Banas v. Transamerica Title Insurance

133 Cal. App. 3d 845, 184 Cal. Rptr. 262, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1763
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1982
DocketCiv. 25528
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 Cal. App. 3d 845 (Banas v. Transamerica Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banas v. Transamerica Title Insurance, 133 Cal. App. 3d 845, 184 Cal. Rptr. 262, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1763 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

*847 Opinion

KAUFMAN, Acting P. J.

So far as this appeal is concerned, the action involves the validity of tax sales of and tax deeds to improved real property in San Bernardino County. The trial court awarded judgment on the pleadings in favor of the County of San Bernardino and Joe Bell, its Treasurer-Tax Collector (hereafter collectively referred to as the county). Plaintiffs appeal. We have concluded that the motion for judgment on the pleadings was improvidently, although understandably, granted, and the judgment will be reversed.

The trial court’s granting the motion for summary judgment is quite understandable because the count purportedly stating a cause of action against the county is pled inartfully in the extreme. There is no incorporation by reference of allegations in other counts, and even some of the essential facts, which are well pled in other counts of the complaint, are pled only inferentially or indirectly. We are persuaded that both the court and counsel for the county were in some way misled, because, as we shall explain, the legal basis on which the motion for judgment on the pleadings was made and granted was virtually immaterial to plaintiffs’ theory and certainly did not legally preclude plaintiffs’ prevailing.

In truth, however, for purposes of this appeal the basic facts do not appear to be in dispute, and, liberally construed, the allegations are sufficient to state a cause of action in favor of the plaintiffs and against the county. We shall therefore reverse the judgment conditionally—on the condition that within a prescribed time the plaintiffs file an amendment to the complaint alleging in substance the facts recited below, which are the facts as we understand them.

Facts

Prior to January 24, 1974, James Keeton and Beverly June Keeton, husband and wife, were the owners of a residence at 11998 Reche Canyon Road in Colton. The residence was constructed partly on each of two lots, which for some reason not disclosed by the pleadings were separately assessed for real property taxes. In the early part of 1974, the plaintiffs Patrick V. Bañas and Claudia I. Bañas, husband and wife, purchased the residence, naturally assuming they were buying the land on which the residence was situated. However, either as a result of *848 fraud or mistake the legal description set forth in the conveyance, a grant deed dated February 15, 1974, and recorded March 18, 1974, covered only one of the two lots. Plaintiffs did not learn of that fact or of the separate assessment of the two lots until after the tax sales and tax deeds herein questioned.

After purchasing the property plaintiffs moved into the residence and have resided there ever since. Annually they or their impound account holder received from the county and paid a tax bill which they believed was the tax bill for the residence and the land upon which it wás situated. However, apparently those tax bills covered only the one lot conveyed to them. Although the residence was also partly on the other lot, that lot was separately assessed and a separate tax bill was sent with respect to it, presumably to Mr. and Mrs. Keeton, who were the last assessees of record.

The taxes assessed on the second lot (hereafter the excluded parcel) were not paid and, after the statutory period, the excluded parcel was sold and, later, deeded to the state and thereafter sold and deeded to William D. Reynolds. The tax deed from Joe Bell as Treasurer-Tax Collector of the County of San Bernardino to Mr. Reynolds was dated March 18, 1980, and recorded March 28, 1980.

On September 12, 1980, plaintiffs instituted this action against numerous defendants, including the Keetons, the real estate licensees involved in the purchase and sale transaction, plaintiffs’ title insurer, the County of San Bernardino, Joe Bell, William D. Reynolds and the State of California, seeking every conceivable type of relief including cancellation of the tax deed from the County Treasurer-Tax Collector to William D. Reynolds and, apparently, cancellation of the earlier tax deed to the state.

Discussion

The county correctly states: “The ground of the motion [for judgment on the pleadings] was that [plaintiffs] could not state a cause of action to support their prayer for cancellation of a tax deed and sale, because their incorporation by reference into their complaint of the duly acknowledged and recorded tax deed from the tax collector to the State was conclusive evidence, except against actual fraud, of the regularity of all other proceedings from the assessment ... to the execution of the *849 deed, both inclusive.... The motion was based upon Revenue and Taxation Code, Sections 3518^ 1 and 3711[2V’

The county was and is incorrect in asserting that the tax deed to the state was incorporated by reference by plaintiffs into their complaint. The plaintiffs did allege that the tax deed to the state was invalid. However, the only deed expressly identified by date, attached to the complaint and incorporated by reference, was the tax deed to William D. Reynolds. But it makes little difference because neither section 3518 nor section 3711, which make a duly acknowledged tax deed conclusive evidence of the regularity of the tax sale proceedings (more or less), could serve to remedy the defect claimed by plaintiffs as invalidating the tax sales and tax deeds here involved. While the Legislature by statute may cure errors and irregularities in tax sale proceedings that do not violate jurisdictional prerequisites or constitutional mandates, jurisdictional errors or errors violating constitutionally guaranteed rights may not be thus cured. (See Chesney v. Gresham (1976) 64 Cal.App.3d 120, 128 [134 Cal.Rptr. 238]; Philbrick v. Huff (1976) 60 Cal.App.3d 633, 646-647 [131 Cal.Rptr. 733]; Paul v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist. (1974) 37 Cal.App.3d 265, 275 [112 Cal.Rptr. 274].)

In the count here at issue plaintiffs do not attack the tax sales and tax deeds on the basis of any irregularity in the proceedings; they assert that the procedures established by the statutes for giving notice of impending tax sales and tax deeds are unconstitutional as applied to them, that is, that the means of giving notice prescribed by the statutes are constitutionally insufficient as applied to an equitable owner of improved real property in actual possession of the property and in *850 circumstances, such as the plaintiffs here, giving the equitable owner no reason to believe that the taxes on the land underlying his or her residence have not been paid. 3

Although the allegations of the complaint pertinent to plaintiffs’ claim of the tax sales’ and tax deeds’ invalidity were, charitably, inartful (see fn. 3, ante),

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Bluebook (online)
133 Cal. App. 3d 845, 184 Cal. Rptr. 262, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banas-v-transamerica-title-insurance-calctapp-1982.