109 P. 880 | Cal. | 1910
This is an appeal by plaintiff from a portion of the same judgment as is involved in Engebretsen v. Gay, (L.A. 2478), ante,
p. 27, [
Section 12 of the act relating to street improvements, the act of March 18, 1885, as amended, in terms provides that "in all cases of recovery under the provisions of this act, the plaintiff shall recover the sum of $15 in addition to the taxable costs as attorneys' fees." The theory upon which the lower court disallowed plaintiff's claim was that this provision is invalid under the doctrine of Builders' Supply Depot v. O'Connor,
More closely in point, but depending on the same general *35
principle, are decisions upholding provisions for attorneys' fees in actions to recover taxes, the validity of which has apparently never been doubted by the courts. In People v. Seymour,
There is no distinction in principle in this regard between ordinary taxes and local assessments for improvements under such statutes as our Street Improvement Act. The assessment, it is true, is one in favor of the contractor to whom the contract for the improvement has been let by the public authorities, but it is one laid by virtue of the power of the state to tax, and the contractor may properly be regarded as the agent of the state in the matter of the enforcement of the tax against the assessed property. The obligation resting on the property assessed to answer for this tax is as clear and positive as is the duty of a taxpayer to pay the ordinary tax. The nature of the proceedings is such that the expense of collecting the tax on property delinquent, if not recoverable against such property in the proceeding to enforce the tax, would fall in part on those who voluntarily pay their assessments, since contractors in bidding upon street work would be compelled to include in their estimates an additional amount sufficient to indemnify them against the probable further expense in this regard. Such expense should equitably be borne only by the property as to which such proceedings are rendered necessary by the delinquency of the owners. It would seem that the legislature should have the power to provide for the payment of such additional *36
expense by the property whose owners are responsible therefor. While the precise question has not been presented for determination many times, such rulings as have been made sustain the validity of such a provision. It is declared in Page Jones Taxation by Assessment, that if the statute so provides, a penalty may be charged for failure to pay an assessment when due, and an attorney fee may be recovered in a suit to enforce an assessment. (Secs. 1108, 1109 and 1110.) The question was determined by the supreme court of Indiana in favor of such a provision for attorneys' fees in Brown v. Central Bermuidez Co.,
We are of the opinion that the provision for an attorney fee in this class of cases is not in violation of any constitutional provision, federal or state, and that the judgment is erroneous in not including the allowance of fifteen dollars asked by plaintiff thereunder.
So much of the judgment of the court below as refuses plaintiff an allowance for attorney fee is reversed, with directions to the court below to modify its judgment by incorporating a provision allowing such a fee as provided by the statute.
Shaw, J., and Sloss, J., concurred. *37