In this action to recover monies paid under municipal ordinances regulating trucking on city streets, defendant and cross-complainant City of San Bruno (City) and defendant city officials appeal from a judgment 1 entered against them, after a non jury trial, awarding plaintiff the sum of $33,592.57 with interest and denying the City all recovery on its cross-complaint. 2
Before plaintiff entered into the above hauling contract defendant City had enacted as part of the San Bruno City Code certain ordinances regulating trucking on its streets. These in substance provide that with the exception of certain specified streets to be marked as truck routes, the use, operation or maintenance upon all remaining City streets of any motor vehicle or truck of a gross weight of 27,000 pounds or over is unlawful. Neverthеless vehicles hauling materials exceeding such gross maximum weight limits may be permitted along streets from which they are excluded upon the filing with the city clerk of an application in the form prescribed by the code, together with a minimum filing fee of $35 “to cover the cost of the city’s investigation of such application.’’ 3 The city manager shall make or have made an investigation of the facts stated in the application and within seven days of the date of its filing “shall either grant a permit with or without modification, or deny the same in whole or in part. ’ ' 4
Shortly before plaintiff started hauling under the contract he was told by an engineer at the Airport that he would have to make his own arrangеments with defendant City to haul over its streets. He then consulted the city clerk who advised him of the necessity of a permit and of a fee of two cents (2c) per ton. When plaintiff protested that as a licensed contractor he had the right to haul he was told that unless he received a permit he would be subject to arrest. While plaintiff testified on direct examination that he had not considered this two cents a ton charge in computing his bid upon which the contract was awarded and that he did not learn of the existence of the charge until after the contract was awarded, he admitted under cross-examination that he was aware of state
Plaintiff thereupon carried out his hauling operations to the extent already indicated. He used “double-bottomed dumps,” that is a tractor pulling two trailers, each set of trailers holding about 25 or 26 tons of fill, making the gross weight of the entire vehicle 75,000 to 80,000 pounds. Almost every load comprising the 3,016,100.2 tons of fill was hauled down San Bruno Avenue. Plaintiff testified that at the time he applied for the permit, he did not know that he could haul to the Airport by an alternate route along Junípero Serra Boulevard to Sneath Lane to El Camino Real 7 and then to Spruce Street and through South San Francisco to the Bayshore Highway, nor was he so informed by any official of defendant City; he further stated that during the time he was hauling the fill he did not know of such alternate route.
Plaintiff paid the two cents per ton charge for 10 months until May 1961 when he refused to make further payments although he continued his hauling operations. The parties agree that payments made by him total $33,592.57. On August 24, 1961 plaintiff commenced the present action to recover the monies paid to the City together with punitive damages and in addition to secure a judgment declaring all documents pertaining to the permits applied for by plaintiff null and void and restraining defendants from interfering with plaintiff’s hauling operations. 8 Defendant City cross-complained for $32,524.05 as additional monies due under the ordinances. 9 As we have said, the court below rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $33,592.27, the total amount paid by him to the City, and denied the City all recovery on its cross-complaint.
The bases of the court’s decision as gleaned from its findings of fact and conclusions of law and from its memorandum
The City’s ordinances here involved were enacted pursuant to former section 713 now section 35701 of the Vehicle Code.
13
Said section provides in pertinent part: “ (a) Any city may by ordinance prohibit the use of a street to be described in the ordinance by any commercial vehicle or by any vehicle exceeding a maximum gross weight limit to be specified in the ordinance, ...” The grant to cities of authority to legislate in this field is therefоre clear. (McCam
mon
v.
City of Redwood City
(1957)
We said in
Thain
v.
City of Palo Alto
(1962)
The determination by the legislative body of the facts warranting its action will not be set aside or disregarded by the courts unless the legislative decision is clearly and palpably wrong and such error appears beyond a rational doubt from facts or evidence which cannot be controverted.
(In re Spencer
(1906)
In the case before us, the trial court nullified the particular sections of the City’s code because it concluded essentially that they imposed a charge for a permit to haul
We must determine whether the record before us shows a reasonable basis for this legislative determination. If the record shows that the question is fairly debatable' or one as to which, reasonable minds may differ, the legislative determination will not be disturbed.
(In re Miller, supra,
The evidence in the record is sparse. The only evidence adduced by plaintiff as to damage to San Bruno Avenue was his own testimony to the effect that no one ever advised him that the operation of his trucks was causing damage, that he did not notice any damage to the streets, that he did not notice “any change” in streets while he was operating over them and that he did not notice any substantial difference in the condition of San Bruno Avenue on the completion of his hauling operations. Plaintiff called as a witness under Code of Civil Procedure section 2055 Leo Van Dusen, who was both City’s Director of Public Works and its City Engineer. Mr. Van Dusen testified that one of his duties as Director of Public Works was to supervise the repair and maintenance of the City’s streets; that the City had a crew of repair men but that no definite records were kept as to the repairs which were required—“the crew just does them and that is it”; that if the repairs were made under contracts let by the City, the contracts would be preserved as a record; that no attempts were made to determine the cost of repairs and damage due to the trucks using the streets; that the witness had no idea or record as to the total damage to San Bruno Avenue during the period of plaintiff’s hauling but “I could probably compute it.” Plaintiff did not ask the witness to do so.
Van Dusen was then called by defendants. After being questioned as to his educational qualifications and his professional background and experience as a civil engineer, he stated that after the commencement of the instant action and at the request of the city attorney he computed the damage caused to San Bruno Avenue by plaintiff’s dirt-hauling operations
16
Under the legal principles set forth above, it was plaintiff’s burden to establish the invalidity of the ordinances and to show that the unreasonableness of their provisions dealing with the issuance of permits for San Bruno Avenue was not even a debatable question. Plaintiff was confronted with a legislative determination, made on investigation, that the gross weight limitations could be waived and a permit issued under circumstances calling for a payment of per ton charges by the permittee and that such payments were necessary and reasonable. This was a determination by the City that its street could be protected from the effects of heavy trucking by such regulation.
Plaintiff contended for the first time at oral argument that the City’s ordinances regulating trucking were invalid because in enacting them the City failed to comply with the procedure prescribed by section 35705 and that consequently the entire scheme of regulation (City Code, §§ 16.65-16.84) is not applicable to San Bruno Avenue. This argument is grounded on testimony elicited under Code of Civil Procedure section 2055 from defendant Hultberg, the city clerk, that San Bruno Avenue was one of the streets ‘ ‘ within the purview of the Highway Users Gas Tax Fund.” Section 35705 provides that section 35701 “shall not be applicable to any city street on which money from the State Highway Fund has been or is used for construction or maintenance” unless the legislative body of the city determines tо reduce weight limits on such street after notice and hearing as prescribed in such section. Plaintiff at no time objected in the court below to the validity
In view of the conclusion we have reached on the above issue, it becomes unnecessary to decide whether the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of defense witnesses Van Dusen and Mills. Such evidence, if determined to be admissible, would only further confirm the debatability of the issue and underscore plaintiff’s failure to meet the burden of proof cast upon him.
We therefore proceed to consider the several arguments advanced by plaintiff as “additional grounds” upon which to sustain the judgment.
First: He contends that the state has preempted the field by enacting a comprehensive scheme of regulations set forth in sections 35700-35721. But, as we have previously noted, while the state has occupied the legislative field in the regulation of thе weight and allowable load of vehicles (§§ 35550-35655), the Legislature by section 35701 has seen fit to permit municipalities to enter the field and has invested them with power to enact ordinances prescribing maximum gross weight limitations.
(McCammon
v.
City of Redwood City, supra,
Third:
Plaintiff contends that the ordinances are unconstitutional in that he has been denied equal protection of the law, arguing that he was the only one charged or billed by the City during the entire time he was hauling. While the record discloses that plaintiff was the only one billed, it also discloses that of the few permits applied for during the same period, only one other issued to Readymix Trucking Company
Fourth: It is urged that plaintiff made the payments in connection with the permit under duress and the monies represented thereby were wrongfully collected from him under protest. But, as we have shown, the ordinances are valid and plaintiff is not beyond their reach. He was therefore bound to pay the specified charges and any statements made to him by the City officials that hauling on San Bruno Avenue would result in citation or arrest are beside the point. The court’s findings and conclusions to the effect that he paid under duress are ineffective to sustain the judgment. We find no evidentiary support for duress in the legal sense of the word. Essentially the City’s officials merely informed plaintiff that it was unlawful to operate any vehicle of excess weight over the streets other than those designated as allowable truck routes. The ordinances so provided (City Code, §§ 16.65-16.66) and officials were merely performing their duty of enforcing the law.
Fifth: Plaintiff argues that since he was constructing runways and maintenance facilities used in interstate commerce, he was clothed with the same “immunity from taxation” as an interstate carrier. Even assuming that he was engaged in interstate commerce, he would still be, as he concedes in his brief, subject to reasonable charges. Plaintiff failed to prove that the charges were unreasonable.
Sixth:
Finally, we take up plaintiff’s contention that as a licensed contractor employed in the repair of a public
It is clear that the trial court’s ruling was erroneous, for it is settled that the Airport
is
a public utility.
(City & County of San Francisco
v.
Western Air Lines, Inc.
(1962)
We must first determine whether plаintiff is precluded from attacking such error because he has not himself appealed. While it is the general rule that a successful respondent who has not appealed may not complain of errors
(Phillips
v.
Phillips
(1953)
As set forth above, section 35704 provides that no city ordinance such as those here involved shall apply “to any vehicle owned by ... a licensed contractor
while necessarily in use
in the construction, installation or repair of any public utility.” (Italics added.) Similarly section 35703 provides that no ordinance adopted pursuant to section 35701 shall prohibit- commercial vehicles from entering a restricted street “when
necessary
for the purpose of making pickups or deliveries of goods ... or for the purpose of delivering-materials” for the construction of buildings. (Italics added.) It is obvious that the purpose of sections 35701-35704 considered together is to authorize municipalities to prescribe regulations for business and commercial vehicles oh city streets in furtherance of the orderly conduct of such traffic, the sаfety of the residents, the protection and preservation of the streets and the general welfare of the community
(Whyte
v.
City of Sacramento
(1924)
Furthermore, we think that a persuasive argument can be made to the effect that under section 35704 the Legislature intended to exempt from municipal weight limitations only those vehicles necessarily in use in constructing or repairing public utilities which are located on or adjacent to the city streets, as for example water, gas and electricity, and did not intend to confer the exemption on vehicles used in constructing or repairing a public utility located outside and furnishing no direct service -to the city, albeit they might travel through the city to such construction or repair site. This interpretation of section 35704 would be in harmony with the obvious intendment of section 35703 which confers an exemption on commercial vehicles making pickups or deliveries of goods on or along the city’s streets and not merely traversing such streets to make pickups or deliveries outside city limits.
Since the trial court concluded that the Airport was not a public utility, it apparently had no occasion to make a finding as to whether plaintiff’s trucks were “necessarily in use” within the scope of the above section. However, the evidence considered in the light most favorable to plaintiff falls far short of establishing such necessity. Plaintiff testified that he selected the route down San Bruno Avenue because it was the shortest and most direct route. This shows only that it was more convenient for him to haul on such street. The record reflects that he was not confined to San Bruno Avenue but that he had an alternate course to the Airport over allowable truck routes. The mere fact that such alternate route may be longer, more inconvenient or may involve more expensе does not establish that the use of San Bruno Avenue is necessary.
(McCammon
v.
City of Redwood City, supra,
We therefore arrive at these final conclusions. Since the City’s ordinances are valid and legal enactments and plaintiff is not exempt from their operation and since the recovery awarded plaintiff by the trial court cannot be sustained on the alternate grounds urged by him, the judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendants on the complaint must be reversed. For the same reasons, the judgment denying relief to defendant City on its cross-complaint must bе reversed since defendant and cross-complainant City is entitled to recover from plaintiff and cross-defendant at least the balance due at the rate of two cents per ton under the provisions of the ordinance. The record reflects that this is the sum of $26,607.43.
23
The attempted appeal from the order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial is dismissed. The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to the trial court to amend its findings of fact and conclusions of lаw in conformity with the views herein expressed and to enter judgment ordering that plaintiff take nothing by his complaint and that defendant City of San Bruno have judgment on its cross-complaint against plaintiff and cross-defendant for the sum of $26,607.43, together with interest as provided by law and costs. Appellants shall recover costs on appeal.
Molinari, J., and Sims, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 14, 1966, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 21, 1966. Sullivan, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
Although, the judgment provides that ‘ ‘ defendants take nothing on its and their eross-eomplaint, ” the cross-complaint itself and the pretrial order clearly show that the City is the sole cross-complainant.
Defendants also appeal from the order denying their motion for a new trial. Such an order is nonappealable (Code Civ. Proc., § 963) аnd the appeal therefrom must be dismissed.
(Rodriguez
v.
Barnett
(1959)
San Bruno City Code, article VI, §§ 16.65-16.69.
San Bruno City Code, section 16.70. Section 16.71 provides that the city manager shall grant the permit only if he finds (a) that good cause appears for the issuance of a special permit under former Veh. Code, section 710 (now Veh. Code, §§ 35780-35784); or (b) that emergency conditions require the operation or movement of the type of vehicle otherwise prohibited; and (e) that by an undertaking or other security necessary to protect the highway specified in the application or to provide indemnity for any resulting injury, the City will be fully indemnified from injury, 1 ‘ and that a permit fee as the payment in the form of a liquidated amount for any and all such damages and injuries to such highways shall be a condition of operation to the use of such highways pursuant to special permit and shall fully comрensate the city for such use. (Ord. 641) ”
Section 16.72 provides: “The issuance or withholding of a permit is at the discretion of the city manager. On the issuance of a permit, the permittee must comply with the following conditions of operation:
"(a) For the right to use all or any part of San Bruno Avenue within the limits of the city, the permittee must compensate the city, as a liquidated sum in compensation for and in full satisfaction of all damages and injury to said highway which will he caused hy trucks weighing twenty-seven thousand (27,000) pounds or over at the rate of two cents (2e) per ton for each ton hauled on said highway. It is found upon investigation that payment of said sum is necessary to protect said highway from the actual damages and injury resulting from the operation of such trucks, and by reason of the difficulty in computing such damages, two cents (2c) is found, in advance, to be reasonable compensation for the use of said highway as a condition of operation of said trucks. The city manager is authorized to accept said sum in full satisfaction for all damages and injury to said highway to be caused by such trucks, and is authorized, on the issuance of such a permit, to enter into an agreement, stipulating to the acceptance of said sum in full satisfaction for all damages and injury to occur from the operation of said trucks on San Bruno Avenue.
“(b) The fulfillment, in the discretion of the city manager, of any other conditions specified in Vehicle Code, Section 710(c) for any and all highways and streets involved. (Ord. 641) ”
Section 16.74 provides: “In the event a permit be granted, the permittee shall pay to the city clerk a fee for the privilege of said permit at the rate of two cents (2c) per ton hauled on San Bruno Avenue and a sum to be fixed by the city manager for hauling on any other highway or street. Issuance of a permit pursuant to a proper application and payment of the fees provided in this Article constitutes an acceptance of said fees in full satisfaction as indemnity for all damages and injury to said highways or streets arising from the use of said highways or streets by the permittee. Payment of fees shall be made in monthly installments and shall be paid in the office of the city clerk, on or before the 10th day of the month succeeding the hauling with the deposit heretofore provided to be applicable on payments due for the last month of operation. (Ord. 641, 703 and 746) ”
These streets within defendant City were specifically excluded from the operation оf the ordinance by section 16.65.
Plaintiff’s complaint in separate counts sought recovery of the monies on theories of restitution, implied contract, duress and fraud.
City’s cross-complaint in additional counts sought recovery of the balance due for damage to its streets and “other direct and indirect expenses” ($91,407.43) and for “actual damage” to its restricted streets after May 1, 1961 ($60,000),
Hereafter, unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Vehicle Code.
See fns. 5 and 6, ante.
There is some confusion in the findings on this point. While paragraph 4 of the conclusions of law pertaining to the fifth count refers to "City Code 641, 703, 766 and Sections 16.72 and 16.74” (641, 703 and 746 being the numerical designation of the ordinances underlying the sections of City’s Code), it is obvious from paragraphs 5 and 6 which follow, as well as from paragraph 3 of the "findings ’ ’ pertaining to thе fifth count which precedes (actually a conclusion of law), that the court’s determination of illegality is directed only at City Code sections 16.72 and 16.74.
The new Vehicle Code was enacted by the Legislature in 1959 and became effective September 18, 1959.
Immediately thereafter follows the court’s “finding” that the particular sections of the code “are illegal and in contravention of public policy” on five specified grounds, obviously a conclusion which does not lose its characteristic as such by being placed among the findings of fact. (See
Solley
v.
Solley
(1964)
See fn. 5, ante.
Van Dusen testified that he arrived at his conclusions by using California Division of Highways ’ method of traffic index; by considering the type of pavement, typo of underlying base, total cost of the street, the
In response to the court’s question as to whether he had had any previous experience on computing damage, the witness answered negatively. The court excluded the testimony principally because Van Dusen had not been qualified as an expert.
The court seemed to recognize that Mills had been qualified as an expert but refused to receive any proof of damage based on a formula.
Plaintiff buttresses his argument by a reference to defendant City’s Eesolution 1958-141 introduced in evidence by City and to the court’s “findings’’ and conclusions in respect thereto. The resolution, passed on August 27, 1958 when the older ordinance (No. 746) was in effect, provides that the two-cent fee ‘ ‘ shaE be placed in a special fund to be known and designated ‘Special Street Work Fund’ ’’ and further resolves that “the funds in the Special Street Work Fund shall be used for the laying out, opening, widening, extending, straightening, constructing, improving or altering of city streets, highways, boulevards and public ways and the establishing, modifying or changing the grades thereof and the construction of the necessary pavements, curbs, sidewalks, culverts, bridges, tunnels, viaducts, and other structures, including the acquisition of lands, rights-of-ways or other property necessary for such purpose. ’ ’ The court concluded that the pertinent ordinances (City Code, §§ 16.72 and 16.74) were illegal for the reason, inter alia, that the above resolution “provides that the tax money in question is to be used for many other purposes rather than indemnity for repair of actual damage done by plaintiff’s trucks, and is for the purpose of raising revenue rather than for regulation; . . .’’
Actually, although the evidence showed three permits applied for, there is some confusion in the record as to whether they were ever issued.
Strangely enough, the trial court based its ruling on the decision of the superior court in Western Air Lines which held that the Airport is not a public utility but appears to have ignored the opinion of this court in the same case holding that it is a public utility.
Code of Civil Procedure, section 956 was amended to provide: ‘ ‘ The respondent, or party in whose favor the judgment was given, may, without appealing from such judgment, request the court to and it may review any of the foregoing matters for the purpose of determining whether or not the appellant was prejudiced by the error or errors upon which he relies for reversal or modification of the judgment from which the appeal is taken. ”
Such amount can tie computed according to the present record. As pointed out earlier, the parties stipulated that tht total amount hauled was 3,016,100.2 tons. On motion ior new trial defendants appear to have revised this figure to 3,010,000 tons. At the rate of two cents per ton, this would produce a total charge of §60,200. The parties also agreed that
This is confirmed by the instant record which contains a memorandum submitted to the trial judge at the close of the evidence concluding: "we ask the Court to compensate the City for the damage done to San Bruno Avenue in the sum of 2e per ton times 3,016,100 tons or $60,322.20. Plaintiff has already paid $36,262.97, thus the City prays for a judgment in the sum of $27,069.03.” The italicized figures are obvious discrepancies (see fn. 23, ante). These appear to have been subsequently corrected by the City as is evidenced by its reference to a balance due of g26,607.43 in its proposed counterfindings and the court’s reference to such figure as the amount assessed in the findings of fact and conclusions of law finally filed.
