34 Cal. 571 | Cal. | 1868
This is a suit for taxes. The case is clearly within the principle laid down in The People v. San Francisco Savings Union, 31 Cal. 135. There was nothing in the assessment roll, as returned by the Assessor, by which it could be determined, what value the Assessor put upon the land. The testimony of the Assessor, introduced on the trial, to show what he intended to represent by the figures used, was inadmissible. This was so held in the ease cited (lb., 138-9), and we know of no Act since passed authorizing such testimony. The curative Act of April 2d, 1866 (Laws 1865-6, p. 795), is- precisely like the Act in question in The People v. San Francisco Savings Union (Ib., 139). And the similar Act of April 2d, 1866 (Laws 1865-6, p. 831), is no more effective than the others. Eeither aid the assessment. The County Auditor, with the advice and consent of the District
The proper mode of remedying defects of the kind in question, clearly, is, to authorize the Assessor, who made the assessment himself, in the presence of some designated officers, if this be deemed advisable, to supply omissions of the kind so as to express, in intelligible language, the value which he, in fact, fixed upon the property, the perfected assessment roll to be authenticated in some mode prescribed, as by the certificate of the Assessor, witnessed by the officers in whose presence the roll is thus perfected. This would be completing a duty before imperfectly performed. Or the
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted.