As is indicated by the title of the cause, the plaintiff herein is a corporation known as an irrigation district. In due course of the exercise of its powers and operations as such district, an assessment was levied by it .upon the lands that were located within the boundaries of the district. The assessment not having been paid, by reason thereof and in accordance with the provisions of the enabling statute, the lands upon which the assessment had become delinquent were sold to the said district. Thereafter, while such lands were thus apparently owned by the plaintiff, the county assessor of the county in which the lands were situated threatened to include them in a general assessment of taxes for county governmental purposes. Thereupon, the plaintiff instituted a proceeding for' the purpose of prohibiting such contemplated action on the part of the said county assessor, as well as the collection by the county tax collector of taxes thus proposed to be assessed. Prom a judgment that was rendered therein in favor of the defendants, the instant appeal has been presented to this court.
Basically, the merits of the cause are determinable from a consideration of the pertinent provisions that are contained within section 1 of article XIII of the Constitution of this state. Therein, it is provided that “ . . . property used for free public libraries and free museums, growing crops, property used exclusively for public schools, and such as may belong to the United States, this state, or to any county, city and county, or municipal corporation within this state shall be exempt from taxation, ...” (Emphasis added.)
. In itself, as far as it may relate to the question here presented, the language there employed would seem to require no construction by the courts, particularly the pertinent provision which relates to the exemption of property “belonging to” the state. However, it is urged by respondents that the specific property in question was “non-operative”, that is, not in actual use for the purposes for which the irrigation district was organized—and, consequently, that it was not of the class of public property which is or was intended to be relieved from the burden of taxation.
Passing for the moment the question whether the lands here involved were “non-operative” within the meaning eon- *193 tended for by respondents, or whether they are or were used for governmental purposes—in which latter event respondents concede they could not lawfully be taxed—we deem it, expedient to give some consideration to the argument advanced by respondents to the effect that, notwithstanding the plain language of the constitutional provision which exempts from taxation any property belonging to the state without limitation as to its “use”, nevertheless such property was not intended to be exempted unless it was in actual use for a public purpose.
On several different occasions, the appellate courts of this state heretofore have ruled upon that question adversely to respondents’ contentions.
In the comparatively early case of
San Francisco
v.
McGovern,
It is to be noted that in each of those cases the fundá
*194
mental basis for the decision that was made by the court was that, in effect, the property upon which the tax was sought to be levied was
owned by
the state or held by a subordinate agency thereof, and that, in accordance with the constitutional provision, such land was exempt from taxation. (In principle, the cases of
Webster
v.
Board of Regents,
Also, directly bearing on the question is a note found in 3 A. L. R. 1440, wherein it is said: “Property owned by the state or subordinate municipal bodies is expressly exempted from taxation by constitutional provision or statutory enactment in many jurisdictions, and in some of these jurisdictions it is held that, where the exemption is express and unqualified, no tax can be levied against it regardless of the use to which it is put.” (Citing cases from several jurisdictions, including California.) However, in a succeeding note that appears on page 1442 of the same volume it is also said that, “As a general rule, property held by a municipality in connection with property used for a public purpose, but in excess of the amount required for proper conduct of such purpose, and not actually so used, is not within tax exemption provisions exempting property used for public pur poses.” (Citing cases.) (Emphasis added.) The distinction would thus appear to be that in the first list of authorities, the constitutional or other provision with reference to the exemption is general, whereas in the latter the exempted property must be “used for public purposes”.
Among the several authorities from other jurisdictions which have followed the rule heretofore adhered to in California that where tax exemption provisions are directed solely to the “ownership” of public property, the use to which such property is put becomes immaterial, are the following:
Otter Tail Power Co.
v.
Degnan,
In the case entitled
State
v.
Mayes,
“Section 6, art. 10, of the Constitution provides that ‘all property of the United States, and of this State, and of counties, and of municipalities of this state . . . shall be exempt from taxation.' To the same effect is subdivision 3 of section 12319, O. S. 1931. There is no mention of the use to which property of a municipality is put as a condition to its being nontaxable. The provisions of the Constitution and the statute are without condition or limitation. ... It is the general rule that where the Constitution and laws of a state exempt from taxation all property of municipalities within the state, without reference to the use to which the property is put, it is exempt from all taxation regardless of the character of the use thereof. It is so held in Stewart, County Treas., v. City and County of Denver,70 Colo. 514 [202 Pac. 1085 ] ; Omaha v. Douglas County,96 Neb. 865 [148 N. W. 938 ] ; City of Colorado Springs v. Board of Com’rs of Fremont County,36 Colo. 231 [84 Pac. 1113 ] ; City of Spring-ville v. Johnson,10 Utah 351 [37 Pac. 577 ] ; City and County of San Francisco v. McGovern et al.,28 Cal. App. 491 [152 Pac. 980 ] ; Board of Commrs. of Sumner County v. City of Wellington,66 Kan. 590 [72 Pac. 216 , 60 L. R. A. 850,97 Am. St. Rep. 396 ].”
In the light of the interpretation placed upon constitutional exemptions similar to the one here under consideration, by the several authorities hereinbefore cited, including the decisions of our own courts, it is manifest that the language of the exemption provision, being free from ambiguity, “has left no room for judicial construction.”
*196
In that regard, in the case entitled
San Francisco
v.
McGovern,
*197
And in the late case entitled
Town of Weaverville
v.
Hobbs,
Irrespective of that which hereinbefore has been stated with respect to the rule that under a constitutional provision exempting state-owned property from taxation it is immaterial whether the property is held in a proprietary or a governmental capacity, it does not appear that the lands here involved are nonoperative, within the meaning contended for by respondents. In the recent case entitled
El Camino Irr. Dist.
v.
El Camino Land Corp.,
12 Cal. (2d) 378 [
Respondents have placed great reliance upon the case entitled
La Mesa etc. Irr. Dist.
v.
Hornbeck,
*199 The fact that the property here involved has been judicially determined to be held or used by the irrigation district for a public purpose, and not in a proprietary sense, should not in any way be deemed to detract from the force of that which has been said hereinbefore with regard to the conclusion we have reached that, under the constitutional provision which makes ownership the sole test of exemption, the use to which the property is put would be immaterial.
The judgment is reversed.
Curtis, J., Seawell, J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Langdon, J., and Waste, C. J., concurred.
