Opinion
I. Introduction
The case herein challenges anew the constitutionality of Proposition 13 adopted by the California voters on June 6, 1978 (Cal. Const., art. XIII A,
*356
§§ 1-6 [hereafter Proposition 13 or Article XIII A]). Specifically, appellants attack the change in ownership provisions of Article XIII A which allow the tax assessment to be based upon the fair market value of the property at the time of the ownership change rather than at its 1975 (base year) value. Appellants argue that as far as commercial property is concerned, the change-in-ownership provisions of Article XIII A are unconstitutional because they violate the equal protection and commerce clauses of the federal Constitution and impair interstate mobility (right to travel) as well. In an action brought for a refund of taxes and declaratory relief, the trial court rejected appellants’ arguments and entered judgment in favor of respondent county. We are asked to reexamine these questions, especially in light of
Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal Co.
v.
County Com. of Webster County
(1989)
II. Background Information
A. Scheme of Taxation Under Proposition 13
Unless otherwise provided, in California all real estate is assessed at fair market value for the purposes of taxation. (Cal. Const., art. XIII, § 1 et seq.) One of the most crucial exceptions is carved out by Article XIII A which sets a constitutional limit on the maximum amount of tax that may be levied on real property. That limit on all residential and commercial property is 1 percent of the 1975 base year value which may be enhanced to reflect an inflation rate of no more than 2 percent per year. (Art. XIII A, § 2, subd. (b).) An exception to this rule is supplied in section 2, subdivision (a), which allows the limit to be raised in case a change in ownership has occurred subsequent to the 1975 assessment. In the latter instance, the real property is reappraised at fair market value as of the date of change and the rate of 1 percent is calculated according to the newly established value of the property. (Art. XIII A, § 1, subd. (a), § 2, subd. (a).) 1
B. Factual and Procedural Backdrop
The facts underlying the dispute herein are simple and undisputed. Appellants (R. C. Macy & Co., Inc., a Delaware corporation and its two *357 wholly owned subsidiaries: Concord Properties Corp. and Macy’s California, Inc., hereafter together Macy’s) are owners and operators of Macy’s department store in Contra Costa County. The department store opened in 1967 and has continued to do business under the same management ever since.
On July 15, 1986, Macy’s underwent a corporate restructuring, which constituted a change in ownership within the meaning of Article XIII A, section 2. Prior to restructuring, the tax assessment of the department store was based upon the 1975-1976 value of $3,468,548. Adjusted for inflation of 2 percent per year, the 1987 assessment would have been $4,355,551. As a result of the change in ownership, however, the county assessor reappraised the property and determined its value in the sum of $11,685,026, i.e., $47.50 per square foot.
It is undisputed that Macy’s department store, which is located at Sun Valley Mall, has two competitors in the same shopping center: J. C. Penney and Sears and that the two latter stores have not experienced a change in ownership since 1975. The parties stipulated that while the properties of the three competing stores are comparable, Macy’s, due to a change in ownership and the ensuing reappraisal, has to pay about 2.5 times the amount of property tax that J. C. Penney and Sears pay.
As a consequence of revaluation of the property at its 1986 fair market value, Macy’s was assessed and had to pay an additional tax of $72,947.04 in the 1987 fiscal year. In protest, Macy’s filed a timely application for reduction of assessment with the assessment appeals board which was heard and denied. Macy’s then filed a claim for refund with respondent county which was also denied. Following the exhaustion of its administrative remedies, Macy’s initiated the present lawsuit for declaratory relief and a refund of the supplemental tax paid under protest, claiming, in essence, that the change in ownership provisions of Article XIII A and the statutory and regulatory rules implementing them are unconstitutional both on their face and as applied. After thorough briefing and receipt of extensive documentary evidence, the trial court rejected Macy’s claim and rendered judgment for respondent county.
III. Discussion
Appellants contend that as far as they relate to commercial property, the change in ownership provisions of Proposition 13 are unconstitutional and the supplemental assessments made thereunder are void because the disparate tax levies resulting under the disputed provisions: (a) violate the equal protection clause of the federal Constitution; (b) interfere with interstate *358 mobility (right to travel); and (c) place undue burden on interstate commerce. We find appellants’ renewed attack on the constitutionality of Proposition 13 groundless and affirm the judgment.
A. The Change in Ownership Provisions of Proposition 13 Do Not Violate the Precepts of Equal Protection
Appellants’ principal contention on appeal is that the change-in-ownership provisions codified in Article XIII A, section 2, subdivision (a) (see fn. 1,
ante)
constitute invidious discrimination and, thus, violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Appellants, in essence, maintain that the taxation of property acquired after 1975 at its fair market value leads to evergrowing disparities in the taxation of similarly situated property which cannot be justified on any rational basis or reasonable difference in state policy. Appellants insist that the constitutional requirement of “seasonable attainment of a rough equality in tax treatment of similarly situated property owners”
(Allegheny, supra,
(1) The Applicable Legal Standards
It is well established that the equal protection guaranty of the Fourteenth Amendment does not take from the states all power of classification. Most laws classify and many affect certain groups unevenly. Despite this fact, it has been held that “When the basic classification is rationally based, uneven effects upon particular groups within a class are ordinarily of no constitutional concern .... In assessing the equal protection challenge, a court is called upon only to measure the basic validity of the legislative classification.”
(Personnel Administrator of Mass.
v.
Feeney
(1979)
The general principles applicable to the equal protection challenge to state tax legislation are equally settled. As stated by the United States Supreme Court: “ ‘[w]here taxation is concerned and no specific federal right, apart from equal protection, is imperiled, the States have large leeway in making classifications and drawing lines which in their judgment produce reasonable systems of taxation.’ [Citation.]
A state tax law is not arbitrary although it
‘discriminate[s]
in favor of a certain class ... if the discrimination is founded upon a reasonable distinction, or difference in state
*359
policy,’’
not in conflict with the Federal Constitution. [Citation.] This principle has weathered nearly a century of Supreme Court adjudication . . . .”
(Kahn
v.
Shevin
(1974)
Consistent with the foregoing principles, it has been repeatedly held that “The latitude of discretion is notably wide in the classification of property for the purposes of taxation and the granting of partial or total exemptions upon grounds of policy”
(Royster Guano Co.
v.
Virginia
(1920)
(2) The Equal Protection Issue Relative to Change in Ownership Was Conclusively Determined by Amador
The California Supreme Court long ago laid to rest the equal protection challenge to the change in ownership provisions of Article XIII A in
Amador;
that decision remains unaffected by
Allegheny
and binds us here.
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
In
Amador
the Supreme Court pointed out that under settled rules a discriminatory taxation will be upheld against an equal protection challenge so long as the tax classification or disparity of tax treatment is founded upon some reasonable distinction or rational basis.
(Amador, supra,
22 Cal.3d at pp. 234-235.) Thereafter the court concluded that the taxation of property at its acquisition value rather than its current value (i.e., market price) as required by Article XIII A, section 2, rests on a rational basis and fulfills a legitimate legislative goal inasmuch as the acquisition value system: (1) provides certainty in taxation; (2) brings about a fairer system in which unrealized paper gains generated by inflation are not taxed; and (3) does not unduly discriminate against persons who purchased their property after 1975, because these purchasers are taxed precisely the same way as the 1975 owners, i.e., based upon the acquisition value of property. The critical part of the opinion reads as follows: “By reason of section 2, subdivision (a), of
*360
the article, except for property acquired prior to 1975, henceforth all real property will be assessed and taxed at its value
at date of acquisition
rather than at current value (subject, of course, to the 2 percent maximum annual inflationary increase provided for in subdivision (b)).
This ‘acquisition value ’ approach to taxation finds reasonable support in a theory that the annual taxes
which a property owner must pay
should bear some rational relationship to the original cost of the property, rather than relate to an unforeseen, perhaps unduly inflated, current value. Not only does an acquisition value system enable each property owner to estimate with some assurance his future tax liability, but also the system may operate on a fairer basis than a current value approach.
For example, a taxpayer who acquired his property for $40,000 in 1975 henceforth will be assessed and taxed on the basis of that cost (assuming it represented the then fair market value). This result is fair and equitable in that his future taxes may be said reasonably to reflect the price he was originally willing and able to pay for his property, rather than an inflated value fixed, after acquisition, in part on the basis of sales to third parties over which sales he can exercise no control. On the other hand, a person who paid $80,000 for similar property in 1977 is henceforth assessed and taxed at a higher level which reflects, again, the price he was willing and able to pay for that property. Seen in this light, and contrary to petitioners’ assumption,
section 2 does not unduly discriminate against persons who acquired their property after 1975, for those persons are assessed and taxed in precisely the same manner as those who purchased in 1975, namely, on an acquisition value basis predicated on the owner’s free and voluntary acts ofpurchase. This is
an arguably
reasonable basis for assessment.” Amador, supra,
Nevertheless, appellants contend that Amador does not control the resolution of the present case because: (a) Amador decided the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, upon a facial challenge in the abstract without taking into account the vast disparities developed after the adoption of Proposition 13; (b) Amador focused on residential property and did not *361 address the rationality of the enactment vis-a-vis commercial property; and (c) in view of Allegheny, a recently decided United States Supreme Court case, Amador is of questionable authority and need not be followed. We disagree with appellants on each contention.
(a) The Amador Court Did Consider the Tax Disparities in Deciding the Constitutionality of Article XIII A, Section 2
Appellants first assert that Amador is not dispositive here because it decided the constitutional issue in the abstract (i.e., upon a facial attack) without considering the actual tax disparities that have developed since passage in 1978. Appellants’ contention must fail for multiple reasons.
First, it is widely recognized that a facial attack on the constitutionality of an enactment carries a heavier burden than an attack based on facts resulting from the enactment of legislation. As stated in
United States
v.
Salerno
(1987)
Moreover, contrary to appellants’ assertion, the Amador court did recognize that a serious and substantial attack on Proposition 13 existed which could result in properties of the same current market value having markedly different assessed valuations. This appears in both the majority opinion and the dissent. The majority uses an example that under Proposition 13 property purchased for $40,000 in 1975 will be assessed at that value, while similar property bought in 1977 (only two years later) for $80,000 will be taxed double, i.e., the disparity ratio can reach two to one within only two years! (Amador, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 235.) The dissent further emphasizes this growing disparity by providing additional examples of difference in tax levels developed within a short time period. (Id. at pp. 249-250.)
Finally, this uneven taxation result under Proposition 13 was also highlighted in the voter pamphlet which was presented to, and considered by, the Amador court. For example, rebuttal to arguments in favor of Proposition 13 emphasized that the proposition “Places a disproportionate and unfair tax burden on anyone purchasing a home after July 1, 1978; . . .” The argument against Proposition 13 stated the theme in even stronger language: “Homeowners living in identical side-by-side houses will pay vastly different property tax bills . . . .” (Italics added.)
In sum, since the stipulated difference of the tax burden between appellants’ property and that of their competitors is approximately 2.5 to 1 and *362 since just such a disparity in tax rates was considered and approved by the Amador court when it passed upon the constitutionality of Proposition 13, appellants cannot well claim that when applied to the present facts the Amador holding is unreasonable; much less can they successfully assert that had it been supplied with the new data, the Supreme Court would have reached a different result in Amador.
(b) Amador Applies to Commercial Property as Well as Residential Property
Appellants next claim that in deciding the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, Amador focused on residential property and left undecided the issue whether the change in ownership provisions of Proposition 13 had a rational basis vis-a-vis commercial property. Appellants maintain that while the state may have a legitimate interest in not taxing homeowners on unrealized, inflated property values, the same rationale does not apply to commercial property.
This proposition of appellants also suffers from several weaknesses. First of all, in upholding the constitutionality of the change in ownership provisions of Proposition 13 against an equal protection challenge,
Amador
does not distinguish between residential and commercial property. In the absence of such distinction we have no reason to conclude or infer that the court intended to apply a separate set of constitutional rules to each type of property. Moreover, the policy reasons stated by
Amador
in order to justify the reasonableness of the enactment and the legitimate state objectives promoted thereby (i.e., achievement of certainty and predictability in taxation; assurance of a stable source of revenue for the local governments; uniform taxation of all taxpayers based on the acquisition value, etc.) are equally applicable to both residential and commercial property. The obvious fallacy of appellants’ contention lies in the circumstance that it highlights only one of the policy factors justifying the reasonableness of the enactment, but ignores all others, although the latter are equally relevant to sustain the classification not only as to residential, but also as to commercial property. It is, of course, well settled that “There is a presumption of constitutionality which can be overcome ‘only by the most explicit demonstration that a classification is a hostile and oppressive discrimination against particular persons and classes.’ . . .
'The burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to negative every conceivable basis
which might support it.’ ”
(Lehnhausen
v.
Lake Shore Auto Parts Co.
(1973)
*363 (c) Allegheny Is Inapplicable to Proposition 13 and Does Not Affect the Continued Validity of Amador
Appellants’ central attack on the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, and the precedential force of Amador is based on Allegheny, a recently decided United States Supreme Court case. Allegheny is cited by appellants for two distinct purposes: First, it is contended that the equal protection challenge under Allegheny is met only if there is a seasonable attainment of a rough equality in the tax treatment of comparable properties which, for the reasons set out above, cannot be achieved under the property tax system established by Proposition 13, and based upon this premise, appellants conclude that the change in ownership provisions of Article XIII A must be declared unconstitutional and that Amador should be reassessed in view of Allegheny, second, it is argued that, under Allegheny and the federal cases cited therein, the intentional, systematic undervaluation of comparable property or the dramatic differences in valuation between recently transferred and other comparable property must be deemed ipso facto unconstitutional. Neither of appellants’ points is well taken.
Appellants’ first proposition must fail for two fundamental reasons: (1) Allegheny grew out of a different legal and factual background and, thus, is distinguishable from the instant case; (2) Allegheny expressly refused to pass upon the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, and, hence, left the precedential force of Amador unaffected.
In
Allegheny
the grossly disparate assessment of comparable neighboring property (a ratio varying from 8 to 35 to 1, the equalization of which would have required more than 500 years) was made by the county assessor in violation of the West Virginia state Constitution, which mandated that all property, real or personal, be taxed in proportion to its value.
3
That the
Allegheny
holding was predicated on the irrational enforcement policy of the assessor in contravention of the state constitution appears from the language of the opinion itself. After declaring that the state has broad power to make different classifications and assign to each class a different tax burden, the
Allegheny
court emphasized: “But West Virginia has not
*364
drawn such a distinction. Its Constitution and laws provide that all property of the kind held by petitioners shall be taxed at a rate uniform throughout the State according to its estimated market value .... We are not advised of any West Virginia statute or practice which authorizes individual counties of the State to fashion their own substantive assessment policies independently of state statute. [Citation.] The Webster County assessor has, apparently on her own initiative, applied the tax laws of West Virginia in the manner heretofore described, with the resulting disparity in assessed value of similar property . . . .”
(Id.
at p. 345 [
The distinction between Allegheny and the present case is obvious. While property taxation in West Virginia is based upon the ad valorem (i.e., current or market value) system, Proposition 13 follows the acquisition date system under which all real property is assessed and taxed on the basis of its value at the date of its acquisition. Since the provisions of Proposition 13 are enshrined in the California Constitution, in reassessing appellant’s property at the time of the change in ownership, respondent county proceeded in full compliance with (rather than in violation of) the California Constitution. In other words, the striking difference between Allegheny and the case herein is that while the California acquisition value system is founded on the Constitution and state policy and respondent county proceeded in harmony therewith, the West Virginia Constitution is based on the current value system of taxation which was violated by the county assessor who, in essence, assessed comparable property according to its value on the date of acquisition.
The crucial difference between the West Virginia Constitution and California’s Proposition 13 did not escape the Supreme Court’s scrutiny in
Allegheny.
While coming to the conclusion that the West Virginia county assessor’s grossly unequal treatment of comparable property did violate the precepts of equal protection, the high court specifically refused to extend its holding to California. Rather, by suggesting that Proposition 13 is based on the premise that taxes should not be based on unrealized paper gains in the value of property, the court left the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2 undecided:
“We need not and do not decide today whether the Webster County assessment method would stand on a different footing if it were the law of a State, generally applied, instead of the aberrational enforcement policy
it appears to be. The State of California has adopted a similar policy as Article XIIIA of its Constitution, popularly known as ‘Proposition 13.’ Proposition 13 generally provides that property will be assessed at its 1975-1976 value, and reassessed only when transferred or constructed upon, or in a limited manner for inflation. Cal. Const., Art. XIIIA, § 2 (limiting inflation adjustments to 2% per year). The system is grounded on the belief that taxes should be based on the original cost of property and
*365
should not tax unrealized paper gains in the value of the property.”
(Allegheny, supra,
Appellants’ contention that Allegheny is indistinguishable because California (not unlike West Virginia) has retained the ad valorem (current or fair market value) system of taxation even after the adoption of Proposition 13, does not withstand scrutiny.
While California Constitution, article XIII, section 1, states that unless otherwise provided all property is taxable and shall be assessed at the same percentage of fair market value, the cases unanimously hold that Proposition 13 introduced a new system of taxation based on the acquisition date value: “By reason of section 2, subdivision (a) of the article [XIII A], except for property acquired prior to 1975, henceforth all real property will be assessed and taxed at its value
at date of acquisition
rather than at current value. . . .”
(Amador, supra,
Appellants’ second major attack on the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, rests on the general proposition that “ ‘[I]ntentional systematic undervaluation by state officials of other taxable property in the same class contravenes the constitutional right of one taxed upon the full value of his property.’ ”
(Allegheny, supra,
To begin with,
Allegheny
fails to express any per se rule of an equal protection violation. Instead, it reiterates the well-established principles
*366
that a difference in taxation will be upheld against an equal protection challenge as long as the discrimination is founded upon a reasonable distinction or reasonable state policy. “The States, of course, have broad powers to impose and collect taxes. A State may divide different kinds of property into classes and assign to each class a different tax burden so long as those divisions and burdens are reasonable .... In each case, ‘[i]f the selection or classification is neither capricious nor arbitrary, and rests upon some reasonable consideration of difference or policy, there is no denial of the equal protection of the law.’ [Citation.]”
(Allegheny, supra,
Furthermore, the proposition that the intentional, systematic undervaluation of property similarly situated with other property assessed at its full value constitutes an improper discrimination in violation of equal protection was raised and negatively answered in Amador. In analyzing Cumberland, Sioux City Bridge and Hillsborough (i.e., the very cases cited in Allegheny) the California Supreme Court concluded that those cases are distinguishable because: (a) they decided the constitutionality of legislative schemes which were based on the current market value system (as opposed to Prop. 13 which is founded on the acquisition date system); and (b) at any rate those cases did not change the general rule whereby the constitutionality of a tax enactment will be upheld if founded on a reasonable distinction or rational basis. 4 We fail to see why we should deviate from these sound principles espoused by our Supreme Court.
In rejecting appellants’ complaint that a disparity of taxation between comparable commercial property amounts to an equal protection violation per se, we also invoke the often-stated rule that wide flexibility is permitted the states in the enforcement and interpretation of their tax laws; that there is no iron rule of equality in imposing taxes; and that the states are free to grant partial or total exemptions upon grounds of reasonable state policy. (See discussion,
ante.)
“[T]he Legislature is empowered to grant total or partial exemptions from property taxation on behalf of various classes (e.g., veterans, blind or disabled persons, religious, hospital or charitable property; see art. XIII, § 4), despite the fact that similarly situated property may be taxed at its full value. In addition, homeowners receive a partial exemption from taxation [citation] which is unavailable to other property owners.
*367
As noted previously, the state has wide discretion to grant such exemptions. [Citation.]”
(Amador, supra,
In summary, the constitutionality of Article XIII A, section 2, must be sustained against appellants’ equal protection challenge because: (1) This very issue was conclusively adjudicated by
Amador,
which held Proposition 13 constitutional; (2)
Allegheny
is so factually distinguishable from the present case that it is not controlling; (3)
Allegheny
expressly refused to decide the constitutionality of the change in ownership provisions of Proposition 13, leaving
Amador’s
validity intact; and (4) under the time-honored doctrine of stare decisis we are duty bound to follow
Amador
until it is overruled by a higher court.
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
B. Article XIII A Does Not Interfere With Interstate Mobility
On a different front, appellants attack the constitutionality of Article XIII A on grounds that it interferes with interstate mobility (i.e., right to travel). Appellants claim that an unequal taxation under Proposition 13 impedes the free movement of people inasmuch as it imposes a heavier tax burden on newly arrived property owners than on established California residents. Appellants maintain that the limitation on the right to travel is legally significant in two respects: (1) it comprises a violation of an independent, fundamental constitutional right
(Shapiro
v.
Thompson
(1969)
However, the unequal taxation under Proposition 13 does not impede interstate travel as defined by the United States Supreme Court, which has invoked the “right to travel” only in cases involving invidious discrimination, durational residential requirements or direct restrictions on interstate or foreign travel.
(Memorial Hospital
v.
Maricopa County
(1974)
Yet another reason compels rejection of appellants’ claim predicated on an alleged violation of right to travel. It is well settled that even if an enactment affects interstate travel, it still must be sustained against a constitutional attack if the invasion is inconsequential and does not unreasonably burden freedom of movement.
(Shapiro
v.
Thompson, supra,
Since we have concluded that Proposition 13 does not significantly impede interstate mobility within the purview of the federal Constitution, appellants’ alternative contention that we should reweigh their equal protection claim under the strict scrutiny (compelling state interest) test automatically fails.
(Fair Political Practices Com.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
C. The Change-in-Ownership Provisions of Article XIII A Do Not Unduly Burden Interstate Commerce
Finally, appellants claim that Article XIII A, section 2, places an undue burden on interstate commerce because it gives a competitive edge to established property owners.
(Complete Auto Transit, Inc.
v.
Brady
(1977)
First, Article XIII A does not restrict interstate commerce because it taxes only real property within the state. It is widely recognized that interstate commerce deals with the flow of goods and services between and among the several states
(Bacchus Imports, Ltd.
v.
Dias
(1984)
Second, it is well established that before a state tax or regulation can be declared unconstitutional under the commerce clause, there must be a showing that it has imposed a burden on interstate or foreign commerce.
(Halliburton Oil Well Co.
v.
Reily
(1963)
Third, appellants’ commerce clause argument is, in essence, only a restatement of their “interstate mobility” contention which has been soundly rejected by Amador and finds no legal support in federal case law either.
IV. Conclusion
The United States Supreme Court expressly recognized and then refused to tinker with Proposition 13 in its recent Allegheny decision. That leaves untampered the California Supreme Court’s Amador decision that Proposition 13 violates neither the equal protection clause nor the right to travel. With this long-settled law of California, we may neither tinker nor tamper. The judgment is affirmed.
Perley, J., and Reardon, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 28, 1991. Kennard, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Article XIII A, section 1, subdivision (a), provides in part: “The maximum amount of any ad valorem tax on real property shall not exceed One percent (1%) of the full cash value of such property....’’
Section 2, subdivision (a), in turn, sets out that “The full cash value means the county assessor’s valuation of real property as shown on the 1975-76 tax bill under ‘full cash value’ or, thereafter, the appraised value of real property when purchased, newly constructed, or a change in ownership has occurred after the 1975 assessment.” (Italics added.)
We parenthetically note that the constitutionality of the change in ownership provisions must be sustained for the additional reason that they promote two important state policy goals: (a) a strict limitation on real property taxes and (b) an assurance of a stable revenue source for the local governments. The advancement of these goals constitutes a crucial part of the integrated operation of Proposition 13 which was overwhelmingly adopted by the people of California.
The precise issue raised and decided by
Allegheny
is clearly stated in the introduction to the opinion: “The West Virginia Constitution guarantees to its citizens that, with certain exceptions, ‘taxation shall be equal and uniform throughout the State, and all property, both real and personal, shall be taxed in proportion to its value . . . .’ W. Va. Const., Art. X, § 1. The Webster County tax assessor valued petitioners’ real property on the basis of its recent purchase price, but made only minor modifications in the assessments of land which had not been recently sold. This practice resulted in gross disparities in the assessed value of generally comparable property, and we hold that it denied petitioners the equal protection of the laws guaranteed to them by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
(Allegheny, supra,
In the exact words of the court: “The foregoing cases, however, involved constitutional or statutory provisions which
mandated
the taxation of property on a
current value
basis. These cases do not purport to confine the states to a current value system under equal protection principles or to state an exception to the general rule accepted both by the United States Supreme Court and by us, as previously noted, that a tax classification or disparity of tax treatment will be sustained so long as it is founded upon some reasonable distinction or rational basis.”
(Amador, supra,
We note that appellants’ “new comers” versus “old residents” argument rings especially hollow in view of the fact they are not “new comers,” but longtime property owners in California who had enjoyed the tax benefits of Proposition 13 until the 1986 corporate restructuring conducted with the full knowledge that by doing so they would fall within the change-in-ownership provisions of Article XIII A with the attendant increased tax burden.
