Opinion
The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (Metropolitan) is a public agency engaged in the procuring, storage and delivery of water at wholesale for its member public agencies, which include 12 municipal water districts. In carrying out its *112 authorized purposes Metropolitan constructs, operates and maintains its water supply facilities and fixes a uniform property tax rate for the payment of its obligations (Metropolitan Water District Act, §§ 124, 307, 308). 1 Calleguas Municipal Water District (Calleguas) is a member of Metropolitan and, as such, distributes for beneficial uses water which it obtains from Metropolitan. Its service area comprises the southerly portion of Ventura County and encompasses a population of approximately 285,000. In October 1978 Calleguas sought Metropolitan’s consent for the concurrent annexation to Metropolitan and Calleguas of uninhabited territory in Ventura County, designated as “Calleguas Annexation No. 17,” consisting of four parcels of land. By its resolution No. 7764, adopted November 14, 1978, Metropolitan granted the application. Pursuant to section 374 of the Metropolitan Water District Act, the resolution provided that taxable property within the annexed territory was subjеct to the levy of ad valorem taxes for the payment of Metropolitan’s outstanding obligations. 2 On November 14, 1978, Metropolitan directed its executive secretary, Karen Dorff, immediately to transmit a сertified copy of the resolution to the governing body of Calleguas (Metropolitan Water District Act, § 373) in order that proceedings for the annexation might be completed. The secretary refuses tо comply with such direction on the ground that section 1 of article XIII A of the California Constitution prohibits the imposition of ad valorem taxes in excess of 1 percent on property which was not subjeсt to such taxation prior to July 1, 1978, the effective date of section 1 (art. XIII A, § 5).
Metropolitan and Calleguas filed a petition for a writ of mandate (Code Civ. Proc., § 1084 et seq.) commanding Dorff to certify the resolution and to transmit a certified copy thereof to the governing body of Calleguas. Following issuance of an alternative writ and a hearing on the matter, judgment was entered ordering issuance of a pеremptory writ. Dorff appeals from the judgment.
*113
On June 6, 1978, article XIII A of the California Constitution was adopted by the voters of this state as an initiative measure (commonly known as the Jarvis-Gann initiative). In upholding the genеral validity of article XIII A, our Supreme Court stated that the article “in a number of particulars is imprecise and ambiguous” and characterized it as “a constitutional provision of a kind, similar to many others, which necessarily and over a period of time will require judicial, legislative and administrative construction.”
(Amador Valley Joint Union High Sch. Dist.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization
(1978)
As a general rule, in the absence of statute or constitutional provisions to the contrary, territory annexed to a municipal сorporation or district is liable to pay its proportionate share of the existing indebtedness of the corporation or district to which it is annexed.
(Linke
v.
Board of County Com’rs of Grand County
(1954)
The imрlied repeal of a statute by a later constitutional provision is not favored; in fact the presumption is against such repeal, especially where the prior statute has been generally understood and acted upon.
(Penziner
v.
West American Finance Co.
(1937)
Relying on the principle that arguments presented to the electorate in support of a proposed constitutional provision may be consulted in determining the purpose of the provision
(California Housing Finance Agency
v.
Patitucci
(1978)
Section 374 of the Metropolitan Water District Act was enacted in 1969. (Stats. 1969, ch. 209, § 374.) Pursuant to that statute, which embodies a well established common law principle, taxable property newly annexed to Metropolitan has been consistently subject to taxation for thе payment of any authorized or outstanding bonds or other obligations of the district. In the absence of a more clear-cut mandate than the language of section 1, subdivision (b) of article XIII A, we may not prеsume that such provision abrogated the principle expressed in section 374. (See
Williams
v.
Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority
(1968)
We conclude that section 1 of article XIII A of the California Constitution does not prohibit the levy of an ad valorem tax in excess of *116 1 percent on property annexed to Metropolitan after July 1, 1978, for the payment of indebtedness of Metropolitan approved by the voters prior to that date.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hanson, J., and Ackerman, J., * concurred.
A рetition for a rehearing was denied November 5, 1979, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 6, 1979.
Notes
The Metropolitan Water District Act (Stats. 1969, ch. 209, as amended) is set forth in Deering’s Water—Uncodified Acts, act 9129b, and in West’s Water Code—Appendix, chapter 35.
The resolution provided in part: “Section 3. In the event of such annexation: Taxes of general applicatiоn, comprised of voter-approved indebtedness of Metropolitan prior to the effective date of Article XIII A of the California Constitution, to be levied by Metropolitan on all taxable property within Metropolitan, as authorized by the Metropolitan Water District Act (Stats. 1969, ch. 209, as amended) shall also be levied within the Calleguas Annexation No. 17 area, commencing with the first fiscal year following annexation of said area.”
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
