298 P. 9 | Cal. | 1931
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County.
Southern California Telephone Company and Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, operating in and around Los Angeles County, brought actions against the county to recover taxes paid under protest. Five actions were brought, in all of which judgments were rendered for the plaintiffs. The essential facts in each case are substantially the same, and the single question of law presented in each is identical. They were accordingly consolidated on appeal and will be considered together in this opinion.
In each of the cases the plaintiff owned land upon which it was constructing a building to be equipped and used as an exchange building, a part of its telephone system. The work of construction proceeded with due diligence, and the *123 buildings were eventually completed and are now in operation. However, at noon on the first Monday in March, 1925, none of the buildings had as yet been completed. Plaintiffs listed said buildings in their return to the state board of equalization as "operative property". Upon the protest of the county assessor, the state board held that the property was "nonoperative", and it was thereupon assessed by the county.
The question presented by the record is whether the property was subject to taxation by the county. In order to discuss this point it is necessary first to examine the statutes and Constitution of this state, which set forth the basis upon which such public utilities are taxed. The present system of taxation of public utilities in California is the result of a constitutional amendment adopted in 1910 after an exhaustive study of defects in the former method had been made by a legislative commission. This court has on several occasions reviewed the history and described the operation of this system. (See San Francisco v. Pacific Tel. Tel. Co.,
The said constitutional amendment (Cal. Const., art. XIII, sec. 14), reads in part as follows: "Taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided upon . . . telephone companies . . . shall be entirely and exclusively for state purposes, and shall be levied, assessed and collected in the manner hereinafter provided . . . all telegraph and telephone companies . . . shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their franchises . . . poles, wires, pipes . . . and other property, *124
or any part thereof used exclusively in the operation of theirbusiness in this state, computed as follows: Said tax shall be equal to the percentages hereinafter fixed upon the gross receipts from operation of such companies . . . within this state." (Italics ours.) The scheme of taxation thus provided by the Constitution is elaborated in the Political Code, which restates the constitutional provision that all telegraph and telephone companies shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their property "used exclusively in the operation of their business in this state". (Cal. Pol. Code, sec. 3664a.) The code then defines "operative property" of telegraph and telephone companies as "The franchises, rights of way, poles, wires, pipes, conduits, cables, switchboards, telegraph and telephone instruments, batteries, generators, and other electrical appliances, and exchange and other buildings used in the telegraph and telephone business and so much of the land on which said buildings are situate as may be required for the convenientuse and occupation of said buildings." (Italics ours.) It is also provided that "property of the classes mentioned in this section owned by a company constructing a new . . . telegraph or telephone system . . . no part of which new road, line, plant or system is in operation, and the same classes of property when held by an operating company solely for the construction of a new . . . telegraph or telephone system . . . and not to be used for betterments or additions to roads, lines, plants or systems already under operation, shall not be considered operative property and shall be subject to assessment and taxation for county, municipal, and district purposes. Any part of such property of any company mentioned in this section shall be classed and assessed as operative property when the state board of equalization shall determine that such property is rendering a substantial public service." (Cal. Pol. Code, sec. 3665b.) [1]
It is apparent from an examination of these provisions that public utilities are not exempt from property taxes; the tax levied upon gross receipts is a substituted tax, intended to be the equivalent of a tax on the property, and only differing from a tax directly on the property by reason of the fact that a different method of computation is employed. (See San Francisco
v. Pacific Tel. Tel. Co.,
The application of these constitutional and statutory provisions to property of the class involved in the instant case, that is, property under construction, presents a new question to this court. Nevertheless, certain controlling principles have been settled by prior decisions. [2] We have heretofore held that the provisions of the Political Code must be subordinated to the Constitution. In the words of the court in Lake Tahoe Ry.etc. Co. v. Roberts,
In Lake Tahoe Ry. etc. Co. v. Roberts, supra, the court discusses the method of interpreting these provisions, and points out that the words "used exclusively in the operation of their business" have a plain and obvious meaning. It was therefore held that property used only partially in the business was subject to local taxation. In Transcontinental Tel. Co. v. Neylan,
Nevertheless, it is not apparent to us how, under any construction, the words "used exclusively in the operation of their business" can possibly include property which is neither used nor available for use in such business. Of course, it cannot be doubted that it is the duty of a utility to plan and prepare for emergency and future needs of its business; and we are disposed to give a broad interpretation to the constitutional provision. No one would seriously doubt that extra equipment for replacement purposes or for emergency use is property "used" by the utility, even though on the taxable date it was not in use, and even though at that date it had never been actually placed in use. And the same is true, we think, of necessary additions or betterments when the same are completed. The reason for this is clear enough. It is necessary that this property be on hand when needed, and it is available for use at any time. It is in the same classification as property normally in use, but temporarily out of use, which has been held to come within the meaning of an "actual use" provision. (Seaside Home v. State Board ofTaxes,
[3] The properties involved herein come within an entirely different classification, for they are neither used nor available for use in the business. In all of the other types of property which we have mentioned, the moment the need arises, the property is ready to be used. Here, however, the property cannot be called upon until its completion, and this fact is, we believe, fatal to the claim that it is operative property. Viewing it in the light of the constitutional requirement, the uncompleted building is in exactly the same position as a bare piece of land purchased and held with the intention of constructing a building thereon. It is admitted by plaintiff that such land is taxable locally. But why is it so taxed? Simply because (1) it is not used in the business, and (2) it is not available for use in the business. The mere fact that it is intended to be so used is admittedly immaterial. The Constitution is not concerned with mere intention to use. And we could hardly find a more appropriate analogy to the situation presented by the instant case, that of an uncompleted building. (1) It is not used in the business; (2) it is not available for use in the business. It is intended to be so used, but this is, as we have seen, admittedly immaterial.
This conclusion is not weakened by the decisions from New Jersey and Minnesota upon which plaintiff places reliance. These decisions are to the effect that under certain circumstances property held for a public service business or being diligently prepared for use in such business was exempt from local taxes, under a system of taxation similar to our own. The New Jersey statute, however, exempts "property used for railroad and canal purposes", and the court said in Mayor etc. of Jersey City v.Board of Equalization,
In attempting to solve problems of this sort, it is easy to fall into error by considering the possible effect of the tax on the service offered by the utility to the public. The *129
extent and nature of such service is subject to the control of the Railroad Commission, and the cost of additions and betterments is something for which the utility receives due credit in determining its rates. This tax cannot be considered a hardship on the utility because it is fundamental that there is no exemption intended by the Constitution, but merely a substitution. The gross receipts tax simply separates state and local taxation, but the theory of the tax, as with other taxes, is that all property of the utility, whether operative or nonoperative, shall be taxed either by the state or by the local subdivision. The method of the gross receipts tax is obvious: that part of the property of the utility which is in use and which thereby contributes to the earnings, is taxed by and through the gross receipts tax; and that part which is not in use and thereby does not contribute to the earnings, is taxed locally. In this way, all of the property is taxed by either the state or local government. It is a basic principle of the system that gross receipts furnish a standard of measurement by which operative property may be taxed, and a method had been devised of evaluating the property of the utility by calculations based upon gross receipts. As said in Pullman Co. v. Richardson,
Richards, J., Shenk, J., Waste, C.J., Preston, J., Curtis, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.