150 P. 367 | Cal. | 1915
A general demurrer was sustained to plaintiff's complaint and from the judgment which followed it, dismissing the action, plaintiff appeals. The complaint charged that the defendants while acting, one as mayor, the other as members of the council, of the city of Santa Cruz, made certain illegal expenditures for and on account of which plaintiff seeks a judgment against them, compelling them to pay into the city treasury for the benefit of the taxpayers and property owners of the city the sum of $37,163.
So far as the character of this action is concerned, by the great weight of authority a taxpayer may maintain it. The provision of section
The complaint charged in ten separate counts, alleging illegal payments in matters of widely different character. The general rule is that the municipality itself, upon the refusal of its officers to maintain the action, should be impleaded as a party defendant, but of course it is fundamental that where a demand would be unavailing, as is shown to be the case under the present complaint, a demand upon the municipal authorities so to commence proceedings is unnecessary. (Mock v. Santa Rosa,
Since the general demurrer to plaintiffs right to maintain this character of action was improperly sustained, it becomes necessary to consider at least briefly these separate counts. The learned judge of the trial court seems to have taken the view that because there was a power within the municipality to make the expenditures complained of, that because the municipality had jurisdiction, so to speak, over the subject-matter of these expenditures, the asserted irregularities and illegalities in the mode of payment could not form the subject of an action against the officials. The argument here advanced by respondent is that the city council had general jurisdiction over and general power to do all the things complained of and that "the lower court properly held that it would become utterly impossible to induce good and responsible men to serve the public in an official capacity if the courts of this state should sanction an action of this kind by which it is sought to declare a public official's private property forfeited when he has done no wrong, and there is no showing that the taxpayers of the city have not received full value for every cent of money expended. It would, therefore, be an absolute contravention of sound public policy *484 to deprive cities of the public services, in an official capacity, of their responsible citizens of substance who might, at any time, be made the victims of such an outrageous action as this at the instance of some spiteful and politically aggrieved person." There is a modicum of truth in this, but only a modicum. The converse of the argument is that the powers of municipal officers are well defined. Their modes of procedure in all matters of expenditure are pointed out with particularity. They are given by law a legal adviser, and, if not, are fully empowered to employ one. There is no occasion whatsoever for their taking any step without such advice. There is no reason for their ever making any illegal expenditure of the public's moneys. To countenance the making by these officials of an illegal expenditure in one case, is to open wide the door for like expenditures in every case. And even if it can be truly said that in a specific instance the citizens and taxpayers have received the benefit of the expenditure, this by no means answers the objection that the expenditure itself was illegal. Let us use but one illustration. Charters usually call for competitive bidding on contracts involving the expenditure of moneys over a fixed amount. Assume that such a contract is let by the council without the required competitive bidding; assume further that the contract has been properly performed, who shall say that the price at which the contract was so let was the lowest reasonable price that could have been obtained if bids had been called for, and who will not at once say that to permit this is to open wide the door to favoritisms of all kinds, the very prevention of which was one of the important purposes of the law?
Coming now to the counts of the complaint, the first, third, fourth, eighth, and ninth charge, illegal expenditures of the city's funds for street work. Jurisdiction of street work is given to the city and city council by section 14 of article II of its charter. (Stats. 1911, p. 1866.) But the provisions of the charter declare merely, in general language, that the city council is empowered to establish and change the grade and to lay out, open, extend, widen, narrow, vacate, pave, and repave, etc., the streets, and alleys and highways. The method by which this must be done, the course which must be pursued, is that prescribed in the Vrooman Act [Stats. 1885, p. 147], whose terms become a part of the charter provisions *485
under section 246 thereof. It is not to be doubted, under this condition of the law of Santa Cruz, that the General Street Act provides the mode and measures the power of the municipal authorities in the matters with which this general street law deals. The authorities are too abundant and too uniform upon this proposition to call for anything more than a citation to a few of them. (Los Angeles v. Waldron,
The first count charges the illegal payment of $16,086.50 for work upon the public streets, avenues, lanes, alleys, courts, etc., of the city. It is alleged that the claims so audited, allowed, and paid were not itemized, and for that reason it is impossible for the plaintiff to make the allegations of his complaint more specific as to the character of the work done or where it was done; that no resolution of intention to perform the work was ever passed or adopted; that no competitive bids or proposals were ever called for; that the work was not let to the lowest responsible bidder; that no assessment was ever levied upon the lots or lands fronting upon the streets upon which the work was done, but, to the contrary, it was done by day labor and paid for out of the general fund of the city. It is alleged that upon certain of these streets work was done in accordance with the provisions of the street law and the cost of the work properly charged against the property benefited thereby, but the cost of other parts of the work was not made a charge against the properties, but remained a charge against and was paid out of the funds of the city. The third count is for the payment of certain small sums, each less than five hundred dollars, in the matter of widening River Street in the city, these claims being the surveyor's bill of four hundred and eleven dollars, an advertising bill for forty-seven dollars, and a bill for clerical work of thirty-nine dollars. It is alleged that the proceedings looking to the widening of River Street were not legally taken, and that the claims were not legal claims. The fourth count charges an illegal expenditure of three hundred and twenty-seven dollars in the same matter. The eighth and ninth counts are for the recovery of various sums paid for surveying and engineering expenses for work performed on the streets which sums it is asserted were incidental expenses of the work and chargeable upon the affected land. By the second and tenth counts and causes of action the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendants all sums of money expended for lighting the city, including the cost of electric current and the cost of labor performed and materials furnished for the electrical appliances, upon the theory that the city of Santa Cruz is not empowered to spend any of the *487 city's funds for lighting purposes, and that the city can be lighted only by making the cost of such current and appliances a charge against the districts benefited, in accordance with the act of March, 1905, to provide for the lighting of public streets, lanes, etc. (Stats. 1905, p. 564.) By the sixth cause of action a recovery is sought of the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars illegally paid for rent of a "surveying outfit," which surveying outfit belonged to the street superintendent of the city. The seventh cause of action seeks the recovery of the sum of sixty dollars paid out of the city treasury to J.F. Williams as humane officer of the city. The fifth charges the illegal payment of one thousand dollars for attorney's fees under a contract with a municipal officer.
With this brief statement of the separate counts we come to the consideration of the law applicable to them. Appellant contends, and correctly, that section 16 of the charter of Santa Cruz, authorizing the city and the council to construct and maintain sewers, drains and other works necessary to carry away the sewage and storm water, and section 14, granting power to the city and the council to establish and change the grade and to lay out, open, extend, etc., streets, ways, sidewalks, etc., in the city, are but general grants of power and nothing more. Further, appellant contends, and correctly, that by section 246 of the charter (which reads: "In all matters pertaining to municipal affairs, concerning which no special provision is made in this charter, the general law shall be a part of this charter as far as the same may be applicable"), the provisions of the general street law, in so far as the general street law lays down rules and methods for the exercise of these powers, controls the action of the municipal authorities. Next, if we correctly follow appellant's argument, he insists that a resolution of intention is necessary whenever any work is proposed to be done under the authority of the Vrooman Act. Numerous cases so hold and so declare, and properly do so. But appellant is mistaken if he argues that a municipality can do no work whatsoever for these ends without such a resolution of intention. The resolution of intention is jurisdictional and absolutely necessary whenever it is proposed to bind, in whole or in part, private property for the payment of the work to be done. Otherwise, if it be work of a character which the city proposes to do and may *488
legally do itself at its own proper charge and expense, no resolution of intention is necessary. It has been frequently declared that for work done under the Vrooman Act a resolution of intention is a jurisdictional prerequisite to the legal doing of it. (Santa Cruz etc. Co. v. Broderick,
Dealing now with the first count of the complaint, it is not easy to see whether the work done, exceeding in cost sixteen-thousand dollars, was of the character which the city could do at its own proper charge, or of a character which should have been paid for by abutting property owners. Let us assume, for example, that work is done by a city upon an accepted street. No resolution of intention is necessary for the doing of this work, since the private property is not to be held for the cost of it, and certainly if the estimated cost of the work did not exceed five-hundred dollars it was not incumbent upon the city to have the work performed under contract after competitive bidding. It is asserted, however, in count one that this work, to a very large amount was illegally done, without resolution of intention, without competitive bids, without the letting of a contract, and that it was paid for out of the funds of the city, when it should have been paid for by assessment against the abutting property. It is argued that gross favoritism was shown; that as to some streets the work was done and paid for by the city without warrant in law, and as to other streets similarly situated the owners of property were charged with the expenses of improvement. *489 The uncertainty in the count the pleader excuses upon the ground that the records do not enable him more specifically to describe the illegal character of the claims and demands audited, allowed, and paid for this work. The matters of this count were sufficiently well pleaded to pass a general demurrer and to call upon the defendants to set forth their answer justifying such expenditures. If the expenditures were in fact legally made there can, in the nature of the case, be no difficulty with their ability so to show. If they were in fact illegally made, clearly the defendants are responsible, unless equitable considerations may have entered which would exonerate them from what would otherwise be their strict legal liability.
What has just been said is applicable also to the third and fourth and eighth and ninth counts of the complaint. As to the items embraced in these counts, treating them collectively, but instancing the matter of the widening of River Street, it would appear that the proceedings for the widening of this street should have been taken under the general street law made a part of the charter, and that under this law the costs incurred became a charge upon the property within the area or district delimited to bear the expenses of the widening. There may have been some good reason why these payments were made out of the funds of the city and not made a charge against the property owners. But it is for the defendants in their answer to show that reason.
The second and tenth counts seek a recovery for moneys expended by the city in the matter of street lighting. The argument of appellant upon this proposition is that the charter being silent upon the matter, the city had no right to incur any expenditures in this regard. True, there is in the charter no grant of powers in express terms authorizing the municipality to incur indebtedness for the purpose of lighting its streets. The charter, however, contains in section 26 a general welfare clause, empowering the authorities "to exercise, within constitutional and statutory limits, all municipal and police powers necessary to the complete and efficient . . . administration of the municipal government, although such powers may not be herein expressly enumerated." The lighting of a municipality falls so completely within the all-embracing arms of the police power, — a city in darkness would be so anomalous in our modern civilization, that no *490 authority other than such a general welfare clause is necessary, even if that be necessary, to justify the authorities in providing for street illumination. It is so held. (28 Cyc., 262, 951.) A second argument, however, advanced by appellant contends that, conceding the power to exist, the exercise of that power at the time these expenditures were made was controlled by the provisions of the street lighting act of 1905 (Stats. 1905, p. 564); that this act requires a resolution of intention and the imposition of the cost of the work upon private property precisely as does the street law. No answer to this argument is made by respondent other than the very general response that the municipal authorities, having power to light the streets, could light them by any method they choose. But since the charter of Santa Cruz has seen fit to make the general street lighting law a part of the organic law of the city, it necessarily follows that the authorities are limited in the exercise of their power to the mode prescribed. The demurrer to this count was, therefore, improperly sustained, since something more of an answer is required of the defendants than that given by their counsel in their brief.
The gravamen of the charges in the fifth and sixth counts or causes of action lies in the fact that the contracts under which the moneys were paid were made with officials of the municipality. Contracts such as these are not only denounced by public policy, but are expressly forbidden by section 811 of the Municipal Corporation Act [Stats. 1883, p. 266], which applies to cities of the fifth class, to which Santa Cruz belongs. This section not only prohibits such contracts and makes them void, but forbids the payment of claims arising under them. It would therefore appear, in the absence of an explanatory answer, that the payment of one hundred and twenty-five dollars for the rental of a surveying outfit belonging to the street superintendent of the city and rented by him to the city was an illegal payment, as was also the payment to the law partnership of Netherton
Torchiana of the sum of one thousand dollars for legal services to be rendered by them, when at the time of the entering into the contract and the time of the payment of the money W.P. Netherton, one of this law partnership, was a duly elected, qualified, and acting member of the board of education of the city. (Capron v.Hitchcock,
The seventh cause of action seeks to recover sixty dollars paid J.F. Williams as humane officer. It is said that there is no such officer known to the charter. The name, however, is of no consequence. We think it within the police powers granted to this city to employ and pay a person for the well known purposes indicated in the title given him. The demurrer to this count was properly sustained.
We have thus in detail considered the specific illegal expenditures charged against these municipal officers. We have expressed the conclusion that as to all but one the allegations of the complaint call for answer and defense, but it is proper in closing this discussion to say that the trial court will recognize the discretion which in many matters is and of necessity must be vested in public officials, and will recognize, moreover, that for an honest, even though mistaken, exercise of discretionary powers, no public officer is responsible. (Downer
v. Lent,
The judgment of dismissal is therefore reversed.
Lorigan J. and Melvin J., concurred. *492