Feather River Power Co. v. State Board of Equalization

274 P. 962, 206 Cal. 486, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 625
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1929
DocketDocket No. S.F. 13194.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 P. 962 (Feather River Power Co. v. State Board of Equalization) 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
Feather River Power Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 274 P. 962, 206 Cal. 486, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 625 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

SEAWELL, 3.

The hydroelectric properties of petitioner, organized as a public utility corporation, and particularly the Buck Creek plant, had been for three years immediately prior to the first Monday in March, 1928, in the course of construction and were nonoperative property and therefore subject to assessment and taxation in Plumas County, their situs for county purposes. (See. 3665b et seq., Pol. Code.) On or about March 14, 1928, petitioner, within ten days after the first Monday in March, as required by section 3665c of the Political Code, made its report and tax return to the State Board of Equalization and furnished a duplicate of said report to the assessor of Plumas County covering so much of its property as was located in Plumas County. Said report and return were verified on March 13, 1928, and described its properties located in said county of Plumas in these words: “Plant in course of construction—See our letter of March 1st.” The only portion of said letter which is at all relevant to the subject matter reads: “This company is now engaged in the construction of a power plant, operation of which will be commenced shortly.” By said report, as by its reports of former years, petitioner’s properties were rated as being nonoperative. More than two *488 months thereafter petitioner, claiming that said report was made under a mistake of fact and was erroneous in that it reported said properties as being nonoperative when in fact they were operative, caused the compilation and the listing of certain lands claimed to be operative and in use in the operation of said hydroelectric plant as distinguished from those which were nonoperative, and transmitted, on May 21, 1928, a copy of said lists and accompanying maps to the assessor of Plumas County. On June 8, 1928, petitioner filed with the State Board of Equalization an amended report and return, claiming that the properties therein described and which are involved in this proceeding, particularly the Buck Creek plant, were operative as of date March 5, 1928, and, therefore, were.not subject to assessment and taxation by said county of Plumas for county purposes, which tax computed on said properties as nonoperative amounted to approximately $7,000. The county assessor of Plumas County, in a communication to the State Board of Equalization dated June 20, 1928, refused to recognize said amended report and return on the ground that all of the properties of petitioner located in Plumas County had been placed upon the assessment-rolls of that county in accordance with the verified report and return of petitioner made within the time provided by law, to wit, March ,13th, and that said proposed amended report was filed long after the time provided by law for the filing of said report and return. Other objections not necessary to be stated here were made by said assessor to said proposed amended report. By reason of the objections and protests of said assessor, petitioner appealed to said State Board of Equalization and a hearing was had upon said amended report and return on June 26, 1928, and said Board of Equalization on June 30, 1928, found and decided “that all property of the Feather River Power Company be and the same is hereby declared to be classed as nonoperative as of the first Monday in March, 1928, and, therefore, subject to assessment for local taxation as of that date.”

Petitioner thereupon applied to this court for a writ of mandamus to be directed against said board and commanding it to correct and amend its findings and decision by designating as operative property for the year 1928 all of the properties listed as operative in petitioner’s said *489 amended report and return filed approximately three months after the expiration of the period within which each corporation or company organized as a hydroelectric utility must file its report for the purposes of assessment and taxation.

Petitioner has presented for our consideration a record of the proceedings had and taken before the State Board of Equalization which consists of affidavits, records and testimony of certain witnesses produced by it. All of the hydroelectric energy generated by petitioner on its Buck Creek plant was sold on contract direct to the Great Western Power Company, a public utility, and by it transmitted over its wires to its consumers throughout the northern part of the state. A table prepared by R. E. Ballew, the load dispatcher of the Great Western Power Company, showing the electric current in kilowatt hours purchased by and transmitted to the Great Western Power Company from petitioner’s Buck Creek plant, which is a part of the properties of petitioner situate in Plumas County, is made a part of the record. By said table it appears that the first delivery of electric current by petitioner to the Great Western Power Company was made on March 4, 1928, and consisted of 53,000 kilowatt hours of electric current. The same table shows on March 5, 93,000 kilowatt hours; March 6, 173,000; March 7, 124,000. During certain days of said month the electric current ran as high as 358,000 kilowatt hours. On six days of said month, after operations are alleged to have begun, no electric current was furnished by said Buck Creek plant. The Buck Creek plant seems to be one of a group of two other plants and properties, to wit, Grizzly Creek and Milk Ranch Creek, which constitute the hydroelectric system of the Feather River Power Company in Plumas County. T. S. MacDonald, the superintendent of Buck Creek plant of said Feather River Power Company, by affidavit, averred that said power plant was physically and electrically connected with the electric transmission lines of the Great Western Power Company prior to March 5, 1928, and that on March 4, 1928—one day prior to the first Monday in March—said Buck Creek plant began operations and the delivery of electric current to said Great Western Power Company in kilowatt hours, as shown by the statement heretofore referred to. The assistant secretary, who prepared and verified the report and return within the time provided *490 by law, appeared before the State Board of Equalization and testified that she had not been informed that there had been any change in the status of the property from what it had been at the times she made the reports for the three previous years. She “presumed that the Great Western Company had their original contract and that they were not required to take any electricity until the plant was entirely completed, that is, not until the Milk Ranch Creek conduit had been finished.” She further testified that she did not know the state of completion of the plant on the first Monday in March, and that “there was still construction going on at that time with regard to the Milk Ranch Creek conduit.”

The secretary and treasurer of petitioning power company testified that on Sunday, March 4, the power plant was started and thereafter continuously operated in the generation of power for public use through the distribution system of the Great Western Power Company. He did state, however, that the Milk Ranch Creek conduit was but a little more than one-half completed on March 5th. As to the uncompleted state of the reservoirs the witness testified: “The reservoirs themselves were operative so far as actual use was concerned, that is, they were all operative because we were using them although they might not have been 100% complete.

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 962, 206 Cal. 486, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feather-river-power-co-v-state-board-of-equalization-cal-1929.