Leonard v. Jaffray

165 P. 956, 175 Cal. 371, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 685
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 3606.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 165 P. 956 (Leonard v. Jaffray) 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
Leonard v. Jaffray, 165 P. 956, 175 Cal. 371, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 685 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Plaintiff sued to quiet title to the following described real property in the city of Los Angeles: “Lot 4, in Block ‘PI,’ of G-lassell’s Subdivision of part of Lots 3, 6 and 7, in Block 39, Hancock’s Survey as per map thereof on file in Book 6, page 138, of Miscellaneous! Records, in the office of the County Recorder of said county.” It was alleged that plaintiff was “the owner in fee and entitled to the possession of” the land. Defendant, Jaffray, answered, setting up his *373 own possession and title and also filed’ a cross-complaint to which plaintiff made answer. By his cross-complaint J. R. Jaffray asked to have his title to the property quieted as against Leonard’s claims. The cause was tried partly upon stipulation and partly upon testimony and documentary proof. Judgment was in favor of plaintiff. From said judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial defendant and cross-complainant appeals. Some of the facts stipulated were that “R. N. Withnell was formerly the owner of said lot, and he transferred the title to his daughter, Grace B. Leonard, who died a widow, leaving no will, and leaving Richard W. Leonard her son and only heir at law, who is now the administrator of her estate”; that the city taxes upon the said lot for the year 1903 have never been paid except by way of sale of the lot; and that “certain proceedings were had in 1904 for the purpose of selling said lot to said city for nonpayment of said taxes of 1903, and in 1909 a deed was made to the city under such proceedings, there having been no redemption or repurchase of said lot from said city by anyone.” The purported deeds to the city and from the city to James R. Jaffray were stipulated into the record by copies, plaintiff admitting their execution but reserving the right to make all legal objections to them. The final paragraph of the stipulation is as follows:

“The right, title and interest of said James R. Jaffray in and to said lot is derived and deraighed through the several proceedings above mentioned and should it be made to appear that an essential element of such proceedings is wanting, and that the defect is incurable, then and in that case his title fails and he has no other interest in the lot t_an the amount he paid, provided such payment is found to be a legal claim against the same, and in case there has been a compliance with law in such proceedings, then and in that case, all the light, title and interest of Richard W. Leonard or those through whom he claims, as administrator or in person, has been wholly divested and terminated, including all rights of redemption or repurchase from the city.”

The most important question to be determined, therefore, is this: Did the city ever acquire title to the property through the tax proceedings? The court found the assessment for the year 1903 deficient and defective in this, that the assessor’s affidavit as required by law was not attached to the assessment- *374 book. It was found that the assessment-book contains what purports- to be such affidavit in the form required by law and subscribed by the assessor, but it is not sworn to as in the statute required, before any officer entitled to administer an oath. The requirement of the ordinance under which the purported assessment of plaintiff’s land was made is that on or before the first Monday of July in each year the assessor must “take and subscribe an affidavit in the assessment-roll” in substantially a prescribed form. The ordinance further provides that the city clerk, who is ex-officio clerk of the board of equalization, must record all changes, corrections, and orders made by the board and on or before the last Monday o'f August must deliver the assessment-roll so corrected to the council with “an affidavit thereto affixed subscribed and sworn to by him” in a prescribed form. The required form was made out and signed by the clerk but no jurat was attached to it. These omissions of the officers charged with the duty of authenticating the assessment were fatal to the acquiring of jurisdiction to sell the property to the city. Respondent depends upon the rule announced in Miller v. Kern County, 137 Cal. 516, [70 Pac. 549], and we can see no escape from the conclusion supported by that ease that at least the proceedings following the clerk’s omission properly to certify the equalized roll were invalid. It was said in that ease that without the affidavit of the clerk affixed to the assessment-book the auditor had no power to compute the taxes. True, the requirements of the ordinance were not exactly the same as those of the law considered in the Miller case, in that the roll was not passed to the auditor or other officer for extension of the levy after equalization, but the proper authentication of the equalized roll is none the less made prerequisite to all future proceedings. Neither the prima facie evidence of the regularity of the antecedent proceedings furnished by the deed to the city nor the curative clause of the ordinance relating to informalities- is available against the clear showing that the clerk failed to authenticate the corrected roll as required by the ordinance. If the ordinance merely commanded that an affidavit should be taken and sworn to when the equalization of .the taxes was completed, perhaps the appearance of the affidavit without a jurat might be cured by the presumption of regularity; but the ordinance requires that the affidavit must be subscribed and sworn to and affixed to the *375 assessment-roll. Without a proper jurat the writing in the record is not an affidavit at all, but amounts merely to a certificate. It is not even a statement on oath, and it entirely fails to measure up to the requirements of the statute. (Metcalf v. Prescott, 10 Mont. 283-294, [25 Pac. 1037]; Cosner’s Admr. v. Smith, 36 W. Va. 788, [15 S. E. 977]; Gordon v. State, 29 Tex. Cr. 410, [16 S. W. 337].)

It is to be noted that section 63 of the ordinance, which is called by counsel the “curative clause,” is essentially the same as section 3885 of the Political Code, which was in effect when Miller v. Kern County, 137 Cal. 516, [70 Pac. 549], was decided ; yet a compliance with the terms of the statute requiring the subscription and attachment to the roll of an affidavit was held necessary in that case. Speaking of the affidavit of the clerk and that of the tax collector the learned commissioner who wrote the opinion in the Miller case said: “These affidavits are in effect the certificate or authentication of the assessment as it leaves .the county board of equalization and as made to conform to the requirements of the state board, and, we think, are essential to its validity.”

This court is also in accord with the contention of respondent that the ordinance, under which the attempt to sell the property fo.r taxes was made, was in contravention of the charter of the city of Los Angeles. By this ordinance it was provided that before sale by the city of property which had been sold to it for municipal taxes the clerk should fix a date for such sale and give notice thereof by publication for at least ten days in a daily paper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 P. 956, 175 Cal. 371, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-jaffray-cal-1917.