94 P. 232 | Cal. | 1908
This is an action by the city of Escondido, a municipal corporation of the sixth class, to recover from defendant the sum of $11.55 city taxes for the year 1904, with penalties and costs. Judgment went for defendant, and plaintiff appeals from such judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
By ordinance, the fiscal year for that city is made to commence on the first day of January. The complaint alleged the due making of an assessment-list for the year 1904, containing the assessment sued on in this action, and this allegation was denied in the answer. Upon the trial, plaintiff offered the assessment-book in evidence for the purpose of showing a valid assessment and establishing prima facie its right to recover the tax thereon charged against defendant. (Modoc Co. v. Churchill,
The assessment-book offered in evidence had printed upon each double page the words: "Assessment Book of the Property of the city of Escondido for the year 1904-1905." One of the grounds of objection was, in effect, that this was not the assessment of property alleged in the complaint, which was one for the year 1904. But the book in other respects sufficiently showed that it was the assessment-list for the year 1904. As we have seen, under the laws relating to city assessments and taxes in the city of Escondido, there was no such year as "1904-1905," and there could be no assessment-book for any such year. The affidavit of the city assessor and the certificate or affidavit of the city clerk contained in said book at the end of the list of property, which were required by provisions of the Municipal Corporation Act (Secs. 872 and 877, [Stats. 1883, pp. 274, 275]), clearly show that the book was in fact the assessment-roll of the city for the year 1904, and could be nothing else. Under these circumstances, the printed statement at the head of each double page that it was the book for the year 1904-1905, which, in *42 view of the law applicable, was meaningless, cannot be held to render it in the slightest degree uncertain that the book was the assessment-roll for the year 1904.
The other ground of objection to the roll was that it was not authenticated by the affidavit provided for by section 3732 of the Political Code. That section, relating to the duties of the county auditor in the matter of state and county taxes, provides: "On or before the second Monday in October he must deliver the corrected assessment-book to the tax-collector, with an affidavit attached thereto, and by him subscribed, as follows: `I, ________, auditor of the county of ________, do swear that I received the assessment-book of the taxable property from the clerk of the board of supervisors, with his affidavit thereto affixed, and that I have corrected it and made it to conform to the requirements of the state board of equalization; that I have reckoned the respective sums due as taxes, and have added up the columns of valuation, taxes, and acreage, as required by law.'" It has been held that in the case of assessments for state and county taxes such an affidavit is essential to the enforcement of the tax (Miller v. County of Kern,
No other ground of objection to the assessment-roll is urged, and no reason appears to us why the roll should not have been admitted in evidence.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Shaw, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., Sloss, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.