Whiting Finance Co. v. Hopkins

249 P. 853, 199 Cal. 428, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 290
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1926
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8449.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 249 P. 853 (Whiting Finance Co. v. Hopkins) 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
Whiting Finance Co. v. Hopkins, 249 P. 853, 199 Cal. 428, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 290 (Cal. 1926).

Opinions

RICHARDS, J.

This action is one wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendants in their respective official capacities certain moneys paid as taxes under protest upon property of said plaintiff which it asserts to have been *430 not subject to the taxes imposed and collected. The trial court upheld as legal the imposition of said taxes and from its judgment to that effect the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. The cause comes before us upon an agreed statement of facts from which it appears that there were two separate levies of taxes to which the plaintiff and appellant objected and the amount of each of which he was required to pay and did pay under protest. The first of these relates to the imposition by the defendant Ed. W. Hopkins, as county assessor of the county of Los Angeles and also as city assessor of the city of Los Angeles, of an assessment upon certain alleged solvent credits of which the plaintiff was the owner and in possession on the first Monday in March, 1923, and consisting of certain conditional sales contracts for the disposition of motor vehicles to various purchasers, the aggregate cash value of which was on said date the sum of $291,867.14, the stipulation of facts showing that said motor vehicles were on said date assessed to the respective purchasers thereof and that the tax so levied and assessed thereon was paid respectively by said purchasers. The form of the conditional sales contracts thus sought to be subjected to taxation was set forth in said stipulation and was and is the usual and ordinary form of such contracts used by the trade in the sale of motor vehicles. It may be stated generally as to said agreed form of contract that by its terms the purchaser of the specified motor vehicle agreed to purchase and the seller thereof to sell the described vehicle for the agreed purchase price, which sum the purchaser agreed to pay in certain installments at specified times, the contract providing that until the purchaser had fully complied with the terms, covenants and conditions of said contract to be by him performed and made all of the payments as therein provided, the said personal property should belong to and the title thereto remain in the seller; the purchaser to be given the immediate possession of said personal property and to have the right to retain the same so long as he was engaged in complying with his obligation under said contract; but in the event of the violation thereof by him the seller retained the full right to retake possession of said property and thereupon the right of the purchaser therein should cease; the seller, however, being given the right to enforce full payment of the unperformed obligations of said contract *431 against the purchaser, notwithstanding the retaking by the seller of said property in consequence of the purchaser’s breach thereof. The contracts in question had been transferred to the plaintiff by numerous so-called “sellers” or dealers in motor vehicles in its capacity as a “finance corporation organized to facilitate the business of selling motor vehicles on credit by financing such transactions. It was the aggregate amount of such contracts in the hands of the plaintiff as such transferee thereof on the first Monday in March, 1923, which were sought to be subjected to taxation as “solvent credits” by the defendants herein in their aforesaid official capacities, and the question presented to us upon the first phase of this appeal is as to whether said contract.-; are such solvent credits within the meaning of the constitution and laws of this state as to be subject to taxation.

The constitution, in article XIII, section 1, thereof, provides :

“All property in the state except as otherwise in this constitution provided, not exempt under the laws of the United States, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, to be ascertained as provided by law, or as hereinafter provided. The word ‘property,’ as used in this article and section, is hereby declared to include moneys, credits, bonds, stocks, dues, franchises, and all other matters and things, real, personal and mixed, capable of private ownership; provided, that a mortgage, deed of trust, contract, or other obligation by which a debt is secured when land is pledged as security for the payment thereof, together with the money represented by such debt, shall not be considered property subject to taxation.”

The Political Code, in section 3607 thereof, provides as-follows:

“Property subject to taxation. All property in this state, except as otherwise provided in the constitution of this state, is subject to taxation. Nothing in this code shall be construed to require or permit double taxation.”

Section 3617 of the Political Code, in subdivision 1 thereof, further provides:

“The term ‘property’ includes moneys, credits, bonds (except railroad or quasi-public corporation), stocks, dues, franchises, and all other matters and interests, real, personal, and mixed, capable of private ownership.”

*432 Subdivision 6 of said section 3617 further provides:

“The term ‘credits’ means those solvent debts, not secured by mortgage or trust deed, owing to the person, firm, corporation, or association assessed. The term ‘debt’ means those unsecured liabilities owing by the person, firm, corporation, or association assessed to Iona fide residents of this state, or firms, associations or corporations doing business therein; but credits, claims, debts, and demands due, owing or accruing for or on account of money deposited with savings and loan corporations or with building and loan associations, shall, for the purpose of taxation be deemed and treated as an interest in the property of such corporation, and shall not be assessed to the creditor or owner thereof.”

At the threshold of our consideration of the question as to whether the contracts involved in the issue herein are “solvent credits” in a sense which would subject them to taxation under the foregoing provisions of the constitution and laws of this state, it may be well to take note of the fact that these contracts, while denominated “conditional sales contracts,” are not wholly or strictly such; for while as to the seller of the personal properties covered by their terms the title is retained by him and the sale is conditioned upon the fulfillment by the purchaser of the obligations of the contract to be by him performed, the contract is not conditional in so far as the purchaser is concerned, since his agreement to purchase and pay for the property is absolute and may be enforced against him by the seller, regardless of whether the latter may have retaken the property and otherwise disposed of the same on account of some breach in the purchaser’s obligation. These contracts, therefore, in the hands of the plaintiff constitute in effect the absolute promise of the respective purchasers of the properties covered by them to pay the sum set forth therein, and they amount, in effect, to the promissory note of the signer thereof to make the required payments at the time and in the manner set forth therein.

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 853, 199 Cal. 428, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-finance-co-v-hopkins-cal-1926.