Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Roberts

167 P. 845, 176 Cal. 183, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 494
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1917
DocketS. F. No. 6895. S. F. No. 6896.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 167 P. 845 (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Roberts) 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
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Roberts, 167 P. 845, 176 Cal. 183, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 494 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

*184 MELVIN, J.

As the questions involved in both appeals, are identical, we shall discuss them in an opinion applicable alike to each case. Each appeal is from a judgment.

The plaintiff, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, sued to recover $41,000.45, the amount of certain taxes assessed to that corporation for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1911, and paid under protest. The judgment of the superior court was in favor of the defendant. The action of the other plaintiff was for the recovery of $1,693.99, paid under the same cir- 0 cumstances. The judgment, except in amount, was exactly the same as in the other case. We will present in detail the facts of the first case only.

This appeal is on the judgment-roll. The findings are based upon defendant’s admissions contained in the answer or made at the trial, and the main question presented is whether or not the findings support the judgment. The essential findings were that plaintiff was at all times relevant to this discussion a Californian corporation engaged in the sale of gas and electricity; that on the first Monday in March, 1911, said company exclusively owned and operated certain properties used in its said business; that it was also at that time operating in its business other properties owned by subsidiary-companies, among them the Suburban Light and Power Company ; that during the entire calendar year ending December 31, 1910, the properties of the Suburban Light and Power Company were operated by it as an independent company and the rest of the properties aforesaid were operated by the plaintiff in conducting the business of transmitting and selling gas and electricity; that the gross receipts of the Suburban Light and Power Company from the sale of gas and electricity during the year 1910 amounted to $188,401.60, but of such gas and electricity large quantities were purchased from plaintiff for the sum of $52,717.99; that the gross receipts of plaintiff derived from the sale of electricity during that year amounted to $7,816,313.12, but of such electricity large quantities were bought from other and independent corporations for $972,-293.52; that the state board of equalization assessed to plaintiff as taxes for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1911, upon the properties of the Suburban Light and Power Company, $7,536.06, or four per cent of the gross receipts; and as taxes upon that part of plaintiff’s properties used by it in trans *185 mitting and selling electricity, $312,652.53, or four per cent, and at the same time assessed to plaintiff as part of the taxes upon its own property, $2,108.71 (being four per cent of the sum of $52,717.99 paid to plaintiff by the Suburban Light and Power Company), and to plaintiff’s vendors as part of the taxes upon their properties, $38,891.74, being four per cent of $972,293.52 paid by plaintiff to its vendors for electricity purchased from them. There were findings to the effect that plaintiff had tried in vain by the methods prescribed by law to have the alleged errors corrected; that such efforts were unsuccessful; and that the moneys had been paid under protest. The conclusions of law were that the gross receipts of the plaintiff and of the Suburban Company were as found by the state board, and that the assessments were legal and valid.

Plaintiff’s contention is that the “gross receipts from operation,” within the true meaning of subdivision (a) of section 14 of article XIII of the constitution of • California, are obtained by subtracting from the entire amount realized from the sale of the commodities distributed by any one of the public service corporations therein contemplated, the cost of such of said commodities as have been purchased from other companies. It is asserted that this interpretation of the cited constitutional provision is correct, because (1) the taxes there specified are upon the operative properties of the corporations; (2) such interpretation would be in harmony with section 1 of article XIII of the constitution, providing for taxation in proportion to value of property, and with section 11 of article I, requiring all laws of a general nature to have uniform operation; and (3) plaintiff’s interpretation of the term “gross receipts from operation” is the ordinary and usual one.

It is argued that if the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, during the year 1910, had owned and operated the distributing systems owned and operated by the Suburban Light- and Power Company during that period and had manufactured and sold to ultimate consumers, at the same price, the same quantity of gas and electricity which was sold to the Suburban Light and Power Company, the entire amount of tax which would have been assessed upon all of the property which was in fact owned during that year by the Suburban Light and Power Company and a part of the property owned by the *186 Pacific Gas and Electric Company would have been four per cent of $188,401.60, instead of four per cent on that sum plus four per cent of $52,717.99. In other words, appellant insists that the method followed by the state board of equalization and upheld by the court resulted in double taxation,, which, according to its view, is forbidden by the constitutional provisions to which reference is made, namely, section 1 of article XIII and section 11 of article I. The effect of section 1 upon section 14 of article XIII was discussed by Mr. Justice Sloss in the unanimous opinion of this court in Bank of California, National Assn., v. Roberts, 173 Cal. 398, [160 Pac. 225], That was a case in which double taxation was the subject of complaint, such double taxation arising from the inclusion of the value of shares of stock in other banks owned by the bank which was taxed in reaching the value of its assessable assets notwithstanding the fact that such other shares were subject to separate assessment and taxation. At page 403 of 173 Cal., [160 Pac. 227], the following language is used:

“Does the constitution of California prohibit such double taxation as may be involved in the assessment here complained of ? No doubt our constitution, as it stood prior to the amendments of 1910, did contain such prohibition. Section 1 of article XIII, as it originally read, provided that ‘All property in the state, not exempt under the laws of the United. States, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as provided by law.’ This is the language which was held, in the cases above cited, to forbid double taxation. ‘All property’ is not taxed in proportion to its value if some of it is taxed once and some of it more than once upon the ascertained value. (Burke v. Badlam, 57 Cal. 594.) But when the new system of taxing certain corporations for state purposes was'embodied in the constitution, section 1 was also amended. That section was made to read as follows: ‘All property in the state except as otherwise in this constitution provided, not exempt under the laws of the United States, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as provided by law, or as hereinafter provided.’ The change consisted in the addition of the italicized words. Here is an express declaration that the general rule requiring property to be taxed in proportion to its value shall be subject to the qualification that such proportionate method of taxation shall *187

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 845, 176 Cal. 183, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-gas-electric-co-v-roberts-cal-1917.