertaking, in her name, without authority of law, she would be entirely unaffected by their acts, defaults.
The city, in our opinion, not being responsible for the acts of her assumed agents up to and including the placing of the money in the treasury, and the money being then the money of the plaintiff, responsibility for the money does not attach to her till she has converted it to her own use. The unauthorized act of the Treasurer in paying it out to a third person, is not the act of the city, and it makes no difference in this respect whether he pays it to a creditor of the city, or to any other person. Suppose that he or the Secretary of the Land Committee, while the money was in his hands, acting upon the fact, of which all persons concerned had notice, that the sale was a nullity, had returned the money to the plaintiff, it could not be said that the act of payment was the act of the city. She could not rightfully do anything with the money, and to be responsible for it, she must have wrongfully converted it to her own use, and this she must have done by some corporate act, and the only act competent for that purpose was an appropriation, for that is the only manner in which she can dispose of money. The reports of the Secretary of the Land Committee and of the Treasurer, and the acceptance of the reports by the Common Council, neither changed the ownership, the custody or control of the money—it still remained in the hands of the Treasurer, and continued the property of the plaintiff.
It is not intended to controvert the position of the plaintiff that if the city received the money of the plaintiff, she is liable in an action for its recovery, for it is correct beyond a doubt; but the important question in the case must first be decided: did she receive the money ? Lfor is it intended to deny the doctrine of the Massachusetts cases cited by the plaintiff. We understand it to be a rule of law that the principal, whether a natural or an artificial person, is responsible for the acts of his agents, while they are acting within the scope of their employment, and as a necessary inference therefrom that when they are not so acting, he is not respon
The immunity of the city from responsibility for the unauthorized acts of her assumed agents, can work no greater hardship than, would • occur if the principal were a private corporation or person; for in each case those who deal with those professing to be agents, must see that they are such agents, and are invested with proper authority; and if they are not what they assume' to be, they are responsible for their acts, and in the one case as well as the other, the person dealing with the pretended agent may follow the property improperly obtained from him.
The third point is: “ The mode in which the city could render itself liable for the appropriation of the moneys being pointed out in the charter, not having been pursued, the city is not liable, for the mode is a part of the power.” This case differs from the preceding cases of the same class mainly in this particular. In the cases of McCracken, Grogan and Pimental it was found that Ordinance Ho. 505, and Joint Besolutions Ho. 383 and Ho. 405, by which portions of the proceeds of the sale were appropriated, were legally passed by the legislative authority of the city; but in the present
It is unnecessary to pass upon the fourth point—that: “ If
Judgment affirmed.
■ Mr. Justice Lawyer and Mr. Justice Shaeter, being disqualified, did not sit in this case.