Napa Savings Bank v. County of Napa

120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 545, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 34
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 877.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 120 P. 429 (Napa Savings Bank v. County of Napa) 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
Napa Savings Bank v. County of Napa, 120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 545, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 34 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The only question for determination is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, the appeal being from a judgment entered by default against the. defendant for failure to answer after its demurrer had been overruled.

After a suitable allegation of the corporate capacity of plaintiff and of defendant, it appears: “That on the first Monday in March, 1909, at 12 o ’clock meridian, plaintiff was engaged in the business of a savings and loan corporation, viz., in the savings bank business, at Napa, California, and had a capital of $25,000, a surplus of $6,500 and savings deposits in the sum of $279,741.23; and at said time and on said date the plaintiff had and owned the following property, viz., real estate, assessed at the sum of $640; money on hand assessed at $1,540; solvent credits, not secured by mortgage or trust deeds, assessed at $40,910.28; promissory notes secured by mortgage or trust deeds on real estate, assessed at $164,426.53; and money (including capital and surplus) and savings deposits invested in quasi-public corporation bonds of the state (incorporated and organized under the laws of the state of California, and having their respective places of business in this state) in the sum of $89,825, and money (including capital and surplus) and savings deposits invested in the city of Stockton (California) municipal bonds in the sum of $4,395.50, and at the time aforesaid the plaintiff neither had nor owned any property other than the said prop *547 erty above stated; that the said capital, surplus and savings deposits were intermingled and used as a whole, and invested in the property and loans above stated, and that all of plaintiff’s said property had been assessed for the purpose of taxation for the fiscal year 1909-10, long prior to the time of the assessment herein complained -of and contested.

“That on the thirtieth day of July, 1909, the board of equalization made an order directing the assessor of Napa county to assess to plaintiff the money and savings deposits invested in the said bonds aforesaid as credits, and on said day the said assessor did enter said assessment upon the assessment-roll and assessed the same at the sum of ten dollars and no more.

“That said board of equalization was in session from the first Monday in July, 190-9, and for the term of twenty days thereafter, under an extension of twenty days granted to it by the state board of equalization, and on the eighth day of August, 1909, the said extension of twenty days expired, and that said board of equalization thereupon ceased to exist, and had no right or authority to sit as such board after the said eighth day of August, 1909. That on the second day of September, 1909, the said board of supervisors of the county of Napa met as a pretended or assumed board of equalization and raised the said assessment of ten dollars, made by the assessor as aforesaid, from ten dollars to the sum of $94,184.50, thereby assessing the said money and savings deposits so invested in said bonds, which were so invested on the first Monday in March, 1909, and had been so invested for a long time prior thereto.”

Then follows an allegation that the said bonds of the quasi-public corporations “are secured by a mortgage or trust deed of all the real and personal property owned by the respective corporations,” and that all of said real and personal property, together with the franchises of said corporations in the state, “have each been assessed for the fiscal year 1909-10, at the full cash value, without deduction of the amount so secured by mortgage or trust deed covering the same or any part thereof.”

The plaintiff paid to the tax collector of the county the sum of $1,864.84, the amount of said tax, under a written *548 protest, and the money was afterward paid into the county treasury by said tax collector.

There are two grounds upon which respondent seeks to justify the action of the lower court in overruling the demurrer, and we think both are "well taken.

1. There can be no doubt that the board of equalization and the board of supervisors are two distinct constitutional bodies, although composed of the same members. Section 9 of article XIII of the constitution provides for a state board of equalization and also for a county board. As to the latter the section is: “The boards of supervisors of the several counties of the state shall constitute boards of equalization for their respective counties, whose duty it shall be to equalize the valuation of the taxable property in the county for the purpose of taxation.” Section XIII of the same article provides that “The legislature shall pass all laws necessary to carry out the provisions of this article.”

In pursuance of these provisions suitable laws have been passed by the legislature prescribing the duties and directing the mode of exercise of the powers of the boards of equalization. They are contained in the Political Code from section 3672 to 3705, inclusive. Said section 3672 is that “The board of supervisors of each county must meet on the first Monday in July of each year, to examine the assessment-book and equalize the assessment of property in the county. It must continue in session for that purpose, from time to time, until the business of equalization is disposed of, but not later than the third Monday in July.” Section 3705 authorizes the state board of equalization to extend this time but not to exceed twenty days. It is thus to be seen that the order in question here was made at a time not within the period during which the statute provides that all the acts of the board of equalization must be performed. We think it necessarily follows that the said board was entirely without authority to raise said assessment and that the order purporting to do so was in excess of jurisdiction and void.

The case of Buswell v. Supervisors etc., 116 Cal. 351, [48 Pac. 226], is quite distinct from this. There the order complained of was made within the time during which the board of equalization could exercise its function as such, although *549 it was later than the third Monday in July, and the order of the state board attempting to extend this period was nugatory. The learned justice who wrote the opinion recognized the distinction between that case and this in the declaration that “The sittings of the county board did not exceed the time contemplated by law to which they might have extended.”

2. But whether the foregoing position be sound or not, it cannot be disputed that plaintiff could not be legally assessed upon property to which it had no title and in which it had no interest. All the moneys owned by plaintiff and due to plaintiff from others were assessed to it, and it could certainly be only by virtue of some peculiar provision of the law that money which had been paid to another for other property should be assessed to plaintiff.

Of course, there is no contention that the bonds which were purchased by plaintiff were assessable. The city of Stockton bonds are exempt, in accordance with section of the state constitution, and the quasi-public bonds are not taxable to plaintiff, as that would be double taxation. (Pol. Code, sec. 3617; Germania Trust Co. v. San Francisco, 128 Cal. 589, [61 Pac. 178];

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 545, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/napa-savings-bank-v-county-of-napa-calctapp-1911.