Marysville Woolen Mills v. Smith

175 P. 13, 178 Cal. 786, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 563
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1918
DocketSac. No. 2574. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 175 P. 13 (Marysville Woolen Mills v. Smith) 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
Marysville Woolen Mills v. Smith, 175 P. 13, 178 Cal. 786, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 563 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

Two other eases on appeal—California Midland Ry. Co. v. Smith, and Martin v. Smith, post, p. 812, [175 Pac. 16]—involve the same controlling points as are embraced in this appeal, and by stipulation of all parties are submitted to abide the decision on the appeal under present" consideration.

This action was brought to remove a cloud upon the title of the plaintiff to certain property in Tuba County through the issuance of a certificate of sale to defendant Johnson at a> delinquent tax sale and to enjoin the issuance of a tax deed on the certificate.

*788 The court entered a decree declaring the tax sale and tax certificate issued thereon invalid, enjoined the issuance of atar, deed, but required that plaintiff pay to defendant Johnson the sum of $641.91, the amount due for taxes and paid by him for the property at the tax sale. The defendant Johnson appeals from this decree and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The only attack made on this appeal is on the findings. The court found that plaintiff was the owner of the real and personal property involved in the tax sale which, it may be here remarked, was necessarily a determination that the tax sale to appellant was void. It further found, among other proceedings eventuating in the sale of the property for delinquent taxes, that the tax collector of the city of Marysville published in a specified newspaper a notice stating that taxes fixed and levied against the property of the plaintiff would be delinquent on October 3, 1914; that thereafter said taxes not having been paid, said tax collector published, for the proper time required by law, a delinquent tax notice which, provided for the sale of the property on the 3d of December, 1914; that at no time, however, did said tax collector make or file with the city clerk of the city of Marysville, or with any other person, or in any office, or at all, any copy of the publication aforesaid, or any affidavit attached thereto, or any proof of any such publication; that said sale was advertised and noticed for December 3, 1914, but on said last date wan postponed till the fourth day of December, 1914; that said tax collector neither gave, nor caused to be given, any notice of the said postponement of sale; that on December 4th a sale was had and the property herein was sold to defendant Johnson and a certificate of sale issued to him; that on December 2, 1915, the plaintiff, through its attorneys, offered in writing to pay defendant Johnson the amount of money paid by him upon the salé of the property, together with interest thereon, and fifty per cent additional for the purpose of redeeming from said tax sale, and offered to pay any other sum that defendant Johnson might claim was necessary for a redemption, but that said Johnson refused to accept any sum except upon payment by plaintiff to him of the sum of eleven thousand dollars, being the value of certain personal property assessed against the plaintiff in addition to the assessment of the real estate and which purported to have been sold with *789 the real property to said defendant Johnson at the tax sale above mentioned.

Upon the refusal of the defendant Johnson to accept the redemption money tendered, plaintiff brought this action with the result above stated.

At the threshold of this appeal we are asked to determine whether the law governing taxation and tax proceedings -as it existed in 1876 applies and governs with reference to this tax sale made in 1914, or whether the general law on the subject of taxation and a sale for delinquent taxes existing when the sale was made in 1914 is to prevail. This question is sought to be presented under the charter of the city of Marysville. It appears that the city of Marysville operates under a charter granted by a special act of the legislature in 1876, and which expressly provided that the city should be organized with the powers and under the provisions of title III of the Political Code of this state. Section 4390, part of title III, provides, among other things, that “the mode of making out the list and of certifying the value of property and of collecting all taxes is the same as prescribed in this code for assessing and collecting the state taxes. ’ ’ In harmony with this section the city of Marysville has been levying and collecting its taxes and making delinquent sales and certificates and deeds thereon to purchasers under the tax law as it stood in 1876 unaffected by any change, alteration, repeal, or amendment to which the law as it then stood has been subjected during the course of these many years. The tax law as it then stood has been treated as incorporated in and as an inflexible part of the charter, and under the provisions of the tax law as it existed in 1876 the taxes, sale, and tax certificate in question here were levied and made, and appellant Johnson defends his title acquired at the delinquent sale on the ground that it was made in full compliance with the tax law governing under the charter. On the part of respondent it is asserted that it was not the intention of the charter provision that th'e city should be bound inflexibly by the taxation law of 1876, but that it was subject to the changes of the code and the repeal, modification, or amendment of the tax law, and that the collection and levy of taxes and the proceedings under which the sale here in question was made and the sale itself should have been had under the provisions of the general taxation law as it existed in 1914.

*790 As it is conceded that the city of Marysville for nearly half a century has been proceeding on the theory that the tax law of 1876 bound-her in all tax proceedings, and under it has been malting her assessments, levying her taxes, selling at delinquent tax sales, and making deeds to purchasers thereat, a court would be particularly loath to disturb this condition of affairs and unsettle titles based on tax sales heretofore made, and would only do so when a clear necessity for deciding the point should arise, and we do not here find the existence of any such necessity. It is conceded if the tax law as it existed in 1914 applied to the city of Marysville, notwithstanding the charter provision, that the tax sale here involved was void because there is no pretense that any of the proceedings for taxation or collection of taxes or sales for delinquencies thereon were made under it. As to the tax law and procedure existing in 1876, which for present purposes we will assume governed as to the sale here made, we are satisfied that the tax sale and the certificate thereunder here in question were void for failure to comply with the law.

It is provided by section 3746 of the Political Code as it stood in 1876 and as incorporated into the charter of Marysville that “taxes shall become delinquent on the first Monday in January next thereafter,” which, of course, as applied to the tax sale in question here was the first Monday in January, 1915. The sale, however, as we have pointed out was made to the defendant Johnson on December 4, 1914, before the taxes were delinquent, and necessarily the sale-was void.

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Bluebook (online)
175 P. 13, 178 Cal. 786, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marysville-woolen-mills-v-smith-cal-1918.