A hearing in the above cause was ordered in this court, after decision by the district court of appeal of the second district.
The opinion of the district court of appeal, written by Mr. Presiding Justice Conrey, is adopted as the opinion of this court. It is as follows:
The plaintiff as owner of certain street improvement bonds transferred to him by a holder who acquired them from Municipal Securities Company (a corporation), to which the bonds had been issued by the city of Watts, brought this proceeding against the defendant as city treasurer, and applied for a writ of mandate commanding defendant to advertise and sell the property described in the petition. The bonds, purporting to be issued as required by an act approved February 27, 1893 (Stats. 1893, p. 33), are alleged to cover said property by lien claimed to exist under assessments made representing the cost of certain street work. From a judgment entered in favor of defendant, plaintiff appeals.
The street work in question was done pursuant to a contract entered into by the superintendent of streets with a contractor, and the proceedings were in form according to the requirements of the street work act, commonly known as the Vrooman Act. The record of these proceedings, so far as necessary to be noted here, begins with a resolution of the board of trustees, adopted on December 28, 1909, and known as resolution No. 123, ordering the work to be done. The bonds are valid, unless their invalidity can be established for at least one of the reasons here presented by the respondent for our consideration.
It is suggested by her counsel that the resolution No. 123, was posted and published without having thereon the city clerk's certificate to its passage, and that the clerk did not sign the certificate until after such posting and publication. Respondent asserts that this was an omission of a legal requirement; but we do not find either in the resolution or in the statute anything which supports the assertion made. The certificate is evidence on the minutes of the fact that the resolution passed, and it is nothing more.
It is further claimed that the warrant and assessment were not certified by the duly appointed street superintendent, and that the original warrant was not signed by the president of the board of trustees. These points cannot be sustained. *Page 767 The record shows that A.B. Waddingham who, on July 29, 1911, signed the certificate to the record of warrants, diagrams, and assessments following upon the contractor's return thereof, was then acting as street superintendent. The only point made against this is that earlier in the proceedings he was city engineer, and had not yet relinquished that office, and that he as superintendent of streets was certifying to acts which had been done by him as city engineer. No reason is shown why he should not do this. Upon the objection that the original warrant was not signed by the president of the board of trustees, the answer is that the original warrant was so signed, although that signature is absent from the warrant as recorded. This omission is not material. (Gillis v. Cleveland, 87 Cal. 214, 220, [25 P. 351].)
Next it is contended that certain provisions contained in section 4 of the Bond Act are unreasonable and unconstitutional. That section as amended in 1899, and also in its original form (Stats. 1893, p. 33; Stats. 1899, p. 41) provides: "That if any person, or his authorized agent, shall at any time before the issuance of the bond for said assessment upon his lot or parcel of land, present to the city treasurer his affidavit, made before a competent officer, that he is the owner of a lot or parcel of land in said list, accompanied by the certificate of a searcher of records, that he is such owner of record, and with such affidavit and certificate, such person notifies said treasurer, in writing, that he desires no bond to be issued for the assessments upon said lot or parcel of land, then no such bond shall be issued therefor, and the payee of the warrant, or his assigns, shall retain his right for enforcing collection, as if said lot or parcel of land had not been so listed by the street superintendent." The argument for respondent is that the provision requiring the property owner to present to the treasurer a certificate made by a searcher of records is in effect the taking of property without due process of law, and that it places upon the property holder a burden above his just share of the expense of the improvement. In our opinion, the statute does not have the effect thus claimed. The legislature has the power to provide, as by this Bond Act it does provide, that bonds shall issue for the amount of a delinquent assessment. The legislature is not bound to give the property owner any opportunity to avoid the issuance of bonds further than his *Page 768 opportunity to pay the assessment before the time fixed when it would become delinquent. In extending to him the further privilege whereby he may be subject to the assessment alone and may prevent the issuance of such bonds, any reasonable condition to the exercise of that privilege may be imposed. The rule requiring him to produce from the records some evidence that he owns the property imposes only a reasonable condition. The case of Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327, [18 Am. St. Rep. 192, 10 L.R.A. 627, 24 P. 121], cited by counsel for respondent, does not support their position. After much searching through the eighty-two pages of that decision, we think that we have found at page 396 [of 84 Cal.] the reference intended. The court there holds that where a person is about to be illegally deprived of his property by another person claiming to act as receiver, and where the superior court in appointing a receiver exceeded its jurisdiction, the property owner may have a writ of prohibition and is not obliged to submit to the wrong and rely on a long and expensive litigation for recovery of his property. But the provisions above quoted in the Bond Act are in their effect confined to proceedings within the jurisdiction of a city and its officers.
In respondent's answer to the petition herein she alleged, and the court found, that along the westerly side of Melvin Avenue, and along the entire length thereof within the north and south limits of the street work described in said resolution No. 123, "extends the lands of the Pacific Electric Railway Company, which lands are used as a part of the right-of-way of said railway company for its line of railway from the city of Los Angeles to the city of Long Beach, and which right-of-way abuts and fronts upon the westerly side of said Melvin Avenue between said Main Street and Shorb Avenue, the entire distance." After deducting from the total cost of the street work certain amounts which were paid partly by the city out of a street improvement fund obtained from the proceeds of a municipal bond issue, and partly by one thousand five hundred dollars voluntarily paid by the Pacific Electric Railway Company to the city of Watts on account of said street improvements, the remainder of said cost (such remainder amounting to much more than half of the total cost) was assessed solely and only against the lots and lands fronting on the easterly side of Melvin Avenue *Page 769 between Main Street and Shorb Avenue. The bonds here in question are based upon this assessment.
Upon the facts above stated, the respondent claims that the land covered by the railroad right-of-way is part of the land fronting on the improved street, and that the assessment is void because the right-of-way land is not included therein; or that if by reason of the principles of law controlling assessments against rights-of-way no interest in this land could be subjected to assessment, then the street could not be improved at all under the street work act. In Pennsylvania it has been held that for the purposes of asserting claims for street paving against the roadbed of a railway company "the distinction between the right-of-way and the fee is a shadowy one." (Junction City R. Co. v. City of Philadelphia, 88 Pa. St. 424.) In California this point appears to be not definitely decided. In SouthernCalifornia Ry. Co. v. Workman, 146 Cal. 80, [2 Ann. Cas. 583,79 P. 586, 82 P. 79], it was decided that a railroad right-of-way could not be sold under a street work assessment. With respect to the question now under consideration, the statute applicable to this work on Melvin Avenue was the same as that under which the case last mentioned was determined. At that time the legislature had not provided for such sales of rights-of-way. In that decision the supreme court declined to decide whether or not the fee or reversion in right-of-way land could be assessed, as it held that the proceeding there was merely "for the purpose of enjoining a sale of plaintiff's right-of-way, — that is to say, its easement." In Fox v. Workman, 155 Cal. 201, 204, [100 P. 246], referring to the same proceedings as in the earlier case, the court again found that the question of right to assess the fee separately from the right-of-way was not involved, and said: "The court did not, therefore, in the former decision, determine that the fee, subject to the easement, could not be, or that it had not been assessed. The judgment there affirmed merely declared that the bond created no lien upon the right of way. It could not bar plaintiff's right to have the fee, subject to such easement, sold. . . . Here the plaintiff, having at most a right to compel the sale of the fee, subject to the easement, made a demand for a sale of property described in terms covering both fee and easement. The officer was justified in refusing to comply with this excessive demand, *Page 770 and no liability for damages accrued upon such refusal." If the case of Fox v. Workman does not carry an intimation that lands subject to a railroad right-of-way, as were the lands of the Pacific Electric Railway on the west side of Melvin Avenue, are subject to assessment and should be assessed as lands fronting on the street, but excluding from such assessment the easement held for right-of-way purposes, we are at least left free to deal with the subject as an undetermined matter. From the record in this case we are unable to say that the right-of-way over the land in question is complete either in the sense of being perpetual, or of being such as to necessarily require the company to continue to occupy the whole thereof in the operation of its railroad. This land abutting upon the street, although subject to such right-of-way, may have a substantial value to the owner of the fee. Our conclusion is that, while the right-of-way cannot be assessed, the land itself is land fronting upon the street within the meaning of the street work act, and under the limitations defined is subject to assessment.
But is suggested on behalf of appellant that the property owners aggrieved by the assessment as it was made did not, within the time required by law, appeal to the board of trustees from the assessment, and that since they did not so appeal the assessment became final and is not further subject to attack on account of the alleged errors. The statute declares that no assessment shall be held invalid, except upon appeal to the city council as provided in section 11 of the street work act, [Stats. 1885, p. 156], for any error, informality, or other defect in any of the proceedings prior to the assessment, or in the assessment itself, where notice of the intention of the city council to order the work to be done has been published in accordance with law.
Appellant further calls attention to the fact that on June 26, 1911, four days before issuance of the warrant of assessment in the case at bar, there became effective an amendment to section 4 of the Street Improvement Bond Act, providing that bonds issued thereunder "shall be conclusive evidence of the regularity of all proceedings thereto under said street work act and under this act, previous to the making of the certified list of all assessments unpaid to the amount of twenty-five dollars or over by the street superintendent to the city treasurer, and of the validity of said lien up to the *Page 771 date of said list." (Stats. 1911, p. 1204.) In Chase v. Trout,146 Cal. 350, [80 P. 81], the supreme court declared its interpretation of the meaning of the conclusive evidence clause as formerly contained in the same section of the statute. Without repeating at length the principles there set forth, we find the decision in substance to be that under the quoted clause of the statute the issuance of the bonds shall be conclusive evidence of the regularity of the performance of all the required steps in the proceedings leading up to the bonds, excepting those that are necessary to constitute due process of law, or to comply with any other constitutional prerequisite. Answering the question as to what are the essentials the nonobservance of which cannot be cured, one item specified is that there must be an assessment or apportionment of the amount to be raised. The court there calls attention to the fact (citing Bolton v. Gilleran, 105 Cal. 244, [45 Am. St. Rep. 33, 38 P. 881]) that power could not be given to the street superintendent to change the amount of the contract price and of the assessment. Such attempted plan would be beyond the reach of a curative provision, because it would give power to that officer to improve the street and levy an assessment without a substantial compliance with the constitutional conditions. After pointing out some of the objections made to the proceedings in that case, the court said: "All of them relate to the manner of the work and the method of procedure to get it done, and not to the subjects of the notice to the owners, the hearing of grievances, the fact that work was done, nor to the existence ofa uniform assessment."
But in the case at bar the claim is, under the facts to which we have referred, that the attempted assessment made wholly against the lots on the easterly side of Melvin Avenue is not a uniform assessment, and that on its face it shows a willful failure to make an assessment according to the plan provided by law. We think this claim should be sustained, and that the assessment belongs to that class where the owner may, without appealing to the city council, resist the enforcement of the assessment because it is void on its face. In Perine v. Lewis,128 Cal. 236, 241, [60 P. 422], referring to an assessment made upon a plan not in accordance with the law and which resulted in assessing certain lots in double the right amount, the court said: "As the objection did not require *Page 772 extrinsic evidence for the purpose of establishing the fact, but the assessment appeared upon its face to have been made in violation of the statute, the defendants are not precluded from making the objection without having previously appealed to the board of supervisors." To the same effect is Kenny v. Kelly,113 Cal. 364, [45 P. 699]. In San Diego Investment Co. v. Shaw,129 Cal. 273, [61 P. 1082], no question was raised with respect to the right of the property owner to resist the enforcement of a street assessment lien for irregularities that might have been passed upon by the city council, but it was there directly decided that where the whole cost of certain street grading work was apportioned and assessed against the lots fronting on one side of the street, when according to the statute both sides should have been assessed, the assessment was void and the lien claimed thereunder could not be enforced.
Since the assessment in the present case was void upon its face, and since the bonds issued pursuant to such assessment were also void, it follows that no duty has devolved upon the defendant city treasurer to foreclose those bonds or sell the property described therein. This being so, the appellant is not injured or aggrieved by the affirmative part of the judgment which directs that defendant cancel of record the bonds and assessments described in plaintiff's petition."
The judgment is affirmed.
Rehearing denied.