31 Cal. 26 | Cal. | 1866
This is an application for a peremptory mandamus against the respondent, as President of the Board of Trustees of the City of Sacramento, to compel him to sign a certain warrant drawn by the Auditor on the Treasurer of said city for the sum of five hundred and seventy-four dollars and thirty-eight cents, for work done and materials furnished by the relator in repairing and improving the Police Court room of said city.
The referee to whom the case was sent to find and report
This subsequent ratification by the Board, within their powers, and according to the method of contracting pointed out in the charter, bound the city as effectually as an employment in advance would have done. (McCracken v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 592; Zottman v. San Francisco, 20 Cal. 96.)
Subsequent to this ratification and on the 14th of August, 1864, a bill of items was made out by the relator, and presented to the Trustees, by whom it was allowed, and on the same day the claim was approved by the Auditor (Acts .1863, p. 421, Sec. 9), and thereupon a warrant for the amount, payable out of the General Fund, was drawn by the Auditor in favor of the relator.
The respondent justifies his refusal to sign this warrant, not only upon-the ground that there was no contract binding the city to pay the relator’s claim, a point already considered, but also upon the ground that the claim when presented for allow
This objection is not well founded in fact. It appears distinctly from the report and accompanying evidence that the relator’s claim, after it had taken on that shape by the ratification of July 17th, was presented to and allowed by the Board on the 14th of August, and that the written claim so presented contains a distinct reference to the ratifying ordinance and to the second section of the charter as authorizing it.
It is further objected that the claim originated in the year 1863, when the relator was authorized by one of the Trustees to do the work in question, and that it can be paid, under the charter, only from the revenues of that year. The objection is founded upon an anachronism. The claim had no existence as such prior to the 17th of July, 1864, at which date the Board of Trustees assumed it by ordinance, and the referee has found that at the time when the claim was allowed there was the sum of five thousand six hundred and fifty-two dollars and sixteen cents unappropriated in the fund on which the claim was charged by the ordinance and on which the warrant was drawn.
Let a peremptory mandate issue, according to the prayer.
Mr. Justice Sanderson expressed no opinion.