141 P. 404 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
This was an application for a writ of review to annul the proceedings of the board of supervisors of Yuba County relating to the organization of reclamation district number 784. The defendants appeared and demurred to the petition or complaint upon the grounds, among others, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that the plaintiffs have not the legal capacity to sue, it appearing that plaintiffs as individuals are seeking to attack the validity of the organization and legal existence of a reclamation district, a public or quasi public corporation. Subsequently motions to dismiss the action were made by defendants. After hearing the matter the court rendered its decision sustaining the demurrers and dismissing the action and the appeal is from the judgment entered in pursuance of said decision.
Several contentions are made by appellants and argued with much force, learning, and ability, but it is deemed necessary to consider only one point as that is decisive of the controversy.
In the complaint it is alleged: "That it is claimed and asserted and at all times since on or about May 6, 1908, it has been claimed and asserted by reclamation district number 784, defendants herein, that said reclamation district became a public or quasi public corporation and reclamation district, on or about the sixth day of May, 1908, under and by virtue of the petition and other proceedings and papers hereinafter mentioned. . . . That said reclamation district number 784 claims to be and as hereinafter alleged has for some time last past acted as and now is acting as a reclamation district, and claims that certain lands, including the lands of plaintiff herein mentioned, are situated within and comprise the territory of said reclamation district." The complaint was filed December 2, 1912, and it thus appears that for more than four years the said district had claimed and asserted that it was a reclamation district, and for some time prior to the filing of the complaint it had acted and is still acting as a reclamation district. *383
Regardless, then, of the legality of its organization, it is, without question, according to the allegations of the complaint, what is familiarly known as a de facto corporation. A corporation is recognized as de facto "when a number of persons have organized and acted as a corporation; have conducted their affairs to some extent at least, by the methods and through the officers usually employed by corporations; and have assumed the appearance, at least, of the counterfeit presentment of a legal corporate body." (Martin v. Deetz,
In Tulare Irrigation District v. Shepard,
The existence of these three requisites clearly appears in the complaint before us. In fact, it is difficult to conceive how they could be more emphatically presented. We take judicial notice, of course, of the general law under which reclamation districts may be organized, and "the attempt to organize" and "the actual user of the corporate franchise" are expressly averred.
But whatever expressions to the contrary may appear in some of the decisions, it must be deemed settled now in this state that the legal right of such corporation to exist and exercise its corporate powers can be inquired into and determined only by the state in quo warranto proceedings.
In Williams v. Board of Supervisors,
In Keech v. Joplin,
In Metcalfe v. Merritt,
This question received careful consideration in the case ofReclamation District No. 765 v. McPhee,
We must assume, of course, that the attorney-general will do his duty and that appellants will have no difficulty in obtaining redress by the method thus pointed out, if there be merit in their contention.
The foregoing cases seem to set this decisive question at rest and no further discussion is called for.
The judgment is affirmed.
Chipman, P. J., and Hart, J., concurred.