Sinclair & Valentine Co., Inc. v. Cty. of Los Angeles

201 Cal. App. 3d 1021, 247 Cal. Rptr. 568, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 518
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 1988
DocketB021961
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 3d 1021 (Sinclair & Valentine Co., Inc. v. Cty. of Los Angeles) 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
Sinclair & Valentine Co., Inc. v. Cty. of Los Angeles, 201 Cal. App. 3d 1021, 247 Cal. Rptr. 568, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 518 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

GATES, J.

The instant appeals are taken from a summary judgment quieting title to a parcel of real property in favor of plaintiff Sinclair & Valentine Company and cancelling certain deeds purporting to convey the property first from defendant Tax Collector of the County of Los Angeles 1 to the State of California and then from the state, acting by and through the County, to defendants Stephen Landau and Reid Alexander (hereinafter defendants).

*1024 In its appeal the County does not contest the propriety of the judgment insofar as it restores plaintiff’s title to the property, but rather merely challenges that portion which requires it to pay plaintiff’s attorney’s fees in the amount of $30,000 pursuant to 42 United States Code section 1988. 2 On the other hand, plaintiff asserts the trial court abused its discretion by “arbitrarily halving” its requested attorney’s fee award and disallowing its nonstatutory out-of-pocket costs in their entirety.

Only defendants assail the merits of the judgment, per se, contending: “[L] Revenue and Taxation Code § 3711 bars any attack on the deed to [defendants] on grounds other than a violation of [plaintiff’s] constitutional rights. [II.] The sale of the property to [defendants] was not constitutionally defective as the minimum requirements of due process were satisfied.”

The relevant facts are undisputed. In December 1972, WheelabratorFrye, Inc., by means of a grant deed describing it as the “successor in interest to Frye Industries, Inc. by virtue of a statutory merger,” conveyed to plaintiff two parcels of unimproved real property located in the City of Santa Fe Springs. However, the County had actually assigned to the two parcels described in the deed memorializing this intercorporate transfer not two, but three, separate identification numbers for purposes of assessing real property taxes, i.e., one parcel carried numbers 8069-007-009 and 8069-013-014, while the other was simply 8069-007-010. 3

In March 1973, plaintiff relocated its principal offices from New York to Ohio. For reasons which are not entirely clear, while the secured tax rolls relating to parcel 009 were updated to reflect this and subsequent changes in plaintiff’s address, as well as the fact that Frye Industries was no longer the record owner of the property, those relating to parcel 010, the subject of this litigation, were not. Consequently, the assessments on parcel 010 were mailed to Frye Industries, Inc., in care of Sinclair & Valentine, at a New York address previously shared by both businesses. Nonetheless, for a peri *1025 od of 30 months the bills were forwarded to and paid by plaintiff. However, once the post office ceased providing this service, they were returned to the County marked “undeliverable.” By contrast, the tax bills on parcel 009 were sent to plaintiff at each of its various addresses and were duly paid.

Because of the failure to receive and pay the assessment for the 1976-1977 fiscal year, parcel 010, in accordance with statutory procedures then in effect, was sold to the State of California on June 30, 1977. When these taxes thereafter remained delinquent for an additional five years, the property was deeded to the State on July 1, 1982. Notice of this latter event, which had been mailed to Frye Industries in New York, was, of course, returned, as had been the earlier tax bills, with the notation “undeliverable.”

Subsequently the County conducted a title search which revealed that plaintiff, not Frye Industries, was the record owner of parcel 010. Before the property was finally sold at public auction in February 1983 to defendants, the County, inexplicably, purported to inform both Frye Industries and plaintiff of the proposed sale by sending notices thereof to the same New York address it had futilely utilized previously. As a consequence, and quite anticipatably, these documents were also returned undelivered.

No further effort was made to determine plaintiff’s correct address, either by simply checking the tax collector’s own name index, or by referring to a local telephone directory for the Santa Fe Springs area, though the County readily conceded that had it done so, it would have discovered the address of plaintiff’s corporate headquarters in Iowa, where it had moved in June 1979, as well as that of its local plant, which was situated immediately adjacent to parcel 010 in Santa Fe Springs.

As a result, plaintiff received no notice of the sale to defendants until it was contacted in March 1983 by a company seeking to act as a “collection agent” on its behalf in connection with the “ ‘excess proceeds’ that resulted from a state tax sale of property in Los Angeles County.” The following month plaintiff notified the County of its belief that the property in question had been redeemed in January 1981. After investigating the matter, however, the County determined the redemption thus referred to, in fact, had related to parcel 014 which, equally inexplicably, had not even been assessed to Frye Industries but to that entity’s predecessor in interest at a New Jersey address. Having failed to gain relief, plaintiff filed the instant action on July 19, 1983, well within the one-year statute of limitations period provided by sections 177 and 3725 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.

*1026 It is manifest, and the County understandably does not contend otherwise, that it completely failed here to “make a reasonable effort to obtain the name and last known mailing address of parties of interest,” as required by section 3701 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. 4 This dereliction was not excused by Revenue and Taxation Code section 3711, which states: “Except as against actual fraud, the deed duly acknowledged or proved is conclusive evidence of the regularity of all proceedings from the assessment of the assessor to the execution of the deed, both inclusive.” Such curative statutes are simply “conclusive evidence that all taxing procedures other than those affecting jurisdiction consonant with due process ha[ve] been complied with.” (Philbrick v. Huff (1976) 60 Cal.App.3d 633, 649 [131 Cal.Rptr. 733]; italics added.)

It is well-settled that a person’s property may not be taken without due process of law and that a fundamental requisite of such process is notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of proceedings which could result in a deprivation of property so as to afford them an opportunity to be heard. (Mullane v. Central Hanover Tr. Co. (1950) 339 U.S. 306, 314 [94 L.Ed. 865, 873, 70 S.Ct. 652]; Banas v. Transamerica Title Ins. Co. (1982) 133 Cal.App.3d 845, 850 [184 Cal.Rptr. 262].)

In Mennonite Board of Missions v. Adams (1983) 462 U.S. 791 [77 L.Ed.2d 180, 103 S.Ct.

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201 Cal. App. 3d 1021, 247 Cal. Rptr. 568, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinclair-valentine-co-inc-v-cty-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1988.