Hewes v. Reis

40 Cal. 255 | Cal. | 1870

Temple, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court, Wallace, J., Ehodes, C. J., and Spbague, J., concurring;

Action upon a street assessment for grading a portion of Townsend street, San Francisco. To support his claim the plaintiff introduced the assessment, warrant, diagrams and return, which were objected to on various grounds, and the rulings of the Court in admitting them against the objections of the defendants are assigned as error.

*261Tbe first objection is that the assessment does not contain a description of the property, and the particular point of the objection is, that the assessment refers to the diagram attached thereto to complete the description, which otherwise is imperfect.

There is no requirement that the assessment shall be upon one sheet of paper only, and if the description referred to had been upon a separate paper, attached to the paper containing the statement of the amounts assessed, it would probably not have been considered objectionable. The fact that the diagram is also a requirement of the law does not vitiate the reference for the purpose of helping out the description in the assessment. For that purpose it may be regarded as an exhibit attached to and made a part of the assessment. But the very purpose of requiring a diagram to be attached to the assessment is to aid the description given in the assessment, and to enable persons interested to ascertain with greater certainty what property is assessed. The assessment gives the numbers of the lots as shown upon the diagram, the frontage of each lot, and refers to the diagram for further description. Taking the assessment and the diagram referred to in it together, we have no trouble in making out the description of the lot precisely as given in the complaint.

The second point is that the lot is not assessed to the owner, and that it does not appear that the name of the owner was unknown to the Superintendent. In the assessment the word “unknown” is written opposite the number of the lot. The statute provides that the assessment shall show the name of the owner, if known; if unknown to the Superintendent, that the word “unknown” shall be written opposite the number of the lot. This assessment is an exact compliance with the statute, and, read with the statute, shows as effectually as the most elaborate certificate could that the lot was assessed to unknown owners because the name of the owner was unknown to the Superintendent. (See Himmelmann v. Steiner, 38 Cal. 175).

*262The third objection is that the Board of Supervisors never had any authority to enter into the contract in question, because,

First — The Board did not cause the notice inviting sealed proposals to be posted in the office- of the Superintendent of Streets for five days.

Second — The Clerk did not advertise as directed by the Board.

Third — No notice was posted in the Superintendent’s office.

The proof shows that the notice was published on the 14th of August, and specified that no bids would be received after the 17th of the same month — that is, that bids would only be received for three days after the notice was posted as required by the statute. • The law provides that before giving out any contract the Board shall cause notice to be published and posted for five days inviting sealed proposals. In the notice given, parties who might bid are expressly notified that bids would not be received after the third day. This is clearly a violation of the statute, and in a matter affecting the substantial rights of persons interested, and there can be no question that ordinarily such a defect would render subsequent proceedings entirely void. It is a condition precedent to the action of the Board in letting the contract, and the notice evidently was not published and posted as required by law.

But it is claimed that the Board acquired jurisdiction to order the work to be done by the publication of the notice of intention; that the subsequent proceedings are merely ministerial, and the statutory provisions concerning them, directory, and that an error in those proceedings would not vitiate the tax; that the proceedings are but steps taken to impose upon the defendants a tax; that the statute has provided a remedy for any persons who may feel aggrieved by any action of the Board in the matter — that is, by remonstrance or petition to the Board — and that the remedy thus provided is exclusive of any other.

It is perfectly evident that the provisions of the law in regard to appeals to the Board of Supervisors can have no *263bearing upon tbe case. The action complained of is that of the Board itself, in letting the contract without giving the notice required bj law. It would be absurd to provide an appeal from the Board to itself. The only remedy provided by the statute, therefore, isthatthepartiesmay appear before the Board while the matter is in fieri, and by petition or remonstrance make known their objections. That is to say, the defendants might have appeared before the Board at the time they proposed to open the bids and award the contract, and make their objections to their doing so, on the ground that the notice had not been published as required by law.

The defendants were not parties to the contract for grading the street, nor to the proceedings which led to it. It was competent for the Legislature to have authorized the Board to make the contract without publishing a notice of intention and without inviting bids, and then to have compelled the defendants to pay the amount through its sovereign power of taxation. The Board, however, is required to publish a notice of its intention to contract for grading the street, before it has the power to order the work to be done. It is then placed in just the position it might have been placed in without any publication at all. That is to say, it has power or jurisdiction to act. The statute then proceeds to prescribe the mode in which it shall exercise this power. It is a proceeding in derogation of the common law, by which the title of one may be divested and transferred to another, and every requisite having the semblance of benefit to the former must be complied with,

Nor do we see how the right to appear before the Board and remonstrate while the proceedings are in fieri, can be said to afford a remedy for an illegal act done by the Board.

The statute requires a series of acts to be performed before the defendants are properly chargeable with the tax. All the requirements of the statute must be complied with or the tax cannot be collected. The right to appear before the Board and object cannot certainly excuse the performance of these acts, which are conditions precedent to the *264exercise of tbe power; nor does this right of remonstrance possess the least semblance of a remedy for a wrong that may be committed notwithstanding the protest.

As to those matters concerning which an appeal lies to the Board of Supervisors, a very different rule prevails, as has been held by numerous decisions. They are such matters as are primarily under the control of the Superintendent of Streets, and in regard to which, if errors have been committed, ample remedy may be afforded by the Board.

Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded.

Cbookett, J., expressed no opinion.
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