The appellant is a religious corporation owning real property which it claims is exempt from taxation under the provisions of section iy2 of article XIII of the Constitution of California. In the year 1930 it failed to file an affidаvit stating facts concerning the ownership and use of the property for religious purposes as required by seсtion 3611 of the Political Code. Thereafter, on June 30, 1931, the respondent County of Los Angeles sold the property to the state for delinquent taxes which had been assessed thereon. Appellant then paid to the county treasurer the amount required by law to redeem the property and brought this action to recover the amount so paid. The appeal is prosecuted from a judgment which followed an order sustaining without leave to amend a demurrer to the appellant’s complaint.
The complaint alleges that in the year 1930 there was located on the real property in question a church building which was used solely and exclusively for religious worship; “that said building never has been rented for religious purposes and that no rent ever has been received for said building which is used exclusively for religious purposes’’. It is then alleged that these facts were well known to the assessor and also tо the tax collector of the respondent county but that in 1930 the property was assessed to the appеllant upon the assessment roll for that year. According to further allegations of the complaint, after the sale to the state, the appellant tendered to the tax collector of the respondent county аnd afterward paid to its treasurer an amount equal to .the tax assessed against the property, with penaltiеs, costs and interest, the payment being accompanied by a notice of protest in writing. This notice recitеs that the appellant ‘ ‘ under protest and in no sense as a voluntary payment, pays to you *593 the amount of sаid taxes with the aforesaid penalties, costs and interest . . . claiming the right to recover back and to have rеpaid to it the whole of said amount of said alleged tax and accrued penalties, costs and interest. ...”
The appellant bases its right to recover upon section 3819 of the Political Code. This section provides that “At anytime after the assessment-book has been received by the tax collector, and the taxes have bеcome payable, the owner of any property assessed therein, who may claim that the assessment is void in whole or in part, may pay the same to the tax collector under protest, which protest shall be in writing, and shаll specify whether the whole assessment is claimed to be void, or if a part only, what portion, and in either cаse the grounds upon which such claim is founded and when so paid under protest, the payment shall in no case be regarded as voluntary payment.” Obviously the time when payment may be made to the tax collector under the prоvisions of this section is the period between the date when the equalized, certified assessment roll is turned over tо him by the auditor, which by section 3732 is required to be done on or before the first day of October of each year, and June 30th of the following year. The appellant concedes that at the time it made a tender to the tax сollector no taxes for the fiscal year 1930 could legally be paid to him, but it contends that as the Political Cоde section allowing the payment of taxes under protest is a remedial statute, it should have a liberal construction, and that under such a construction payment to the county treasurer, even after the time specifiеd therein for payment to the tax collector, is a sufficient compliance with its requirements.
Section 3819 of thе Political Code was undoubtedly enacted by the legislature to provide a simple and direct method for the оwner of property to challenge a tax levied against it. It gives a property owner the right to pay the tаx and then bring an action to recover the amount of the payment, “and when the directions of the act arе followed it is provided that the payment of the tax ‘shall in no case be regarded as a voluntary payment’ ”.
(Stewart Law & Col. Co.
v.
County of Alameda,
The languаge used by the legislature in enacting these provisions is plain, and requires no construction. Under such circumstancеs the only function of the court is to apply the terms of the enactment to the facts presented.
(Wilson
v.
Johnson,
1 Cal. (2d) 288 [
The judgment is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C. J., concurred.
