Plaintiff and respondent, State of California, acting by and through the Public Works Board (hereinafter referred to as “State”), brought this action on April 21, 1958, for condemnation, in fee simple, against owners of and claimants to 12 parcels of real property located in the city of San Diego, for the purpose of securing a site for the construction of a new building for the California Department of Motor Vehicles under the provisions of Property Acquisition Law (part 11) division 3, title 2 of the Government Code and in accordance with a resolution of the State.
Appellant, county of San Diego, appeared and claimed a liеn for taxes for the fiscal year 1957-1958 on parcels 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 12 in a total sum of $1,024.07 and for 1958-1959 parcels 1, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 12 in a total sum of $1,402.49, based on estimates, since the tax rates had not yet been fixed. A jury trial of the action commenced on August 4, 1958, and continued through August 14, 1958. Prior to trial the State did not secure possession of the property and no order for immediate possession issued.
On August 25, 1958, the court held a hearing on the matter of the taxes claimed by the county. Defendant and respondent property owners and other parties claiming an interest therein
Appellant county has now appealed from those portions of the judgment which deny its claim for thе 1958-1959 taxes, which cancel, discharge and extinguish the lien arising from said taxes, and which award such amounts to the respondent property owners. It is the claim of the county (1) that the taxes claimed were a lien on the subject property which attached to the property on the first Monday in March, 1958; (2) that the tax lien is to be paid out of the condemnation award; (3) that the county is entitled to taxes for the entire fiscal yeаr 1958-1959; (4) that the tax lien, which attached to the property on the first Monday of March, 1958, for the fiscal year 1958-1959 fixed liability on the property for taxes for that entire fiscal year; (5) that taxes may not be cancelled by Revenue and Taxation Code, section 4986 et seq. as between condemnee and taxing agency; that the sole issue to be determined on this appeal is “In an eminent domain proceeding, is a taxing body (such as the County of San Diego) entitled to payment of taxes out of the total compensation awarded for the property being condemned, where title to said property passes to the condеmnor, a tax-exempt corporation, after the lien has attached but before any of said taxes are due?” Citing such authority as
City of Long Beach
v.
Aistrup,
Respondent property owners contend that all taxes here under consideration were cancelled by virtue of the operation of section 4986, Revenue and Taxation Code, which provided in part, “All or any portion of any uncollected tax . . . heretofore or hereafter levied, may, on satisfactory proof, be cancelled by the auditor on order of the board of supervisors with the written consent of the district attorney if it was levied or charged; ... (e) on property аcquired after the lien date by the State . . .”; they insist that neither the property nor the owners of the property are liable for either installment of the 1958-1959 taxes for the reason that neither installment was due until dates subsequent to the trial date of August 4,1958, and that under the decision of
County of San Diego
v.
United States,
It is further argued that if respondents ’ contention, in this respect, is contrary to the holding in the case of
City of Long Beach
v.
Aistrup, supra,
that holding is unsound and should not be followed or if followеd there should be an equitable proration of the taxes for the year
involved;
that since there could be no award for taxes not accrued at the time of trial, respondent property owners were deрrived of just compensation for their property in violation of Article I, section 14, California Constitution. Citing
Yara Engineering Corp.
v.
City of Newark,
136 N.J.Eq. 453 [
Respondent State, by its attorney general, in its brief, calls attention to its complaint in which it specifically аsked that all liens and incumbrances of record be satisfied out of the judgment rendered; that the interlocutory judgment entered herein on September 25, 1958, sets forth the values of the parcels sought to be condemned, as of October 22, 1957, as found by the jury. The interlocutory judgment makes provision for payment of this total sum into the court by respondent State and upon recordation of the final order of condemnation respоndent property owners shall vacate and surrender possession and occupancy to plaintiff; that plaintiff
The final judgment provides that the County of San Diego possesses an interest in certain described parcels of land by reason of liens for unpaid 1957-1958 taxes but all othеr taxes, including 1958-1959 against said property, are cancelled.
Respondent State cites section 1246.1 of Code of Civil Procedure and
People
v.
Frahm,
If we follow the late decision of the
City of Long Beach
v.
Aistrup, supra,
involving a somewhat similar situation, many of the points here raised are sufficiently discussed and answered. It directly holds that in all cases of taxation of realty, a lien attaches annually as of noon on the first Monday in March preceding the fisсal year for which the taxes are levied. There can be no question about this point. (Revenue and Taxation Code, sections 2187 and 2192.) The general rule is that title to the property does not pass in a cоndemnation proceeding until judgment is entered and recorded. (Section 1253, Code of Civil Procedure.) The evidence here presented does not show a previous “physical taking” prior to divestiture of title, as considered in some cases. See
People
v.
Joerger,
Shepard, J., concurred.
