L. W. Blinn Lumber Co. v. County of Los Angeles

14 P.2d 512, 216 Cal. 474, 84 A.L.R. 1304, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 596
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 11514.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 512 (L. W. Blinn Lumber Co. v. County of Los Angeles) 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
L. W. Blinn Lumber Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 14 P.2d 512, 216 Cal. 474, 84 A.L.R. 1304, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 596 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

PRESTON,. J.

Appeal by plaintiff from judgment for defendants in an action to recover taxes for the year 1924, paid under protest (sec. 3819, Pol. Code), upon a possessory, or leasehold, interest in tide lands owned by the City of Los Angeles. Said judgment rests- upon findings of fact and conclusions of law, the substance of which will now be set forth: .

The court found that in 1917, as the result of the settlement and compromise of litigation between the City of Los Angeles and the Southern Pacific Railroad, the city leased certain tide lands to the railroad without the specification of rental, the lease to terminate in 1947; that in 1918 said railroad assigned to Consolidated Lumber Company, a corporation, all of its interest in and to a portion of said tide lands, comprising some 27.56 acres, more or less; that in 1920 the latter company in turn contracted with plaintiff to sublet or assign to it the estate in said lease at an annual payment of $300 per acre for the first five years, increasing materially at the commencement of the second, third, fourth *476 and fifth respective five-year periods thereafter, then to be at the rate of $600 per acre per annum for the balance of the term of the lease, expiring July 23, 1947; that since January 1, 1920, plaintiff had possessed, occupied and used said territory.

The court further found that in 1924, the Los Angeles County assessor entered against plaintiff an assessment upon the following described property: “Unsecured personal property as follows: The leasehold int and all other rights of L. W. Blinn Lbr Co in and to lands described under L A City Ord H C 0 833 or otherwise”; that by said description the assessor had in mind and intended to describe plaintiff’s said leasehold interest above referred to, although said description failed to describe said interest sufficiently to identify it, “L A City Ord H C 0 883” being an order of the board of harbor commissioners and not an ordinance; that, however, plaintiff was not misled or prejudiced by said defective description and on March 27, 1924, rendered to said assessor a statement under oath setting forth specifically its leasehold or possessory interest, which is the estate here under consideration.

The court further found that the annual payments mentioned did not represent the full value of the occupancy and use or the full rental value of said premises; that said assessor placed a valuation of $110,240 upon plaintiff’s said interest, pursuant to which a tax of $4,133.99 was levied for the year 1924 and paid under protest in writing by plaintiff.

The court further found that the full cash value of plaintiff’s said leasehold and possessory interest on the first Monday in March, 1924, was $114,058 and stated that “in determining the value of said property the court' considered the payments to be made by plaintiff to the Consolidated Lumber Company pursuant to the written agreement set forth in paragraph V of these findings, as installments of a purchase price and not as rental”.

The court then found that the sum of $110,240 set forth in said assessment was ascertained and fixed by the assessor as follows: That said assessor valued the fee-simple title of the lands within the exterior boundaries of said portion of tide lands at $13,000 per acre; that said assessor next capitalized at six per cent the amount per acre per annum then being paid by plaintiff to Consolidated Lumber Com *477 pany under said agreement of 1920, to wit: The sum of $300, and by such capitalization derived the figure of $5,000; that said assessor thereupon deducted said $5,000 from said fee value of $13,000 per acre and thereby derived an amount of $8,000 per aere, of which he took fifty per cent, viz., $4,000' multiplied said sum of $4,000 by 27.56, being the number of acres, thereby deriving said assessment figure of $110,240.

The court also found that said assessment was made without any purpose or intent of requiring plaintiff to pay an excessive or unlawful tax or to bear a burden unequal to that of other taxpayers, although it was true that in the case of a few small isolated parcels of real property within said county, leased to private individuals for a short term, the leasehold or possessory interests escaped assessment and taxes for the year 1924. The court found that at the hearing before the board of equalization plaintiff had an opportunity to offer all the evidence it desired in reference to said alleged overvaluation of said possessory right and leasehold interest and that the conclusion of said board and its refusal to lower said assessed valuation was the result of its honest judgment, free from discrimination or arbitrary action.

As a matter of law the court concluded that the determination of the board of equalization that the sum of $110,240 was the full cash value of said possessory or leasehold interest was conclusive; that solely because of said defective description the assessment and tax was invalid; that, however, the tax was morally and equitably due and plaintiff, in good conscience, should pay it and defendants should retain it; hence that plaintiff was not entitled to a judgment refunding to it said tax. Accordingly, judgment followed for defendants, awarding them their costs of suit, and plaintiff appealed.

The contentions of appellant are: That the assessment of 1924 was grossly excessive because of adoption by the county assessor of a wrong theory and plan of assessment and particularly because of the admitted failure to take into consideration, as a proper deduction, plaintiff’s obligation to pay the annual amounts or rentals due under said contract with the Consolidated Lumber Company; that allowing a grossly excessive assessment is constructive fraud on the *478 part of a county assessor and board of equalization approving it, which will be relieved against by the courts; also that the assessment was void in that it failed to comply with the requirements of the Political Code, sections 3650, 3884.

The latter point we deem to be without merit, inasmuch as all parties considered and acted upon the understanding that the property here in question was the property intended to be assessed and plaintiff also returned these premises for assessment. The first two questions, however, undoubtedly possess merit and will now be discussed.

The system employed by the assessor and confirmed by the board of equalization is manifestly unsound, for at most it is a doubtful plan to appraise the present reversionary interest and not the leasehold interest in the property. The system, as we understand it, was to appraise the fee title interest per acre and subtract therefrom the capitalized rental per acre paid by the lessee; then to multiply the result by the number of acres involved and take one-half the product in accordance with the rule of assessment applicable to all property in Los Angeles County.

This system, however, takes no account of the duration of the leasehold estate; hence, it would ordinarily carry the same valuation on the last year of the term as on the first. It ignores the fact that the estate of the lessee is a limited one and that the excess of annual benefits over burdens must of necessity be the important factor in such an appraisal.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 512, 216 Cal. 474, 84 A.L.R. 1304, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-w-blinn-lumber-co-v-county-of-los-angeles-cal-1932.