Eastern-Columbia, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles

161 P.2d 407, 70 Cal. App. 2d 497, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1096
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 1945
DocketCiv. 14256
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 161 P.2d 407 (Eastern-Columbia, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles) 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
Eastern-Columbia, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles, 161 P.2d 407, 70 Cal. App. 2d 497, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1096 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

This is an appeal by the defendants, county of Los Angeles and city of Los Angeles, from a judgment in favor of plaintiff corporation which grants a refund of taxes paid by it under protest on personal property for the fiscal year 1940-41.

The corporate respondent is engaged in the merchandising of furniture, household goods and wearing apparel, maintaining stocks of such merchandise distributed between its principal place of business in the city of Los Angeles and eleven *498 branch stores situate in the cities of Los Angeles, Huntington Park, Pasadena and Long Beach, as well as in unincorporated county territory. Respondent took exception to the county assessor’s method of valuation and to the assessed value he placed on its stock of' merchandise for tax purposes for the fiscal year 1940-41, claiming that the assessor in valuing said personal property on the basis of respondent’s inventory did not assess at the usual 40 per cent thereof, but instead used the factor of 50 per cent. Accordingly, respondent filed an application for reduction of such assessment from $416,865 to $333,480 with the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles County sitting as a county board of equalization. After a hearing, the board denied the application; taxes were extended against the assessed property and were paid by respondent under protest. Thereafter claims for a refund of that portion of the taxes computed on the asserted overvaluation having been rejected, the respondent instituted the instant action “For refund of taxes paid under protest and for refund of taxes illegally collected,” on the ground that said taxes were void, excessive, fraudulent and unconstitutional.

The complaint alleged that it was the uniform practice' of the assessor to determine the full cash value of stocks of merchandise owned by merchants operating in the county “by taking the book inventory thereof, if maintained in accordance with the landed cost or market . , . and by applying to such inventory for assessment purposes the factor of 40 per cent thereof, arriving, for assessment purposes, at a full cash value of the equivalent of 40 per cent of such book inventory value”;' that this method was used by the assessor in computing assessments of competing merchants, but that in the ease of respondent, the assessor arbitrarily applied the factor of 50 per cent of the book inventory in order to determine the full cash value of respondent’s merchandise for assessment purposes, and in so using such special method of assessment and in arriving at an assessed valuation of respondent's merchandise, the assessor did so intentionally in order “to discriminate against and to defraud plaintiff, and- to cause plaintiff to pay an undue and disproportionate amount of - the tax burden properly imposed upon plaintiff for governmental purposes for said tax year of 1940-41; that said assessments . . . actually placed on plaintiff’s merchandise were excessive, discriminatory and void ... in violation of plaintiff’s rights to due *499 process of law.” It was also alleged that upon hearing of respondent’s application for reduction of such assessed valuations, the board of equalization, disregarding the evidence presented to it, denied the application thereby adopting the “illegal, erroneous, fraudulent and special method employed by said Assessor . . . and in intentionally adopting, ratifying and approving the illegal, erroneous, fraudulent and special method of assessing plaintiff’s merchandise different from that employed ... in assessing other merchants’ merchandise in the County of Los Angeles for said tax year 1940-41, said Board did intentionally discriminate against plaintiff.”

At the trial, which consumed fifty-two days, respondent introduced the transcript of all the evidence presented to the Board of Equalization at the hearing on its application for reduction of the assessment. In addition thereto, respondent was permitted to introduce the testimony of twenty-two witnesses, none of whom had testified at the hearing before the board, as well as fifty exhibits which had not been offered at said hearing. Appellants objected that receipt of such testimony and such evidence would constitute a trial de novo of the question of the equalized assessment of the assessed property and a collateral attack upon the quasi judicial determination of the board that the assessment of such property was equalized and not disproportionate to the assessment of other property, and that such testimony and evidence would not prove or tend to prove fraud or fraudulent conduct, either actual or constructive, on the part of said board in making its determination and denying said application.

The judgment is for a sum which represents the difference between the amount of taxes paid based on the assessment calculated at 50 per cent, and the amount based on an assessment calculated at 40 per cent of the inventory figure.

The cause is presented to this court upon a transcript on appeal which contains the usual clerk's transcript, and an engrossed bill of exceptions containing all of the evidence produced at the hearing before the Board of Equalization, appellants’ specifications of error, together with the following stipulation:

“It is stipulated by and between the plaintiff and the defendants County of Los Angeles and City of Los Angeles, through their attorneys, as follows;
“That Appellants have not included in their Bill of Excep *500 tions any of the evidence of value or methods of assessment presented for the first time to the Superior Court and not presented to the Board of Equalization for the reason that Appellants are basing their appeal upon the proposition that granting a trial de novo was error.
“It is stipulated and agreed that if granting a trial de novo was not error then the findings and judgment of the above entitled Court relative to the fair, equalized assessed value of the property are supported by substantial although conflicting evidence. Dated: November 4th, 1942 . . . Piled Dec. 18, 1942.”

The position of appellants, as declared in their opening brief, is that “under established rule of law the assessor’s valuation of property for tax purposes which, upon the property owner’s application to the County Board of Equalization for reduction, has been confirmed and approved, is conclusive on the question of value and is not thereafter subject to question or attack upon claim or suit for tax refund, and that the Board’s determination of equalization of assessment is not subject to collateral attack. The conduct of the trial court herein, we respectfully submit, was clear violation of such established rule. ’ ’ Appellants urge that the duty of the trial court “is to review the proceedings before the County Board of Equalization and to ascertain and determine whether that body, upon the evidence which was before it, so grossly abused its judicial .discretion that its conclusion regarding the matter was tantamount to no conclusion at all but constituted a constructive fraud upon the litigant.” (Italics included.)

In the case of Universal Consolidated Oil Co. v. Byram, 25 Cal.2d 353 [153 P.2d 746

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Bluebook (online)
161 P.2d 407, 70 Cal. App. 2d 497, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-columbia-inc-v-county-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1945.