85 Cal. 196 | Cal. | 1890
Lead Opinion
This action is prosecuted to secure an injunction restraining defendant, tax collector of the county of Los Angeles, from selling certain real prop
Plaintiffs were the owners and in possession of divers pieces of real property, and, among others, of that known as Naud’s warehouse, holding the same as tenants in common, the plaintiff O. G. Weyse being the manager, and having the control thereof. In or about the month of April, 1887, 0. G. Weyse, in response to the. demand of the assessor, made out and delivered to said assessor a statement under oath, in the form prescribed by law and required by that officer, giving a description of what he claimed and swore to be all the property owned by or in the possession or under the control of himself or his co-tenants on the first Monday of March in that year. This statement included the lot and warehouse in question, with divers other pieces of real estate, and a list of personal property, but did not include any goods, wares, and merchandise on store in the warehouse. Subsequent conferences were had between the assessor or his deputy on the one side, and the plaintiff and his foreman at the warehouse on the other, in reference to the personal property in the warehouse. At these conferences, the officer was shown through the warehouse, and given every opportunity he required to inspect the property, and was told that none of it was the property of plaintiffs; that it was simply property left on storage by different parties, and for which warehouse receipts had been issued in the regular course of business; that the plaintiffs had no interest in it or control over it, and did not then know who it belonged to or who held the receipts therefor; but at his request the officer was furnished with a written memorandum of the quantity and character of the property, so far as known to the plaintiffs or their foreman in charge, and of the persons to whom warehouse receipts were originally issued therefor. This memorandum,
“Miscellaneous merchandise and grain in Naud’s •warehouse, fifty thousand dollars.” And opposite the item made the following note on the margin of the assessment: “Neglected to return statement as required by section 3633.”
Plaintiffs’ total assessment for the year, including the item above mentioned, amounted to ninety-one thousand five hundred dollars. A general reduction of ten per cent was made upon the entire assessment roll of the county, which left the final assessment of plaintiffs $82,850, of which the item above quoted amounted to $45,500.
In due time, plaintiffs tendered the entire taxes imposed for the year upon all the property given in by them, and all that was assessed against them, except the single item above quoted, with all costs and percentage . thereon. The tender was refused, and in due course the tax collector advertised to sell the real property for the ■tax as delinquent, including the tax levied upon this item of forty-five thousand five hundred dollars. It was to restrain this sale that the present action was brought.
This arbitrary assessment and the accompanying marginal note was made without authority of law, and is void. The tax levied and imposed upon that assessment never became a lien upon the real or any property or plaintiffs, and plaintiffs never became liable therefor.
The error into which the assessor has fallen in this case may be a common one, but it is none the less an error. All proceedings in the nature of assessing property for purposes of taxation, and in levying and collecting taxes thereon, are in invitum, and must be stricti juris.
If the property owner neglects or refuses to make and return any statement under oath, or if upon being subpoenaed he refuses to appear before the assessor for examination, or refuses upon proper citation to appear before the superior court for examination, in either of those three cases the assessor has power to make an arbitrary assessment, noting on the margin the reason why it was made, and the board of equalization has no power to reduce such assessment, but he has such power in no other case. In this case, the sworn statement was returned, so that there was no power to make an arbitrary assessment for failure to make such return. The assessor did not subpoena the party to appear for examination, or cite him to appear in the superior court; hence there was no power to make an arbtirary assessment for failure to comply with such subpoena or cita
For false return, or false testimony upon examination, there are other and more severe penalties,—the pains and penalties of perjury; but these can only be imposed after due trial and conviction of having sworn or testified falsely. Hence the assessor is not authorized to impose a penalty for false statement or false testimony. The power is not given to him to convict or to punish for perjury. The only thing for which he can punish by arbitrary assessment or otherwise is for refusing to take the oath. He cannot set himself up as the judge to determine that the oath, when taken, is false. Still, his powers for the protection of the revenue are ample; for in ease of refusal to make the return under oath, or testify when properly subpoenaed, he may not only make an arbitrary assessment, but may also prosecute the offender under section 8632, and recover the penalty therein provided for each and every refusal. If the statement is returned, or the examination had, and the assessor believes that the party has sworn falsely, his remedy then is to complain of and prosecute the offender for perjury; but then he becomes the prosecutor, not the judge.
To our minds, the assessor has also fallen into another error in this case,—an error founded upon a misconstruction of the word “possession,” as used in the first subdivision of section 3629 of the Political Code. That section and that subdivision requires that the party shall return a statement, under oath, showing, separately, — “1. All property belonging to, claimed by, or in the possession or under the control or management of such person.”
As we understand the case, there is no dispute about the fads in regard to the property intended to be covered by or included in this arbitrary assessment. It did not belong to, was not claimed by, and was not under the control or management of the plaintiffs. They were
The word “possession,” as used in this section, is one of several forms of expression there used to convey the same idea, another of which immediately follows it, and is in the words “or under the control or management of such person.” To make the party liable to assessment, his “possession” must be one that carries with it the usual marks and indications of ownership. It is true that, ordinarily, possession of personal property is prima facie evidence of ownership; but it is only prima facie so; and even to this there are exceptions to the rule. The presence of a trunk filled with wearing apparel, in a guest-chamber of a hotel, or of a horse in a boarding-stable, is not even prima facie evidence of ownership of the trunk or the horse in the keeper of the hotel or stable. So of a carriage in a repair-shop; and so of grain or goods in a warehouse kept only for the storage of goods for hire, as was the case here.
Possession by a factor, who does not purchase on his own account, is not evidence of ownership. (Leet v. Wadsworth, 5 Cal. 404; Hutchinson v. Bours, 6 Cal. 383.) Much less would it be such evidence in the case of a mere warehouseman, whose sole business was to furnish
Judgment and order reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Paterson, J., McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment.