Southern California Telephone Co. v. Hopkins

13 F.2d 814, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3682
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1926
Docket4811
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 13 F.2d 814 (Southern California Telephone Co. v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern California Telephone Co. v. Hopkins, 13 F.2d 814, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3682 (9th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

HUNT, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a complaint, the object of which was to se'cure an injunction restraining the seizure and sale of more than 300,000 telephone talking sets in satisfaction of a local tax.

Plaintiffs, California corporations, allege that since 1911 they have paid annually to the state of California in lieu of other taxes on their operative property — that is, all property used by plaintiffs in the telephone business — a fixed percentage of the gross receipts from their business. Further facts alleged are: In 1925 plaintiffs had upwards of 300,000 telephone instruments in use in Los Angeles county. A telephone instrument consists of a receiver, a transmitter, an induction coil, a stand (in case of a desk telephone) or a body (in case of a wall telephone), and the necessary wiring. Plaintiffs do not own the talking sets, but lease them from the American Telephone & Telegraph Company, a New York corporation. In April, 1025, the assessor of Los Angeles county assessed against the American Company personal property taxes of over $52,-000 on the talking sets; that is, upon receiver, transmitter, and induction coil. The American Company failed to pay the tax, whereupon the assessor threatened to seize and sell the talking sets.

It is alleged that under the Constitution and laws of California the gross receipts lux required precludes the imposition of any other tax upon the property used in the business of plaintiffs; that the tax involved is without warrant in law; that it would result in double taxation, which is expressly forbidden by the laws of California; that no other property in California is taxed twice, and that the threatened seizure and sale would disrupt and paralyze the telephone business within Los Angelos county, thereby denying plaintiffs the equal protection of the law and taking their property without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment; that plaintiffs have reported their instruments, including the talking sots, to the California state board of equalization as operative property, and have paid, or assert a willingness and ability to pay, gross receipts taxes to the state.

The defendants answered, and moved to dismiss, upon the grounds of lack of jurisdiction, that plaintiffs had an adequate remedy at law by paying the tax and suing to recover, and that the tax was valid. After hearing a limited amount of evidence, the case was submitted on motion to dismiss, and, in the event of denial of that motion, then without further hearing, ou application of plaintiffs for permanent injunction.

The argument before us was upon these questions: (1) Does the complaint raise a federal question under the Fourteenth Amendment? (2) Are plaintiffs without an adequate remedy at law? (3) Is the tax invalid under the laws of California? (4) *816 Is the tax invalid under the Fourteenth Amendment?

The case, we think, turns upon the construction of section 14, art. 13, of the state Constitution and certain statutes hereinafter cited. ' Section 14 of article 13, omitting enumeration of other public utilities than telephone companies, provides in part as follows :

“See. 14. Taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided upon * * * telephone companies * * * and taxes upon all franchises of every kind and nature, shall be entirely and exclusively for state purposes, and shall be levied, assessed and collected in the manner hereinafter provided. * # +

“(a) * * * All telegraph and telephone companies * * * shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their franchises, roadways, roadbeds, rails, rolling stock, poles, wires, pipes, canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property, or any part thereof used exclusively in the operation of their business in this state, computed as follows : Said tax shall be equal,to the percentages hereinafter fixed upon the gross receipts from-operation of such companies, and each thereof within this state. * * *

“Such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of such companies except as otherwise in this section provided. * * *

“(f) All the provisions of this section shall be self-executing, and the Legislature shall pass all laws necessary to carry this section into effect.”

Section 3665b of the Political Code defines operative property, on which, under the above-quoted constitutional provisions, the gross -receipts tax is “in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county and municipal.” Operative property of telephone companies includes (subdivision [d]):

“The franchises, rights of way, poles, wires, pipes, conduits, cables, switchboards} telegraph and telephone instruments, batteries, generators, and Other electrical appliances, and exchange and other buildings used in the telegraph and telephone business and so much of the land on which said buildings are situate as may be required for the convenient use and , occupation of said buildings.”

Subdivision (e) of the same section provides :

“ * * * The operative property of the companies enumerated in this section, shall also include any other property not above enumerated that may be reasonably necessary for use by said companies exclusively in the operation and conduct of the particular kinds of business enumerated in section three thousand six hundred sixty-four a of this Code.” ,

We are at once directed to a clear understanding of the system of taxation of telephone companies in California by the decision of the Supreme Court in San Francisco v. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co., 166 Cal. 244, 135 P. 971, where it is shown that the larger purpose of changes wrought by the constitutional amendment, heretofore quoted, was division of the subjects of state and local taxation by imposing upon corporations engaged in certain callings the obligation to pay certain taxes to be applied exclusively to state purposes, and by making provision that persons engaged in, and the property employed in, a public service corporation are, to a greater or less degree, to be free from the burden of local taxation. With respect to telephone companies, provision is made for taxes measured by given percentages of gross receipts, the taxes so imposed to be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county, and municipal, upon the property of the corporation in question. The court further pointed out that the new method under which the taxes are collected exclusively for the state was substituted for former ways,' and that the percentages imposed by the amendment “supersede, not only other taxes upon the property, but also license fees like those exacted by the ordinances of the city and county.” These views were followed in Hartford Fire Insurance Co. v. Jordan, 168 Cal. 270, 142 P. 839, where it was again held that the effect of the amendment was to supersede the prior state license tax act, so far as it applied to the insurance company. Pullman Co. v. Richardson, 261 U. S. 330, 43 S. Ct. 366, 67 L. Ed. 682.

We 'do not understand that defendants would controvert the proposition to this exr tent: That the effeet of the amendment wa? to supersede prior taxes and that the talking sets are operative property, and that if they were owned by plaintiffs they could not be assessed.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F.2d 814, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-california-telephone-co-v-hopkins-ca9-1926.