State ex rel. Cranston v. County of San Diego

254 Cal. App. 2d 535, 62 Cal. Rptr. 374, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1427
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1967
DocketCiv. No. 8561
StatusPublished

This text of 254 Cal. App. 2d 535 (State ex rel. Cranston v. County of San Diego) 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
State ex rel. Cranston v. County of San Diego, 254 Cal. App. 2d 535, 62 Cal. Rptr. 374, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1427 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

COUGHLIN, J.

The State of California, as plaintiff, appeals from a judgment denying recovery of an alleged overpayment to the County of San Diego, defendant, for the Junior College Tuition Fund, arising out of the apportionment of state funds pursuant to Education Code section 20211.

The Education Code provides a method for financing the education of junior college pupils not residing in any school district maintaining a junior college. The county superintendent of schools is directed, not later than August 8th of each year, to certify to the board of supervisors and the county auditor the amounts of designated items of expense for educating non-district junior college pupils during the preceding fiscal year. (Ed. Code, §20201.) The board of supervisors is required to levy a tax “upon all taxable property in the county not situated in any school district maintaining a junior college, sufficient in amount to defray” the amounts so certified. (Ed. Code, § 20202.) The tax, when collected, is paid into the county treasury and placed in the college tuition fund (Ed. Code, §20204), which is apportioned among the school districts educating the non-resident junior college pupils. (Ed. Code, § 20205.) However, Education Code, section 20211 provides the tax shall not be levied upon property in a newly formed junior college district during the first fiscal year it is effective for all purposes, and the state shall pay into the tuition fund the amount which would have been raised if the tax were levied. Particularly pertinent to the issues at hand are the provisions of section 20211 that: ‘ ‘ The county auditor shall . . . determine and report to the county superintendent of schools the amount which would be raised if the tax prescribed by Section 20202 [viz., the non-district pupil special tax] were levied in such territory during such year”; the county superintendent shall report such amount to the state superintendent of instruction, who shall certify the amount to the state controller; the latter shall draw his warrant upon the general fund “in the amount certified”, payable to the county treasurer; and the county treasurer shall deposit the amount in the Junior College Tuition Fund.

During the fiscal year 1961-1962 the newly formed Grossmont and Sweetwater Junior College Districts, in the County [538]*538of San Diego, became fully effective within the meaning of section 20211. The amounts of the items of expense for nonresident junior college pupils in the County of San Diego during the fiscal year 1960-1961, as certified by the superintendent of schools pursuant to section 20201, totalled $1,412,-397.28. In September 1961, the county superintendent of schools reported to the state Superintendent of Public Instruction: “In relation to the State General Fund apportionment to our Junior College Tuition Fund per Education Code 20211 our County Auditor has determined the amount of tax which would be raised if the tax were levied in the Grossmont and Sweetwater Junior College Districts” was $1,092,208.48; the “Taxable Net Valuation” for the two districts was the sum of $400,076,370; and the “1961-62 Junior College Tuition Tax Rate per $100” was $.273. The reported “Amount of Tax Which Would Be Raised” was the product of the amount of “Taxable Net Valuation” multiplied by the “Tax Rate.” Thereupon the state paid the county $1,092,208 as prescribed by section 20211.

The report of the superintendent of schools did not detail the computation of the item designated “Taxable Net Valuation,” or the method of fixing the “Tax Rate.” However, the evidence in the case furnishes this information as hereinafter set forth.

The reported “Taxable Net Valuation” in the sum of $400,076,370 was the total assessed value of the property in the two districts on the secured roll. It did not include the value of the property on the unsecured roll, which totalled $27,143,420.

In determining the reported “Tax Rate” the auditor first fixed the amount to be raised by the tax. In doing this he took the total of the certified amounts of expense for the fiscal year 1960-1961 which was $1,412,397.28, and deducted therefrom the remaining balance in the Junior College Tuition Fund for that year consisting of cash in the sum of $170,631.17 and the unapportioned delinquent taxes in the county treasury on June 30, 1961 to which the fund was entitled in the sum of $9,109.03, which left a balance of $1,232,657.08 as the amount to be raised through the special tax prescribed by section 20202 for the fiscal year 1961-1962, if such a tax were levied. This procedure followed that used in previous years.1 After [539]*539fixing the amount to be raised the auditor determined the “Tax Bate” pursuant to the method provided by Education Code section 20704, governing tax levies required for school districts ;2 deducted 10 percent from the value of the secured roll to cover delinquent tax payments; and divided the amount to be raised by the remaining assessment roll valuation, with the resultant tax rate of $.273.

In 1963 the state concluded the auditor’s determination and report of the amount which would be raised if the tax prescribed by section 20202 were levied in the territory of the two newly formed junior college districts, which furnished the basis for its payment under section 20211, was error, because (1) no consideration was given to the amount of tax which would have been raised from a levy upon property on the unsecured roll, and (2) a 10 percent delinquency factor was assumed; claimed an overpayment of $168,292.56; and brought the instant action to recover this excess. The trial court found the amount determined and reported by the auditor “was based on a tax rate which: (1) did not include amounts arising from the levy of a tax upon unsecured property for the current fiscal year 1961-62, and (2) assumed a 10 percent delinquency factor”; but concluded no error occurred and no overpayment was made; and rendered judgment in favor of the county.

The issues at hand involve a construction of that part of section 20211 directing the auditor to “determine and report . . . the amount which would be raised if the tax prescribed by Section 20202 were levied” upon “all taxable [540]*540property” in the newly formed school districts. The object of the statute is to relieve the newly formed districts of a tax to meet their remaining obligation to the tuition fund. (Gen. see Foothill Junior College Dist. v. Board of Supervisors, 57 Cal. 2d 771 [22 Cal.Rptr. 201, 371 P.2d 977] ; County of Tuolumne v. Rafferty, 252 Cal.App.2d 694 [60 Cal.Rptr. 765].) The amount of the tax which would have been raised for this purpose must be measured in light of the amount of this obligation.

The state contends if a tax were levied for the fiscal year 1961-1962 pursuant to section 20202, the amount raised from the levy upon property on the unsecured roll would have been $75,991.66 ;3 deducts this amount from the amount the auditor [541]

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Bluebook (online)
254 Cal. App. 2d 535, 62 Cal. Rptr. 374, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cranston-v-county-of-san-diego-calctapp-1967.