Morgan Adams, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles

289 P. 811, 209 Cal. 696, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 538
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1930
DocketDocket No. L.A. 10201.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 289 P. 811 (Morgan Adams, Inc. 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
Morgan Adams, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles, 289 P. 811, 209 Cal. 696, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 538 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

Appeal by defendant County of Los

Angeles from a judgment rendered against it upon its declination to answer plaintiff’s complaint, following the overruling of demurrer thereto.

The action ivas one to recover under Political Code, section 3819, a certain item of $19,416.91, paid under protest as taxes levied by said defendant for the year 1926 upon a certain piece of real property in said county upon which *698 was located a ten-story class A concrete building of the assessed value of $501,730. Said building, together with the ground thereunder necessary for its use, was at the time in question leased by plaintiff to the Southern California Telephone Company, a public utility corporation, and was used exclusively by the latter corporation for office quarters for its various departments. It is conceded that the said building and ground thereunder were at all times legitimately used by said telephone company as a part of its operative property. Respondent states the sole question involved in the following language:

“ The case involves the question whether property leased by a telephone company and used exclusively in its telephone business in this state is subject to local taxation merely because it is leased and not owned by the operating company, despite the provision of section 14 of article XIII of the Constitution that the gross receipts tax of telephone companies is ‘in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county and municipal’ upon ‘ their franchises, . . . poles, wires . . . rights of way and other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in the operation of their business in this state, ’ and despite the fact, hereafter shown, that the rates of the gross receipts tax were specifically fixed to make that tax the equivalent of a fair tax on all property used by public service corporations in their business, whether leased, owned or howsoever held.”

This identical question, involving this same telephone company, has, since the institution of this present action, been passed upon and determined by the Supreme Court of the United States and its conclusion was in accord with the previous decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit. We refer to the case of Hopkins v. Southern California Tel. Co., 275 U. S. 393 [72 L. Ed. 329, 48 Sup. Ct. Rep. 180], decided January 3, 1928. In the opinion written by Mr. Justice McReynolds, the question is stated, authorities cited and reasoning applied as follows:

“The argument against exemption of leased property from local taxation rests chiefly upon literal and narrow interpretation of words in see. 14, Article XIII, California Constitution—‘ ... all telegraph and telephone companies . . . shall annually pay to the State a tax upon their fran *699 chises, . . . , poles, wires, pipes, canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property . . . used exclusively in the operation of their business’; and ‘such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, State, county and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of such companies. ’
“But the Constitution plainly directs, ‘taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided upon . . . telephone companies . . . shall be entirely and exclusively for State purposes’ and such companies ‘shall annually pay to the State a tax upon their poles, . . . and other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in the operation of their business. ’ And the Political Code provides (sec. 3664) that ‘taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided upon telephone companies shall be entirely and exclusively for State purposes and shall be assessed and levied by the State Board of Equalization’; (sec. 3664a) that ‘all . . . telegraph and telephone companies . . . shall annually pay to the State a tax upon their . . . poles, wires . . . and any other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in the operation of their business . . . ’; (sec. 3664a-4) ‘such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county, and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of such companies except . . . ’; (sec. 3665a) ‘the term “gross receipts from operation” as used in sec. 3664a of this Code is hereby defined to include all sums received from business done within this State’; (sec. 3666) if an assessor finds reported as operative property in his county any which he regards as nonoperative, he shall notify the Board of Equalization within thirty days; and (sec. 3607) ‘nothing in this Code shall be construed to require or permit double taxation. ’
“Sec. 14, article XIII (adopted 1910), was proposed by a Commission which gave the matter much consideration and made an elaborate report. It is the result of an earnest effort to provide for enforcement of adequate contributions from public service and some other corporations while avoiding double and unjust taxation. Payment of specified percentages (subject to change by the Legislature) of gross receipts was directed upon the theory that the value of operative property could be fairly measured by considering receipts therefrom. Also, that by paying to the State a portion of these, the corporation would, in effect, con *700 tribute for its operative property the substantial equivalent of all taxes laid upon other property. The Commission (Rep. 1910, p. 19) said: ‘In explanation of the above rates it may be stated that they are fixed on the theory that these proportions of the gross receipts will in each case equal the average burden of taxation on other classes of property. The method of arriving at the different rates is explained in detail in the 1906 report of this commission. ’
“The Supreme Court of the State has declared the gross receipts tax is essentially one on property (Pullman Company v. Richardson, 185 Cal. 484, 487 [197 Pac. 346]); and it apparently approves the view that ‘a fair tax upon gross earnings bore such a relation to the values of these properties under their unity of use as to justify such a tax upon revenue as being a legal and commutated or substituted tax for other taxes which were or might have been levied.’ (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Roberts, 168 Cal. 420, 425 [143 Pac. 700], See Southern Pac. Co. v. Levee District No. 1, 172 Cal. 345 [156 Pac. 502]; Great Western Power Co. v. City of Oakland, 189 Cal. 649 [209 Pac. 553].)
“The State received from respondents a sum equal to five and one-half per centum of the gross revenues derived from all operative property under their control—leased as well as owned. These did not depend upon ownership; and rent paid out was not considered.
“If payment of the prescribed part of the gross receipts only relieves from local taxation property actually owned and leaves all held under lease subject thereto, inequalities with possible confiscation, would certainly result.

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Bluebook (online)
289 P. 811, 209 Cal. 696, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-adams-inc-v-county-of-los-angeles-cal-1930.