Rancho Santa Margarita v. County of San Diego

26 P.2d 716, 135 Cal. App. 134, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
DocketDocket No. 1066.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 716 (Rancho Santa Margarita v. County of San Diego) 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
Rancho Santa Margarita v. County of San Diego, 26 P.2d 716, 135 Cal. App. 134, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 126 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

The appellant corporation is the owner of approximately 131,000 acres of land in the county of San Diego. This was originally a Spanish grant which had never been officially surveyed and divided into sections. In 1927 appellant caused a survey to be made dividing the real property into sections, which were numbered with townships and ranges to conform to a general official survey of adjoining sectionized property. A map was made and filed with the assessor of San' Diego County, who used it in making the subsequent assessments of the property.

The board of supervisors of San Diego County employed a corporation known as Tax Factors Inc. to make a survey and appraisement of all of the real property in San Diego County. R. B. Hunt, an employee of Tax Factors Inc., had charge of the valuations of all rural properties in the county, including that of appellant. In September, 1929, he waa appointed deputy county assessor and continued to act as such during all times material to this action.

• The method employed by Tax Factors Inc. in arriving at its valuations of real property may be briefly summarized as follows: Airplane photographs were made from an elevation of about 2,000 feet. The shadows on these photographs *137 showed the different kinds of soil formations in the ground below. The developed pictures were taken onto the land by engineers who were soil experts. After investigation they recorded the various characters of soils actually found. The names used for the various soils were those adopted and established by a department of the United States government. The photographs were then returned to the offices of Tax Factors Inc., and what is referred to as “Red Line Maps” were prepared from them. These maps each usually show a complete section or fractional section. The results of the photographs, together with-the investigation of the actual soil conditions, were reproduced on these red line maps so that each area of a particular soil was definitely marked. Also such additional data as washouts, bluffs, creeks, marsh and overflow lands were equally faithfully recorded. The area of each individual tracing showing soil or other condition mentioned was determined and entered upon each red line sheet.

The red line sheets were then used for the preparation of what is called “classification sheets”. These sheets contained a detailed description of each section. For convenience in illustration and to show the minute care with which the work was done, the material part of one is reproduced as follows:

*138 The designations for soil types, in the order in which they appear, are incorporated in the record as follows: (1) Rough, broken; (2) Los Flores Sandy Loam #2, gently rolling; (3) Los Flores Sandy Loam #2, gently rolling; (4) Dublin Sandy Loam #1, irrigation; (5) Dublin Sandy Loam #1; (6) Dublin Clay Loam #1, irrigation; (7) Yolo Sandy Loam #1, irrigation; (8) Yolo Sandy Loam #1; (9) Creek; (10) Yolo Sandy Loam #2; (11) Yolo Sandy Loam #6; (12) Yolo Clay Loam #1, irrigation.

The values of the different kinds of land, as given above, and of all others, were determined by committees, and the same values were intended to apply to all lands of similar character in San Diego County, with allowances 'made for location, beach influences, water supplies, highways and other similar considerations.

In making the 1929 assessments the county assessor of San Diego County accepted the valuations on the classification sheet of Tax Factors Inc. and assessed the various lands within San Diego County at forty per cent of these valuations. He again did this in his assessments of 1930.

The board of supervisors of San Diego County, sitting as a board of equalization, in July, 1929, served notice upon appellant requiring it to show cause why the assessment on its lands in San Diego County should not be raised. After a hearing, a resolution was passed raising the assessments on approximately forty sections of land belonging to appellant, being all of its lands bordering the Pacific Ocean between the Orange County line and the northerly limits of the city of Oceanside, excepting two sections and two fractional sections, and also lands near the city of Fallbrook. Appellant paid its taxes under protest and brought suit against the county for the recovery of a portion of the taxes thus paid. The action resulted in a judgment in favor of appellant, which was affirmed by this court. (Rancho Santa Margarita v. County of San Diego, 126 Cal. App. 186 [14 Pac. (2d) 588].)

In July, 1930, the board of equalization of San Diego County again summoned appellant to show cause why its assessments for the fiscal year 1930-31 should not be raised. A hearing was had which resulted in a horizontal raise of the assessments of twenty-nine sections, or fractional sections, of appellant’s lands lying between the Pacific Ocean on the *139 west and the low-lying hills on the east, the dividing line between Orange and San Diego Counties on the north, and the northerly limits of the lands riparian to the Santa Margarita River on the south, being northerly from the northerly city limits of the city of Oceanside, excepting two fractional sections. The easterly boundary is a serrated line with points varying in distance from about one-half to one and three-quarters miles from the ocean. The figures to which the assessments of these sections were raised may be obtained by multiplying each 1930 assessment of the assessor by 2.3, and changing the last two figures of each result to zero, ten, or its nearest multiple. Appellant again paid its taxes under protest and brought this action to recover the sum of $15,627.11, which it alleged it was compelled to pay by reason of the illegal action of the board of equalization in raising the assessments on the twenty-nine sections in question. The trial court made findings in favor of respondent and entered judgment accordingly, from which this appeal is taken.

Appellant states the questions to be considered here as follows: “First, was the evidence before the Board of Equalization sufficient to justify the increase in the assessments ? Second, did the Board arbitrarily reassess the plaintiff’s lands without attempting to equalize the assessments of the Assessor? Third, did the Board’s increases in the assessments destroy the uniformity of the Assessor’s valuations and result in inequalities and discriminations? Fourth, did the trial court err in refusing to make a finding on the affirmative defense pleaded that the tax paid by the plaintiff was not more than a fair and just proportion of the taxes assessed and levied for the fiscal year 1930-1931 which plaintiff should have paid on said property.”

It is not questioned that the board of equalization acts in a judicial capacity and can only change the values on evidence given before it. (Southern Pacific Land Co. v. San Diego County, 183 Cal. 543 [191 Pac. 931].) The board has no power to assess or reassess the property on the roll prepared by the assessor.

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Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 716, 135 Cal. App. 134, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rancho-santa-margarita-v-county-of-san-diego-calctapp-1933.