Opinion
This is a case about documentary transfer taxes and the manner in which they are to be calculated when a purchaser at a trustee’s sale is neither a benеficiary nor a mortgagee of the foreclosed deed of trust. We hold that, under those circumstances, the tax must be based upon the purchase price, withоut regard to the amount of indebtedness attached to the property and assumed by the purchaser.
Facts
In 1994, Minnie Brown purchased real property at a trustee’s sale for $255,859.42, subject to an unpaid debt of $480,691.18. When Brown (who was not a beneficiary of the foreclosed trust deed or otherwise affiliated with the property) presentеd the trustee’s deed to the Registrar-Recorder of Los Angeles County for recording, the County assessed documentary transfer taxes of $529.10 ($1.10 per thousand dollars on the $480,691.18 unрaid debt), and the City of Los Angeles assessed documentary transfer taxes of $2,164.50 ($4.50 per thousand dollars on the $480,691.18).
In Brown’s view, the documentary transfer taxes should have been bаsed on the price she paid to purchase the property, not on the amount of the unpaid debt (in which event she would have owed the County only $281.60 and the City only $1,152). Brown paid the assessed documentary taxes under protest and then filed claims for refunds. When the claims were denied, Brown filed this action to recover the difference between the amounts she paid and the amounts she thought she ought to pay ($247.50 from the County and $1,012.50 from the City, a total of $1,260).
Brown prevailed at trial. A judgment was entered against the County for $247.50 (plus interest) and against the City for $1,012.50 (plus interest), plus attorneys’ fees ($22,694.75) and costs ($675.71). 1 The City and County both appeal.
*668 Discussion
I.
The County contends the documentary transfer taxes were properly basеd on the amount of the unpaid debt. We disagree.
A.
As relevant, subdivision (a) of section 11911 of the Revenue and Taxation Code gives the County the right to impose a documеntary transfer tax (at specified rates) for real property transferred within the County “when the
consideration or value of the interest or property conveyed (exclusive of the value of any lien or encumbrance remaining thereon at the time of sale)”
exceeds $100.
2
(Italics added; see
City of Cathedral City
v.
County of Riverside
(1985)
B. •
By an unwritten policy, the County determines “value” аnd computes the transfer tax based upon either the actual purchase price or the amount of the unpaid debt, whichever is greater. The County says this is a proper method for the determination of “value” as that term is used in section 11911. The trial court disagreed and so do we.
Section 11911 was enacted “to replace and was patterned after the Federal Stamp Act on conveyances which expired on that same date. (Former 26 U.S.C. §§ 4361, 4363. . . .) Because section 11911 was patterned after thе former federal act and employs virtually identical language as that act, we must infer that the Legislature intended to perpetuate the federal administrativе interpretations of that federal act.”
(Thrifty Corp.
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1989)
Whatever merit there may be to an argument that the calculation is or ought to be different when the purchaser is associated with the property or the foreclosed deed, it is clear that where, as here, the purchaser is
not
the beneficiary or the borrower, the reference in section 11911 to “consideration” means the purchase price paid at the foreclosure sale.
(Railroad Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n
v.
United States
(2d Cir. 1943)
To avoid this conclusion, the County contends the “assessment of the documentary transfer tax in a non-judicial foreclosure sale on the unрaid debt rather than the purchase price is a sound tax policy.” Leaving to one side the County’s concession “that there may be situations in which the purchasе price -is more indicative of value than the unpaid debt remaining,” the policy issue is one that must be argued to the Legislature, not to us. Our role is to construe the statute as it is written, not as it might have been or ought to be written.
C.
We agree with the trial court that this is not a “close case.” As it was to the trial court, it is clear to us that, in assessing the dоcumentary transfer tax *670 against a purchaser at a trustee’s sale who is not a mortgagee or a beneficiary under the foreclosed deed of trust (or otherwise related to the property), the County must calculate the transfer tax based upon the purchase price paid at the trustee’s sale, not on the аmount of any unpaid indebtedness—without regard to which amount is higher than the other. Plainly, section 11911 means what it says—the County’s right to impose a documentary transfer tax attaches to the consideration or value of the property conveyed (exclusive of the value of any lien or encumbrance remaining thereon at the timе of sale), not to the amount of any encumbrance. (See also § 11926 [exempting from the documentary transfer tax a deed in lieu of foreclosure given to a bеneficiary or mortgagee, except that (as to a deed in lieu of foreclosure) the tax' does apply to the extent the consideration paid exceeds the amount of the unpaid debt].)
II.
We summarily reject the County’s contention that the declaratory relief judgment entered by the trial court improperly “prevents” or “enjoins” a tax. First, the constitutional prohibition cited by the County (Cal. Const., art. XIII, § 32) applies to actions against the State of California, not those involving assessments by local governments.
(A&M Records, Inc.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization
(1988)
*671 Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. Brown is awarded her costs of appeal.
Spencer, P. J., and Masterson, J., concurred.
Notes
The judgment is for a tax refund and for the declaratory relief requested by Brown.
Undesignated section references are to the Revenue and Taxation Code.
The County ordinance adopted pursuant to section 11911 uses the same “considеration or value” language. (See L.A. County Code, § 4.60.120(A); see' also Los Angeles Mun. Code, § 21.9.2.)
In any event, the “value” of property sold in foreclosure is ordinarily the price paid at the forced sale, not what the property might have been worth under different circumstances.
(BFP
v.
Resolution Trust Corporation
(1994)
In a separate brief, the City summarily makes the same pоints made by the County. The City’s separate contention that the award of attorney’s fees must fall with the judgment is technically correct but irrelevant in light of our. conclusion that the judgment must be affirmed.
