Mohawk Oil Co. v. Hopkins

236 P. 133, 196 Cal. 148, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 300
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1925
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8535.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 236 P. 133 (Mohawk Oil Co. v. Hopkins) 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
Mohawk Oil Co. v. Hopkins, 236 P. 133, 196 Cal. 148, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 300 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

*149 RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the defendant as county assessor of the county of Los Angeles after an order sustaining a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s amended complaint without leave to further amend. The action was one brought by the plaintiff to enjoin the defendant as such county assessor from the collection of certain taxes upon the plaintiff’s property. The facts as they appear upon the face of the complaint may be briefly stated as follows: The plaintiff, a California corporation, is the grantee and holder of certain oil and gas leases; granted to it by the owners of certain parcels of land described in its complaint, by the terms and conditions of which leases the plaintiff has been granted the right to drill for and extract oil, gas, and other hydrocarbon substances from said lands and to have the possession of the same for such purposes, the terms of said leases to be twenty years and as long thereafter as said substances can be extracted from said lands in paying quantities, the consideration for such leases being certain royalties to be paid by plaintiff to the owners of such lands, respectively, in proportion to the amount of such substances so to be extracted from their respective tracts of land. The defendant is county assessor of said county and is claiming and attempting to exercise the right to demand and collect county taxes upon the plaintiff’s possessory rights and oil and gas leases in and upon said lands and to have the same paid in conformity with section 3820 of the Political Code, or, in default of said payment as provided in said section, to have the plaintiff’s said possessory and leasehold rights seized and sold under the provisions of sections 3821 and 3822 of said code. It is the plaintiff’s contention that its said possessory rights and leasehold interests in said real estate are themselves real estate, and that whatever taxes are or are to be imposed thereon should be assessed, levied, and collected in the same manner as taxes upon other real estate are assessed, levied and collected and that the foregoing provisions of the Political Code, in so far as they attempt or purport to authorize the defendant as county assessor to assess, levy, collect, or enforce the collection of taxes upon the plaintiff’s said properties in any other manner than that provided by law for *150 the assessment and collection of taxes upon real estate are violative of the provisions of section 1 of article XIII and section 25 of article IY of the state constitution, and are also violative of the fourteenth amendment of the federal constitution; wherefore it sought the relief prayed for in its amended complaint, and being denied such relief by the trial court has prosecuted this appeal. Section 3820 of the Political Code reads as follows: “The assessor must collect the taxes on all property when, in his opinion, said taxes are not a lien upon real property sufficient to secure the payment of the taxes. The taxes on all assessments of possession of, claim to, or right to the possession of land and the taxes on taxable improvements located upon land exempt from taxation, shall be immediately due and payable upon assessment and shall be collected by the assessor as provided in this chapter.”

This section of the Political Code was amended in 1921 .(Stats. 1921, p. 370) by adding thereto the clause therein reading “and the taxes on taxable improvements located on land exempt from taxation,” but otherwise the wording of the second has remained unchanged since 1895. The first case before this court interpreting this section in its relation to leases for the extraction of oil from land was the case of Bakersfield & Fresno Oil Co. v. Kern County, 144 Cal. 148 [77 Pac. 892], In that case the plaintiff’s property was subjected to taxes and to the immediate payment thereof under the terms of section 3820 of the Political Code. It paid such taxes under protest and thereafter brought suit to recover such taxes so paid. This court held upon the appeal in that case that interests in mining claims and oil leases were real estate under the definition of section 3617 of the Political Code and were properly assessable as such under the provisions of section-3820 of the Political Code, and having been so assessed the taxes thereon were properly collectable under the terms of said last-named section, and that the taxes of the plaintiff in that action having thus been properly assessed and paid thereunder . were not recoverable. The next case before this court upon appeal touching the assessment and collection of taxes upon oil leases was the case of Graciosa Oil Co. v. County of Santa Barbara, 155 Cal. 140 [20 L. R. A. (N. S.) *151 211, 99 Pac. 483]. In that case also the action was one for the recovery of taxes paid under protest upon certain oil leases and the possessory rights thereunder in lands owned by certain lessors and the question presented was whether ' such possessory rights and the privileges to extract oil from! the leased premises were assessable separately from the assessment of the lands themselves, or whether such attempted ‘ assessment thereof was not double taxation. The court held that the possessory right to lands for a term of years, embracing the privilege to bore for and extract oil therefrom differed materially from ordinary leases for usufructuary purposes and that the right vested in a lessee in lands for the purpose of taking oil therefrom during a prescribed term was in the nature of a servitude on the land and a chattel real at common law, and as such was separately assessable from the land itself, .and that its assessment and the collection of the taxes thereon under the provisions of sections 3820, 3821, and 3822- of the Political Code were proper and legal and should have been upheld by the trial court. It is true that while in each of these cases the assessment and compulsory payment of taxes upon oil leases under the foregoing sections of the Political Code were upheld, the precise constitutional question urged in the instant case was not urged. It is also, however, to be noted as a conceded fact herein that during the twenty or more years which have elapsed since the decision of the case of Bakersfield etc. Oil Co. v. Kern Co., supra, taxes upon oil leases have been uniformly assessed and collected in accordance with the three last named sections of the Political Code. These sections of said code have remained unchanged except in the single respect above referred to,. whereby section 3820 has been broadened so as to permit the assessment and collection of taxes upon possessory rights in and taxable improvements upon lands which are themselves exempt from taxation. The present contention of the plaintiff and appellant herein is that since possessory rights and leasehold interests in lands are real estate under section 3617 of the Political Code as interpreted in the foregoing cases, no reason exists for the application to these forms of real estate of a different principle and method of assessment and of the payment of taxes than that which under the general laws relating to *152 taxation of real property is provided for the assessment and collection of the taxes upon the land out of which these lesser interests therein have been carved. This contention was answered in part by this court in the case of Graciosa Oil Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 133, 196 Cal. 148, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohawk-oil-co-v-hopkins-cal-1925.