28 Cal. 612 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
This is an action to recover a tax on personal property levied by the City of Sacramento on the 23d day of June, 1863. The complaint alleges, amongst other things, that the property assessed was within the city limits at the date of the assessment; that it belonged to the firm of “ Sneath & Arnold,” and that it Avas valued at thirteen thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. The answer avers that the firm of Sneath & Arnold was dissolved on the 1st day of January, 1863, and that since that time it has neither owned nor possessed any personal property in Sacramento. The trial was
The Court has found that the firm was dissolved as alleged in the answer, and that at the date of the assessment there was no personal property in the city possessed by or belonging to the defendants jointly. But it is also found that Arnold at the date of the assessment had in his possession and was the owner of personal property of the value named in the assessment.
First. It is insisted that the assessment was illegal and void for the reason that it was on “ personal property ” in bulk, without any more minute description of the character of the property.
By the eleventh section of the Act incorporating the City of Sacramento, passed April 25th, 1863, (Acts 1863, p. 415,) it is provided that “the manner of making the assessments and roll shall be the same as is described by an Act entitled an Act to provide revenue for the government of this State, approved May 17th, 1861.”e By the sixth subdivision of the twentieth section of the Act referred to, it is provided that no further description of personal property need be given in the assessment roll than that furnished by a statement of its value, and the name of its owner or owners.
The case of People v. Holladay, 25 Cal. 300, cited for the respondents, was an action to collect a delinquent tax under the Act of 1861, entitled “An Act to legalize and provide for the collection of delinquent taxes in the counties of this State,” and the Act is limited by the first section to taxes assessed for the fiscal years ending March 1st, 1859, 1860 and 1861. (Statutes 1861, p. 471.) The decision in the case of People v. Holladay is therefore inapplicable to this.
Second. It is further insisted that neither Sneath nor Arnold, nor the firm of Sneath & Arnold, is responsible for the tax, on the ground that everything entering into the description in the assessment is fictitious and unreal.
This objection is well taken. Though the assessment was
But it is urged that the assessment is legalized by the Act of 1864, (Acts 1864, p. 350,) if defective in the first instance. The answer is that the assessment is not defective, but something worse. The matters which it puts forward as realities, had no existence in fact. Further, by the Act of 1864 the defective assessments referred to therein are made valid only “ against the person and property assessed.” All that follows from that is, that if there was any such firm as “Sneath & Arnold ” in Sacramento in 1863 the tax is good as against the firm and as against its members, whoever they may have been, if the firm has been dissolved. But if there was no firm in 1863 answering the description, it would be beyond the power of the Legislature to alter the fact, even if it had attempted to do so.
The judgment is reversed, and it is ordered that a judgment be entered upon the findings in favor of the defendants.
Rhodes, J., concurring specially.
I concur in the judgment.