Smith v. Furlong

117 P. 527, 160 Cal. 522, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 542
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2565.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 117 P. 527 (Smith v. Furlong) 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
Smith v. Furlong, 117 P. 527, 160 Cal. 522, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 542 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

A rehearing was granted in this matter after decision in Department.

The Department decision was written by Justice Shaw and is as follows:—

“The appeals are from the judgment and from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. •
“The complaint stated a cause of action to quiet title to a city lot in Pasadena. The plaintiff relied solely on a tax title. He introduced in evidence a deed of the lot from the county tax-collector to the state, executed on July 2, 1907, in pursuance of a sale of the lot made on July 1, 1902, for delinquent taxes for the year 1901. No objection is made to the regularity *524 of the assessment or to the validity of this deed. Plaintiff also introduced in evidence a deed of the lot from the county tax-collector to the plaintiff, executed on June 10, 1908, in pursuance of a sale at public auction by the tax-collector, for the state, made on that day, as provided in section 3897 of the Political Code. This deed was regular on its face. Section 3898 of the Political Code provides that this deed shall recite ‘the fact necessary to authorize such sale and conveyance, and that it ‘shall' be prim» facie evidence of all facts recited therein.’
“Section 3897 provides that before making the sale the tax-collector must publish in a newspaper and by posting on the land a notice of the time and place of sale, for three successive weeks, and that ‘it shall be the duty of the tax-collector to mail a copy of said notice, postage thereon prepaid and registered, to the party to whom the land was last assessed next before the sale, at his last known post-office address.’ The mailing of this copy was one of the facts necessary to authorize the tax-collector to make the sale. With respect to it the recital in the deed was as follows: ‘And whereas, the address being unknown, W. 0. Welch, tax-collector as aforesaid, did not mail a copy of said notice, postage thereon prepaid, to the party to whom the land was last assessed next before such sale.’
“In rebuttal of the prima facie effect of this recital, the defendant showed that the assessment book for the year 1901, and the delinquent list of taxes for that year, each contained in a column headed ‘Tax Payer’s Name,’ opposite the assessment of this lot, the words ‘Ida B. Furlong, N. W. cor. Los Robles & Walnut St. Pasadena, Cal.’ The lot was on the corner of Raymond Avenue and California Street in Pasadena. It was admitted that Ida B. Furlong was the person to whom the lot was last assessed next before said sale to the plaintiff. The evidence showed further that Ida B. Furlong had resided at the northwest corner of Los Robles Avenue and Walnut Street in Pasadena from 1881 to 1903; that in 1903 she moved to the adjoining city of South Pasadena, where she has ever since resided, and that every year from 1902 to 1907, inclusive, the tax on the lot had been regularly paid by her and receipts therefor regularly given to her.
“Section 3650 of the Political Code requires the assessor to prepare an assessment book of all property within the county *525 showing, among other things, ‘the name and post-office address, if known, of the persons to whom the property is assessed.’ After the taxes against the property are computed and extended on this book it is to be delivered to the tax-collector (sec. 3732), who must thereupon collect the taxes therein assessed. (Secs. 3746 to 3753.) He must then make a delinquent list of taxes unpaid, describing the property and stating therein the address of each taxpayer, as in the assessment boob. (Secs. 3759, 3760.)' After the final settlement by the tax-collector with the auditor for the taxes of each year, including delinquencies, the assessment book and delinquent list of that year, it seems, are given into the keeping of the auditor. (Secs. 3789, 3799.) The tax-collector thus has convenient access to these books and by reason thereof has at hand means of knowledge of the address of the person to whom the property was last assessed. The deed in which he recited that this address was unknown was founded on the assessment boob for the taxes of 1901 and on the subsequent deed to the state aforesaid. This deed to the state recited that the property was assessed to Ida B. Furlong for the year 1901. The assessment book and delinquent list for that year showed her address at that time. It does not appear whether the subsequent books showed her address or not. If not, then the address as shown on the books of 1901 constituted her last known post-office address, so far as the tax records were concerned, unless the tax-collector had other information of a different address. From the fact that these boobs are required to show the address of the taxpayer we think it may be inferred that the tax-collector was required to consult these books for the purpose of learning the address of the persons to whom the property was last assessed. It is evident, therefore, that if the address was unknown to the tax-collector it was because he had failed to avail himself of the ample means of knowledge readily accessible to him and furnished by law for that purpose, one of these books being the record of the assessment from which his authority to make the deed was derived. In view of this evidence and these provisions of the law we think we may assume that the court found that this recital in the deed to the plaintiff was false and that the post-offee address of Ida B. Furlong was by legal intendment known to the tax-collector. We do not intend to lay down the rule that in cases where the deed de *526 dares that such address is unknown, and no copy of the notice of sale is registered and mailed, the question whether or not the address is in fact unknown is always open to dispute and subject to proof by evidence aliunde the tax records. But we think the provisions requiring the entry of the post-office address of each taxpayer on the assessment boob and delinquent list were designed for the purpose of affording the proper officers ready means of information thereof, and that the safer rule is that where the assessment boob for the year for which property is sold shows such address, and the last assessment is to the same person, it is the duty of the officer making the subsequent sale by the state to examine such assessment book for the purpose of ascertaining the address, and that where that boob shows it, and the subsequent assessments of the same property do not show any address, the tax-collector cannot truthfully say the address is unknown and make a valid sale of the property without mailing and registering the notice to the address so shown. He must take notice of the information contained in the record of the tax sale in virtue of which he executes the deed. This recital being false in contemplation of law it would follow that the deed to the plaintiff was invalid.
“The statute gives to the original owner of land sold to the state for taxes, the right to redeem the same from such sale at any time before the state shall have disposed of it. (Pol. Code, sees. 3780, 3817.) The attempted sale to the plaintiff being invalid because of the failure to mail a notice to the person to whom it was last assessed, the state has not yet disposed of the lot and the right of Ida B. Furlong to redeem the same still continues.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P. 527, 160 Cal. 522, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-furlong-cal-1911.