Graciosa Oil Co. v. County of Santa Barbara

99 P. 483, 155 Cal. 140, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 405
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1909
DocketL.A. No. 2070.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 99 P. 483 (Graciosa Oil Co. v. County of Santa Barbara) 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
Graciosa Oil Co. v. County of Santa Barbara, 99 P. 483, 155 Cal. 140, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 405 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

SHAW. J.

This is an action to recover taxes assessed against plaintiff by defendant and paid under protest, claiming that the assessment is void.

For the year 1904 plaintiff was assessed for taxes as the owner of property described on the assessment-roll as “mining rights and privileges under lease made by L. Harris et al., to Graciosa Oil Co., dated December 15, 1900, and recorded in (referring to the record) in and to the following described lands,” (describing about seven thousand acres of land situated in Santa Barbara County). The property rights thus described were assessed at the value of fourteen thousand, nine hundred and fifty dollars, and on this assessment the taxes in question were levied and paid.

For the same year the same land was assessed to the lessors Harris et al.-, who were the owners of the fee, at the value of sixty-six thousand, four hundred and fifty dollars. In this assessment the land was described by sections and subdivisions, precisely as in the assessment to plainitff, without mention of any deduction from the valuation thereof or of any exception arising out of any qualification, limitation, or burden upon the fee, by reason of the separate ownership of the mining rights and privileges referred to in the assessment to plaintiff. It was found by the court, however, “that the mining rights and privileges assessed to plaintiff was not included, and no part of them was included, for assessment in or with any of the property as assessed to” Harris et al., and that “the said assessment of said mining rights and privileges was not included in and did not include the assessment of any property assessed” to said Harris et al. We understand this finding to mean that there was no double assessment or double taxation upon the same property or interest therein, and we assume therefrom that the valuation of the entire estate and property in the land, as made by the assessor, including the plaintiff’s rights and privileges, would exactly equal the aggre *142 gate amount of all the assessments involved. • The court below, in its conclusions of law, held the assessment to plaintiff void solely on the ground that the mining rights and privileges granted by the lease were not taxable or assessable separately from the land upon which they were operated, and that the lease did not create a separate taxable interest in the land, or justify a separate assessment of the right granted, although the value of said right was not included in the valuation of the land in the assessment to the landowners. The question presented and argued is whether or not, under the provisions of the constitution and of the Political Code providing for taxation, an assessment of the mining rights and privileges of plaintiff under the lease referred to can be made against the plaintiff, separately from and in addition to the assessment to the owners of the fee covering the land itself but not including said rights and privileges, or, in other words, whether or not the respective rights of the plaintiff and of Harris et al., under the contract, are separately assessable to each.

The contract of lease was dated December 15, 1900. The parties of the first part, named as lessors, were Lawrence Harris, Eleanor Kate Harris, and Harry H. Harris, the owners of the land. By this contract the landowners granted to the plaintiff, party of the second part, “the sole and exclusive right to enter upon the premises (described) for the purpose and to mine or bore wells,-or to do whatever things may be necessary and proper for the development and extraction upon said premises of petroleum, and other hydrocarbon substances, by whatever name known, and natural gas (asphaltum included'),” together with the privilege of conveying over said land any of said substances produced therefrom, the right to use the water of the streams thereon so far as needed in said business, and of placing and maintaining on the premises “all structures and appliances necessary and useful for the objects of the lease; ... to have and to hold the said premises and privileges with the appurtenances for the said purposes unto the said party of the second part, its successors or assigns, from and after the date hereof . . . for and during the whole period of twenty years, unless otherwise terminated by the party of the second part, (plaintiff?), for failure to comply with the terms of this lease”: provided, that if any wells on the premises were then producing oil, such wells might be re *143 tained by the plaintiff and deepened and operated thereafter so long as they continued to produce. It further provided that the lessee should begin development work within six months from the date of the lease and prosecute the same continuously in good faith to success or abandonment, but that it should have the right at its option to abandon the lease at any time that it deemed it unprofitable to hold or operate and that the lease should thereupon become void. And further that “in the event that oil is found, the lessee agrees to deliver or pay as rent or royalty to the said lessor . . . the one-tenth part or share of so much of all the crude oil or petroleum, naphtha, or maltha, which may be produced and saved by the lessor from said wells and operations on said premises,” not including that required by the plaintiff for fuel in the mining operations.

The contention of the respondent is that there can be but one assessment of these lands, that the assessment to the Harrises covers and includes all other interests and that, after having made that assessment, excluding the value of plaintiff’s rights, it is not lawful to separately assess to the plaintiff the value of its property rights under the oil lease.

It is no doubt the general rule, regarding land held under an ordinary lease for years giving the right to hold the land for usufructuary purposes only, that, in the absence of contrary statutory provisions, there is to be but one assessment of the entire estate in the land, and that this assessment should include the value of both the- estate for years and of the remainder or reversion. (27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 678; Chicago v. People, 153 Ill. 409, [38 N. E. 1075]; State v. Mississippi B. Co., 109 Mo. 253, [19 S. W. 421].) Section 3887 of the Political Code recognized this rule and provided that “the mortgagor or lessor of real estate is liable for the taxes thereon.” This section was repealed in 1880, but, so far as we are advised, the practice of making but one assessment of such land and covering therein the entire value of all interests and estates, has been uniformly followed in this state, since its repeal as well-as before.

With respect to ordinary leases for usufructuary purposes there are good reasons for this practice. Except when held for speculative purposes, the value of land usually depends on the value of the use and occupation, and consists of a sum *144 equivalent to a principal which, at the rate of interest usual upon safe investments, will bring a net annual income equal to that which the land will produce. The Jessor or landowner annually receives a sum as rent which he. deems the equivalent of this annual income, or of the value of the use of the land to him, and therefore he enjoys the entire beneficial interest in the premises, including the value of the leasehold as well as of the fee.

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Bluebook (online)
99 P. 483, 155 Cal. 140, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graciosa-oil-co-v-county-of-santa-barbara-cal-1909.