DocketNumber: S. F. No. 8340.
Citation Numbers: 191 P. 1110, 183 Cal. 519, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 436
Judges: Olney, Wilbur
Filed Date: 8/12/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was brought to enjoin the sale of the plaintiffs' respective pieces of property for the nonpayment of assessments for the widening and extension of Encinal Avenue, in Alameda. The application for an injunction pendente lite having been denied, the plaintiffs paid the assessments under protest, and thereupon filed a supplemental complaint for the recovery of the amounts paid. Judgment was rendered for the defendants on demurrer and plaintiffs appeal. The assessments were made by authority of the Street Opening Act of March 6, 1889, as amended in 1909 and 1913. (Stats. 1889, p. 70; Stats. 1909, p. 1034; Stats. 1913, p. 376.)
[1] Appellants claim that the proceedings are void for the reason that three city officers appointed by the city council as commissioners for the assessment of the damages and benefits, to wit, the city clerk, the city auditor, and the city attorney, were disqualified because they were to be paid, as provided by the statute (Stats. 1889, pp. 71, 72, secs. 6, 8), from the assessments levied by them. There is no merit in *Page 521
this contention. If appellants' position is sound, it would invalidate every assessment for the purpose of state and county taxes and render impossible the performance of such services except by volunteer officers. It is contended that this disqualification also results from the vesting in these commissioners of an uncontrolled discretion, if the law be so construed, to exclude or include public property in the assessment of benefits. But there was no public land within the assessment district, as will be shown in the discussion of the next point. Appellants claim that the assessment is void for the reason that fourteen pieces of property belonging to the city of Alameda within the exterior boundaries of the assessment district were not assessed for benefits. There are two answers to this proposition: [2] First. In a district assessment the mere failure to assess a lot of land within the assessment district does not make the assessment void. The remedy for such an erroneous assessment is by objection to the city council. (Stats. 1889, p. 73, sec. 14; Larsen v. City andCounty of San Francisco,
The statute provides that before ordering the opening or extension of any street the city council shall pass a resolution of intention to do so, describing the opening or extension to be made and the land to be taken, "and specifying the exterior boundaries of the district of lands to be affected or benefited by said work or improvement, and to be assessed to pay the damages, cost, and expenses thereof." (Stats. 1889, p. 70, sec. 2.) It also provides for notice and a hearing at which any person interested may object to the extent of "the district of lands to be affected or benefited." (Secs. 3, 4 and 5.) If the objections are sustained, the proceeding terminates. If they are overruled, it goes forward. While the statute requires only the "exterior boundaries" of the district to be specified, it is reasonable to hold that if the council finds that any convenient delimitation of such boundaries would include parcels of land that in its opinion would not be benefited or affected by the proposed opening or extension, it could properly qualify the description by excepting such parcels, so that they would not form a part of the district. The council is empowered to determine the extent of the district benefited. It should be permitted to describe it accurately by making a proper exception of the land that may be within the fixed outer boundaries, but which are not benefited, in order that the resolution may not be inaccurate or misleading. Such a description would not make the proceeding void. The exception herein shown is obviously nothing more than a part of the description of the district, and if the council was of the opinion above referred to, the exception was necessary to make the description accurate. It must be presumed that it so decided and framed the description accordingly.
[4] The decision of the city council, determining the extent of the district benefited by the improvement, is conclusive except on appeal to that body. (United Real Estate Trust Co.
v. Barnes,
It is contended that the city council never acquired jurisdiction because of the insufficient description in the resolution *Page 523
and notice of public work of the land to be taken. This contention is based upon the fact that after describing in great detail a strip of land eighty feet wide which was to constitute the street as widened and opened, the following exception is stated in the resolution and notice: "Excepting therefrom all lands now held by said city or the people of said state as open ways." Proceedings instituted under the same statute here involved were under consideration inCohen v. City of Alameda,
The judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., Lawlor, J., Lennon, J., and Angellotti, C. J. concurred.