The plaintiff seeks by this action to recover from the city and county of San Francisco, and from its tax collector, the sum of sixtv-nine thousand nine hundred and twenty-one dollars and eighteen cents, paid by him under protest for the assessments made upon a certain lot of land belonging to him for the widening of Dupont street during sixteen consccu
It was expressly held in Easterbrook v. San Francisco,
The payment by the plaintiff was moreover voluntary, and not under duress. In order to constitute a payment under duress, there must be some coercion or compulsion which controls the conduct of the party making the payment—some threatened exercise of power or authority over his person or property, which can be avoided only by making the payment. If one pays an illegal demand with full knowledge of its'illegality, his protest does not take from the pаyment its voluntary character, unless the payment is necessary in order to protect his person or property. The payment of a tax to prevent a threatened sale of real estate is not compulsory, unless the conveyance by the officer will have the effect to deprive the owner of some defense to the tax, or throw upon him the burden of showing its illegality. If the officer’s want of authority will appear upon the face of the deed, or if the illegality of the proceedings will necessarily appear in any attempt by the purchaser to disturb the owner in the possession of the land, a рayment to prevent such sale is not made under duress. (Bucknall v. Story, 4C Cal. 589; Wills v. Auslin,
If the tax was valid and cоnstituted a lien upon the plaintiff's property, his protest at the time of making the payment gives him no right of recovery. Neither the lien of the tax nor his obligation to pay it ceased by reason of any defect in the proceedings for a sale of the land to enforce its collection, and the satisfaction of this obligation, as well as the release of the lien, was a sufficient motive and consideration fоr the payment to take from it all. character of duress.
The plaintiff's obligation to pay the tax is not affected by the omission of the tax collector to enforce its collection against, other property. If the tax against that property is not collected, ■
The judgment is affirmed.
Van Fleet, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
