115 Cal. 404 | Cal. | 1896
The plaintiffs brought this action to restrain the defendant, who is the collector of Turlock irrigation district, from selling certain lands belonging to them, in satisfaction of a delinquent assessment
The Turlock irrigation district was organized in 1887, and shortly after its organization an issue of bonds to the amount of $600,000 was voted by the district. Subsequently, in the year 1892, the district voted an additional issue of $600,000. In September, 1888, after the board of directors had declared its intention to sell its bonds to the amount of $550,000, it accepted a written offer made to it by L. M. Hickman, in which he proposed to buy the said amount of bonds “at the price of ninety per cent of the face value thereof,” but was not to make payment therefor until he could sell the same at not less than that price. Said proposal contained also the following agreement: “I further offer and agree to pay to said district all sums I may receive for said bonds over and above said ninety per cent and the cost
In December, 1891, the board of directors entered into an agreement with J. E. Wilbur, by which he was authorized, as the agent of the district, to sell the bonds of the district to the amount of $252,500, at the rate of ninety per cent of their par value, and it is alleged that under this agreement a large portion of the bonds of the district were disposed of through his agency, at the lowest price allowed by law, but without taking any of the proceedings for the sale thereof required by section 16 of the act.
In 1891 the board of directors entered into a contract with E. W. Gorrill for the construction of a dam, which was to constitute a portion of the works of the district, and, for securing the payments to be made to him for the work that he should do under this contract, the following clause was inserted therein:
“ The district shall advertise for sale, as prescribed by law, sufficient bonds for such payments, and said first party (Gorrill) shall bid therefor at least ninety per cent of the face value thereof, and, if no higher bids be received, such bonds shall be awarded to him, and he shall be credited in payment therefor the sum due him*411 from the district, and the district shall be credited on such payment under this contract the sum so bid for such bonds.”
The board of directors did not, however, follow these terms of the contract, and did not advertise for the sale of any of its bonds, nor did Gorrill make, or the board receive, any proposal for the purchase of said bonds, nor did the board award any purchase of the bonds to Gorrill, but delivered to him bonds to the amount of $150,000, in exchange for the amount due him upon the contract, and as a payment thereon, at the rate of ninety per cent of their face value. It is also alleged in the complaint that bonds to the amount of a few thousand dollars were exchanged by the board with its officers for their salaries, and also in payment of certain obligations of the district.
At the date of the assessment, October 3, 1893, the amount of bonds outstanding, including those legally as well as illegally disposed of by the board, amounted to $524,000, and for the purpose of paying the interest thereon the board levied an assessment of $40,855.51. There was at that time in the treasury of the district to the credit of the bond and interest fund, the sum of $9,598, applicable to the payment of interest, and which, it is alleged, was more than sufficient to pay the interest upon the bonds that had been legally issued.
Section 15 of the irrigation act provides that, after the organization of the district, the board of directors shall determine the amount of money necessary to be raised “for the purpose of constructing necessary irrigating canals and works, and acquiring the necessary property and rights therefor, and otherwise carrying out the provisions of this act” ; and shall thereupon submit to the electors of the district, at a special election to be called for the purpose, the question whether the bonds of the district shall be issued “ in the amount so determined.”
Section 16 of the act is as follows: “ The board may sell said bonds from time to time, in such quantities as
It is provided in section 37 that “the costand expense of purchasing and acquiring property, and constructing the works and improvements herein provided for, shall be wholly paid out of the construction fund”; and the authority given to the board of directors, in the subsequent portion of this section, to levy special assessments for defraying the expenses of the organization of the district, and the payment of the salaries of the officers and employees, clearly indicates that the construction fund thus referred to consists of the moneys received from the sales of the bonds authorized by section 16, and that this disposition of the bonds is not only limited to providing for this construction fund, but that they can be applied to no other object. It was held in Tregea v. Owens, 94 Cal. 317, that the directors have no authority to levy an assessment for the payment of the expenditures authorized by section 37, without a previous approval of the voters of the district, at an election held for that purpose. Under the principles of that case the directors have no authority to appropriate the bonds which the electors have voted to issue for the construction of the irrigation works, to the payment of salaries, or expenditures incurred in the management of the property. If, instead of selling the bonds, as directed by section 16, they could use them for these purposes, the provisions of section 41 would be futile, and, under an improvident or reckless board of directors, the bonds, which had been voted for the purpose of raising “money” with which to construct a canal, might be frittered away in useless expenditures and salaries, and the district receive no benefit whatever.
The irrigation act is evidently framed upon the theory, and with the intention on the part of the legislature, that the affairs of the district shall be conducted upon a ready-money basis, and not upon credit, and, to enable the directors to carry out this purpose, provision
The plaintiffs base their right to the relief sought in the complaint upon the grounds that, during the first ten years after the issuing of the bonds, the board of directors have no authority under the act to levy a greater assessment in any one year than will be “sufficient to raise the annual interest on the outstanding bonds,” and that the greater portion, if not all, of-the outstanding bonds of the district have been illegally issued, and were received, and are now held, by the persons to whom, they were issued with such knowledge of their invalidity, by reason of having been illegally issued; that they do not constitute valid obligations of the district upon which any interest should be paid, or for whose payment the defendant is authorized to sell the lands of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs do not show the amount of bonds which may have been legally disposed of by the board of directors, but allege that they are unable to state whether any have been legally disposed of. In support of this averment, they allege that neither the secretary nor the board of directors have kept any record of the bonds sold, their number, the date of sale, the price received, or the name of the purchaser, as required by section 15 of the act, and that the district has never had any such record; that, although they have endeavored to ascertain the number and amount of bonds sold by the district, they have, by reason of the omission to keep such record, failed to ascertain the same, and are unable to state said amount; and they contend that the failure of the proper officers to keep a bond register, as required by the act, relieves them from the necessity of showing, with greater definiteness, that any of the bonds have been sold or otherwise legally disposed of, and that, even if it should be shown that a portion of the outstanding bonds are legal obligations of the district, the portion is so small that the assessment
While the authority given to the board of directors by section 22, to levy an assessment sufficient to raise the annual interest on .the outstanding bonds, is limited to providing for the interest on the bonds that are outstanding at the time of the levy, it does not require that the amount of the assessment shall be the exact amount of that interest. The phrase “sufficient to raise” the annual interest is more elastic than would be the phrase “to the amount of” the annual interest, and must be held to authorize the board of directors to exercise a reasonable discretion in determining the amount to be levied. It is a matter of common experience that the entire levy of a tax or an assessment is very rarely paid as it matures, and the provision in the act for the sale of any real estate upon which the assessment is delinquent, and, if there be no other bidder, its purchase by the district, shows that it was in the mind of the legislature that the assessment might, in some instances, be not fully paid, and justifies the conclusion that it was not intended that the assessment should be the exact amount of the interest. The board of directors must be allowed to exercise a discretion in determining how great an assessment will be “sufficient to raise” the annual interest, and, unless it can be seen that they have abused this discretion, courts ought not to interfere with their action. If, however, the disparity between the amount of the assessment and the amount of the annual interest is so great as to make it appear that their action was improper, and not in the exercise of any discretion, so that the assessment is excessive, courts are authorized to prevent its enforcement. Although the levying of an assessment is an act of a legislative character, yet the board of directors is not clothed with the supremacy of the legislature in this respect, but is in the exercise of a delegated power, and subject to control by the judiciary if it steps beyond the limits of the
The complaint contains a great deal of matter relative to the conduct of the directors in the management of the district, which cannot be considered for the purpose of determining the validity of the assessment. For this purpose the court could not look into the contract with Gorrill for building the dam, whether it was for an excessive price, or was properly let in accordance with the terms of the statute. Neither is the validity of the election for the second issue of bonds a matter of consideration in this proceeding. Nor is it a ground for impeaching the assessment that former assessments for interest were in excess of the requirements for the interest on the bonds then outstanding, or that the moneys so raised had been misapplied by the directors. If, at the time of the levy of the present assessment, it was required for the payment of interest on the outstanding bonds of the district, the directors were authorized to levy it, and the property of the plaintiffs is liable for its proportion thereof. The complaint is far from being clear in all its averments, but a careful examination leads to the conclusion that it is sufficiently alleged therein that none of the outstanding bonds of the district were issued in conformity with the requirements of the statute, and that the persons to whom they were issued took them with such knowledge of their invalidity that they do not constitute enforceable obligations against the district, for which the property of the plaintiffs is liable. The averments- of the complaint are sufficiently pointed to these defects against the liability of the plaintiff’s property, so that, if they are true, the plaintiffs would be entitled to the relief they seek.
The complaint does not definitely show that there are
As the inability of the plaintiffs to determine the amount of the bonds that have been legally disposed of results from the failure of the officers of the district to keep such a record of their disposal as is required by
Whether a bona fide holder of any of the bonds thus illegally disposed of could enforce them against the district, or whether the district would be liable for the interest upon any of the bonds thus illegally disposed of, is not involved in this action. It is not shown by the complaint that any of the bonds are in the hands of a bona fide holder, and, in the absence of any averments to the contrary, it is to be assumed that Gorrill and the other persons to whom they were delivered still retain them. Neither is the right of Gorrill to a recovery against the district for the work done by him under his contract presented in this action. If the benefits received and enjoyed by the district under his performance of the contract give him an equitable right of recovery therefor, such right is independent of any liability of the district upon the bonds. If the bonds were issued to him in violation of the statute, they cannot, in his hands, be valid obligations against the district, even though they were taken in payment for his work. The law is well settled that one dealing with a municipal corporation is charged with a knowledge of all the limitations upon the power of its officers, and that he can have no right of action upon its written obligation if it was entered into in disregard of statutory requirements. Gorrill must be held to have taken the bonds with notice of their illegality by reason of the want of power in the board of directors to dispose of them in this manner, or without following the course prescribed in section 16 of the act.
It was not necessary to join the district as a party to the action. No relief is sought against it, nor is its presence necessary to a proper' solution of the questions presented by the complaint. The plaintiffs are not
Neither was it necessary to make Gorrill or Hickman defendants herein. The transactions with Hickman did not have the effect to make him a purchaser of the bonds, but he thereby became merely the agent of the board for their sale, and, whatever right of action Gorrill may have against the district, either upon his contract, or upon the bonds received by him, will not be affected by the judgment herein.
The order dissolving the injunction and the judgment in favor of the defendant are reversed, and the court below is directed to overrule the demurrer to the com
Van Fleet, J., McFarland, J., Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.