44 Cal. 213 | Cal. | 1872
The statute of 1862, amendatory of the “ Consolidation Act ” (Stats. 1862, p. 391), empowers the Board of Supervisors to lay out and open new streets within the corporate limits of the city and county, and west of Larkin and southwest of Johnson streets; and to order such streets to be graded or regraded to the official grade. The power to lay out, open, and grade streets carries with it, by necessary implication, the power to establish the grade of such streets, unless the power be expressly reserved, or granted to another body or officer.
Order Ho. 681, passed by the Supervisors January 30th, 1866, purported to establish the location, width, and grade of streets over that part of the city which includes the premises in controversy. This order was confirmed by the Act of March 8th, 1866 (Stats. 1866, p. 166), and thus the action of the Board, if not authorized by the general power to lay out, open, and grade streets, was rendered valid.
The record of the assessment, diagram, and warrant which
It is claimed by the defendant that the record is defective in two particulars.' In Himmelmann v. Danos, 35 Cal. p. 441, the question whether the record of the assessment should be separately signed was reserved. The usual and, in our opinion, proper mode for the authentication of such a record, is by appending the official certificate of the officer whose duty it is to make the record. He need not specify in his certificate the pages of the record upon which the assessment, etc., are copied; but when he does certify in that form, the certificate will be limited to the pages specified, unless the record itself shows that the reference to the pages is a clerical error. It is apparent, we think, that the omission of the numbers of the five preceding pages was a mere clerical error, and that such error was not calculated to mislead a person owning or dealing with a lot mentioned in the assessment.
The second objection is that the certificate appended to the record of the return is not signed by the Superintendent. It is provided in section twenty-two of the Act concerning streets in San Francisco, that the Superintendent “ shall be allowed, at the discretion of the Supervisors, not less than three, and not more than six deputies, to be by him ap
The point, that the fraudulent side agreement entered into between the contractor and a part of the lot owners, rendered the contract "between contractor and the city illegal and void, cannot be entertained, because it is not comprehended within any of the specifications in the statement on tire motion for a new trial. And, it may be added, that Nolan v. Reese, 32 Cal. 484, is decisive of the point adversely to the defendants. If the fact, that the defendants had no knowledge of the fraudulent agreement, until the time for an appeal to the Board had elapsed, entitles them to any relief, as the statute now stands, they could avail themselves of it only in a direct attack on the contract.
Judgment affirmed.