Rittersbacher v. Bd. of Supervisors of L.A. Cty.

32 P.2d 135, 220 Cal. 535, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1934
DocketDocket No. L.A. 14510.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 32 P.2d 135 (Rittersbacher v. Bd. of Supervisors of L.A. Cty.) 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
Rittersbacher v. Bd. of Supervisors of L.A. Cty., 32 P.2d 135, 220 Cal. 535, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 570 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The plaintiff above named is the owner of unimproved lot No. 22 in block 15, tract No. 8235, in Los Angeles County. By her petition filed in the superior court she sought a" writ of mandate to compel the defendants, board of supervisors, county auditor, county tax collector and county counsel to order and consent to the cancellation of the assessment for general county purposes levied against said lot by the county assessor for the year 1933. On July 17, 1933, through her agent, she filed with the board of supervisors, sitting as a board of equalization, her petition to have the valuation placed upon said property by the assessor reduced from $640 to $385. After a hearing her petition was denied on July 26, 1933. On September 19, 1933, she commenced this proceeding in the superior court to obtain the cancellation of said assessment “or such portion thereof as the court finds to be erroneous”.

Through the same agent eight other owners of real property, some of which was improved and some unimproved, filed separate petitions with said board of equalization to have the assessments on their several properties reduced to designated sums. These petitions were denied and the petitioners therein filed similar petitions in mandamus to compel the cancellation of said assessments, “or such portions thereof as the court finds to be erroneous”. To each petition for the writ a general demurrer was filed. Pursuant to a stipulation of the parties and an order of court all nine *539 causes were consolidated and thereafter treated as one proceeding. The demurrers were sustained without leave to amend and a judgment of dismissal entered, whereupon an appeal was taken both from the order sustaining the demurrers and from the judgment of dismissal. The appeal from the order, which is nonappealable, is dismissed.

On the appeal from the judgment it is contended that the petition for the writ of mandamus, together with the exhibits attached thereto, shows that the uncontradicted evidence before the board of equalization, at the time the petitions for equalization were denied, proved that the assessor had wilfully adopted and deliberately pursued an erroneous and discriminatory and inequitable method of assessing different classes of property which resulted in excessively inequitable valuations of the property of the plaintiffs, and therefore that the peremptory writ should have been granted. In this connection it is claimed that the uncontradicted evidence before the board at the time the petitions for equalization were denied was that the assessor adopted a lower percentage in assessing certain classes of personal property than that applied to real estate and improvements, to the unlawful prejudice of and discrimination against the latter. That evidence, as produced by the agent of the several petitioners, was to the effect that, in passing the property in the county “in proportion to its value to be ascertained as provided by law”, as required by the Constitution (art. XIII, sec. 1), and by sections 3617 and 3627 of the Political Code, the assessor adopted fifty per cent of the value of real property and fifty per cent of the depreciated value of improvements thereon as the value of said property for the purpose of assessment; that in assessing merchandise the assessor adopted forty per cent of the " cost or market value, whichever is lower”; that forty per cent was applied to stocks of new automobiles, thirty per cent to fleets of automobiles in use, thirty per cent to store fixtures, forty per cent to office furniture and fixtures, thirty per cent to machinery and equipment and thirty per cent to used automobiles. After this evidence was produced by the petitioners the assessor requested and was accorded the right to reply at a later date. This reply was filed with the board, but not until after the board had denied the petitions. Therefore the plaintiffs herein contend that the defendants are bound, *540 on the subsequent proceeding for a cancellation of the assessments pursuant to section 3804a of the Political Code, by the showing of the alleged uncontradicted facts made to the board at the time of or prior to the orders of denial of the petitions to equalize. But this is not so. The petitions filed with the board alleged an overvaluation of the described real estate and improvements and nothing more, and the prayer was for an equalization of the value. “To equalize is to make equal, to cause to correspond, or be like in amount or degree, as compared with something.” (Wells Fargo & Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 56 Cal. 194, 196.) What the petitioners before the board were entitled to was that their property be placed “on the same basis of valuation as that applied to other property of like character and similarly situated”. (Birch v. County of Orange, 186 Cal. 736 [200 Pac. 647, 649]; Los Angeles etc. Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 162 Cal. 164, 166 [121 Pac. 384, 9 A. L. R. 1277].) On the hearing on this issue the assessor’s office reported to the board, in effect, that there was no disparity between the assessment on the properties of the petitioners and that placed on like property similarly situated, and there was no showing to the contrary on that issue.

As above indicated, the petitions for equalization filed with the board made no reference whatever to the claim of the petitioners that their properties were assessed on an unlawfully discriminatory basis. The petitioners failed then to advise the board of “the facts upon which it is claimed such reduction should be made”, as required by section 3674 of the Political Code. While mere informalities in the presentation of a petition for equalization should receive a liberal indulgence, nevertheless the above requirement of said section 3674 serves a necessary purpose and should be complied with in order that the board may know, or have some reasonable means of ascertaining, what the claims of the petitioners are, to the end that such claims may be investigated by the assessing authorities prior to the hearing. The proof offered by the petitioners at the hearing might well have taken the assessor by surprise as being entirely without the scope of the inquiry presented by the petitions, and this may account for the fact that the assessor requested time to make a reply to the attempted showing of illegality of the assessments. In this connection it must be noted that the *541 claims of the petitioners on the hearing, if supported to their full import, would invalidate the entire assessment-roll of the county, or would require the board to raise or lower the entire assessment-roll, a power not possessed by the board under section 3673 of the Political Code. We therefore conclude that the petitions for equalization as filed with the board were properly denied.

We have discussed the foregoing points because they are elaborately argued in the briefs; but a determination thereof is not determinative of this appeal. The real question is whether the petitions in mandamus state facts entitling the plaintiffs to any relief; and this question must be determined on the facts existing at the time the petitions for the writs were filed as disclosed by the allegations thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
32 P.2d 135, 220 Cal. 535, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rittersbacher-v-bd-of-supervisors-of-la-cty-cal-1934.