Prang v. Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Bd.

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 2024
DocketS266590
StatusPublished

This text of Prang v. Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Bd. (Prang v. Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Bd.) 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
Prang v. Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Bd., (Cal. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

JEFFREY PRANG, as County Assessor, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent, v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD, Defendant and Respondent; LUIS A. AMEN et al., as Trustees, etc., Real Parties in Interest and Appellants.

S266590

Second Appellate District, Division Five B298794

Los Angeles County Superior Court BS173698

May 30, 2024

Justice Evans authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Corrigan, Liu, Kruger, Groban, and Jenkins concurred. PRANG v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD S266590

Opinion of the Court by Evans, J.

Article XIII A of the California Constitution, added by Proposition 13, strictly limits increases in the assessed value of real property unless the property undergoes a “change in ownership.” (Cal. Const., art. XIII A, § 2, subds. (a), (b); see Citizens for Fair REU Rates v. City of Redding (2018) 6 Cal.5th 1, 10.) A change in ownership generally occurs with a transfer of real property. In a typical real estate transaction where one party transfers real property to another, there is unquestionably a change in ownership as title passes from the transferor to the transferee. Whether there has been a “change in ownership” in transactions involving a legal entity, however, is a more complex issue that can give rise to certain anomalies. If individual owners transfer real property to an entity they own, for example, it can be argued that the transfer has not caused a change in underlying “ownership,” but merely a change in the form of holding title. Likewise, when there is a significant change in the ownership of a legal entity, it can be argued that this causes a change in ownership of the entity’s real property despite no change in title. In enacting a statutory scheme to implement Proposition 13, the Legislature sought to account for these anomalies. It also chose to adopt different rules to govern these different

1 PRANG v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD Opinion of the Court by Evans, J.

situations. Governing the transfer at issue here, Revenue and Taxation Code section 62, subdivision (a)(2)1 identifies property transfers that, although they result in a change in title, nonetheless do not constitute a “change in ownership.” The statute excludes from change in ownership any transaction involving a legal entity that “results solely in a change in the method of holding title to the real property and in which proportional ownership interests of the transferors and transferees, whether represented by stock, partnership interest, or otherwise, in each and every piece of real property transferred, remain the same after the transfer.” (§ 62, subd. (a)(2), italics added.) Here, a family corporation transferred ownership of a pair of supermarkets to one of its shareholders, a revocable trust. The trust held all the corporation’s voting stock. The corporation also had a small number of individual shareholders who held nonvoting stock; those shareholders had no interest in the trust. The transfer of the properties to the trust thus eliminated whatever interests the individual shareholders held in the corporation’s real property. The question presented is whether this transfer of the properties nonetheless is excluded from change in ownership under section 62, subdivision (a)(2); that is, whether the proportional ownership interests in the real property transferred, as “represented by stock, partnership interest, or otherwise,” remained the same before and after the transfer. The trustees, appellants here, argue that no change in ownership occurred because the trust held all the corporation’s

1 Unless indicated otherwise, subsequent statutory citations are to the Revenue and Taxation Code.

2 PRANG v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD Opinion of the Court by Evans, J.

voting stock. According to the trustees, the term “stock” in section 62, subdivision (a)(2) must be interpreted to mean voting stock. In advancing this argument, the trustees point to another Revenue and Taxation Code section concerning transfers of ownership interests in legal entities, which expressly refers to “voting stock” (§ 64, subd. (c)(1)), and argue that sections 62 and 64 must be read together. Section 64 provides a transfer of ownership interests in a corporation will result in a change in ownership of its real property only when there is a change in corporate “control,” which is determined by ownership of a majority of its “voting stock.” (§ 64, subd. (c)(1).) The county assessor, respondent here, argues section 62, subdivision (a)(2) is unambiguous and measures ownership interests in real property transferred to or from a corporation by all stock. Under that measure, a change in ownership occurred. The Court of Appeal agreed with the county assessor and held the transfer of the property from the corporation to the trust resulted in a change in ownership. The trustees challenge that holding on the ground that the Court of Appeal failed to accord proper deference to the implementing regulation and interpretative materials issued by the state Board of Equalization. We conclude the agency’s implementing regulation and interpretative materials do not support the trustees’ reading of section 62, subdivision (a)(2). To understand why that is the case, however, it is necessary to begin with the plain language of the statute and the usual statutory interpretation framework. Applying this framework, we conclude that section 62, subdivision (a)(2) measures proportional beneficial ownership interests in corporate real property by corporate stock

3 PRANG v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD Opinion of the Court by Evans, J.

generally. Further, because sections 62 and 64 concern different ownership interests — ownership interests in real property and ownership interests in legal entities, respectively — section 64 does not compel a contrary reading of section 62. The Board of Equalization’s guidance either concerns section 64, and is therefore not pertinent, or fails to directly consider the issue presented here, and is therefore unpersuasive. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeal, which held in a manner consistent with these conclusions. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The real property at issue consists of two Los Angeles supermarkets operating under the brand name “Super A Foods” (the properties). In December 2014, Super A Foods, Inc., a corporation (the corporation), transferred the properties to the Amen Family 1990 Revocable Trust (the trust). At the time of the transfer, the corporation had two classes of stock, “Voting Common Stock” and “Non-Voting Common Stock.” Under its articles of incorporation, the sole difference between the rights possessed by holders of these respective classes of stock concerned control over corporate governance. Control over corporate governance was granted exclusively to holders of the voting stock: “Except with respect to all voting rights being vested exclusively in the holders of the Voting Common Shares, as herein above provided, the Voting Common Stock and the Non-Voting Common Stock shall be equal in all other respects including, but not limited to, dividend and liquidation rights.” The trust owned 92.8 percent of the corporation’s stock, which included 100 percent of the voting stock. The trust had two beneficiaries, Louis Amen and Dolores Amen. Four

4 PRANG v. LOS ANGELES COUNTY ASSESSMENT APPEALS BOARD Opinion of the Court by Evans, J.

individuals — other members of the Amen family and a long- time employee of the corporation — owned approximately 5.2 percent of the corporation’s stock, all nonvoting stock.

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Prang v. Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Bd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prang-v-los-angeles-county-assessment-appeals-bd-cal-2024.