City of San Jose v. Ruthroff & Englekirk Consulting Structural Engineers, Inc.

131 Cal. App. 3d 462, 183 Cal. Rptr. 391, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1982
DocketCiv. No. 48964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 Cal. App. 3d 462 (City of San Jose v. Ruthroff & Englekirk Consulting Structural Engineers, Inc.) 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
City of San Jose v. Ruthroff & Englekirk Consulting Structural Engineers, Inc., 131 Cal. App. 3d 462, 183 Cal. Rptr. 391, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

ELKINGTON, J.

An ordinance of the City of San Jose (San Jose), a charter city, provides among other things that: “Every person engaged in the City of San Jose, whether or not at a fixed place of business in such City [with an average number of employees in such business of five or less], in the business of: ... (c) Any profession or semi-profession; or (d) Any other business or businesses; [with certain here inapplicable exceptions] shall pay to the City of San Jose ... [a minimum] annual license.tax of thirty dollars ($30.00) per annum, . . .” The tax is levied for revenue, and not for regulatory, purposes.

Defendant and appellant Ruthroff & Englekirk Consulting Structural Engineers, Inc. (Ruthroff) is a professional engineering firm licensed [464]*464by the State of California (see Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6700 et seq.) as a civil and structural engineer. It maintains offices within, and pays business license taxes to, the cities of Los Angeles, Oakland, and Newport Beach.

A building complex was in the course of construction in San Jose, under direction of an architect whose business headquarters was in Los Angeles. Under a contract with the architect, Ruthroff, in Oakland, performed some structural engineering services for the San Jose project mainly under telephone direction from the architect. in Los Angeles. The contract price was $5,500 based, apparently, upon 220 hours of RuthrofFs employees’ time. During the course of the San Jose project’s construction an engineer employee of Ruthroff visited the San Jose site to inspect the work progress five or six times, and he, or another, had accompanied the architect to answer any questions generated upon application for a permit from a San Jose “building official.” The total time spent in San Jose during the course of the project by RuthrofFs employees was about 12 hours. All of the remaining work of Ruthroff was performed in Oakland.

San Jose levied the minimum license tax of $30 against Ruthroff under its ordinance, based upon RuthrofFs above-described business there during the taxable year. RuthrofFs protest in time led to a determination of the superior court that the tax was properly levied. We review that adjudication upon the superior court’s certification under rule 63, California Rules of Court, that a transfer to this court appears necessary to secure uniformity of decision and to settle an important question of law.

City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co. (1971) 4 Cal.3d 108 [93 Cal. Rptr. 1, 480 P.2d 953] (cert, den., 404 U.S. 831 [30 L.Ed.2d 61, 92 S.Ct. 73]) and General Motors Corp. v. City of Los Angeles (1971) 5 Cal.3d 229 [95 Cal.Rptr. 635, 486 P.2d 163] are beyond any doubt the state’s leading authorities on the issue here presented. They will be deemed to have superseded inconsistent language, if any, of earlier cases. (In quoting from them the italics, generally, are ours.)

City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co. addressed itself to the constitutional implications of intercity business license taxes. It was there stated: “Although the Constitution of this state, unlike that of the United States, contains no provision specifically preventing its constituent [465]*465political subdivisions from enacting laws affecting commerce among them, there is no doubt that many of the considerations relevant to problems of interstate commerce apply in microcosm to the problems of intrastate or intercity commerce in a heavily populated state such as our own. In the words of one perceptive commentator; ‘The basic policy underlying the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution [art. I, § 8, par. 3] — to preserve the free flow of commerce among the states to optimize economic benefits — is equally applicable to intercity commerce within the state. If fifty independent economic units within the United States are undesirable, 387 economic enclaves within California would be intolerable. A tax burden which places intercity commerce at a disadvantage in comparison to a wholly intracity business may have such an effect.'” (4 Cal.3d, p. 119.) “[I]t is clear that in spite of the absence of a specific ‘commerce clause’ in our state Constitution, other provisions in that Constitution — notably those provisions forbidding extraterritorial application of laws and guaranteeing equal protection of the laws . .. —combine with the equal protection clause of the federal Constitution to proscribe local taxes which operate to unfairly discriminate against intercity businesses by subjecting such businesses to a measure of taxation which is not fairly apportioned to the quantum of business actually done in the taxing jurisdiction. On the other hand, those constitutional principles do not prohibit local license taxes upon businesses ‘doing business’ both within and outside the taxing jurisdiction; as long as such taxes are apportioned in a manner by which the measure of tax fairly reflects that proportion of the taxed activity which is actually carried on within the taxing jurisdiction, no constitutional objection appears. However, and conversely, no measure of apportionment can satisfy the constitutional standard if the measure of tax is made to depend upon a factor which bears no fair relationship to the proportion of the taxed activity actually taking place within the taxing jurisdiction.” (4 Cal.3d, p. 124.)

The City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co. court then found invalid, a business license tax “‘that has no relation to the taxable event occurring in [the City] or the quantum of business there carried on.’” (4 Cal.3d, p. 125.)

General Motors Corp. v. City of Los Angeles reiterated the teaching of City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co. and emphasized that the city was constitutionally “free [only] to tax the business presence within its jurisdiction by reference to the ‘taxable events’ occurring there” (5 [466]*466Cal. 3d, p. 242), and that a business license tax “must be apportioned in a manner which fairly reflects the proportion of in-city to out-of-city [business] activities” (5 Cal.3d, p. 244).

In City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co. and General Motors Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, the business license taxes involved, even after apportionment and as might well be supposed, represented very substantial sums. In the case here before us, we are concerned with a minimum business license tax of $30 per year. A question arises whether that relatively small yearly tax, unapportioned on the one hand as to business activity entirely within San Jose, and on the other, as to occasional intercity business transactions therein, meets the constitutional requirement explicated by City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co.

On this issue we first note the holding of General Motors Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, that what is proscribed is “the possibility of duplicate taxation by another taxing jurisdiction based upon the same activity . . ..” (Italics added; 5 Cal. 3d, p. 243.) And we consider City of Los Angeles v. Shell Oil Co.’s emphasized adoption of a legal commentator’s conclusion that the possibility

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Bluebook (online)
131 Cal. App. 3d 462, 183 Cal. Rptr. 391, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 1576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-jose-v-ruthroff-englekirk-consulting-structural-engineers-calctapp-1982.