280 P. 540 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
This is an appeal from the judgment in which it is adjudged that defendant City of Belmont is not now and never was incorporated or organized as a municipal corporation, and has not now and never had any legal existence. The action is one in quowarranto brought against the City of Belmont to set aside the incorporation *539 on the grounds that plaintiff Bourdette's three lots, consisting of an undivided parcel of thirty acres of land, had been included within the incorporated boundaries without his petition, and that the city's petition for incorporation is illegal in that the dates the signers signed the petition were omitted after the signatures thereto.
The complaint contains three causes of action. Inasmuch, however, as plaintiff is not urging his third cause of action and no finding thereon was made by the trial court, we are concerned only with the first and second causes of action: the first placing in issue the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors to act on the petition by reason of the omission of dates opposite the signatures thereon, and the second placing in issue the authority of the board to act by reason of the inclusion of plaintiff's ranch land or outside acreage within the boundaries of the incorporated area without his petition or acquiescence.
[1] The petition was filed with the board on August 2, 1926. Section 2 of the Municipal Corporation Bill then provided, and still provides (Deering's Gen. Laws 1923, Act 5233), that a petition signed by at least fifty of the qualified electors of the county resident within the limits of the proposed corporation shall be presented to the board, and that the affidavit of three qualified electors residing within the proposed limits "certifying to the genuineness of the said signatures filed with the petition shall be prima facie evidence of the requisite number of signatures." The sufficiency of the petition with respect to the signatures was not required to be certified or determined by the county clerk, but the question was one to be determined by the board, and the affidavit of the three electors filed with the petition, in so far as jurisdiction depended upon the number of signatures, was sufficient without further evidence to give the board power to proceed. (Hoffecker v. Board ofSupervisors,
The court found "that none of the signers of said petition for incorporation affixed to said petition the date of signing the same either at the time of so signing or at any time thereafter, or at all," and further, "that in the territory embraced within the boundaries of said alleged corporation there were at the time of said election, and still are, certain portions thereof more densely populated than *540 others which had been subdivided into town or other lots and delineated upon a recorded map under the map law of March 15, 1907, as amended; that the territory within said boundary also contains areas of ranch land or outside acreage including the aforesaid lands of plaintiff which the board of supervisors included within said boundaries, in addition to said subdivided area, notwithstanding the fact that the owners of said ranch land or outside acreage including plaintiff had not petitioned to have said lands included therein."
[2] As to the failure of the signers to affix the dates on which they signed the petition, it may be said that the fact is undisputed that the clerk satisfied himself that such signers were qualified electors. Plaintiff does not in his complaint or otherwise question the fact that at the time of signing the petition the signers were qualified electors, but contends that the provisions of section 1083a of the Political Code, which provides that the signers of all petitions shall put down the date of signing the same, is a mandatory requirement. In the recent case of Carter v. Green,
[3] As is said in People v. Town of Ontario,
The Municipal Corporation Bill (Act 5233, Deering's Gen. Laws), after setting forth the number of inhabitants required to organize a municipal corporation, in section 2 of the act provides: ". . . and provided further, in the case of municipal corporations of the sixth class that in the event that the proposed boundaries of such corporation contain both a center of population subdivided into town or other lots delineated upon a map recorded as provided by an act entitled `An Act requiring the recording of maps of subdivisions of land into lots for the purpose of sale, and prescribing the conditions on which such maps may be recorded and prohibiting the selling or offering for sale of land by reference to said maps unless the same are recorded,' approved *543 March 15, 1907, as amended, and an area of ranch land or outside acreage, the said board of supervisors shall include within said proposed boundaries in addition to said subdivided area only such portion of said area of ranch land or outside acreage as the owners thereof shall have petitioned to have included within the limits of said proposed corporation. The boundaries so established by the board of supervisors shall be the boundaries of such municipal corporation until by action authorized by law for the annexation of additional territory to, or the taking of territory from, said municipal corporation, such boundaries shall be changed . . ."
[4] Under the above provision, in order that the signature of the owner of ranch land or outside acreage included within the proposed boundaries be a necessary prerequisite, two conditions must exist: one, there must be a center of population, and the other, the center of population must be subdivided into town or other lots delineated upon a recorded map. [5] Here no point is made respecting the recording of the map; the controversy, in so far as the question now being considered is concerned, turns upon whether or not the proposed boundaries contain a center of population. As to this fact there is a conflict in the testimony. The plaintiff testified that there is a center of population, while George A. Kneese, the county surveyor, and Donald S. Mulford, assessor for the sanitary district which includes the area of Belmont, both testified that there is no center of population in the City of Belmont, but that there are some portions more densely populated than others. On this issue the only finding of the court is: "That in the territory embraced within the boundaries of said alleged corporation there was at the time of said election, and still are, certain portions thereof more densely populated than others which had been subdivided into town or other lots and delineated upon a recorded map under the map law of March 15, 1907, as amended," and no finding is made as to whether or not there existed a center of population. As we view the case, however, this question becomes unimportant as the board of supervisors determined as a fact "that no portion of said territory within said boundaries is a part of or included within any existing municipal corporation nor do said boundaries contain a center of population subdivided *544 into town or other lots and an area of ranch land or outside acreage, the owners of which have not petitioned to be included within the limits of said corporation," and the determination of this question is left exclusively to such board.
In People v. City of Los Angeles,
[6] The action appears to have been brought on the mistaken theory that this question was an original one for the court to decide, and as there is nothing in the record showing what evidence was taken by the board of supervisors upon which it determined that there was not a center of population, we cannot say that its judgment lacks support. If, however, upon the hearing before the board the same evidence was presented as was presented to the trial court with the same conflict, the board's finding would not be disturbed by the court, as the question of the extent and character of the territory proposed to be included in the corporation is left exclusively to the board of supervisors, and the courts have no control of the subject. [7] With *545 the wisdom of the board's determination in the matter the courts cannot interfere. They only interfere where some substantial provision of the law has been violated or where fraud was perpetrated in the matter of the boundaries (People v. City ofLos Angeles, supra), and here no fraud is pleaded nor claimed.
Upon the record as presented the judgment must be reversed, and it is accordingly ordered.
Knight, Acting P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on October 11, 1929, and a petition by respondent to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on November 4, 1929.
All the Justices concurred.