Cowles v. City of Oakland

167 Cal. App. 2d 835
CourtAppellate Division of the Superior Court of California
DecidedFebruary 2, 1959
DocketCiv. A. No. 268
StatusPublished

This text of 167 Cal. App. 2d 835 (Cowles v. City of Oakland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowles v. City of Oakland, 167 Cal. App. 2d 835 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CHAMBERLAIN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment in favor of the defendant, rendered after the municipal court had sustained defendant’s demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend.

By the complaint and an amendment thereto, neither of which is a model of pleading, the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant the sum of $12 which he alleges he paid to the city license fee collector “under duress and fear of criminal prosecution” for the issuance of an annual “Municipal Permit” in October, 1957, pursuant to the provisions of a 1932 city ordinance.

The further allegations of the complaint and amendment may be summarized as follows: In 1932 the city enacted an ordinance (Oakland Municipal Code, §§ 5-1.02 et seq.) requiring the payment of an annual “license tax” or fee by any person carrying on any business within the city, the amount of the tax or fee being computed upon the number of persons employed in the business. Although the ordinance expressly provided—and still provides—that the payment required was “a tax for revenue purposes and are not regulatory permit fees,” the true primary purpose of the ordinance “is for regulation and not revenue.” Since 1933 plaintiff has been and is carrying on a printing business in the city and has each year paid for and obtained a license as required by the ordinance. Since 1940 plaintiff has had a state sales tax license, issued pursuant to the Sales and Use Tax Law (Rev. [837]*837& Tax. Code, § 6001 et seq.). In 1946 the city enacted an ordinance levying a city sales tax and requiring that every person selling tangible personal property at retail within the city obtain a city permit upon the payment of a fee. In 1946 the city treasurer issued to plaintiff, pursuant to the 1946 ordinance, Business Permit Number 439, which has never been revoked or cancelled. After plaintiff had under protest paid the $12 and received a license under the 1932 ordinance, he returned the license to the city and filed a claim for the return of the $12. On August 19th, 1958, his claim was denied when the city council adopted Resolution Number 37392, reciting that “said fee was not a tax, percentage or cost erroneously or illegally collected.”

In its essence, plaintiff’s action to recover the $12 fee is based upon two theories: (1) that, since he already had the 1946 permit, the city was without power to exact from him a fee for the 1957 permit; and (2) that the 1932 Ordinance levying a business tax was “for regulation and not for revenue” and the $12 paid by the plaintiff was “a permit fee and not a tax fee,” and therefore the city was without power to require the plaintiff to purchase the “Seller’s Permit” because, by enacting the Sales and Use Tax Law the state had entered and occupied the field of regulating business to the exclusion of municipal power to do so.

The trial court sustained defendant’s demurrer to the complaint as amended, without leave to further amend, on the ground that it appeared from the complaint that the action involved the legality of a “tax, impost, assessment, toll, or municipal fine,” as those words are used in section 89, subdivision (a) of the Code of Civil Procedure defining the original jurisdiction of municipal courts, and therefore the municipal court did “not have jurisdiction over the proceedings and for the relief sought in the Complaint.”

At the outset it is appropriate to discuss a preliminary contention made by the city on this appeal: In the city’s brief it is asserted that, after the municipal court had sustained the city’s demurrer without leave to amend, plaintiff “orally advised said court he wished judgment entered thereon so that he might commence this appeal.” Nowhere does it appear in the record on appeal that plaintiff-appellant made any such request, but the statement in defendant’s brief is not controverted. Based on the assumption that such an oral request was made by the plaintiff-appellant, the city invokes the doctrine of “invited error” and, because plaintiff [838]*838requested the rendition of the judgment from which this appeal is taken, contends he should not now he heard to allege that the judgment was erroneous. Since no such “request” is disclosed by the appellate record upon which we must decide this case, this court would be justified in dismissing the defendant’s contention without further discussion, but in our opinion the contention should not be sustained for the additional reason that throughout the proceedings in this action plaintiff, a layman, has appeared in his own behalf without an attorney and was obviously desirous of obtaining a ruling from the municipal court from which he could appeal, and an application of the doctrine of invited error would not be fair or equitable to him. As was said in Pete v. Henderson (1954), 124 Cal.App.2d 487, at 491 [269 P.2d 78], “While the fact that a layman litigant elects to represent himself does not relieve him of the duty of observing legal rules, . . . that fact should be considered in determining whether, in a situation where the trial court has discretion to act to relieve the lay litigant from his default, that discretion should be exercised. ’ ’ A similar discretion should, we believe, be exercised by the appellate court in this ease.

Plaintiff contends on appeal that the municipal court did have jurisdiction of the action because the controversy does not involve the validity of a “tax,” but rather the validity of a “ permit fee. ’ ’ In other words, plaintiff construes the words “tax,” “impost,” “toll,” and “municipal fine” as they appear in Code Civ. Proe. 89, subdivision (a), to exclude the fee paid by him under protest because—he says— said fee was a “permit fee” exacted by a regulatory measure rather than by a true tax-raising ordinance.

The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is described in section 4. of article VI of the Constitution as including “all cases at law which involve . . . the legality of any tax, impost, assessment, toll, or municipal fine ...” The words just quoted are exactly the same language as is used in Code of Civil Procedure, section 89, subdivision (a), to exclude such cases from the original jurisdiction of municipal courts. That language has received the attention of the appellate courts of this state in a number of cases.

In City of Madera v. Black (1919), 181 Cal. 306 [184 P. 397], the plaintiff city was seeking to recover $23 as monthly sewage rates due from a property owner under a municipal ordinance requiring the payment of rates for connecting a city sewer system with private dwellings; the defendant re[839]*839sisted the action on the ground that the ordinance was invalid and that the rates or charges were extravagant and exorbitant and were imposed for the purpose of raising revenue to defray general municipal expenses rather than to pay for the actual cost and maintenance of the sewer system. The complaint in that case was filed in a recorder’s court, a court of limited jurisdiction just as is the municipal court in the ease at bar. In considering the jurisdictional question whether the ease involved the validity of a “tax, impost, assessment, toll or municipal fine,” the Supreme Court said (at p. 310):

“A tax, in the general sense of the word, includes every charge upon persons or property, imposed by or under the authority of the legislature, for public purposes. (Perry v. Washburn, 20 Cal. 350; People v. McCreery, 34 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
167 Cal. App. 2d 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-v-city-of-oakland-calappdeptsuper-1959.