MORRIS MEYERFELD, Jr., et al., Petitioners, v. SOUTH SAN JOAQUIN IRRIGATION DISTRICT et al., Respondents; MARY E. MORRIS et al., Interveners
S. F. No. 15271
In Bank
April 30, 1935
Rehearing Denied May 27, 1935
3 Cal.2d 409
The appeal of defendant is sustained in toto and the appeal of plaintiff denied in toto. Accordingly, the judgment is reversed as to paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 and 9 thereof and as to paragraphs 6 and 7 thereof it is affirmed. The cause is remanded for further proceedings in accord with the holding hereinabove outlined.
Curtis, J., Waste, C. J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Thomas J. Straub and W. R. Dunn, as Amici Curiae on Behalf of Petitioners.
Nutter & Rutherford for Respondents.
W. Coburn Cook and Clark, Nichols & Eltse for Interveners.
SHENK, J.—Mandamus to compel the respondent district and its officers to pay interest and principal on certain outstanding bonds of the district known as the sixth issue.
The sixth bond issue, now under consideration, is not specifically included in the plan of readjustment involved in the federal court proceeding. This sixth issue was in the sum of $1,100,000, due serially 1927-1965, with interest at five per cent per annum. These bonds were authorized at an election held in May, 1925. Of this issue, bonds in the sum of $900,000 were sold and delivered on August 1, 1925, pursuant to a bid accepted by the directors of the district on July 11, 1925, and the remaining $200,000 in bonds were sold and delivered in June, 1926, pursuant to a bid received on the eighth day of that month. All of the proceeds of the bonds of the sixth issue were used to construct the Melones dam on the Stanislaus River. Each block of said bonds was duly advertised to be sold. Sealed bids were invited and the bonds were issued in form the same as the prior general bonds of the district. These steps were taken in conformity with the requirements of the act as they existed when said steps were severally taken. But the bid submitted for the block of $900,000 in bonds contained the following condition: “This bid is made upon the condition that the acceptance of this bid by the district, and its sale and delivery of said bonds to the undersigned, shall constitute a contract obligation by the district,
The contract referred to in each conditional bid was executed under date of January 2, 1925, between the Oakdale Irrigation District and the South San Francisco Irrigation District, through their respective boards of directors, as first parties, and Pacific Gas and Electric Company and Sierra and San Francisco Power Company, as second parties. The instrument recited among other things that the several parties owned and controlled certain water rights on the main and south forks of the Stanislaus River and that it was was the desire of all parties to the contract to settle all claims between them as to their respective rights in and to the waters of said river and its tributaries by the construction by the districts of the Melones dam and the operation of a power plant in connection therewith by the power companies upon payment to the districts of $5,175,000 in semiannual instalments of $64,687.50 to each district. As to the disposition by the districts of such power revenues the contract contained this provision: “Such payments shall be used by Irrigation Districts for the following purposes: First, to pay the interest accrued upon the bonds, the proceeds from the sales of which were used to construct said Melones dam; second, to purchase and cancel, from time to time, any of said bonds outstanding, to the end that said bonds shall be retired and cancelled at the earliest practicable date; and, third, and thereafter for such other purposes as the district may desire.”
After the power plant installed in connection with the dam was put in operation, the officers of the district established in its treasury separate funds called “Melones Bond Interest Fund” and “Melones Bond Redemption Fund“. These funds were thereafter held and made applicable by the district board solely to the bonds of the sixth issue, and interest and principal requirements of such bonds have
Intervener Mary E. Morris is the owner of bonds in the sum of $98,000 of the first five issues. Together with other owners representing in all six per cent of the entire first five issues, she refused to exchange her bonds for refunding bonds authorized by the electors of the district on August 14, 1931. Thereafter she commenced a proceeding in this court for a writ of mandate to compel the officers of the district, among other things, to levy an assessment sufficient to discharge the district‘s accrued obligations under her bonds, claiming that the district and its officers were, and had been paying obligations on the refunding bonds and ignoring her own demands until she should elect to exchange her bonds for refunding bonds, and in derogation of her rights. That proceeding was held in abeyance by this court until the termination of the federal court proceeding involving the first five issues. (Morris v. South San Joaquin Irr. Dist., supra.) The petition in the Morris proceeding was filed on June 26, 1934. Pending the determination of that proceeding some question arose as to the authority of the district to allocate moneys on hand in the Melones bond funds exclusively to the payment of obligations on the bonds of the sixth issue. Whereupon the officers of the district withheld further payments on bonds of the sixth issue from funds admittedly on hand in the Melones bond funds and available for such payments. The present proceeding was commenced on September 29, 1934, to compel the district and its officers to discharge the obligations under the bonds of the sixth issue from funds received by the district under the contract with the power companies.
The respondents herein filed an answer admitting generally the allegations of the petition and alleging that they had withheld payments on the petitioner‘s bonds from the special Melones bond funds by reason of the terms of the alternative writ in the Morris case which required them to pay the bond obligations on the Morris bonds from any bond funds of the district or show cause on a day certain why they had not done so. Thereafter Mary E. Morris and George F. Covell, as the owners of bonds of the first five issues, each filed a petition in intervention herein chal-
The powers of the board with reference to the alleged infringement of the rights of the interveners must necessarily be measured by the law in effect at the time the successive challenged steps were taken. (W. B. Worthen Co. v. Kavanaugh, 295 U. S. 56 [55 Sup. Ct. 555, 79 L. Ed. 1298, 97 A. L. R. 905]; Hershey v. Cole, 130 Cal. App. 683 [20 Pac. (2d) 972], and cases therein cited.) The powers and duties with respect to the sale of the $900,000 in bonds of the sixth issue will first be considered. These bonds were sold prior to the amendment of section 39 of the act in 1925. At the time of the authorization, sale and issuance of these bonds the Irrigation District Act provided a complete and unequivocal method of incurring indebtedness by the issue of bonds and of raising money in payment of the same. Such method was the measure of the power of the board. (McCoy v. Briant, 53 Cal. 247.) No question of the regularity of the authorization of bonds of the sixth issue is presented. The proceedings inviting proposals for the sale were regular. The bonds were advertised to be sold as general bonds of the district, the same in effect as in the case of the first five issues. Sealed bids were received. Section 32 of the act required that the board should award the bonds to the highest responsible bidder. Section 33 provided: “Said bonds, and the interest thereon, shall be paid by revenues derived from an annual assessment upon the real property in the district; and all the land within the district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for such payments as hereinafter provided.”
As stated, the bonds of the sixth issue were issued in form the same as bonds of the prior issues, namely, as general bonds of the district. By section 33 of the act the law charged the lands in the district as security for the payment of said bonds. If the revenue from the power contract should fail for any reason the lands in the district would be liable to assessment in discharge of the indebted-
The same result must follow as to the issuance of the remaining $200,000 of bonds sold in June, 1926. The only change in the law in the meantime and in any way applicable to the subject was an amendment of section 39 in 1925 (
The conclusions announced are further fortified by the fact that the legislature in 1931 (
Other points made by the parties need not be discussed, as the foregoing is deemed determinative of the proceeding.
Since there is no duty enjoined by law on the respondents to recognize the alleged preferential rights of the petitioner, the peremptory writ is denied.
Thompson, J., Curtis, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C. J., concurred.
A rehearing was denied on May 27, 1935, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
THE COURT.—On petition for rehearing, it is urged for the first time that a ratifying statute of 1931 (
Also, on petition for rehearing amici curiae on behalf of Sierra and San Francisco Power Company and Pacific
The petition for rehearing is denied.
