39 Cal. 354 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This action is to recov.er a lot in the City of Sacramento, and the plaintiff deraigns title by regular mesne conveyances ■from John A. Sutter, to whom the land was granted by the Mexican Government, and to whom it has been finally con•firmed and patented. The defendants are the tenants of one Elliott, who was permitted to defend for them, and who sets up title in himself under certain sales for taxes and Sheriff’s deeds in pursuance thereof. The validity of the titles thus acquired is the principal question arising on this appeal. Jn support of the defense there is offered in evidence the complaint, summons, affidavit constituting proof of service, and Commissioners’ report in the case of The People v. Wm. Firderer and the west half of the lot in contest in this case, and also the decree and order of sale issued thereon, together with the Sheriff’s return, all which were objected to by the plaintiff as incompetent evidence; but they were admitted by the Court; and thereupon the Court also admitted in evidence, against the objection of the plaintiff, a Sheriff’s deed to Elliott for the west half of said lot, founded on said proceedings, which deed was made pending the action after the answer was filed, and but one day before the trial. It appears, from these proceedings, that the action was commenced against William Eirderer, as the owner of the west half of the lot, to whom it was assessed, and also against the west half in rem. But in the summons which was published the name of Eirderer is omitted, and the plaintiff claims that the omission is fatal to the judgment, the Court having acquired no jurisdiction of the proceeding, because of the failure to serve .the owner to whom the
The defendants next put in evidence the record of the proceedings in the case of The People v. 7,961 Doe et al., under which it is claimed Elliott acquired the title to the east quarter of the lot. The Sheriff’s deed under this sale was also made pendente lite, and was improperly admitted in evidence, for the same reasons which were applicable to the other deed. The same questions also arise in respect to the effect of this deed; and on another trial it will be material to ascertain whether or not Elliott or his grantor, Butterfield, was in possession when this tax was levied or assessed.
The defendants then put in evidence the record of the proceedings in the case of The People v. Roe 5,221, under which Elliott claims to have acquired the title to the w'hole lot, by means of a Sheriff’s deed to Mayo, and a deed from Mayo to Elliott, made in 1865. The judgment in this case also recites a due service of process on all the owners and
The tax for which this judgment was rendered was assessed under the Act of April 9, 1862, concerning the construction and repair of levees in the County of Sacramento (Statutes of 1862, p. 151), by the first section of which a Board of City Levee Commissioners is created, whose duty it is made to construct and repair the levees outside of the city limits and within Swamp Land District No. 2. The necessary fnnd for performing the work within the 'city was to be raised by a tax levied on the property within the city limits, and, in like manner, the funds required for the work in Swamp Land District No. 2 were to be raised by a tax on the property within that district. For the purpose of raising the money to be. expended within the city, Section 11 of the Act requires the Assessor to “make a copy of the names of persons and description of real estate and improvements assessed in the city within the lines of levee, as aforesaid, in the year 1861; and then, using the equalized assessment roll of 1861 as a basis for making his estimates, he shall proceed and make an assessment of all taxable property within the city and within the levee lines as aforesaid, ” etc. The term “within the city and within the levee lines” was manifestly inserted for the purpose of excluding from the burden of the tax that portion of the city not' included by the levee, and which, therefore, would derive no benefit from the work; and not for the purpose of subjecting to the city tax lands lying outside the city, but within the lines of the levee. The complaint in the action we are considering (People v. Roe 5,221) alleges that the assessment, on which the tax sued for was founded, was made by “the Assessor of the City and County of Sacramento,” and the plaintiff’s counsel insist that, under the Constitution and former decisions of this Court, the assessment was void, because not made by an Assessor elected by the electors of the “district” rvithin which the. assessment was to be made. In support of this vieAV, the case of People v. Hastings (29 Cal. 449) is relied upon, in which we held: First—That a tax, to be valid, must rest upon an assessment made by an Assessor
That the levee tax authorized by the Act of April 9, 1862, to be raised from property within the city is a tax for city purposes, admits of no debate. The special purpose of the tax was to raise a fund for the construction of a levee to protect the city from inundation; and we can conceive of none which could more properly be designated a tax “for city purposes ” than one intended to protect the city from destructive inundations which threaten with serious disaster the lives and property of its inhabitants. It is equally plain that by the very terms of the Act the city, for all the purposes of the tax, was a separate district. The tax was to be raised from property within the city, and was to be expended for its protection by a Board of Commissioners appointed for that special purpose, and styled in the Act “a Board of City Levee Commissioners, ” as contradistinguished from the “Board of County Levee Commissioners,” who were appointed by the same Act.
The former Board was to take charge of the work inside the city, and the other Board outside of it. Inasmuch, therefore, as the tax was for city purposes, and was to be raised within the city, as a separate district, the case comes fully'within the principles announced in People v. Hastings, on authority of which case the assessment in question was void, and the tax invalid. On the same point see, also, People v. Placerville and Sacramento Valley Railroad Company (31 Cal. 656); Rynerson v. Kelly (January Term, 1868.)
For these reasons the tax deed to Mayo was void, and Elliott acquired no title under it.
judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.