Rickard v. Council of Santa Barbara

192 P. 726 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920

This is an original proceeding in certiorari to annul an order of the council of the city of Santa Barbara, sitting as a board of equalization, whereby the assessed valuation of petitioner's property was increased. Petitioner seeks to have the order declared void upon the ground that the board had no jurisdiction, for the reason that, according to her claim, no "complaint" was made to the board, as contemplated by section 85 of the city charter, which reads: "On the first Monday in July in each year, and daily thereafter until and including the following Saturday, or for such further time as they may find necessary, the Council shall meet as a Board of Equalization, for the hearing and adjudication of all complaints regarding the description, valuation and ownership of assessed property, or the omission of property which should be assessed, and notice of the time and place of such meetings shall be included with notice of publication of the tax-roll, and upon such roll when published. At such meetings the Council shall publicly order, and the assessor shall enter upon the tax-roll, all such corrections as may be adjudged equitable, and in case of any additional assessment, the assessor shall immediately send written notice of the same to the person assessed." It will be noticed that by this charter provision the board of equalization is authorized to meet for the hearing and adjudication of "complaints."

[1] In reviewing the assessments of individuals, the powers of the board of equalization, under this charter provision, are not original, but are appellate and specific, and dependent upon the condition that there shall first be made a "complaint" upon which the board may act and hear evidence to determine whether the objection to the assessment *60 is well founded. (People v. Reynolds, 28 Cal. 108; People v.Flint, 39 Cal. 670; People v. Goldtree, 44 Cal. 323.) But it is not necessary that the complaint should be in writing. The charter requirement is fulfilled when a complaint has been made to the board, stating the objections to the assessment, either orally or in writing. That an oral complaint is sufficient has been held in well considered opinions by the highest courts of sister states construing similar statutory requirements. (SeeState v. Northern Belle M. Co., 12 Nev. 92; State v. WashoeCo., 14 Nev. 140; Central Pac. R. Co. v. Standing, 13 Utah, 488, [45 P. 344].) And we know of no decision in this state to the contrary, unless it can be said that a written complaint was held to be essential in People v. Goldtree,supra. But there the point was not really involved, as that case was decided upon the ground that no complaint of any sort whatever had been made to the board. All that these early California cases hold is that under section 23 of the Revenue Act of 1861 (Stats. 1861, p. 427), the board cannot act without a complaint. This, as said by the Nevada and Utah courts in the cases cited supra, does not necessarily mean a complaint in writing. And we are satisfied that an oral complaint, stating the objections to the assessment, will answer all the requirements of this charter provision.

Upon the presentation of the petition for the writ ofcertiorari, we ordered the writ to issue, and thereafter the respondents made their return, setting forth therein what purports to be a full, true, and correct copy of the record of the proceedings of the board of equalization. Nowhere in the return to the writ is there to be found any written complaint of any assessment. As the return purports to set forth, in full, all matters before the board of equalization and the proceedings of the board thereon, we can only conclude that no written complaint of the assessment of petitioner's property was made or heard and determined. It is possible, however, that oral complaints, sufficient to meet the charter requirement, may have been made, and, as there is no law, of which we are aware, requiring a written record to be made of such complaints, they may have been made notwithstanding the record's silence. [2] The resolution of the board of equalization approving the tax-roll recites that the board "has heard and adjudicated all complaints *61 regarding the description, valuation, and ownership of the property assessed, and publicly ordered and caused the assessor to enter upon such tax-roll all corrections made by it, as required by law and the charter of said city." We do not think, however, that this mere recital that the board heard and adjudicated "complaints" is of itself sufficient as legal evidence that "complaints," either written or oral, were made to the board as contemplated by section 85 of the charter.[3] The law presumes that the assessor, when he assessed the property, performed his duty, and that, therefore, he assessed all properties fairly and upon an equal basis. [4] The board of equalization exercises judicial functions, and before it could acquire jurisdiction to review the assessor's work, every jurisdictional prerequisite must have been fulfilled. It is well settled that no intendments can be indulged in favor of the jurisdiction of inferior tribunals, but that their jurisdiction must affirmatively appear. There seems, however, to be authority for the proposition that upon certiorari, if the jurisdictional facts do not appear of record because the law has not required a record of them to be made, the respondent may be required not only to certify what is technically denominated the record, but also to present such evidence of the jurisdictional prerequisites as may be necessary to determine the question of jurisdiction. (Blair v.Hamilton, 32 Cal. 53; Whitney v. Board, 14 Cal. 479; Lowe v. Alexander, 15 Cal. 300; In re Madera Irr. Dist., 92 Cal. 335, [27 Am. St. Rep. 106, 14 L. R. A. 755, 28 P. 272, 675];Stumpf v. Board, 131 Cal. 367, [82 Am. St. Rep. 350,63 P. 663]. See, however, Farmers' etc. Bank v. Board, 97 Cal. 325, 326, [32 P. 312].) In Blair v. Hamilton, supra, it is said: "In many cases jurisdictional facts may not appear of record, either by failure of the inferior court or officer to follow the requirements of the law and make them of record, or because the law itself does not require it to be done. In such cases this court, and all other courts having jurisdiction to review and correct the proceedings of inferior courts, would be powerless, unless it can compel the inferior tribunal to certify to this court not only what is technically denominated the record, but such facts, or the evidence of them, as may be necessary to determine whatever questions as to the jurisdiction of the inferior tribunal *62 may be involved, and the grossest abuses of power, to the great reproach of the law, might be perpetrated with impunity and without the possibility of a remedy." Whether evidencedehors the record may be given in this proceeding for the purpose of showing whether the board acted upon a sufficient oral complaint is a nice question that need not be decided. [5] For we are satisfied that this is not a case for certiorari, since petitioner has another form of redress that gives her a plain, speedy and adequate remedy.

Petitioner is, we think, afforded a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by the action at law which an aggrieved taxpayer is permitted to bring under section 3819 of the Political Code. We think, therefore, that we ought not to have issued the writ. In State v. Washoe Co., 14 Nev. 140, the supreme court of Nevada held that if the board of equalization acts without jurisdiction in raising an assessment, that fact is a good defense pro tanto in any suit for the tax, and, being a good defense, the taxpayer is thereby afforded a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, so that the writ of certiorari ought not to issue to review the action of the board. The petitioner here, under section 3819 of the Political Code, may pay her tax under protest, and thereafter, within the time provided by this code section, may bring an action to recover back the illegal part of the tax. (Mackay v. San Francisco,113 Cal. 401, [45 P. 696]; Columbia Sav. Bank v. Los Angeles,137 Cal. 467, 70 P. 308].) If the method pursued in making an assessment is not that prescribed by law, the matter can always be gone into by the courts and the taxpayer relieved of the assessment. (Miller Lux v. Richardson, 184 Cal. 115, [187 P. 411].) A weighty reason impelling us to the conclusion that petitioner should be remitted to the mode of redress provided by section 3819 is that in an action brought by her under the permissive provisions of that code section there can be no question as to the right of the respective parties to go fully into all the facts relative to the question as to what complaints, if any, were made before, and heard and determined by, the board of equalization.

The writ having been improvidently issued, is hereby set aside and the proceedings dismissed.

Thomas, J., and Weller, J., concurred. *63

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