183 P. 598 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *273 The action was brought to foreclose an assessment lien. It is stated in respondent's brief:
"The respondent district is situated in the county of Yolo, state of California, and was organized as a reclamation district on the 29th day of May, 1908. On the 6th day of July, 1908, respondent levied an assessment of $132,000.00 over all the lands in the district. Shortly thereafter an action was brought by said respondent under section 3493 1/2 of the Political Code of this state to validate said assessment, and on the 5th day of October, 1908, a judgment was entered in the validation suit in respondent's favor.
"At the time of the organization of the respondent district, and until after the judgment in the validation suit, Lovdal Brothers Company, a corporation, one of the defendants in this action, was the owner of the lands upon which this action was brought to foreclose a lien. Thereafter said Lovdal Brothers Company, a corporation, sold said land to W. E. Lovdal. While W. E. Lovdal was the owner of said lands and in 1914 the respondent district brought this action to foreclose the assessment lien upon said land amounting to the sum of $17,601.07, together with interest on said sum. Thereafter said W. E. Lovdal died and the defendants, Ovedia A. White, Emma T. L. Beardslee and Katherine B. Fisk, executrices of the last will and testament of said W. E. Lovdal, deceased, were duly substituted by the trial court as defendants.
"The complaint in this action to foreclose the lien sets forth the statutory requirements of such a complaint. Appellants *274 (executrices) in their answer denied that the assessment was valid, that the assessment was due or payable or that a call of the assessment had ever been made, and alleged as a separate defense that part of the moneys of said assessment was paid out for purposes other than reclamation, to wit, to pay for a judgment obtained against the trustees individually and for their individual negligence, and to pay for the purchase of the front levee owned by the trustees themselves."
The cause was tried by the court, findings and judgment were in favor of plaintiff, and the appellants, executrices, prosecute this appeal from the judgment.
[1] 1. It is first urged by appellants that the court erred in overruling their demurrer to the complaint and in denying their motion for a nonsuit at the close of plaintiff's testimony, on the ground that the complaint showed upon its face and that plaintiff's evidence showed "that the trustees had never called in said assessment in separate and distinct installments, but had attempted to call in the entire assessment at one time."
Section 3466 of the Political Code, at the time of the levy of the assessment in question, read, in part, as follows: "At the end of thirty days, the treasurer must return the lists to the board of trustees of the district, and all unpaid assessments shall bear legal interest from the date of the return of the lists to said board, and shall thereafter be collected and paid in separate installments, of such amounts, and at such times, respectively, as the board, from time to time, in its discretion, may, by order entered in its minutes, direct; and a cause of action for the collection of any such installment shall accrue at the expiration of twenty days from the date of the order directing its payment; provided, that if any such installment shall remain unpaid at the expiration of said twenty days, then the whole of the assessment against the land owned by the person failing to pay such installment shall become due and payable at once, and may, in the discretion of the board, be collected immediately, in one and the same action. The board of trustees of the district must commence actions for the collection of such delinquent installments, and delinquent assessments," etc. (Stats. 1891, p. 288.) *275
The respondent contends that the provision of the said section requiring the assessments to be collected and paid in installments is merely directory, or, in other words, that it rests in the discretion of the board of trustees of reclamation districts to order the collection and payment of the assessments either as a whole or in installments. We cannot give our assent to that contention.
Prior to its amendment by the legislature of 1891 (Stats. 1891, p. 288), the section made no provision for the collection and payment of assessments in separate installments. "This law," said the supreme court, in Swamp Land Dist. No. 307 v.Glide,
A law authorizing the assessment of land for reclamation purposes in duly formed and organized reclamation districts authorizes the exercise of the taxing power. [2] The assessment of lands for that purpose is a species of taxation, and the rule that all laws authorizing the taxation of the property for public purposes are in invitum, and their provisions, therefore, to be strictly construed and pursued, or at least substantially so, is no less applicable to a case of an assessment of lands in reclamation districts for reclamation purposes than to laws authorizing the taxation of property for general governmental purposes. [3] Where, therefore, the provisions of a law by authority of which districts are formed for the purpose of reclaiming lands situated therein specify the manner or the method of assessing such lands for the purpose of raising funds with which to carry out the purposes of the district, such manner or method of proceeding must be observed with substantial *277 strictness. A substantial departure from the method specifically pointed out by the statute for raising the money for the purposes of the district will render the assessment abortive. These are elementary propositions which apply in the construction of the powers, duties, and obligations of all public or quasi-public instrumentalities or agencies established for the purpose of carrying out, within certain limited subdivisions of the state, certain designated policies of the state or of exercising certain governmental functions.
[4] The right of the owners of lands within reclamation districts to have the assessments levied against such lands for the purposes of such districts made collectible and payable in separate installments is, as above declared, a substantial one expressly given to them by the legislature for their benefit and convenience, and the courts would be guilty of resorting to the very extreme of judicial legislation under the guise of construction should they hold that the trustees of reclamation districts are at liberty to disregard that right whenever they see fit to do so, and so require the land owners to pay the entire assessments at one time.
We have carefully read and considered the briefs of respondent. We find no fault with the rules of statutory construction to which they therein refer and which they invoke as supporting their view of the section of the Political Code in question. But, as must be manifest from the views we have already expressed respecting the language of said section, we cannot support them in their insistence upon the application to the present case of the rules of construction invoked by them or the cases they rely upon. They argue that, as there is no language in the section expressly forbidding the trustees from calling in the entire assessment at one time, therefore, the legislature must have intended that they should be vested with the discretion of collecting the entire assessment at any time, if, in their judgment, the requirements of the district justify it. This proposition we have already answered. While it is true that the section does not say to the board, "You shall not call in the entire assessment at one time," it does say, as we have shown, that the collection and payment of the assessmentsshall be in separate installments, and this is tantamount to the declaration that the collection of the, entire assessment shall not be compelled by the trustees at *278 one time. The language necessarily excludes any other manner of collecting the assessments.
Nor is there any force in the argument of respondent that, inasmuch as the land owners must pay the entire assessment at some time, they can suffer no prejudice because the suit to foreclose or to enforce payment of the assessment is upon or for the entire assessment. Prejudice to the party so wronged must always follow from an act resulting in the invasion of any substantial right to which he is entitled under the law. In contracts, neither party has the right to forfeit the agreement before the time for the doing of the thing thereby agreed to be done has matured. No action will lie to recover on a promissory note until the debt of which it is evidence is due. If a purchaser agrees to pay for personal property by installments payable at stated intervals of time, his rights under the agreement cannot be forfeited until he has violated the conditions of payment or some other vital covenant. The same principle applies here. The district was without authority to sue for the entire assessment until there was default in the land owner to pay one of the installments for a certain specified period; but the vital proposition involved is the land owner's right to have the assessment made payable in separate installments so that it will be the more convenient for him to pay the assessment. For aught that can be said to the contrary, the defendants here might have willingly paid the assessments had they been made payable according to law. We have no right to assume that they would not have done so if the amount had been ordered payable in installments. [5] But be that as it may, we are fully persuaded that, for the reasons above given, the complaint fails to state a cause of action against the defendants — that is to say, that the action was premature or brought before a cause therefor could have accrued — and that the demurrer thereto should, therefore, have been sustained. From this it follows, of course, that, the demurrer having been overruled and the cause tried, and the evidence at the trial showing that the trustees failed to order the assessment involved herein to be collected and paid in separate installments, the motion of defendants for a nonsuit should have been granted. *279
While the conclusion thus arrived at is decisive of the case, there are some other points to which attention should be given, in view of possible litigation arising in the future with respect to this assessment.
2. Appellants claim that the court erred in admitting in evidence the judgment-roll in the validation suit, over the objection of defendants, that (1) No notice of the pendency of said action was offered in evidence; (2) That the court had no jurisdiction to render a judgment validating said assessment against the then owner of said lands, Lovdal Brothers Company, a corporation; (3) Conceding the validating judgment to be binding upon these defendants, still the plaintiff waived the estoppel that would otherwise have been created by the judgment by introducing evidence in support of each allegation of the complaint necessary to establish the regularity and validity of the assessment.
[6] While section 3466 of the Political Code as it read at the time the assessment in question was levied provided that alis pendens should be filed in the office of the county recorder in all actions for the collection or enforcement of the payment of delinquent installments of the assessment, there was no provision, in section 3493 1/2 of said code, authorizing actions to determine the validity of the assessments, which required that notice of the pendency of such actions should be filed. Nor was such a notice required to be filed in such actions by section
[7] The objection that the court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate the validity of the assessment as against Lovdal Brothers Company, the then owner of the lands in *280
question, is based upon the contention that the summons required by the statute is not in the form of language prescribed thereby. This objection is highly technical and without substantial merit. Section 3493 1/2 provided that, in such an action, the summons shall require the defendant or defendants "to answer the complaint within ten days after the service of the summons, if served within the state." The summons served on Lovdal Brothers Company was in the usual form of such processes and required the defendant to "answer the complaint within ten days, exclusive of the day of service after service on you of this summons, if served within the said county — if served elsewhere within thirty days." Thus it will be observed that the summons served did not direct or require the defendant to answer the complaint within ten days, "ifserved within the state," and it is upon this omission that the objection to the summons is founded. By the summons the said defendant was informed that, if served within the county in which the action was brought, it was required to answer the complaint within ten days after such service. The certificate attached to the summons by the party making service on Lovdal Brothers Company sets forth that the summons was served on said company in Yolo County. Thus the said defendant was given, substantially as the statute required, notice of the commencement of the action, and thus the only purpose that a summons is designed to achieve was as effectually and fully accomplished as if the process had contained the precise language of section 3493 1/2. The rule of the code is that its provisions and all proceedings under it are to be liberally construed, with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 4), and this rule obviously applies as well to the provisions as to a summons as to those relating to other proceedings and processes authorized by the codes. (See Bewick v. Muir,
In this connection we should notice another point made by appellants, which is that neither W. E. Lovdal, the grantee of the corporation of the lands involved herein, nor his executrices, ever received notice of the validation suit, and that the court below, therefore, never acquired jurisdiction to enter judgment in said action as against them. The contention is without force. The deceased, *281
Lovdal, purchased the property after judgment in the validation suit was rendered and entered, and, inasmuch as the effect of the judgment was to confirm or establish the validity of the lien which, ipso facto, attached to all the lands in the district upon the filing of the list of the charges with the county treasurer, the judgment imparted notice of such lien, and all purchasers of property in the district subject to the assessment were charged with such notice. (See Carpenter v.Lewis,
[9] The claim that the plaintiff waived the estoppel created by the judgment in the validation suit by introducing evidence here in support of the issues raised in that suit requires no elaborate notice here, since, if it were true that such an objection is good as against the right to invoke an estoppel by judgment, the same would probably be obviated at the trial of any action which might be brought in the future to enforce the payment of this assessment. It may be suggested, however, that the case of Megerle v. Ashe,
[10] 3. The plans and estimates of P. N. Ashley, engineer of the district, dated July 6, 1908, as reported to the trustees of the district, stated that the estimated cost of raising old front levees which were to be used as a part of the reclamation plan was six cents per cubic yard. The trustees of the district at that time were Messrs. H. J. Goethe, Theo. Blauth, and C. F. Silva, each of whom was the *282 owner of a portion of the front levee. Defendants attempted to prove by the witness, P. S. Driver, secretary and attorney for the plaintiff district, that those parties were paid ten cents per cubic yard for such levees. An objection by plaintiff that this was a collateral attack upon the warrants issued in payment for said levees was sustained and appellants urge that the ruling was erroneous.
The ruling was proper. Before the assessment could be levied under the law it was requisite that a statement or report should have been made to the supervisors by the trustees showing the plan of the proposed reclamation work and estimates of the costs thereof. This report or statement was a necessary prerequisite to the levying of the assessment and the assessment was, in turn, a necessary prerequisite to a validation suit. It follows, therefore, that the statement or report of the plan and estimated costs of the work to be done was necessarily one of the issues to be adjudicated in the validation suit. [11] The judgment in that action is resadjudicata as to all matters contained in the statement. The time for the urging of any objections to the statement or any other matter connected with the assessment was at the trial of that action. The Lovdal Brothers Company, although duly notified of the action, defaulted or made no appearance therein. The attempt here to impeach the validity of the warrants in question involved an attempt to attack the judgment in that action collaterally. Of course, this cannot be done, even if it be true that the warrants called for larger amounts than the estimated price of the land, as shown by the report, justified. Indeed, the question of the price per cubic yard of the land was one of fact, and that question having been determined by the trustees of the district and the supervisors of the county by finding that ten cents rather than six cents (the estimated price per cubic yard) was the proper price, and the warrants having been drawn for that amount, the validity or correctness of the warrants themselves cannot be collaterally challenged. (Reclamation District v. Clark,
The appellants undertake to differentiate the above-named cases from the present case in that the question involved in those cases was one of fact, while the question presented here is one of law, the contention being that the act of the trustees in purchasing their own property for the purposes of the district was illegal. But however that may be, the question whether the act of the trustees in the matter was or was not legal was, as we have pointed out, necessarily a direct issue in the validation suit and was therein adjudicated. Indeed, the sole question to be determined in that action was whether the assessment was or was not in all respects valid.
The cases of Reclamation District v. Turner,
4. It is lastly claimed that a sum amounting to nearly fifteen thousand dollars, included in the assessment of one hundred and thirty-two thousand dollars, was misappropriated and could not possibly benefit the lands of defendants.
It was alleged in the answer that the trustees of the district, in 1908, caused the front levee of the district on the bank of the Sacramento River to be cut through in order to take a dredger into the district, and that they so negligently and carelessly closed the opening made by them that, in the spring of 1909, the water of the river broke through the levee and damaged the lands of one Calvin Perkins lying adjacent to the district; that said Perkins brought suit and recovered judgment against said trustees for the sum of nine thousand three hundred and sixty dollars and costs, which judgment and costs, together with attorney's fees, were paid out of the assessment for one hundred and thirty-two thousand dollars.
The action above referred to of Perkins v. Blauth et al. is reported in
At the trial defendants offered in evidence the judgment-roll in Perkins v. Blauth et al., and also attempted to prove the above facts by the introduction of testimony. The court sustained objections to the introduction of said evidence, which ruling is specified as error.
[12] The ruling was correct. We cannot conceive of a more obvious proposition in connection with a case of this *285 character than that the misappropriation of the funds of the district by the trustees thereof cannot have the effect of invalidating the assessment by which such funds were raised. If the trustees have misused the funds of the district by paying them out for some purpose wholly foreign to the objects of the district, they are, of course, personally liable for the repayment of the moneys so used; that the act of those officials in the misappropriation of the moneys of the district has absolutely nothing to do with the matter of levying the assessment and can in no way affect the proceedings involving that duty.
For the reason first hereinabove given, the judgment is reversed.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 15, 1919.
Shaw, T., Melvin, J., Wilbur, J., and Lennon, J., concurred.