Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Hansen

102 P.2d 417, 38 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 719
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1940
DocketCiv. 6388
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 102 P.2d 417 (Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Hansen) 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
Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Hansen, 102 P.2d 417, 38 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 719 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This appeal raises the question as to the right of priority of lien in the State of California for unpaid sales faxes due and owing.

Respondent corporation filed an action in Los Angeles County for the foreclosure of a mortgage on real property situated therein. The State of California was made a party defendant because of the fact that the state had a judgment for $74.32 against Axel Hansen, the owner and mortgagor of the property, subject to the foreclosure suit. The judgment of foreclosure decreed that the real property therein described be sold and the proceeds of the sale applied to payment of the commissioner’s fee, costs of suit and principal and interest in satisfaction of the mortgage debt. The foreclosure decree failed to recognize any lien or interest in behalf of the State of California in respect to the real property involved therein.

*750 The note and mortgage to respondent corporation was executed on August 2, 1934, and the mortgage was recorded on October 5, 1934. A license or permit to engage in the sale of tangible personal property at retail was issued to the defendant, Axel Hansen, the mortgagor, by the board of equalization of the State of California for the period from July 1, 1934, to September 15, 1935. During this period there accrued and became due to the State of California a retail sales tax in the sum of $13.58. This sum, together with interest and a penalty which was imposed, amounts to $16.28. Other retail sales taxes due from Axel Hansen to the state accrued on retail sales made by him after September 15, 1935, and as to these latter taxes the state makes no claim of priority to respondent’s lien of the mortgage. The Retail Sales Tax Act of 1933 (Stats. 1933, p. 2599; Deering's Supp. 1933, p. 2359, Act 8493) was amended in 1935 and the amendments became effective on September 15, 1935. Section 26y2 was added to the act by the legislature in 1935. This section provides that the state does not have a preference over any recorded lien which attached prior to the date when the tax became a lien.

Appellant claims priority of lien as to said sum of $16.28, which accrued on sales made prior to September 15, 1935. It is contended that the state has a superior or prior lien against the property of the retailer, on the theory that any tax lien in California is ex proprio vigore superior to a private prior contract or mortgage lien. The 1935 amendments to the Retail Sales Tax Act of 1933 preclude the possibility of the application of the doctrine ex proprio vigore to property subject to a lien for taxes accruing on retail sales made after September 15, 1935. The act of 1933 is silent on the right of priority of lien. It is the silence of the statute in this regard which leads to the claim that the doctrine of ex proprio vigore applies as to tax liens. Consequently, appellant is claiming priority of lien against the property of the retailer for taxes accruing on retail sales of tangible personal property made only before the effective date of the 1935 amendments. We are concerned alone with the Retail Sales Tax Act of 1933, and this act becomes important in determining the question of priority of lien in the absence of a finding that California follows the rule that any tax lien is ex proprio vigore superior to a prior private contract or mortgage lien.

*751 Considerable confusion has existed through various jurisdictions in determining the dignity to be granted to tax obligations. As early as 1800 the Supreme Court of South Carolina, in the case of Butler v. Baily, 2 Bay, 244, 249, held that a tax imposed upon persons was a lien on all the propertj' of the person assessed, and superior to an earlier judgment lien, even though there was no statute purporting to create such lien, or any lien. Other jurisdictions adopted this rule of the Butler ease, and held that taxes are ex proprio vigore a lien on all the property of the taxpayer. The importance of proper maintenance of the government and the necessity of expediting its functions were among the reasons given for the superiority granted to tax liens.

The case of Dougherty v. Henarie, 47 Cal. 9, decided in 1873, was perhaps the first authority in this state which might be deemed to state the rule of law that tax liens are ex proprio vigore superior to all other liens. The question was raised as to the superiority of a title acquired under a tax deed issued upon a sale for state and county taxes. The court held that the tax deed conveyed the title, discharged of the plaintiff’s lien. At page 14 the court stated as follows:

“The general rule is that a sale and conveyance in due form, for taxes, extinguishes all prior liens, whether for taxes or otherwise. The necessity of collecting revenue for the support of the government imperatively requires that the lien for taxes shall take precedence over all other liens; and that a tax sale, followed by a proper conveyance, shall transfer the title discharged of prior tax liens. ’ ’

The court was aided, however, in reaching its conclusion as to title under the tax deed by the presence of a section of the revenue law which provided that the tax deed conveyed to the grantee the absolute title to the lands described in the deed. In determining the effect of this section of the revenue law, the court said at page 15:

“More explicit and comprehensive language could not well have been employed to define the nature of the title which passes by the tax deed. . . . This language is so explicit as to require no interpretation and to leave no room for construction.”

In California Loan Co. v. Weis, 118 Cal. 489 [50 Pac. 697], the question arose as to whether the lien of personal property *752 taxes was superior to the lien of a pre-existing mortgage which had attached to the land. The court held that the title of the purchaser under a sale of the land for delinquent personal property taxes was paramount to the lien of the mortgage. The decision in this instance was, however, based solely on the construction of the Political Code and it cannot be said that this ease stands for the proposition that tax liens are ex proprio vigore superior to prior mortgage liens- The court said at page 493:

“It still remains to be considered, before leaving this branch of the case, whether the legislature of this State has, in the exercise of an unquestioned power, made the lien of its taxes paramount. As this matter, the power being conceded, depends for its determination entirely upon statutory enactment, adjudications in sister states will be of little value unless based upon identical laws.” (Italics ours.)

In every case in which the question of the superiority of the tax lien has been in issue it will be noted that a construction of a statute has been involved. It is also true that the decisions, with the exception of the holding in the case of O’Dea v. Mitchell, 144 Cal. 374, 375, 381 [77 Pac. 1020], has, in the final analysis, depended upon the language used in the statutes applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P.2d 417, 38 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-loan-corp-v-hansen-calctapp-1940.