248 P. 532 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *175 The plaintiff commenced this action to recover taxes paid under protest to the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, a public corporation. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained and this was followed by a judgment in favor of the defendants from which the plaintiff has appealed on the judgment-roll.
The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was a public utility corporation engaged within the boundaries of the Flood Control District in the business of transporting passengers for hire; that the District was created under the "Los Angeles Flood Control Act" (Stats. 1915, p. 1502); that, acting under the provisions of section 10 and 14 of said act, the board of supervisors of Los Angeles County levied for each fiscal year from 1916 to 1919-20, inclusive, a special tax on the real property in the District for the purpose of paying the interest and a portion of the principal on bonds theretofore issued by the District, said tax being levied upon all the real property in the District appearing on the assessment-roll prepared by the county assessor for each fiscal year mentioned; that the taxes levied against the plaintiff's operative real property for the fiscal years 1916-17, 1917-18, and 1918-19 were not paid and said properties were sold to the state because of the delinquency on June 29, 1917; that thereafter the plaintiff redeemed said properties by the payment of $7,382.10, and has paid, before delinquency, the additional sum of $8,223.58 to cover taxes levied for the year 1919-20; that the plaintiff filed with the board of supervisors of said county its verified *176
petitions and claims for the refund of the money so paid, but the same were disallowed. It is then alleged that the taxes so levied were invalid in so far as they related to the operative real property of plaintiff as they were not authorized by the constitution and laws of the state of California and were especially forbidden by section 14 of article XIII of the constitution. The demurrer was on the general ground that the complaint failed to state a cause of action. In support of the demurrer the defendants argued that the taxes were not invalid for the reason alleged because they were in fact assessments as distinguished from the general taxes under the rule announced inLos Angeles Flood Control Dist. v. Hamilton,
Appellant, conceding the rule of the Hamilton case, insists on this appeal that the taxes are invalid because the Flood Control Act does not specifically declare that the operative property of public utilities shall be subject to assessment for these special taxes. In support of its position the appellant cites SouthernCalifornia Ry. Co. v. Workman,
The Workman case (
In dissenting from the order denying a rehearing in the Workman case, Beatty, C.J., gave a very clear explanation of the meaning and effect of the opinion when he said: "For although the decision only declares in terms that there is no authority for making an assessment upon a right of way, it means, when construed with reference to the facts of the *178 case, that you cannot assess or sell a tract of land belonging to a railroad company if its track extends over it without expressly exempting the right of way; that is to say, without reserving to the company in the express terms of the sale the exclusive right to use the land for all the purposes of its traffic. The proposition broadly laid down is that a part of a railroad company's right of way cannot be sold on execution or for a street assessment. Of course, it is consistent and logical to say that such property cannot be assessed if it cannot be sold, for there is no possible way of enforcing a delinquent assessment for street improvement except by a sale of the abutting lots, and an assessment which binds no one is equivalent to no assessment at all."
Inasmuch as the Vrooman Act required that the assessment should run specifically to the property benefited and that the lien should attach to that property only, there was no way of enforcing an assessment against the railway's property except by a dismemberment of the operating system of the railway to the injury of the public. Our understanding of the reasoning of the court is that the law did not authorize the assessment and sale of a railroad right of way because, no provision having been made for reserving to the company the exclusive right to use the right of way for all purposes of its traffic under its franchise to serve the public, such authority should not be implied from the general grant of power to assess "the lots and lands fronting on the improved portion of the street." The expression quoted had been in the Vrooman Act since its enactment in 1885 and had a well-known and accepted meaning as applying to the lots of land abutting the curb line of the street and "fronting" on the portion of the street to be improved. Then again the whole purpose and theory of the Vrooman Act was to provide a mode of procedure for the improvement of streets on the basis of benefits accruing to these abutting lots of land — among other things to provide the lot owners a convenient mode of egress and ingress. This theory of the original act was repugnant to the thought that it was intended to include in the assessment a right of way which would not be benefited by the street improvement. Because there was nothing in the act to indicate a departure from this well-known theory and because of the question of public interest and convenience involved, the court properly *179 held that the power did not exist. There is no intimation by our supreme court that if the Vrooman Act had expressly authorized the assessment and sale it would have been valid, and there is no holding that the failure to "expressly" include the public utility was the reason for the denial of the power to join it in the assessment.
Fox v. Workman,
In the Hubbard case
In the Pillsbury case (
[1] With this rule of law before it the legislature in June, 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 1502) created a special taxing district designated as the Los Angeles County Flood Control District and which embraced practically all Los Angeles County, except the islands off the coast, for the special purpose of providing for the control of the flood and storm waters of the District, to conserve such waters for useful purposes, "and to protect from damage from such flood or storm waters the harbors, waterways, public highways and property in said district." By sections 10 and 14 of the act the District was authorized to levy a tax each year upon "the taxable real property" in such District to pay the cost of carrying out the objects and purposes of the act, and the interest and principal upon bonds issued by the District, and said tax was directed to be "levied and collected at the same time and in the same manner as the general tax levied for county purposes." By section 16 of the act it was provided that nothing in the act should be construed to authorize the supervisors to raise money for said District by any method or system other than that by the issuing of bonds or the levying of a tax upon the assessed value of all the real property in the District in the manner provided. In passing on the provisions of this act the supreme court in Los Angeles Co. F.C. Dist. v. Hamilton,
[2] Furthermore, we must view the act "in the light of every presumption and intendment favorable to its constitutionality." (Los Angeles Co. F.C. Dist. v. Hamilton, supra, p. 125.) With this in view, and treating the power to tax as a power to assess for benefits, we find that the legislature has directed that the assessment shall be made upon all the taxable real property in the District and that it has exempted from such assessment the personal property situated therein only. If it had been the intention of the legislature to exempt from such assessment the operative property of any public utility it was necessary to have that exemption stated in explicit terms. By the provisions of section 1 of article XIII of the constitution all property in the state, except as otherwise provided in the constitution, is to be taxed in proportion to its value. Numerous exemptions appear in the constitution itself, but these do not include either the operative or nonoperative property of public utilities. [3] By section 14 of the same article of the constitution a special mode of assessing all the property of certain public utilities for state purposes is provided and such property is then exempted from taxation for local purposes. This however, it has been conceded, does not apply to assessments upon such property for special improvements, and we find, therefore, that the operative as well as the nonoperative real property of the utilities is in the category of "taxable real property in such district" within the meaning of the Flood *182 Control Act. [4] It is unnecessary to cite authorities to the rule that when a statute is general in its terms any exemption or exception from its operation must be specific. Thus when the legislature declared that the tax should be levied upon all the taxable real property in the District it included every class of real property in the District which was not by the constitution or statutes expressly exempted from that character of taxation. Now the operative real property of the public utilities within the District, though exempt under section 14 of article XIII from general taxation by the District, but not being expressly exempted from local assessments, comes within the general classification of "taxable real property" and as such is subject to the assessments for the purpose of the act.
This conclusion follows all the more naturally because it is a matter of common knowledge that the purposes of the act were to protect from damage the public highways and other property in the District and that the demand for its enactment resulted from the great loss to property from destructive flood which had, for a long period of years, interrupted traffic within the District, washed away railroad bridges and damaged railroad tracks and rights of way and had caused enormous damage to the property owned by the various public utilities operating in the District.
Counsel for the Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corporation, a public utility owning operative property in the Flood Control District, have filed a brief as "amici curiae," in which they advance the point that such property is not subject to taxation under the act because the only machinery provided in the act for the levy and collection of a tax is that provided for the levy and collection of the "general tax levied for county purposes" from which the operative property of these utilities is exempted by section 14 of article XIII of the constitution. The argument is that as this operative property is exempted from county general taxes the fact that the Flood Control Act adopted the county tax machinery as the only method of levying and collecting the "tax" for flood control purposes discloses an intention on the part of the legislature to exempt such operative property from the burdens of the act.
The answer to the point raised is a simple one and is found in the comprehensive opinion written by Mr. Justice *183
Sloss in the Hamilton case (
[6] By sections 10 and 14 of the act it is provided that these assessments shall be levied and collected "at the time and in the same manner as the general tax levy for county purposes," and, by section 11, all the provisions of the Political Code relating to the "manner of levying, assessing, equalizing, and collecting of taxes" are adopted and made a part of the act. The evident meaning of these provisions of the act is that, though the levy is an assessment for benefits as distinguished from a general tax, the machinery for the imposition and collection of the charge is the same as that provided for in the case of general taxes. Summarizing in the light of the decision in the Hamilton case, the situation is this: The legislature has created a special taxing district and has declared that all the real property in the District (with certain unimportant exceptions) will be benefited by the proposed improvement. For the purpose of raising funds it has authorized the supervisors to assess all this real property and has declared that the bonds issued by the District shall be a lien upon "all the real property in the District." For the purpose of convenience to the owners of such property, *184 as well as to the county officials, it has provided that these assessments shall be levied and collected in the same manner and at the same time as general taxes for county purposes. The adoption of this general taxing machinery, however, does not change the character of the charge which is imposed as a special assessment for benefits and the other provisions of the act plainly subject to such assessments all the real property in the District, including the operative real property of public utilities.
Judgment affirmed.
Sturtevant, J., and Langdon, P.J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on July 22, 1926.