Opinion
Plaintiffs 1 brought this taxpayers’ suit to enjoin defendants from proceeding with a consolidation plan involving the junior high schools in the Los Altos School District. Defendants’ demurrer to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint (hereafter referred to as complaint) was sustained by the trial court as to plaintiffs’ second cause of action, and plaintiffs were given 15 days to amend. Plaintiffs did not amend, and upon their motion, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ second cause of action. Plaintiffs now appeal from this order of dismissal. 2
Plaintiffs brought this action to obtain a temporary and permanent injunction preventing defendants from proceeding with any phase of the сonsolidation plan that is the subject of this dispute, including the construction or alteration of classrooms and other facilities, the making of contracts, and the acceptance of bids for the sale of school property. Plaintiffs object to the proposed consolidation plan for a number оf reasons. 3 The first cause of action alleges that the consolidation plan *25 adopted by the defendants wastes public funds and constitutes a manifest abuse of discretion because there are less expensive alternative plans available; that these alternative plans would cost from $1,100,000 to $1,200,000 less tо implement; that they would “provide a level of benefits, services, efficiency, and protection of educational goals and values equal to or greater than the level of benefits, services, efficiency and protection provided by the consolidation plan adopted by the Board of Trusteеs”; that the plan adopted by the board of trustees would “provide no substantial educational services, benefits, or values greater than the alternative plans for consolidation which were presented to the Board of Trustees”; that defendants were aware of these facts when the selection of thе consolidation plan was made; that defendants have repeatedly refused to reevaluate their decision despite repeated requests by plaintiffs that they do so; that defendant Relocatable Structures, Inc., will soon begin ordering materials and subcontracting out work to implement this consolidation рlan; and that because of this, plaintiffs will be irreparably injured if defendants are not enjoined from proceeding with the consolidation plan selected.
In the second cause of action, plaintiffs allege that in “implementing the consolidation plan adopted on October 7, 1974, the Los Altos School District must spend approximately $747,000 needlessly, uselessly, and improvidently in that . . . neither the Los Altos School District, the schools within the Los Altos School District, the teachers, administration, taxpayers, or students in the Los Altos School District, or anyone else, will receive any financial, educational, or public benefits, or any other type of benefits, from the expenditure of this $747,000”; that the construction of new facilities under the consolidation plan will “duplicate already existing, adequate, and equivalent facilities and assets and these existing facilities and assets will not be utilized by the Los Altos School District as a result of this expenditure”; and that the expenditure of this $747,000 without “the receipt of any benefit, public or otherwise, by the Los Altos School District, was a manifest abuse of discretion and beyond the jurisdiction of the Board of Trustees of the Los Altos School District.”
There are two issues raised on appeal: first, whether plaintiffs have standing to bring suit under section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure, and whether the allegations of the complaint state a cause of action *26 under that section; and, second, whether the allegations state a cause of action for ultra vires actions under the common, law basis for taxpayers’ suits.
It is settled that a taxpayer can bring suit against governmental bodies in California under either of two theories, one statutory, the other based upon the common law. Section 526a of the Code of Civil Procedure
4
provides, in part, that “An. action to obtain a judgment, restraining and preventing any illegal expenditure of,
waste of,
or injuiy to, the estate,
funds,
or other property
of a county, town, city or city and county of the state,
may be maintained against any officer thereof, оr any agent, or other person, acting in its behalf, either by a citizen resident therein, or by a corporation, who is assessed for and is liable to pay, or, within one year before the commencement of the action, has paid, a tax therein.” (Italics added.) This provision is to be compared to and contrasted with the common law authority for taxpayer suits, as stated in
Silver
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1961)
While the two theories are similar in many respects, they differ in two important areas. First, section 526a includes the waste of public property as a ground for bringing suit, while the common law limits the grounds to fraud, collusion, ultra vires, or a failure to perform a duty specifiсally enjoined. While waste may seem to be a form of ultra vires act, courts have distinguished between the two. (See
City of Ceres
v.
City of Modesto
(1969)
Defendants contend that plaintiffs have no standing to sue for waste under section 526a since it only applies to suits directed at counties, towns, cities, or cities and counties of the state, and defendant *27 school district falls into none of these categories. 5 Since plaintiffs have cited no authority extending section 526a to school districts, defendants arguе that plaintiffs are without standing to sue under that statute.
The cases arising under section 526a have consistently held that the statute is to be liberally construed. In
Blair
v.
Pitchess
(1971)
“California courts have consistently construed section 526a liberally to achieve this remedial purpose. . ..
“Moreover, we have not limited suits under section 526a to challenges of policies or ordinances adopted by the county, city or town. If county, town or city officials implement a state stаtute or even the provisions of the state Constitution, an injunction under section 526a will issue to restrain such enforcement if the provision is unconstitutional.
(Lundberg
v.
County of Alameda
(1956)
*28
In
Serrano
v.
Priest
(1971)
More recently, in
Stanson
v.
Mott
(1976)
The precise language of section 526a appears to limit its application to actions against officers of a county, town, city, or city and county of the state, or any agent or other person acting on behalf of any of said entities. However, as has been noted, language contained in various Supreme Court decisions declares that the statute is not so restricted in its application. Citing
Ahlgren
v.
Carr, supra
(a case which did not even mention § 526a), the court, in
Blair
v.
Pitchess, supra
(Pitchess was a
county, not
state, official), indicated that state officials could be sued under the provisions of section 526a. Later, in a footnote on page 618 of
Serrano
v.
Priest, supra,
the court stated that “it has been held that state officers too may be sued under section 526a,” citing
Blair
v.
Pitchess
and
Ahlgren
v.
Carr,
both
supra.
Again, in
Adams
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1974)
In
Duskin
v.
San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
(1973)
In the present case, plaintiffs are suing to enjoin wasteful, and possibly illegal, еxpenditures of public funds by defendant school district and its officers. Although a school district iS"*not, strictly speaking, a “county, *30 town, city or city and county,” but rather a creature of state law, 8 it is hard to understand how this difference has any bearing on the purpose of section 526a, to “ ‘enable a large body of the citizenry to challenge governmental action which would otherwise go unchallenged in the courts because of the standing requirement.’ ” (Blair v. Pitchess, supra, at pp. 267-268, quoting Comment, Taxpayers’ Suits: A Survey and Summary (1960) 69 Yale L.J. 895, 904.) The interest of a taxpayer in suing a school district to enjoin wasteful expenditures is identical to that of the taxpayer suing a county government to enjoin waste. Given that section 526a is tо be liberally construed to achieve its remedial purpose (Blair v. Pitchess, supra, at p. 268) and that our Supreme Court has already implicitly held that section 526a authorizes a suit against state officials (Serrano v. Priest, supra; Adams v. Department of Motor Vehicles, supra, at p. 151; Stanson v. Mott, supra), there would appear to be no reason why section 526a should not be construed so as to afford plaintiffs standing to sue defendant school district.
With regard to the sufficiency of the allegations to state a cause of action under section 526a, plaintiffs have alleged that defendants will be expending public funds on a consolidation plan that costs a great deal more than alternative plans considered, without a finding of any additionаl public benefit. Such allegations go beyond a mere difference in judgment between plaintiffs and defendants, and are sufficient to state a cause of action for waste under section 526a. (City of Ceres v. City of Modesto, supra.)
Since we have concluded that plaintiffs have standing to sue under the provisions of section 526a and that they have properly pleaded a cause of action under that section, we need not determine whether the allegations of their complaint also state a cause of action for ultra vires actions under the common law basis.for taxpayers’ suits.
The order dismissing plaintiffs’ second cause of action is reversеd.
Taylor, P. J., and Kane, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 16, 1977.
Notes
The plaintiffs in this action are the Los Altos Property Owners Association, an unincorporated association, and E. O. Huttlinger, a citizen resident of the Los Altos School District, acting individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated. The defendants are Ian L. Hutcheon, individually and as Superintendent of Schools for the Los Altos School District; Keith D. Vander-Zyl, individually and as Business Manager for the Los Altos School District; M. Rita Sampson, Phyliss Levin, Shirley R. Brey, Gerald E. Rosenblum and Katrina Smathers, individually and as members of the Board of Trustees; the Board of Trustees of the Los Altos School District; and Relocаtable Structures, Inc., a California corporation. All parties are represented on appeal except for Relocatable Structures, Inc.
Plaintiffs’ appeal was originally dismissed by this court because there were four causes of action still pending on the complaint at the trial court lеvel, and plaintiffs’ appeal was therefore in violation of the one final judgment rule. However, this dismissal was vacated by this court when plaintiffs dismissed without prejudice the four remaining causes of action set forth in their complaint.
Although the dismissal of the second cause of action is the only matter before this court, because the second cause of action realleges and incorporates all of the allegations contained in the first cause of action, the factual allegations of both causes of action will be discussed. In determining whether plaintiffs have stated a cause of action, this court
*25
must consider all properly pleaded factual allegations as true for the purpose of review, but deductions, contentions and conclusions of fact or law are not deemed admitted.
(Daar
v.
Yellow Cab Co.
(1967)
Unless otherwise stated, all statutory references will be to the Code of Civil Procedure.
“School districts are agencies of the state for the local operation of the state school system.”
(Hall
v.
City of Taft
(1956)
A careful reading of the
Ahlgren
case fails to reveal any reference to section 526a. In holding that the taxpayers had standing to sue
state officials,
the court relied solely upon the common law theory set out in
Silver
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1961)
In the recent case of
Gould
v.
People
(1976)
See footnote 5, ante.
