12 P.2d 1087 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
Certain property owners within an assessment district, who sued to enjoin respondents from executing a contract awarded pursuant to proceedings had under the "Improvement Act of 1911" for the extension of the municipal pier, appeal from a judgment of nonsuit.
[1] Their first point is that they should have been allowed to prove that no permit for such extension had ever been obtained from the federal authorities as required by an act of Congress of March 3, 1899 (U.S. Code, Ann., title 33, sec. 401, p. 377) and that, upon such proof, they were entitled to the injunction, as, in the absence of such permit, the contract and its award were invalid. In support of their general allegation, that the city never had jurisdiction to order the work, appellants offered to prove that the proposed improvement was located in navigable waters of the Pacific Ocean and that the city had never obtained the requisite permit. Upon respondents' objection to its relevancy, the court properly rejected this offer because the allegation was a mere conclusion of law (Spaulding v. Wesson,
[2] While there seems to have been no previous determination of this express question by the appellate courts of this state, yet the reasoning upon an analogous question in Southlands Co.
v. City of San Diego,
[3] The next question presented is whether the improvement is upon submerged lands owned by the City of Redondo Beach as such ownership is contemplated by the provisions of the "Improvement Act of 1911". Statutes of 1915, page 62, granted to the city "all the right, title and interest of the State of California, held by said state by virtue of its sovereignty, in and to all the tidelands and submerged lands, within the present boundaries of said city, and situated below the line of mean high tide of the Pacific Ocean, to be forever held by said city, . . . in trust for the uses and purposes, and upon the express conditions following, to-wit: (a) Said lands shall be used by said city . . . solely . . . for the construction, maintenance and operationthereon of wharves, docks, piers, . . . necessary or convenientfor the promotion or accommodation of commerce and navigation . .." (Italics ours.)
The state held title to these tide lands in trust and for the benefit of the people, and such title was subservient to the public rights of navigation and fishing. (Santa Cruz v.Southern Pac. R.R. Co.,
Appellants next contend that the nature of the proposed improvement prevents it from conferring special benefit on the property assessed and therefore such assessment violates state and federal constitutional prohibitions against taking property without due process of law and without payment of just compensation. The work is described in the resolution of intention as the building of a wooden extension, approximately 268 feet long, to the existing municipal pier, with a boat landing, public comfort station, six rest-houses for the purpose of harboring benches or seats, and a lighting system. [4] In order to justify a local assessment based on a theory of benefits, the proposed improvement must be public and must confer an especial and local benefit upon the property to be assessed. If, from the nature of the improvements, it can be seen that the lots to be assessed are susceptible of some substantial benefit from it, the question of the extent of the benefit received is one which, *547
in the absence of fraud, gross injustice or demonstrable mistake, rests peculiarly in the determination of the city council, and its action will not be interfered with by the courts. (FederalConstruction Co. v. Ensign,
[5] In the present case appellants do not make the narrow contention that their property is not benefited, but broadly assert that no private property could possibly be specially benefited by a public wharf. The wharf would, from its very nature, attract pleasure seekers, desirous of boating, fishing, sightseeing, walking, etc. Such persons, in the pursuance of such pleasures, must necessarily spend money in satisfying their desires and would become potential customers of stores in the immediate vicinity of the wharf. The increased accessibility of the water, made possible by the improvement, would increase the uses to which adjacent property might be adapted. In short, business in the immediate vicinity would be stimulated by the influx of people, and property values would be created thereby. "There is no fairer test of special benefit received than that which determines the existence and amount of such benefit by the effect of the improvement upon the market value of the property to be assessed." (Federal Construction Co. v. Ensign, supra,
p. 212.) The growth of civilization and increase of population has greatly increased municipal functions, and in recognition of that fact the legislature from time to time has added to the purposes for which a city may levy local assessments. (See numerous instances cited in Irish v. Hahn, supra.) The express question here involved was decided adversely to appellants' contention in Solomon v. Wharf Improvement Dist.No. 1,
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to allow the requested amendment to the complaint.
Knight, Acting P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.