Los Angeles Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Corp. v. County of Los Angeles

71 P.2d 282, 22 Cal. App. 2d 418
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 25, 1937
DocketCiv. 10509
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 71 P.2d 282 (Los Angeles Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Corp. v. County of Los Angeles) 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
Los Angeles Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Corp. v. County of Los Angeles, 71 P.2d 282, 22 Cal. App. 2d 418 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DO CLING, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment for defendant entered pursuant to an order sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint without leave to amend.

*420 The action was one under Political Code, section 3804, to recover taxes paid to defendant county for the tax year 1931-1932. The complaint is in five counts but, except for certain allegations of the pleader’s reasons why in his opinion the tax is recoverable, the ultimate facts are similarly alleged in each count, being incorporated from count one into the later counts by appropriate reference. In our opinion plaintiff must stand or fall on the allegations contained in count one of the complaint, as nothing is added to the allegations of the ultimate facts in the later counts except the pleader’s conclusions.

In the complaint it is alleged that plaintiff is the owner of a permit or lease entitling it to the use of certain tide lands the fee to which stands in the city of Los Angeles; that the agreed rental for the first ten years of such lease is the nominal annual rental of $100, plus the value of certain improvements placed in and upon said tide lands by predecessors in interest of plaintiff, “that the true and correct monetary value of the ánnual rental being so paid to the City of Los Angeles ... on the first Monday in March, 1931, was the total sum of $557,427.67”; that the said leasehold interest of plaintiff was assessed for tax purposes by the assessor for the tax year 1931-1932 at $500,540; “that said assessment . . . was an erroneous and mistaken assessment by reason of the fact that the aforesaid county assessor did erroneously and mistakenly believe that the sole and only rent being paid for the use of the aforesaid premises . . . was the sum of $100.00 per annum . . . ; that said rental of $100.00 per annum, instead of the true and correct rental of $557,327.67, was, through inadvertence, error and mistake of said assessor, used in the aforesaid calculation of the assessed value of the aforesaid possessory interest; that had it not been for the aforesaid inadvertence, error and mistake of said assessor in so assuming erroneously and mistakenly the rental paid . . . was the sum of $100.00, instead of the correct figure of $557,327.67, there would have been no assessment of any sum at all . . . as it was the custom and practice of said assessor to make no assessment whatsoever, regardless of the ownership, right, title or interest under said harbor orders, where the computed proper rental and/or six per cent return on the restricted fee interest of the property was less than the amount of rental paid by such lessee *421 to the Board of Harbor Commissioners of the City of Los Angeles”. The complaint further sets forth the alleged valuation procedure followed by the assessor, i. e., a valuation of the lands covered by the lease at $1,456,310; a computation of the proper rental return at 6 per cent, to wit: $87,386; the deduction from the latter figure of $100 rental paid by plaintiff, leaving $87,278.60 (the pleader’s figures) as the net amiual worth of the lease to the lessee; and the capitalization of that balance for the remainder of the life of the lease as giving the assessed value of the leasehold interest. It is further alleged “that the assessed valuation of the aforesaid possessory interests ... on the basis of the actual rent paid by said company in the sum of $557,327.67, as applied to the proper return thereon, as found by said assessor ... of the sum of $87,386.60, left a negative annual interest in said Los Angeles Lumber Products Company under and by virtue of said possessory interests of $469,-941.07” and “that by reason of the lack of any interest under the assessor’s method of computing the same, no assessment and/or tax thereon was due or proper in any sum or at all”.

It is respondent’s contention that the allegations of the complaint show a mere case of overvaluation by the assessor and since there is no allegation of any appeal to the county board of equalization for relief (Southern California Hardwood etc. Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 49 Cal. App. 712 [194 Pac. 62]; Luce v. City of San Diego, 198 Cal. 405 [245 Pac. 196]) appellant cannot recover.

Appellant claims to be entitled to recover under Political Code, section 3804, on four separate grounds: 1. That the assessment was in excess of the actual cash value of the property by reason of a clerical error of the assessor (Orpheum Circuit, Inc., v. County of Los Angeles, 12 Cal. App. (2d) 257 [55 Pac. (2d) 901]; Associated Oil Co. v. County of Orange, 4 Cal. App. (2d) 5 [40 Pac. (2d) 887]); 2. That the tax was in effect a tax on nonexistent property (Pacific Coast Co. v. Wells, 134 Cal. 471 [66 Pac. 657]; Associated Oil Co. v. County of Orange, supra); 3. That the tax was really laid on the exempt city property since the lease had no taxable value (Brenner v. City of Los Angeles, 160 Cal. 72 [116 Pac. 397]); 4. That since the power of the assessor under Political Code, section 3627, is restricted to the assess *422 ment of property at its full cash value the assessment of this property in excess of its full cash value is illegal and recoverable under Political Code, section 3804.

Appellant also urges preliminarily that “in the absence of statute authorizing it to do so, a Board of Equalization has no power to cancel or strike out an assessment under any circumstances, and any order to that effect is a nullity” (24 Cal. Jur., p. 235, and eases cited), and hence, since its property had no taxable value, the board of equalization would have been powerless to give it relief. This argument is more ingenious than persuasive. Herein must be observed the distinction between property not properly the subject of taxation, and property which is of a character properly subject to taxation but without taxable value. If the propr erty placed on the assessment roll is not subject to taxation in any event, e. g\, exempt, out of the jurisdiction, etc., the attempted assessment is a nullity. If the property is the proper subject of taxation, as here, but not taxable because it possesses no taxable value an appeal to the board of equalization would still lie even though the board might reduce its assessed value to zero. The question would still be “what is the taxable value”? and not “is the property of a class which is not subject to taxation”?

It should not be forgotten that the requirement of appeal to the board of equalization in cases of overvaluation in assessments for tax purposes is grounded in an important public policy. In fixing the tax rate the board of supervisors must perform a mathematical calculation in which the sum of the estimated expenditures for the ensuing fiscal year is applied to the total assessed valuation of the taxable property. If the latter figure becomes a variable the possible confusion in the fiscal affairs of the county will be incalculable. In view of this fact the courts should be, as they have been, slow to extend the cases in which recourse to the board of equalization is not made a prerequisite to the recovery of taxes paid.

We return to the four main arguments of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
71 P.2d 282, 22 Cal. App. 2d 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-shipbuilding-dry-dock-corp-v-county-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1937.