68 Cal. 78 | Cal. | 1885
— This case was decided by this court in Department One, January 20, 1885. Hearing in Bank having been granted and had, we are satisfied with the reason given in Department; the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Ross, J., McKee, J., Mobeison, C. J., McKimstby, J., and Thoknton, J., concurred.
The following is the opinion in Department One, above referred to:—
— Diggins v. Page was an action to enforce a street assessment lien that accrued July 10, 1875, against a lot of land in the city and county of San Francisco. By virtue of a sale made under the judgment rendered in that action, the title of the owner of the lot vested in the plaintiff in the present action. But prior to the accruing of the assessment lien involved in the action of Diggins v. Page, the defendant in the present action acquired a street assessment lien upon the lot, which when Diggins v. Page was commenced, he was proceeding to enforce by action entitled Brady v. Page. And having finally got a judgment declaring his lien and directing a sale of the property to satisfy it, he (Brady) is sought by the present action to be enjoined from enforcing it, upon the ground, as we understand counsel, that the foreclosure of the lien involved in Diggins v. Page extinguished all prior liens. It is not pretended that Brady was a party to the suit of Diggins v. Page, but it is sought to sustain the position by likening the foreclosure of a street assessment lien to a sale of property for the nonpayment of taxes, and a conveyance thereunder.
“ While the power of assessment comes from the general power of taxation, it must not be confounded with it,” said this court in Taylor v. Palmer, 31 Cal. 251. “ In their origin and legal or constitutional complexion they are the same; but in the mode of their exercise, and
Judgment affirmed.