139 P. 1071 | Cal. | 1914
Appellant is the tenant of certain lands under a lease from the city of Long Beach, which lease acquires validity through a ratifying act of the legislature. It is, in legal contemplation, a lease by the state of certain of its tide and submerged lands.(San Pedro L.A. etc. Co. v. Hamilton,
Respondent cites certain sections of the constitution and of the codes which it argues support the assessment in question. The constitution of the state, article XIII, sections 1 to 10, is referred to. These constitutional provisions declare that all property, not exempt under the laws of the United States, with other exceptions, including property belonging to the state, or to any county or municipal corporation within the state shall be taxed in proportion to its value. The Political Code, section 3617, defines property as including "all other matters and things, real, personal and mixed, capable of private ownership"; and the term real estate as including "the possession of, claim to, ownership of, or right to the possession of land." Section 3820 of the same code provides that: "The taxes on all assessments of possession of, claim to, or right to the possession of land, shall be immediately due and payable," etc., and the following section declares that "the assessor may collect the taxes by seizure and sale of any personal property owned by the person against whom the tax is *427 assessed, or if no personal property can be found, then the assessor may collect the taxes by seizure and sale of the right to the possession of, claim to or right to the possession of the land." Upon these provisions respondent argues that a leasehold is an estate in land, involving and including the right of possession to land which may be designated real estate and is assessable for purposes of taxation, and it supports its argument by citation of authority such as the following from Judge Cooley on Taxation, page 635: "It is entirely competent to provide for the assessment of any mere possessory right in lands, whether they are owned by the government or by private individuals, as well as for any inchoate right to land which has been bought and in part paid for"; and this language from 28 Cyc. 1684: "While ordinarily public property, including property owned by the municipality itself, is not taxable by the municipality, yet such property is ordinarily taxable in the hands of a grantee, or lessee, or where the municipality has no present interest but only one to become vested in the future." And, finally, respondent makes reference to the repeal of section 3887 of the Political Code, which provided that "the mortgagor or lessor of real estate is liable for the taxes thereon," as implying that the lessor is no longer liable but that the lessee is liable for the taxes upon his leasehold interest.
It may be and indeed must be conceded that a leasehold under certain circumstances and for certain purposes is property. The real question is whether, under our revenue and fiscal laws, it is property for the purposes of taxation. Nothing in these laws, it is to be observed, so expressly declares. The declarations to the effect that the term "real estate" includes the possession of or right to the possession of land may well be construed to mean such possessions as are held under an assertion of the ownership of the fee, or such possessions as in time may ripen into a fee. Not only may the term be thus construed, but by the taxing officers of this state, by the courts of this state, as well as, generally speaking, by the courts of other states, such is the construction given to like language. Thus, in 1 Tiffany on Landlord Tenant, 838, it is said: "In this country the statutes imposing taxes upon land, as on other property, are framed on the theory that the owner of the property is to pay the taxes, and the *428
owner of a reversion in land — the landlord, is alone regarded as the owner for this purpose, the tenant being looked upon merely as a temporary occupant." 2 Cooley on Taxation, page 822, declares to the same effect; and also 2 Underhill on Landlord
Tenant, section 598; while in 37 Cyc. 790, it is declared to be the general rule that property under lease for the term of years is taxable to the owner and not to the tenant. The reason for this rule is that the possession of the tenant is the possession of the owner. The tenant has no title to the property, and merely has the use thereof, and it is no more divisible for purposes of taxation than are a life estate and remainder in fee. (See, also, 24 Cyc. 1074; Chicago v. People,
Both parties to this controversy rely upon the decision of this court in Graciosa Oil Co. v. Santa Barbara,
"It is no doubt the general rule, regarding land held under an ordinary lease for years giving the right to hold the land for usufructuary purposes only, that, in the absence of contrary statutory provisions, there is to be but one assessment of the entire estate in the land, and that this assessment should include the value of both the estate for years and of the remainder or reversion. (27 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 678;Chicago v. People,
With respect to ordinary leases for usufructuary purposes there are good reasons for this practice. Except when held for speculative purposes, the value of land usually depends on the value of the use and occupation, and consists of a sum equivalent to a principal which, at the rate of interest usual upon safe investments, will bring a net annual income equal to that which the land will produce. The lessor or landowner annually receives a sum as rent which he deems the equivalent of this annual income, or of the value of the use of the land to him, and therefore he enjoys the entire beneficial interest in the premises, including the value of the leasehold as well as of the fee. There are exceptional cases, due to the sudden rise in rental values, where this is not the case. But general rules in regard to taxation must be made to fit the usual conditions and not the exceptional ones, and statutes are to be construed with this fact in view. Since 1880 there has been no express statutory provision on the subject, but we think that, as to such leasehold estates, the owner of the fee may fairly be deemed to be the owner of the whole estate for purposes of taxation."
The opinion then proceeds to construe the difference between ordinary leases conveying the usufructuary right and mining leases which contain the right to impair and destroy the freehold and to carry it away, and concludes that the right of the lessee under such contracts "is more than that of the ordinary lessee. It is of a different character and for a different purpose. He has no right at all to the usufruct of the soil. His right extends to the extraction of a certain part of the substance of the land itself, to its permanent separation and removal and its conversion to his own use. The whole object of the contract is to effect, if not technically, a sale and conveyance of a substantial and specific part of the land, at least a disposition and transfer thereof to another." Then the opinion points out that the code recognizes such rights and privileges as a species of property in real estate. Under section 3617, subdivision 1, touching "the possession of, claim to, *430 ownership of, or right to the possession of land" it is said that the claim to "take this stratum from its place and then convert it to one's own use may well be termed a claim to land, although not accompanied by actual physical possession of the subterranean deposit." While under the second subdivision, where real estate is defined to include "all mines, minerals and quarries in and under the land" it is declared that clearly the oil company's interest in the land was of this character and, therefore, within the definition of the code, property clearly subject to taxation.
In the present case, however, it is to be observed that we are not dealing with a leasehold in mineral lands conveying the right to impair the freehold or to extract mineral wealth, nor are we dealing with any possessory right which could possibly develop into an ownership. The appellant here holds from the state a lease of lands, with title to which the state itself could not part. Originally they were submerged lands lying far below the surface of the ocean. The covenants of the lease required a large expenditure of money in bulkheading and filling these lands, to the end that they may become valuable for purposes of navigation and commerce, and by the terms of the lease the use of the land is limited to public purposes. The consideration has been paid the state by the appellant and it is as truly in the form of rent as though the state had exacted an annual payment of money which it should devote to the same purpose of reclamation. At the end of the term of the lease the state acquires all of the property, with the betterments and improvements pertaining to it. Therefore, because of the radical differences in the character of the leasehold estates, the Graciosa case cannot be considered as authority for the imposition of the tax upon this leasehold. Its authority goes no further than to declare that leaseholds containing the right to extract valuable minerals are the subject of separate assessment from that of the freehold. But the general rule is in the Graciosa case laid down in consonance with the foregoing authorities, and it is that land held under an ordinary lease for years, giving the right to hold the land for usufructuary purposes only, is subject to but one assessment of the entire estate in the land against the owner of the fee. It is said that "this assessment should include the value of both the estate for years and of the *431 remainder or reversion." This last declaration, while sufficiently true for the purposes of the case then under consideration, is not strictly accurate. No assessor has the right to assess and tax the leasehold interest if it be taxable at all against the fee which belongs in the remainderman or reversioner, for our laws are just and mandatory to the effect that property shall be assessed against the true owner and in the name of the true owner. (Pol. Code, secs. 3627, 3636.) And if it be held that in general a leasehold is property having a taxable value within our fiscal statutes, it must necessarily follow that every assessment which "includes the value of both the estate for years and of the remainder or reversion," which is levied against the landlord, is void as being an assessment against property not his own. The foundation for the rule which ignores the leasehold and puts the assessment of the whole estate upon the landlord, is that the leasehold, while property for certain purposes, yet for fiscal purposes is not property at all; and as the tenant may not deny his landlord's title, so his possession is but the landlord's possession, and the value of that possession, whatever it may be, is therefore the property of the landlord and assessable against him. The tenant's right to possession is always in subordination to the landlord's paramount right, and in the eye of the law is no more separate property apart from the landlord's property than would be the landlord's permission to use a part of his land for a private right of way. The true reason therefore why, in general, leaseholds conveying the right to possession with the usual usufructuary rights are not assessable against the tenant is that they are not, for fiscal purposes, regarded as property.
Is the case at bar to be distinguished in this respect from the cases coming within what, in the Graciosa case, has been designated this "general rule?"
The only fact which differentiates this case from the ordinary case of a lease by a private landlord to a private tenant is that the landlord in this case is the state of California. Though the lease here under consideration originated in the efforts of one or more municipalities to convey such an interest in these lands, the sole and whole validity which these leases possess is drawn from the validating act of the state of California. (Stats. 1907, p. 987.) We repeat, if this had *432
been the case of a lease by a landlord who was a private person, unquestionably we would have heard of no attempt to assess this leasehold interest. But because the property leased is the property of the state, and therefore not subject to taxation, it is here sought to reach the leasehold interest as assessable and taxable property. Authority for so doing, it is declared, exists not alone in the citation of authority above given, but in other decisions of our own state, which, therefore, require brief consideration. The first of these cases is People v. Shearer,
No one of these cases meets the contention advanced by respondent. Nor are we inclined, without an express mandate of the law, to hold that this lease, differing in no respects from a lease which might have been made by a private person, is to *434 be declared property subject to taxation because the land-lord — the state — may not be taxed. The construction of our fiscal laws to the contrary has obtained for a great many years, and, as it is pointed out in the Graciosa case, the practice of the assessors was not modified by the repeal of section 3887 of the Political Code. If, under these circumstances, we are to hold that this leasehold is property within the meaning of our fiscal laws, every leasehold must equally be declared to be property subject to assessment and taxation. The immediate result of this would be to force a declaration that in every case where a lease is in existence, the assessment against the owner for the full value of the property, without an assessment against the lessee of the value of his leasehold is void. Such a disturbance of our fiscal system is not to be contemplated, saving under the plain mandate of the legislature, and no such mandate has as yet been pronounced.
The judgment appealed from is therefore reversed, with directions to the court below to overrule the demurrer to plaintiff's complaint and to permit the defendant to answer thereto if it shall be so advised.
Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.