Deets v. Hall

124 P. 1007, 163 Cal. 249, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 403
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2675.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 P. 1007 (Deets v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deets v. Hall, 124 P. 1007, 163 Cal. 249, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 403 (Cal. 1912).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

This is an action to quiet title to two lots in the city of Long Beach, Los Angeles County. Plaintiff had judgment and defendant appealed from it and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The judgment was affirmed by the district court of appeal for the second appellate district and subsequently a further hearing was granted in this court.

Against the ownership of plaintiff defendant asserted title to the property under two tax deeds to him from the state. It was stipulated on the trial that plaintiff was the owner of the lots unless defendant could sustain title thereto “under and by virtue of tax proceedings, sales and tax deeds upon which he relied.” The judgment in favor of the plaintiff was based upon the conclusion of the trial court that the tax deeds upon which defendant relied were void. In support of the judgment and order and against the attack made on them by the appellant, it is insisted by respondent that the tax deeds from the state upon which appellant, relied are invalid for two reasons. First, it is claimed that in the tax levy for the year 1902 upon which the sales to the state of the two lots in payment for taxes was based, a portion of *251 the taxes levied (to wit, five cents on the hundred dollars) was not levied for any specific purpose and was not apportioned to any particular fund; hence, it is claimed that that portion of the tax was illegal and the whole levy void and the sales and deeds made thereunder invalid. Second, and independent of this, that the tax deeds to the state are void upon their face because they do not recite as required by law the correct date when the period of redemption expired.

As to the first point. The Political Code requires the board of supervisors to levy the state and county rate upon the taxable property of the county “designating the number of cents on each one hundred dollars of property levied for each fund.” (Sec. 3714.) The claim of respondent is that this was not done; that as to five cents on the hundred dollars levied by the board it was not levied for any specific fund. While there is some slight ground for this claim, it will be found on a fair examination of the face of the levy itself, particularly when taken in consideration with the estimate of the auditor to which it refers, that it is based upon a clerical error occurring in one instance in the levy with reference to the rate fixed to -provide sixty thousand dollars for the Temple Street Jail Fund. The report of the county auditor filed with the board pursuant to section 3737 of the Political (Code contained an estimate of the amount of money necessary to be raised by taxes for the support of the county government for the fiscal year 1902-3. It designated the twelve separate funds of the county, among which was the Temple Street Jail Fund, and specified the amount necessary for each particular fund and the special rate to be levied to procure the particular amount for each fund. The aggregate amount to be raised for the funds was totalled in the column as $886,035, and the aggregate tax rate to produce it .8180, the net valuation of the taxable property in the county being estimated at $112,276,055. The report set forth that as to one of the twelve funds—the Temple Street Jail Fund—it was necessary to raise sixty thousand dollars, and the rate on each one hundred dollars of taxable property necessary to produce that amount was designated at .0535. The board of supervisors, in the preamble to their order fixing the tax levy, adopted this report of the county auditor specifying the different funds, amounts required, and par *252 ticular rates under which the amounts w ere to he raised exactly as contained in the estimate of the auditor. The order of the board then proceeded to fix the general tax rate for county purposes at .8180, being the aggregate of the special fund rates as reported by the auditor and mentioned in the preamble, with a further rate of .60 for road purposes and the state tax of .3820. It then declared that the said .8180 cents levied for county purposes should be apportioned to the funds setting them forth in columns with respect to names, amounts, and special rates just as they appeared in the" estimate of the auditor as that estimate had been in effect adopted by the board with the exception that the rate for the Temple Street Jail Fund was specified therein at .0035 instead of .0535 on the one hundred dollars of assessable property. It is from this that respondent claims that five cents on each one hundred dollars of the taxable property of the county was not levied for any special purpose or appropriated to any specific fund. It is quite clear, however, that this insertion of .0035 as the special rate for the Temple Street Jail Fund found in this apportionment column instead of .0535 was clearly a clerical error and is apparent from a consideration of the various amounts contained in the order of the board itself where this error is contained. In the preamble to the order for the tax levy the board recited it appears that .0535 was the rate necessary to be fixed to raise the amount required for the Temple Street Jail Fund. That special rate, with the other special rates fixed to supply the amounts for the other funds and concerning the accuracy of which there is no question makes up exactly the total rate of .8180 fixed for county purposes. This column of special rates in which the rate of .0035 is inserted is totalled on the face of the order itself as amounting to .8180 which is exactly the aggregate rate fixed for county • purposes. This, of itself, shows that the insertion of this lower rate was a clerical error, because a correct addition of the various rates, with the rate for the Temple Street Jail Fund at .0035, would make the county tax rate .7680 instead of .8180, with the result that this rate of .7680 applied to the assessed valuation of the property of the county would produce only $862,280 for county purposes while it is clearly apparent all through the recitals in the order that $886,035 was required, which *253 amount would be procured with the race fixed at .8180. Supplementing this with the further fact that it equally appears all through that sixty thousand dollars was required for the Temple Street Jail Fund, and that .0535 would produce that amount and .0035 would produce but a little over three thousand nine hundred dollars, we have additional confirmation that the insertion of the lower rate was purely a clerical error. Counsel for appellant seem to have had no difficulty in discovering on the face of the order for the levy just where this error arose, but contends that the error is fatal to the levy; that the rule of strict construction in tax matters applies. But in so far as the rule is applicable here it only means that the validity of the levy must be determined from a consideration of the language of the board used in making it without resort to extraneous evidence to prove its intention. Here, however, there is no resort to extraneous evidence. The intention of the board is derived solely from a consideration of the order itself making the levy. It clearly appears therefrom as we have pointed out that the intention of the board was to levy for the Temple Street Jail Fund .0535 on the one hundred dollars of taxable property in the county and that the insertion of .0053 in one of the columns of rates for that particular fund was clearly a clerical mistake. There is no question in this case but that the board had the power to levy a rate of .0535 to procure that fund.

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Related

Hinds v. Clark
159 P. 153 (California Supreme Court, 1916)
Knight v. Hall
152 P. 952 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P. 1007, 163 Cal. 249, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deets-v-hall-cal-1912.