Southern Pac. Land Co. v. County of San Diego

191 P. 931, 183 Cal. 543, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 440
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5772.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 191 P. 931 (Southern Pac. Land Co. v. County of San Diego) 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
Southern Pac. Land Co. v. County of San Diego, 191 P. 931, 183 Cal. 543, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 440 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

*544 ANGELLOTTI, C. J.

This is an action brought under section 3819 of the Political Code to recover taxes for the year 1917-18 paid by plaintiff under protest. A general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint was sustained and judgment was thereupon entered for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from such judgment.

The theory of the complaint is that the assessment of plaintiff’s lands in said county upon which the tax was based was in part void, because the property was deliberately assessed at considerably more than its actual cash value, while all other property in the county was assessed systematically at not exceeding twenty-five per cent of its actual cash value. According to the allegations of the complaint, plaintiff paid the whole tax under protest that the portion of the assessment in excess of a valuation of $17,790 was illegal and void, and this action was duly brought to recover the alleged tax paid on such excess valuation.

The complaint alleges the assessment of plaintiff’s lands on the assessment-book for the year 1917-18 at the uniform valuation of $1.50 per acre, “irrespective of the proportion of fair cash value borne by said lands to each other regarding said lands as parcels by government subdivisions,” and that the same were not at any time mentioned in the complaint “of a value in excess of eighty cents per acre, treating said lands as an entirety.” It further alleged due application by plaintiff to the board of supervisors of the county sitting as a board of equalization for a reduction in the valuation, and the denial, after hearing, of such application. It was further alleged “that it is true and it was shown to said board of equalization by competent evidence without substantial contradiction” that at the time said lands and all other lands in the county were assessed and equalized for the fiscal year 1917-18, there existed “a systematic, willful, and intentional undervaluation of lands assessable by the county for the purpose of assessment upon the said county assessment-roll, said undervaluation being at a percentage of true value, not to exceed twenty-five per cent (25%) for said fiscal year 1917-18,” “that the assessment and the equalization of said lands [plaintiff’s lands] were each made arbitrarily and capriciously and without regard to their value, and without regard to and greatly in excess of said ratio of twenty-five per cent (2.5%) so willfully, intentionally, and systematically *545 adopted,” and “that said hoard of supervisors did not, as such board of equalization, during said month of July, 1917, or at all, change said ratio of not to exceed twenty-five per cent (25%) so systematically, willfully, and intentionally adopted and carried out,” nor change “the assessment made, as aforesaid, by said county assessor, and shown on said assessment-book so as to equalize the said assessment on said plaintiff’s lands with the remaining assessments in said county.” It was further alleged that such order denying plaintiff’s application “was made with full knowledge of all the facts hereinbefore pleaded and was made arbitrarily and capriciously and without regard to said facts, and in disregard of the evidence then before said board showing said facts, which evidence was without substantial conflict or contradiction. ’ ’

Construing these allegations liberally with a view to substantial justice between,the parties, which we are required to do as against a general demurrer (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 452), they substantially state the following case: Plaintiff’s lands in San Diego County had an average value of not to exceed eighty cents per acre, and were assessed upon the assessment-roll at a uniform valuation of $1.50 per acre. At the time of this assessment there existed in the county “a systematic, willful, and intentional undervaluation of lands . . . for the purpose of assessment upon the . . . county assessment-roll, at a percentage of true value not to exceed twenty-five per cent.” This scheme was carried into effect on the assessment-roll for the year with regard to the lands other than plaintiff’s. All these matters were made to appear to the board of supervisors sitting as a board of equalization, “by competent evidence without substantial contradiction,” and “without substantial conflict or contradiction,” but said board, with full knowledge of all such facts and without regard thereto, arbitrarily refused to equalize the assessment on plaintiff’s lands with the remaining assessments.

[1] Taking these to be the facts, as we must for the purposes of the demurrer, we are satisfied it must be held that plaintiff has stated a good cause of action.

We do not understand it to be disputed that, as said by the supreme court of the United States in Sunday Lake Iron Co. v. Township of Wakefield, 247 U. S. 350, [62 L. Ed. *546 1154, 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 495], “it must be regarded as settled that intentional systematic undervaluation by t state officials of other property in the same class contravenes the constitutional rights of one taxed upon the full value of his property.” This statement finds ample support in the authorities, and was recognized by this court in Los Angeles Gas & E. Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 162 Cal. 164, 168, [121 Pac. 384, 386], where we said: “This is as true where the injurious effect so produced is caused by inequality of valuation as by any other cause, for, as said in Judson on Taxation, page 680, ‘it is obvious that where taxation is upon property that requires 'valuation, inequality of taxation is produced as surely by inequality of valuation as by inequality of the rate of tax.’ ”

It must be conceded, of course, that it is thoroughly settled in this state that to our county boards of equalization has been confided the duty of determining “the value of the property under consideration for assessment purposes upon such basis as is used in regard to other property .so as to make all the assessments as equal and fair as is practicable,” and that in discharging this duty, “the board is exercising judicial functions, and its decision as to the value of the property and the fairness of the assessment so far as amount is concerned constitutes an independent and conclusive judgment of the tribunal created by law for the determination of that question,” adjudicating necessarily that .“the property is assessed at the same value proportionately as all the other property in the county,” and that this adjudication “cannot be avoided unless the board has proceeded arbitrarily and in willful disregard of the law intended for their guidance and control, with the evident purpose of imposing unequal burdens upon certain of the taxpayers . . . or unless there be something equivalent to fraud in the action of the board,” and that “mere errors in honest judgment as to the value of the property will not obviate the binding effect of the conclusion of the board.” (Los Angeles Gas & E. Co. v. County of Los Angeles, supra.)

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Bluebook (online)
191 P. 931, 183 Cal. 543, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-land-co-v-county-of-san-diego-cal-1920.