85 Cal. 50 | Cal. | 1890
On the second day of July, 1888, a petition was presented to the board of supervisors of Los Angeles County, asking that certain territory be incorporated into a municipality, to be known as the city of Alhambra, in pursuance with the provisions of the municipal incorporation act. (Stats. 1883, p. 93.) The petition described the proposed boundaries of the corporation, stated that the population within those boundaries was about 850, and was signed by 106 persons claiming to be residents and electors within said territory. It was accompanied with proper proof of publication thereof, with the names of the signers, and of intention to present it at that time. The matter came on for hearing on the 7th of July, when a protest was filed regarding the establishment of the boundaries as described in the petition, and after some general discussion as to the boundaries, and the
Nothing was put upon the minutes of the board showing the result of its deliberations, the judgment or conclusion at which it had arrived, on the question of the sufficiency of the petition or the notice, of the sufficiency of the number of its signers, or of their residence and competency to sign, or of its determination as to the boundaries, except the recitals as found in the resolution or order calling the election; and these make no reference to the petition, or the sufficiency thereof, the notice given of the application, the number, residence, or competency of the signers. In fact, so far as the minutes of the board show, there was no investigation as to whether the signers, or any of them, were residents or electors within the boundaries of the proposed municipality, as described in the notice of election.
Notice of the election was duly published, and at the appointed time the election was held, and the returns thereof duly certified and returned to the board as required by law. The board met at the time fixed by law for the canvassing of such returns, but then and ever since refused to canvass said returns or take any further proceedings in the matter.
The petition is by the parties claiming to have been elected trustees at that election for a writ of mandate to compel the board of supervisors to canvass the returns of that election, and declare the result.
At the hearing it was stipulated as a fact that less than one hundred of the signers of the petition were residents or electors within the territory proposed to be incorporated. The court below found the facts as alleged in the pleadings and conceded in said stipulation, and then found, as conclusions of law, that the act remainipg to be done by the board of supervisors (after the coming in of the returns) was purely ministerial, and that the law neither requires nor authorizes any inquiry on the part of the board of supervisors, other than as to the apparent regularity of the returns they are to canvass, sufficient to assure them that the documents presented have-been properly transmitted and came from authorized election officers. And on such findings and conclusions
We cannot accede to the conclusions of law reached by the court below. If the board of supervisors should find these returns regular on their face, and proceed to canvass the same, and declare the result, as required by the judgment rendered herein, and that result was found in favor of the proposed incorporation, we should have the anomaly of a small community exercising the franchise of a municipal corporation, with all the expenses and obligations incident thereto, under the apparent license of the authorized agent of the state in that behalf, but in fact without any authority of law, for the want of jurisdiction in the agent to grant such license. Under the admitted facts in this case, and the decision of this court in People v. City of Riverside, 66 Cal. 288, the organization of the corporation would be absolutely void for the want of the proper number of signers qualified in the premises to the petition upon which the jurisdiction of the supervisors to act must be based. This jurisdiction is a matter without which every step of the board of supervisors is void, and into which the board not only has the right, but it is its duty, to inquire at every stage of its proceedings, to the end that its final action shall be valid and binding. The inquiry in this case was made late in the proceedings, but not too late for the board to avail itself of the result, and prevent it from doing a void act,—that of declaring Alhambra to be a municipal corporation, or to save the people of Alhambra from other and greater complications and evils.
There is nothing in the proposition that a favorable vote of the people will cure all preceding defects, and itself confer jurisdiction to issue the necessary certificate to exercise the municipal franchise. An election held without authority of law gives no title to office (People v.
It follows, from these conclusions, that the judgment appealed from must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the court below to dismiss the writ.
So ordered.
Works, J., Sharpstein, J., Thornton, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.