Turlock Irrigation Dist. v. White

198 P. 1060, 186 Cal. 183, 17 A.L.R. 72, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 428
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1921
DocketSac. No. 2935.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 198 P. 1060 (Turlock Irrigation Dist. v. White) 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
Turlock Irrigation Dist. v. White, 198 P. 1060, 186 Cal. 183, 17 A.L.R. 72, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 428 (Cal. 1921).

Opinions

THE COURT.

This appeal is by defendants from a judgment enjoining them from attempting to collect certain taxes levied by the defendant county against lands of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, an irrigation district, whose corporate boundaries are wholly within the counties of Merced and Stanislaus, is the owner, of land situated in the county of Tuolumne. It is the taxation of this land by the county of Tuolumne that is sought to be enjoined.

*184 Authority to levy and collect such tax is claimed by the defendant county under the amendment of 1914 to section 1 of article XIII of the state constitution. As this section of the constitution previously stood, it provided that no property belonging to the “United States, this state, or to any county or municipal corporation within this state” shall be subject to taxation. The amendment excepts from such exemption “such lands and the improvements thereon located outside of the county, city and county, or municipal corporation owning same as were subject to taxation at the time of the acquisition of the same by said county, city and county, or municipal corporation.”

The entire controversy in this case is as to whether or not an irrigation district, organized under the laws of California, is a “municipal corporation” within the meaning of this section of the constitution.

This amendment to the constitution (article XIII, section 1) was submitted by the legislature to the people in November, 1914. A printed argument in favor of its adoption accompanied the publication of the proposed amendment, a copy of such argument being mailed to each voter in the state as required by law. (Pol. Code, secs. 1195, 1195a, 1195b.) This argument in favor of the proposed amendment clearly explains its purpose, and the voters in acting upon the amendment must be deemed to have considered such reasons in interpreting the general term “municipal corporation” used in the proposed amendment. The argument, in part, was as follows:

“ . . . This amendment does not seek to hinder in any way the development of enterprises by and for the benefit of counties or municipalities, in any part of the state, but to protect from loss those counties into which they may enter for such purposes. A concrete illustration is afforded by the counties of Tuolumne, Mono, and Inyo. In furtherance of obtaining a large water supply, for municipal and other uses, the purchase by San Francisco in Tuolumne County aggregated over one million dollars’ worth o'f property. Los Angeles, in Owens River valley, acquired by purchase over seventy-five thousand acres of land, amounting to over one-sixth of the assessed value, and more than one-fourth of the located agricultural land of the county. The city of Los Angeles has acquired large holdings in Mono County. Be *185 fore such acquisition the area was taxpaying property. Since the acquisition in Inyo County the city of Los Angeles has continued to pay taxes, as a matter of justice, but its payments are accompanied by protests, in order to preserve to it the right of refusal to pay which many contend that it has under the constitutional provision as it stands at present, and that it might sustain in case of legal contest. While not abandoning any right from a technical standpoint, the city recognizes the justice of the contention upon which this amendment is based.
“The city of San Francisco refuses absolutely to pay one dollar in taxes in Tuolumne County on their one million dollars’ worth of property, contending they are exempt from such a tax by a constitutional provision. . . .
“It would be possible for an acquiring city or county to virtually destroy the government of a small county by acquiring, for one purpose or another, for municipal use, the substance of its revenue-yielding property. That such a result would be improbable and extreme does not alter the fact of its possibility. In the Inyo county instance, refusal by the city of Los Angeles to pay taxes upon real estate which has heretofore borne its due share of the expense of the county government would be a serious matter, either curtailing the county’s welfare or imposing a heavier burden on other property. With such a result possible to a fractional extent, it would be equally possible to the fullest extent that the investing city might see fit to go.
“It is to remedy such a condition that this amendment was proposed. Uncertainty on the matter should be removed by a legal assurance that while natural resources within one county may be directly used for the upbuilding of another, lands or other property already upon the invaded county’s tax-roll shall continue to bear its share of maintaining the local government.
“It is hoped, therefore, that the justice of this amendment will insure for it the approval of the people of the state. ’ ’

It is apparent that the term “municipal corporation” was thus presented to the people as synonymous with such corporations as Los Angeles and San Francisco, that is to say, as municipal corporations in the strict technical sense.

*186 In their brief appellants say: “To start with it will be admitted that by the late decisions of the supreme court said decisions have by an exceedingly fine analysis, determined that, as a technical legal proposition, an irrigation district is an arm of the state government or a public corporation and not a municipal corporation as the term municipal- corporation is technically known.” However, appellants’ contention is that the term “municipal corporation,” in its popular acceptation, includes irrigation district and consequently this popular meaning is to be applied rather than a technical one. The rule -appellants rely on is thus stated in a recent case (City of Pasadena v. Railroad Commission, 183 Cal. 526, [10 A. L. R 1425, 192 Pac. 25]): “ . . . The constitution, ‘unlike the acts of our legislature, owes its whole force and authority to its ratification by the people; and they judged of it by the meaning apparrent on its face according to the general use of the words employed, where they do not appear to have been used in a legal or technical sense. ’ (Miller v. Dunn, 72 Cal. 465, [1 Am. St. Rep. 67, 14 Pac. 27, 28].) Where a word has a popular and also a technical meaning, ‘the courts will accord to it its popular meaning, unless the very nature of the subject indicates or the context suggests that it is employed in its technical sense.’ (Weill v. Kenfield, 54 Cal. 113.) ” Other instances of its application may be found in Miller v. Dunn, 72 Cal. 462-465, [1 Am. St. Rep. 67, 14 Pac. 27]; Towle v. Matheus, 130 Cal. 574-577, [62 Pac. 1064]; San Pedro etc. R. Co. v. Hamilton, 161 Cal. 610-617, [37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 686, 119 Pac. 1073]; Perrin v. Miller, 35 Cal. App. 129-132, [169 Pac. 426].

In support of the proposition that the term “municipal corporation” as commonly understood includes an irrigation district, the following quotation from Merchants’ Bank v. Escondido Irr. Dist., 144 Cal. 329, [77 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P. 1060, 186 Cal. 183, 17 A.L.R. 72, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turlock-irrigation-dist-v-white-cal-1921.