People v. Southern Pac. Co.

290 P. 25, 209 Cal. 578, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 517
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1930
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4160.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 290 P. 25 (People v. Southern Pac. Co.) 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
People v. Southern Pac. Co., 290 P. 25, 209 Cal. 578, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 517 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The sole question presented for decision to the trial court in these three actions was whether the street-car and interurban railways of the Southern Pacific Company, situated in the county of Alameda, were subject to a tax of five and one-quarter per cent or of seven per cent upon their gross receipts for the years 1920, 1921 and 1922. The answer to this question involves the correct interpretation of the amendment to the Constitution of the state adopted in 1910, and often referred to as Constitutional Amendment No. 1. By this amendment a new section was added to the Constitution which was designated as section 14 of article XIII of the state Constitution. By this amendment it was provided that taxes levied, assessed and collected upon certain forms of property specifically described therein should be entirely and exclusively for state purposes. This amendment further fixed the rates of taxation which the companies operating the various kinds of state revenue property were to pay, and it further provided in said section of the Constitution that “All railroad companies, including street railways” should annually pay a tax to the state upon their property equal to four per cent upon their gross receipts. *580 This constitutional amendment provided that, “The rates of taxation fixed in this section shall remain in force until changed by the legislature; two-thirds of all members elected to each house voting in favor thereof.” Pursuant to the authority vested in the legislature by this provision of the amendment, the rates of taxation upon property set aside for state revenue purposes have been changed at various sessions of the legislature. (Stats. 1913, p. 3; Stats. 1915, p. 3; Stats. 1917, p. 336, and Stats. 1921, p. 20.) We are concerned principally with the last of these enactments as it was in force at the time the several assessments involved herein were levied.

By the statute of 1921, which is popularly referred to as the King Tax Bill, the legislature purported to separate railroad companies from street railway companies and to make the former subject to a tax of seven per cent and the latter, including interurban railway companies, subject to a tax of five and one-quarter per cent upon their gross earnings. In pursuance of the 1921 amendment, the board of equalization of the state, which is the body authorized by law to make and levy assessments upon state revenue property, levied assessments for the years 1921, 1922 and 1923, based respectively upon the gross receipts for the previous years, of five and one-quarter per cent upon the gross receipts of all street-car and interurban lines of the state, except the streetcar and interurban lines of the defendant upon which said board of equalization levied an assessment of seven per cent upon their gross receipts. The defendant has paid said assessment to the extent of five and one-quarter per cent thereof, but refuses to pay the balance of said tax, or the difference between seven per cent and five and one-quarter per cent, or one and three-quarters per cent. The board of equalization and the plaintiff herein justify the discrimination which has been made in levying an assessment of seven per cent upon, defendant’s property, and an assessment of five and one-quarter per cent upon all other like property in the state, upon the fact that the defendant is a railroad company, and as such owns and operates the street-car and interurban railways involved herein, and that all the other street-car and interurban lines of railway in the state are either owned by strictly street-car corporations, or persons or corporations other than railroad companies. This argu *581 ment was presented to the trial court before whom this action was tried, but it did not meet with the approval of said court, and the trial judge thereof requested the attorney-general in the preparation of his written argument to confine the same to the question of whether the legislature had the legal power to separate street railways and interurban railways from railroads proper or steam railroads, and to levy an assessment upon the former class of property different from that levied upon railroads proper. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in each action, and we take it from the briefs on file that said judgments were predicated upon the conclusion of the trial court that the legislature was without authority to classify “street railways and interurban railways” separate and apart from “railroads” and to levy a tax on the property of one of said classes different from that levied on the property of the other. From the judgments in favor of the plaintiff the defendant has appealed in each action. The three actions are substantially alike, the only difference being, that they are brought to recover the taxes alleged to be due during different years.

In support of the judgments, the attorney-general makes the same contentions before this court that were made in the trial court. The first of these is that the property of the defendant used by it in the operation of its street and interurban railways is subject to the tax of seven per cent upon its gross receipts from said property for the sole reason that the defendant is a railroad company and as such owned and operated said street-car and interurban lines of railway. The second of said contentions is that the legislature is without authority to classify street and interurban railway companies separate and apart from railroad companies and to provide for the levying of a tax against one of these classes different from that levied upon the other.

The first of respondent’s contentions, we think is completely answered by the decision of this court in the case of Southern Pac. Co. v. Richardson, 181 Cal. 280 [184 Pac. 3]. In that case it was sought to subject to taxation for state purposes a system of ferry-boats between San Francisco and Oakland. These boats carried freight and passengers over what was called the Creek route, and were owned and operated by a railroad company, the defendant in the present actions, but they were in no way connected *582 with the railroad operated by the plaintiff railroad company or with any other railroad. It was the contention of the state in that action that if a railroad company should engage in the business of operating a ferry or any other public utility, not taxable for state purposes, and not necessary or convenient for the operation of its railroad, the gross receipts from the operation of such public utility must be included within the gross receipts from the operation of the railroad system and connections and the fixed percentage computed upon the whole sum. This in principle is much like the contention made by the respondent in the present action. Yet this court held that the position of the state in said action could not be maintained.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 25, 209 Cal. 578, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-southern-pac-co-cal-1930.