Laurel Hill Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco

184 P.2d 160, 81 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1072
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 3, 1947
DocketCiv. No. 13404
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 184 P.2d 160 (Laurel Hill Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Laurel Hill Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco, 184 P.2d 160, 81 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1072 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

The appellant sued to recover $8,948.98 in taxes paid under protest.

On the first Monday in March, 1944, legal title to 55.3 acres of land situated in San Francisco was vested in the appellant. The tract was assessed at a valuation of $189,510 for the land and $1,300 for improvements. The grounds of protest were of course the same as those presented to the trial court and on this appeal.

During the period from 1854 to 1941, this tract was dedicated and used as a cemetery, and upwards of 38,000 bodies had been buried therein. Burials in San Francisco after August 1, 1901, were prohibited by law, but it was not until 1937, that the supervisors ordered the removal of all bodies from the cemetery. By early 1941, 35,987 bodies had been removed by the association and placed in a temporary mausoleum at Lawndale, in San Mateo County, where they are now, awaiting the construction of a permanent. memorial mausoleum. On February 7,1941, notice of the removal of all bodies was recorded and on March 10, 1941, the superior court by its decree declared that the 55-acre tract, theretofore dedicated as a cemetery, was no longer so dedicated. This brought to a close the first phase of the Laurel Hill operation.

The second or intermediate phase opened with the entry of said decree, for thereafter the tract, freed from the dedication, was simply so much vacant, unused real property. On December 16, 1940, and on January 6, 1941, the association, anticipating the decree terminating the cemetery status, entered into contracts with Heyman Brothers, Incorporated for the sale to them of the whole tract. The transfer of title was delayed for several reasons. The association was obligated to file a suit to quiet title, which developed into a contest and resulted in an appeal (Laurel Hill Cemetery Association v. All Persons, 69 Cal.App.2d 190 [158 P.2d 759]). That litigation took several years and the judgment quieting appellant’s title did not become final until July 12, 1945. Moreover, the construction of the permanent mausoleum was delayed by the war. The war interfered also with the financing by the vendees of their real estate project and with the physical improve[374]*374ments thereon. It is conceded by both sides that the delay— affecting vendor and vendee alike—was unavoidable. It was during this interval that the tax was levied.

The third and final phase will open with the completion of the memorial mausoleum at Lawndale and the transfer thereto, as their final resting place, of the 35,987 bodies formerly buried at Laurel Hill.

Section 1b of article XIII of the state Constitution reads: “All property used or held exclusively for the burial or other permanent deposit of the human dead or for the care, maintenance or upkeep of such property or such dead, except as used or held for profit, shall be free from taxation and local assessment.” From the time of the adoption of that section in 1926, until March, 1941, Laurel Hill Cemetery was exempt from taxation. It seems clear (although that question is not before us) that the memorial mausoleum which will contain the 35,987 bodies will be likewise exempt, for it will be used for the “permanent deposit of the human dead” and will not be “used or held for profit.”

The question presented for decision is whether, during the fiscal year 1944-5 (within the second phase of the operation and intermediate the two periods of tax exemption) the 55-acre tract was subject to taxation.

The contracts of sale, entered into several years before this tax was assessed, were in effect at the time of the assessment. The appellant urges with considerable force that this case calls for the application of the doctrine of equitable conversion, the argument being that after the decree of the superior court establishing the reasonableness of the selling price “the vendees were the equitable owners of the land . . . legal title being retained by the . . . Association as security for the price and the Cemetery Association was the equitable owner of the moneys, personal property, held and earmarked by the terms of the Morris Act ... to be used exclusively for the purposes enumerated in sections 7925 and 7926, Health and Safety Code. ...” Accordingly they conclude that, as the doctrine of equitable conversion treats land as money and money as land, the 55-acre tract represents and is, in legal contemplation, the money derived from the sale, and that such money should be exempt from taxation because it is destined by section 7925 for an ultimate use which will be tax-exempt. That section reads:

“Exemption of proceeds of land sales: Authorized uses. Money payable or to become payable as the purchase price or [375]*375on account of the purchase price of unused lands, or lands from which all remains have been removed is not subject to garnishment, attachment or execution, but shall be used exclusively for any or all of the following purposes:
“ (a) Acquisition of lands and improvements for cemetery purposes.
“(b) Disinterment, removal, and reinterment of bodies, pursuant to this chapter.
“ (c) Perpetual case of graves, markers, and cemetery embellishments.
“(d) The payment of expenses incidental to the disinterment, removal, and reinterment.
“(e) Any other purpose consistent with the objects for which the cemetery authority owning the cemetery is created or organized.”

It must be conceded, of course, that if the tax of $8,948.98 stands, it depletes the proceeds of the sale by just that much.

The appellant cites no authority in this state where the doctrine of equitable conversion has been applied in the field of taxation and apparently none is to be found. There is a division of authority on the subject in the United States (112 A.L.R. 23-27; 19 Am.Jur. 18; 51 Am.Jur. 540).

In 51 American Jurisprudence, page 612, this is found: “In general, cemeteries are exempted from taxation by express statutory or constitutional provision, .... Such an exemption is favored upon grounds of public policy. One reason for their exemption is the difficulty of collecting a tax thereon and the obvious impropriety of selling the graves of the dead in order to pay the expenses of carrying on the government of the living. ’ ’ That this is the reason for the exemption found in our Constitution appears from the opinion in Cypress Lawn Cemetery Association v. City and County of San Francisco, 211 Cal. 387, 391 [295 P. 813], where the court says: “It is in accordance with the common wish of mankind that the places where the dead are buried should be protected and preserved against interference of possible sales for unpaid taxes, and be kept free from molestation or desecration. Exemptions of cemetery from taxation are but the expression of that wish. That this is true as regards section 1b of article XIII, supra, appears from the argument made in favor of the proposed constitutional amendment and sent to all of the voters prior to the election at which it was adopted. The proponents of the measure urged that it ‘should have been adopted long ago [376]*376in order to protect the last resting place of the departed. . . .

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184 P.2d 160, 81 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurel-hill-cemetery-assn-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-calctapp-1947.