9 Cal. 2d 485 | Cal. | 1937
Defendants appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Colusa County annulling a reapportionment by the board of supervisors of that county of assessment number 5 of Reclamation District No. 108, in so far as that assessment, as originally levied, affected tract number 109. Tract 109 contains 3,120 acres. In 1923 it was duly and properly assessed for assessment number 5 for $197,538.63. In 1925 bonds in the sum of over $3,000,000 were issued upon assessment number 5. Plaintiff is the holder and owner of some of these bonds, so secured.
The facts giving rise to the present controversy are as follows:
In June of 1931, the county treasurer of Colusa County, as trustee of the bond fund of Reclamation District 108, acquired the title to tract 109, containing 3,120 acres, for the nonpayment by the owner of the call of April 1, 1930, of assessment number 5. In 1936 the county treasurer purported to purchase the title of the state to three small parcels of land designated as tracts A, B and C, all included within the exterior boundaries of tract number 109. The total acreage of these three tracts was about 280 acres. These three tracts were located approximately in the middle of tract 109. Thereafter, on April 18, 1936, the county treasurer, purporting to act under the provisions of section 3466 (a) of
As already indicated, the trial court annulled the reapportionment. The exact theory of the trial court cannot be ascertained, findings having been waived, but apparently the trial court was of the opinion that, after the treasurer, as trustee, has purchased a tract of land for a delinquent assessment, neither section 3466 (a) nor any other section of the Political Code permits the treasurer to resell that land in smaller tracts in the manner disclosed by the record herein. The correctness of the trial court’s determination depends primarily upon the proper interpretation of section 3466 (a) of the Political Code, that section having been added to the
At the time the bonds held by plaintiff were issued (1925), section 3480 of the Political Code governed the powers of the county treasurer in reference to the resale of lands purchased for delinquent assessments. As the section then read (Stats. 1923, p. 598), it is conceded by all the parties to this appeal that the county treasurer was required to resell any assessment tract purchased for delinquent assessments as a unit. This concession is clearly sustained by the provisions of the section as it then read. The section provided that after the treasurer had purchased the land at a sale for delinquent assessments, which he was required to do if no purchaser appeared, and after the one year period of'redemption had elapsed, he might resell in the following manner and on the following conditions: “Any parcel of land bid in and purchased by the treasurer as aforesaid, as trustee of the bond fund of the district, may be sold and conveyed by him . . . at any time after the expiration of said redemption period of one year, at public or private sale and with or without notice to any person paying him the amount for which said parcel was bid in by said treasurer at delinquent sale, with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per annum compounded yearly, from the date of said delinquent sale, and also the amount of all subsequent instalments then delinquent, with accrued interest and penalties thereon . . . the treasurer shall execute a deed to such purchaser upon such sale, conveying said property free of encumbrance except state, county and municipal taxes, and the unpaid balance of said assessment ...” It is quite clear that under this section the authority of the treasurer to sell was limited to
Section 3480 of the Political Code fixed a definite price, as above indicated, at which the property had to be sold. With the recession of real estate values caused by the late depression, it' frequently happened that the price fixed by section 3480 exceeded the fair market value of the property, with the result that county treasurers were unable to sell lands purchased by them for delinquent assessments of reclamation districts. With this in mind, the legislature amended section 3480 in 1931 to provide in part that “after the lapse of one year from and after the expiration of the period of redemption such parcel may be sold as in section 3466 (a) of this code provided”. Note that the amendment refers to the sale of “the parcel” of land already purchased at delinquent assessment sale by the treasurer. As part of the same reform section 3466 (a) was added to the Political Code. It provides in part: “After the lapse of one year from and after the expiration of the period of redemption of any land sold in the district, . . . either pursuant to the provisions of sections 3466, 3480 or section 3480a of this code, the county treasurer of the main county . . . may in their discretion then sell any land remaining unsold to the highest bidder for cash." The section then provides for the place of sale and the giving of notice thereof, and in connection with the notice provides: “It shall be sufficient to describe said land in said notice by reference number as set forth in the assessment lists.” As to the price at which the land is to be sold, it is provided that: “The trustees of the district shall have the right to reject any and all bids and no bid shall be accepted for an amount less than such price as shall be approved by them. No parcel shall be sold for an amount less than the fair market value thereof, as such value shall be ascertained by the board of trustees . . . Upon such last mentioned sale being made as herein provided, the said county treasurer shall execute a deed to the purchaser conveying the land sold, upon payment of the price bid, which deed shall have the effect of conveying title to the land sold to the purchaser free of encumbrance, except district assessments (including the unpaid balance of said assessment for the delinquency of which
Appellants contend that this section completely changed the method of sale by county treasurers of reclamation land purchased at delinquent tax sale; that, although section 3480 of the Political Code prohibited such resale except of the entire parcel purchased at the delinquent sale, under section 3466 (a) of the Political Code, the treasurer was authorized to sell in parcels smaller than the parcels so purchased. This contention is predicated almost entirely on the words italicized in the above quotation, authorizing the treasurer to “sell any land remaining unsold”. It is contended that these words authorize the treasurer or board of trustees to break up a tract purchased for delinquent assessments and to sell portions or a portion of it without selling the entire tract. Appellants point out the difference in phraseology between sections 3480 and 3466 (a). Whatever merit there might be in appellants’ interpretation of these words standing alone (and we think there is none) is completely dissipated when the section is read as a whole.
It is obvious from a reading of section 3466 (a) that the main purpose of the legislature in passing the section was to permit reclamation districts holding lands purchased as a result of delinquent assessment sales, to resell the same for the fair market value, in place of the requirement in section 3480 that such lands had to be resold for the amount of the delinquency, plus interest and penalties. The validity of this change in the selling price was upheld in Rivers Farm Co. v. Gibson, 4 Cal. App. (2d) 731 [42 Pac. (2d) 95], it being held in that case that such a change did not unlawfully impair the contract rights of the bondholders. The same case also held that another 1931 statute giving the former owner of the land a preferential price at which he could purchase was unconstitutional, because it unlawfully impaired the contract rights of the bondholders. There is nothing in the new section to indicate that the legislature had in mind authorizing the breaking up of assessment tracts so purchased, and reselling them piecemeal, in fact, the section clearly indicates that no such change was contemplated. It will be noted that section 3466 (a) of the Political Code, after providing for the notice of sale provides, “It shall be sufficient to describe said land in said notice by reference
Clearly the legislature, by permitting reference to the tract number, contemplated that the tract would be sold as a unit; otherwise, the permission granted is meaningless.
There is another and more important reason why the procedure adopted by the board of trustees in the instant case cannot be sanctioned. Section 3466 (a) provides, as did section 3480, that the purchaser at such sale takes the land subject to the ‘‘unpaid balance of said assessment for the delinquency of which said property was sold, which upon the date of the sale herein provided had not been called”.' The section also requires a sale at the fair market value to the highest bidder". Now, let us see what the board of trustees did and could do under appellants’ construction of the section. Tract 109 included 3,120 acres and was assessed for over $197,000. Various calls were made on this assessment. The entire tract was purchased by the county treasurer, as trustee, for failure to pay a delinquent assessment. The board of trustees then determined to sell three small parcels out of the heart of that tract, totaling about 280 acres. The evidence shows that there 280 acres constitute some of the best land in the tract. Admittedly the quality and value of the lands within tract 109 are not uniform. Aside from the difficulty of apportioning the amount of delinquency properly chargeable to the 280 acres, there is another difficulty. A prospective purchaser knows that he must take the land subject to a proportional part of the uncalled portion of the $197,000 assessment levied on the entire tract. Nothing is done by the board of trustees to ascertain the amount of such reapportionment prior to the sale. Until the reapportionment is had, it is impossible for a prospective purchaser to know what even the approximate amount of the reapportionment on the parcels offered for sale will be. How can a prospective purchaser intelligently bid at such a sale? Is such a sale an open and fair sale? In the instant case, the children of the former owner of tract 109, the former
Appellants likewise contend that respondent bondholder had no right to maintain this action. We do not find it necessary here to discuss the nature of a bondholder’s rights, nor the nature of his interest in lands included within a reclamation district and sold to the treasurer as trustee for the bond fund, by reason of delinquent assessments. That problem has been discussed many times by the appellate courts of this state. In Rivers Farm Co. v. Gibson, supra, the cases are collected and commented upon. Clearly the bondholder is a “person interested” within the meaning of section 3462 of the Political Code, which section confers on a person interested the right to object to any assessment or reapportionment of such assessment.
In view of the construction herein given to section 3466 (a) of the Political Code, the many other points discussed in the briefs need not be passed upon.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Langdon, J., Edmonds, J., Curtis, J., and Nourse, J., pro tern., concurred.
Rehearing denied.