Helping Hand Home for Children v. County of San Diego

79 P.2d 778, 26 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1063
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1938
DocketCiv. 2036
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 778 (Helping Hand Home for Children v. County of San Diego) 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
Helping Hand Home for Children v. County of San Diego, 79 P.2d 778, 26 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1063 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

HAINES, J., pro tem.

Appellant, Helping Hand Home for Children, hereinafter referred to as the “Home”, is a nonprofit charitable corporation organized under the laws of California and. owns certain real property within the city of San Diego, on which are certain buildings wherein it conducts its activities, which consist generally of sheltering and caring for needy children. Its properties were assessed for the purposes of taxation and taxes levied thereon by the authorities of the County of San Diego for each of the fiscal years 1932—33, 1933-34, 193A-35 and 1935-36. Appellant instituted the present proceeding by petition for a writ of mandate against the County of San Diego and the Board of Supervisors and District Attorney thereof, wherein it is claimed that each and all of these assessments and tax levies are illegal “for the reason that all said buildings and the whole of said real property, during each and every fiscal year, were required and used by petitioner for its occupation as an institution sheltering more than 20 orphan children receiving state aid, and because of said use and occupation is free from taxation”. It is further alleged that the purported taxes so levied have not been paid and are, according to the records, delinquent, and that the records of such purported delinquencies constitute and are clouds upon the petitioner’s title; that application to the Board of Supervisors for their removal has been made and denied. It is further alleged that appellant Home “has performed each and every *454 act and thing by it to be performed to render said property exempt from taxation”. The court was asked to direct the Board to cause the record of said tax assessments and levies to be canceled and to direct the District Attorney to assent to such cancellation.

The answer, as amended, admitted most of the matters alleged in the petition but denied appellant’s status as an institution sheltering more than 20 orphan and half-orphan children receiving state aid, and denied the performance by appellant of the conditions precedent to its right to exemption from taxation. The case having been tried, the court found that appellant was a nonprofit charitable corporation, as alleged, owning the property described, in its petition, and that assessments and levies of taxes had been made against the same as claimed, and remained unpaid; that during each of the fiscal years 193A-35 and 1935-36 appellant Home “actually sheltered and had in its care and custody in said buildings and upon said real property more than 20 orphan and half-orphan children for whom petitioner received state aid”, but that during the respective fiscal years 1932-33 and 1933-34, though in the one year it sheltered and- cared for 33, and in the other for 41 orphan and half-orphan children, it had received state aid for only 15 of them in the former year and for only 17 in the latter. The court’s conclusion of law was that appellant’s property should have been given exemption from taxation for the fiscal years 193A-35 and 1935-36, but not for either of the fiscal years 1932-33 or 1933-34, and judgment was given accordingly. Prom this judgment appellant Home appeals.

The sole question before us for consideration is the proper construction of that part of section l%a of article XIII of the state Constitution which, in so far as we need quote it, reads as follows:

“Exempting Orphanages from Taxation. All buildings, and so much of the real property connected therewith as may be required for the occupation of institutions sheltering more than twenty orphan or half-orphan children receiving state aid shall be free from taxation; ...”

The present inquiry is stated in appellant’s opening brief to be: “Does the phrase ‘receiving state aid’ refer to and limit the noun ‘institutions’ or the noun ‘children’?” It is manifest that if the expression “receiving state aid” applies *455 to the noun “institutions” then for the two fiscal years 1932-33 and 1933-34 affected by the appeal, appellant Home was entitled to exemption from taxation because each of said years it received some aid for some children, whereas, if the said expression “receiving state aid”, as used in the constitutional provision, refers to and limits the noun “children” then, since the state aid was not, during* either of said two years given to appellant Home for as many as 20 children, it is not for either year exempt from taxation.

If the ordinary rules of grammar were followed, the phrase “receiving state aid” would be treated as applying to the nearest antecedent noun, which is “children”, not “institutions”. Obviously, therefore, it is the burden of appellant Home to show why that construction should not be adopted. Starting out with the propositions that the cardinal rule in construing a constitutional or statutory provision is to ascertain its intent (In re Davis, 18 Cal. App. (2d) 291 [63 Pac. (2d) 853] ; People v. Strickler, 25 Cal. App. 60 [142 Pac. 1121]); that the interpretation adopted must be reasonable (Civ. Code, see. 3542); that a constitutional provision or a statute should be so construed as to give a sensible and intelligible meaning to every part of it so as to avoid absurd and unjust consequences (Robbiano v. Bovet, 218 Cal. 589 [24 Pac. (2d) 466] ; Madary v. City of Fresno, 20 Cal. App. 91, 97 [128 Pac. 340] ; Matter of Zany, 20 Cal. App. 360, 368 [129 Pac. 295] ; In re Davis, supra); and that a statute should be so interpreted as to make it valid and effective (In re Davis, supra) ; appellant’s counsel urge: (a) that the arguments presented under the provisions of section 1195 of the Political Code and submitted with their sample ballots to the electors when section l%a of article XIII of the Constitution was submitted in 1920 for adoption assume, and, in effect, say, that the reference is to institutions that are, as such, receiving state aid, and that resort may properly be had to these arguments in determining the proper construction of the amendment as adopted; (b) that under article IY, section 22 of the state Constitution and sections 2283 to 2289, both inclusive, of the Political Code, as in effect at the time of the assessments and tax levies here involved (in 1937 carried in a revised form into the Welfare and Institutions Code), orphan aid was given not to the child but to the institution and, therefore, that in the said constitutional *456 provision the words “receiving state aid” necessarily refer to the institution, not children; and (c) that the construction for which respondents contend would lead to results to such an extent absurd and unjust that the electors cannot reasonably be believed to have contemplated them.

On behalf of respondents, on the other hand, it is urged that the said section l^a of article XIII of the Constitution is free from ambiguity and therefore requires no construction; that it follows that the courts may not go outside its language to ascertain its meaning and, finally, that exemption from taxation is the exception and not the rule and, therefore, that the exemption provision under discussion must be strictly construed.

We are constrained to the view that respondents’ contention must be upheld.

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 778, 26 Cal. App. 2d 452, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helping-hand-home-for-children-v-county-of-san-diego-calctapp-1938.