Savings & Loan Society v. City & County of San Francisco

80 P. 1086, 146 Cal. 673, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 583
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1905
DocketS.F. No. 3272.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 80 P. 1086 (Savings & Loan Society v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Savings & Loan Society v. City & County of San Francisco, 80 P. 1086, 146 Cal. 673, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 583 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an action to recover the sum of $5,702.46, taxes for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900, paid, under, protest, upon an apparent assessment of $349,844 against plaintiff, for solvent credits, upon the ground that said apparent assessment was void. The defendant had judgment and plaintiff appeals therefrom upon the judgment-roll.

At the time of the completion of the assessment-book and its delivery by the assessor to the clerk of the board of supervisors, the only description of personal property contained in the assessment against plaintiff was to be found in the general column headed “Description of Property” with subheadings devoted to real property, and was as follows, viz.: “Fur. $1000. Money $53,916. Bonds $569,952. Franchise $2500. Bonds $1,183,244”; and in the column headed “Personal,” under the subheading “Money and Solvent Credits,” “$1,807,112,” and :under the subheading “Other Personal Property,” “$1000,1 2500,” the various valuations aggregating $1,810,612.

Thereafter, on July 14, 1899, while said assessment-book was in the possession of the board of supervisors, sitting and acting as a board of equalization, the assessor made the following changes in the descriptive part of the assessment, namely: He erased the words and figures “Bonds $569,952” and wrote in place thereof; “Solv. Crdts. $349,844”; he changed the item “Bonds $1,183,244” to “Bonds $863,052”; and he changed the- figures under the heading “Money and *675 Solvent Credits” from “$1,807,112” to “$1,266,812,” thus making the valuation of personalty aggregate $1,270,312 instead of $1,810,612.

The county auditor computed the taxes to he paid by plaintiff upon its personalty upon said total sum of $1,270,312 only.

When it came to the collection of taxes it was ascertained and admitted that the only assessable bonds belonging to plaintiff on the first Monday of March, 1899, were certain municipal, county, and school district bonds, aggregating in value $220,108, and that the assessment on bonds was invalid to the extent of $642,944, the tax on which, at the rate for the year, was $10,479.98. This amount was therefore deducted by defendant, and the taxes on the remainder only claimed.

Plaintiff contended that the assessment was still further invalid to the extent of the $349,844 claimed to have been assessed on solvent credits, its claim being that no solvent credits had originally been assessed to it, and that it was only by reason of an unauthorized and void act of the assessor that it was apparently so assessed upon the roll in the hands of the tax-collector. It accordingly paid the tax of $5,702.46 on such amount, under protest, and now seeks to recover it.

The trial court found that the item of “Bonds $569,952” originally on the assessment-roll, in fact consisted of said sum of $349,844 in loans secured by stocks and bonds, assessable as solvent credits, and of $220,108 bonds of municipal corporations, and that the larger item of “Bonds $1,183,244” consisted entirely of bonds, including a duplication of the item of $220,108 municipal bonds. It further found in effect as follows, viz.: On July 11, 1899, plaintiff had been notified to appear before the board on July 14, 1899, to show cause why its assessment should not be increased. On July 13, 1899, it filed its verified petition asking for a reduction of its assessment for bonds by deducting $661,222.72. On July 14, 1899, it appeared before said board, after the changes heretofore noted had been made by the assessor, and in the presence of the board was informed by the assessor of such changes, and was requested by the assessor to examine the same and if dissatisfied therewith to suggest the correction thereof. Plaintiff thereupon stated to the board that the changes had not been authorized and were void, and asked for *676 the reduction of its assessment on bonds, and failed to ask for any relief in regard to the changes, although it examined the roll and saw what alterations had been made. The board did not adjourn as a board of equalization until July 17, 1899.

There is no claim that plaintiff did not own $349,844 of solvent credits, being the amount of loans secured by stocks and bonds, which were assessable as solvent credits (Savings and Loan Soc. v. San Francisco, 131 Cal. 356; San Francisco v. La Société etc., 131 Cal. 612; Security Sav. Bank v. San Francisco, 132 Cal. 599), and the court expressly found that it did own such solvent credits. Plaintiff seeks to recover upon the ground that it was assessed in addition to its furniture, franchise, and money, only for “bonds,” and not for any solvent credits. It says that there was a valid assessment only for bonds in the aggregáte sum of $1,753,196, and that such assessment has never been lawfully changed and is still in force. Confessedly an assessment limited literally to bonds could be enforced only to the extent of $220,108, so that if it be determined here that it was never legally assessed for its solvent credits, it will-escape payment of taxes upon $349,844, property owned by it and for which it should have been assessed.

It must of course be conceded that a valid assessment is essential to the collection of a tax. As said by Mr. Cooley, it is the most important of all proceedings in taxation, is the first step and the foundation of all others. (Cooley on Taxation, 3d ed., p. 597.) As said by this court in Lake County v. Sulphur Bank etc. Co., 66 Cal. 17, 20, “Without an assessment, all subsequent proceedings are nullities; and in making the assessment the provisions' of the statute under which it is to be made must be observed with particularity.” It must further be conceded that the assessor had no power to make any change in the assessment after he delivered his roll to the board of equalization, unless such changes were authorized by the board of supervisors under sections 3679 and 3681 of the Political Code, or with the written consent of the city and county attorney under section 3881 of the same code. It is not contended that any change was made with the consent of the city and county [attorney. Learned counsel for plaintiff are, however, in error in stating that there was no *677 issue upon the point as to whether the changes were authorized by the board of supervisors. While the allegations in the complaint upon this subject are much more specific than the denials of the answer, the defendant did deny “that said item of solvent credits was added . . . without any authorization or direction by any board of supervisors or any board of. equalization.” This was sufficient to put the matter of authorization in issue, and to justify the finding of the probative facts in regard thereto. If the probative facts so found compel the conclusion that the particular changes made could be and were authorized by the board of supervisors, it appears to us the plaintiff’s case must fail.

Mr. Cooley says that the idea on which a suit for taxes paid is predicated is that the municipality has received that which, in justice, it ought not to retain, and that, therefore, where the proceedings have been simply irregular, the action will not lie. There must be something further. The tax must be void, a mere nullity. (Cooley on Taxation, 3d ed., p. 1493.)

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 1086, 146 Cal. 673, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savings-loan-society-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1905.