Miller v. County of Kern

90 P. 119, 150 Cal. 797, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 590
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1907
DocketL.A. Nos. 1741, 1762.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 90 P. 119 (Miller v. County of Kern) 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
Miller v. County of Kern, 90 P. 119, 150 Cal. 797, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 590 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

*798 SHAW, J.

This case is docketed under the above numbers, No. 1741 being an appeal from the judgment, and No. 1762 an appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. We have concluded that the judgment must-be reversed, with directions to enter a modified judgment on the findings.

The action is brought under section 3819 of the Political Code, to recover taxes claimed to be illegal and paid under protest. The case was before this court upon a former appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment given in favor of the defendant, upon a demurrer to the complaint. Upon that appeal the judgment was reversed. (Miller v. County of Kern, 137 Cal. 516, [70 Pac. 549].) Many questions arising in the case were decided against the plaintiff on that appeal, and are not now argued. After the case again reached the lower court an answer was filed denying the facts upon which the reversal was based. Upon the trial, an agreed statement of facts was filed from which the court made findings and gave judgment in favor of plaintiff as prayed for.

1. Upon the former appeal it was decided that growing alfalfa is not subject to taxation, and hence that the item of $1,110, paid by plaintiff as taxes levied on certain growing alfalfa, assessed at sixty thousand dollars, was invalid. The court below, upon the subsequent trial, declared the entire tax invalid and gave judgment for the taxes paid, with interest thereon from the date of payment to the time of trial. The appellant concedes the invalidity of the tax as to the sum of $1,110, levied upon growing alfalfa, but insists that no interest should have been allowed thereon until after judgment. In this the appellant is correct. In Savings and L. Soc. v. San Francisco, 131 Cal. 356, [63 Pac. 1013], and Columbia Sav. Bank v. Los Angeles, 137 Cal. 471, [70 Pac. 308], it was in substance held that in an action to recover taxes paid under protest, under section 3819 of the Political Code, interest after payment and before trial was not allowable, and that interest could only be allowed against the county and state from the time of the adjudication declaring the money due. The judgment now appealed from was rendered on November 22, 1904. It was correct to the extent of $1,110 and no more. Upon the going down of the remittitur the plaintiff will be entitled to judgment for that sum *799 with, legal interest from the date above given. (Columbia Sav. Bank v. Los Angeles, 130 Cal. 471, [70 Pac. 308].)

2. The only points upon which it is now claimed that the balance of the tax paid was invalid are,—1. That although the clerk of the board of supervisors delivered the corrected assessment-book for the year 1895 to the county auditor on the first Monday of August, 1895, the time required by section 3682 of the Political Code, he did not affix to it, nor accompany it with, an affidavit, as required by that section; that the affidavit was made and affixed to the book on November 1, 1895, and not before; and 2. That the auditor, after computing and extending the taxes on the boob, delivered it to the tax-collector on the second Monday of October, 1895, as required by section 3732 of the Political Code, and did not then, nor at all, until November 1, 1895, make or attach to the book his affidavit in authentication thereof, as required by that section, and that in' the mean time the tax-collector had published the notice to taxpayers, as required by section 3746 of the Political Code.

The allegations of the complaint are that the corrected assessment-boob, when it was delivered by the clerk of the board of supervisors to the auditor, and thereafter when delivered by the auditor to the tax-collector, was not accompanied by the affidavit required by section 3682, nor by any affidavit, nor was any affidavit of the auditor attached thereto, as required by section 3732, when it was delivered to the tax-collector. In the decision upon the former appeal, these allegations were admitted by the demurrer, and as it did not appear by averment, and was not presumed, that the affidavits had been attached after delivery, the case was decided upon the theory that they had never been attached, and were entirely lacking. Upon that assumption the taxes were said to be void, but the question of their validity, in case it should afterwards be shown that the proper affidavits were attached after the respective deliveries of the book, was expressly left open and undecided.

Upon the subsequent trial in the lower court, in response to the allegations of the answer, the court made findings that on November 1, 1895, after the assessment-book was delivered to the tax-collector, and after publication by him of the notice *800 to taxpayers, the clerk of the board of supervisors and county auditor, respectively, made and attached to the book the affidavits required of them, respectively, by sections 3682 and 3732 aforesaid. The plaintiff did not make his protest, nor pay any taxes, until November'25, 1895. At that time the affidavits were attached as required. There is no claim that the delay in attaching them, or their absence prior to November 1st, caused any injury to the plaintiff or affected him in any manner.

We are of the opinion that the defect previously existing in the assessment, by reason of the lack of these affidavits, was cured by the facts as above found by the court. The making and attaching of these affidavits to the assessment-book is required, as stated by this court upon the former appeal, for the purpose of authentication. They are “acts relating to the assessment or collection of taxes,” beyond doubt.

Section 3885 of the Political Code is as follows: “No assessment or act relating to assessment or collection of taxes is illegal on account of informality, nor because the same was not completed within the time required by law.”

There was not an entire failure to perform the acts of making and affixing the affidavits; they were properly made and affixed, but not within the time specified in the code. No injury was caused, and we cannot see that injury could be caused, by the delay. By the express language of section 3885 the delay did not make the affidavits or the assessment in question illegal. They were lawfully made and attached, and if the assessment was previously invalid for lack of • them, as had been in effect decided for the purposes of this case, it became valid and lawful the moment they became attached to the book on November 1, 1895. This is a reasonable doctrine and we perceive no benefit, public or private, to be derived from holding the contrary. It is fully supported by the decisions in similar cases: Buswell v. Supervisors, 116 Cal. 354, [48 Pac. 226]; People v. Eureka etc. Co., 48 Cal. 146; Hart v. Plum, 14 Cal. 155; Payne v. San Francisco, 3 Cal. 126; State v. Mining Co., 15 Nev. 388; State v. Western U. T. Co., 4 Nev. 344; Walker v. Edmunds, 197 Pa. St. 647, [47 Atl. 868]; Hooker v. Bond, 118 Mich. 257, [76 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 119, 150 Cal. 797, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-county-of-kern-cal-1907.