Los Angeles Gas & Electric Co. v. County of Los Angeles

121 P. 384, 162 Cal. 164, 9 A.L.R. 1277, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 511
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2560.
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 121 P. 384 (Los Angeles Gas & Electric 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
Los Angeles Gas & Electric Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 121 P. 384, 162 Cal. 164, 9 A.L.R. 1277, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 511 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and from an order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial in an action brought by plaintiff to recover $11,728.12 *166 state and county taxes paid by plaintiff under protest for the fiscal year 1906-7. The judgment was in favor of plaintiff for the full amount claimed.

The amount sought to be recovered was a portion of the taxes paid by plaintiff upon certain tangible assets, such as its gas-pipes, meters, regulators, electric service, poles, wire, electric underground system, gasworks plant, electric works plant, etc., and was the amount claimed to have been illegally collected by reason of an over valuation of such property by the assessor of Los Angeles County. Recognizing the general rule that no remedy can be had in the courts for mistakes honestly made in the valuation of property for purposes of taxation by the assessing officers and tribunals appointed by law for the review of assessments, such as our county boards of equalization, the theory of plaintiff’s complaint was that the excessive valuations of its property were the result of an arbitrary plan adopted by the assessor for the valuation thereof, varying from that employed by him with reference to the property of other taxpayers, and resulting in placing upon its property an unequal burden of taxation, which plan was willfully and designedly adopted by him for the purpose of discriminating against plaintiff. The result was, it is claimed, not that the property was assessed for a sum exceeding its cash value, but that it was assessed at a greater proportion of such value than any other property and especially the property of its two competitors in business, thus bringing about inequality of taxation and denying plaintiff the equal protection of the laws. While the trial court found that the allegations of the complaint to the effect that the assessor acted with corrupt or malicious motives or -fraudulently were untrue, it did find that “the extreme disparity between the valuation of plaintiff’s property and other property of substantially the same character and value ... all arose from a design on the part of the assessor to discriminate against plaintiff, and the adoption and use by said assessor of an intentionally radical different method in arriving at the value of plaintiff’s property from that used in all other cases, involving property of the same character and similarly' situated, and from an entire failure on the part of the assessor to make any examination whatever of any of the properties of plaintiff so assessed, and that by reason of said intentional dis *167 crimination and the use of said radically different method plaintiff was inevitably assessed upon a very much larger proportion of its properties’ values than were other taxpayers and property-owners in the county of Los Angeles, and than were its competitors in business in said county.”

There was no attempt to state in the complaint or to prove on the trial anything in the nature of willful fraud on the part of the county board of equalization, to which application was made by plaintiff for a reduction of its assessment, and by which such application, so far as the particular property here involved is concerned, was denied. The only allegation in this behalf was as follows: “Plaintiff alleges that so many other protests and petitions for reductions of assessments were filed after plaintiff’s said protest and petition (alleged to have been filed July 13, 1906) were filed, heard, and submitted, and the time of the said board of supervisors in which to hear and pass upon the same was so short, that the said board of supervisors did not have time in which to consider in detail said protest of plaintiff and by reason thereof refused to reduce or alter said assessment values in any manner whatsoever.” It is possible that after judgment this allegation might properly be construed in support of the judgment as alleging that the board refused to reduce or even consider the assessment solely because it did not have time to give it any consideration, but there was no evidence in the record tending to support any such conclusion. The trial court found that “said board did not take time in which to consider in detail said protest of plaintiff, and said protest was not fully heard or considered by said board, and plaintiff was not given time and opportunity to introduce fully all evidence offered by it in support of its protest, and said board did not act with fairness and justice in the matter, and failed and refused to give plaintiff’s application careful and proper consideration, and the action of said board in passing upon said protest and claim of plaintiff and refusing to reduce or alter said assessment values in any manner whatsoever, was merely perfunctory in character and hardly more than a mere form, and did not constitute a hearing of plaintiff’s protest.”

It is not disputed that the conclusion of assessing officers as to the value of property for purposes of taxation, when hon *168 estly arrived at and when not made in pursuance of some fixed rule or general system the result of which is necessarily discriminatory and inequitable, is conclusive on the courts, however erroneous the conclusion of those officers may be. The law necessarily leaves the determination of the question of fact of value to certain officers, and when it appoints tribunals for that purpose, as in this state primarily the assessor, and, for purpose of review, the board of supervisors acting as a county board of equalization, the conclusion of those tribunals on such a question of fact constitutes a judgment that is not collaterally assailable in the courts. This is the universal rule, and it has been so held in this state. (San Jose Gas Co. v. January, 57 Cal. 614; Henne v. Los Angeles Co., 129 Cal. 297, [61 Pac. 1081], See, also, Gray on Limitations of Taxing Power, sec. 1460, [31 C. C. A. 537].) As put in Taylor v. Louisville etc. R. R. Co., 88 Fed. 350, such an attack will not lie in the courts “where the injury complained of arises only from the erroneous but honest judgment of the lawfully constituted tax tribunal.” But it is likewise universally held that a taxpayer may so assail an assessment in the courts where it was “fraudulently and corruptly made with the intention of discriminating against him, and for the purpose of causing him to pay more than his share of the public taxes,” and it has that effect, or where there is something equivalent to fraud in the making of the assessment, producing such effect. (See County of Los Angeles v. B allerino, 99 Cal. 593, [32 Pac. 581, 34 Pac. 329]; Pacific etc. Co. v. Dalton, 119 Cal. 604, [51 Pac. 1072] ; Oregon etc. R. R. Co. v. Jackson Co., 38 Ore. 589, 599, [64 Pac. 307, 65 Pac. 369] and cases there cited.) This is as true where the injurious effect so produced is caused by inequality of valuation as by any other cause, for, as said in Judson on Taxation, p. 608, “it is obvious that where taxation is upon property that requires valuation, inequality of taxation is produced as surely by inequality of valuation as by inequality of the rate of tax.”

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Bluebook (online)
121 P. 384, 162 Cal. 164, 9 A.L.R. 1277, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-gas-electric-co-v-county-of-los-angeles-cal-1912.