Court Opinion

ID: 3296383
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:13:30.54268+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:26.702792
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 439 
Complaint to quiet title was filed herein by respondent, claiming to own the property in controversy by title acquired through a deed from the county tax collector. Issue was joined and after trial before the court judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was presented and denied, and this appeal was taken upon a document which appellant contends is a bill of exceptions, although it is entitled "Statement of the Case."
Respondent insists that it is in no sense a bill of exceptions, and that its informality, and the irregularity of attendant proceedings, render it ineffectual; that it is nothing more than a statement of the case, that it is not signed, and that it must therefore be disregarded, and the decree affirmed. [1] Were we confronted merely with the distinction between a bill of exceptions and a statement of the case, such objection would not merit serious consideration, since when the ends of justice require it those terms are regarded as synonymous. (Dennis v. Gordon, 163 Cal. 427
[125 P. 1063].) *Page 440 
Following the judgment-roll in this record appears the statement: "That the following is a complete statement of the evidence given, and of all the proceedings had on the said trial." The motion for new trial was based upon the same statement which is brought here as a bill of exceptions or statement of the case, and it concludes as follows:
"And now comes the defendant, Fee Title Company, and asks that this, its statement, on motion to set aside the decision and judgment herein rendered, and grant a new trial — be settled, allowed and approved, and that said decision and judgment be vacated and set aside and a new trial granted on the grounds specified.
___________________,
"Attorney for Fee Title Company, Defendant.
"O. K. __________,
"Attorney for Plaintiff.
"The above statement is hereby settled, allowed and approved as a true and correct statement of the case.
"(Signed) LESLIE R. HEWITT, "Judge."
[2] There is nothing to indicate that a draft of the document submitted as a bill of exceptions was served upon the appellee or his counsel, "but as no objection on this ground was taken in the court below, and as the statement is certified by the judge to be correct, it will be presumed that it was properly served, in the absence of anything in the record showing to the contrary." (Young v. Rosenbaum, 39 Cal. 646, 655; Sullivan v.Wallace, 73 Cal. 307 [14 P. 789].)
[3] Respondent insists that the case must be considered here upon the judgment-roll alone, and affirmed, upon the authority of Landers v. Lawler, 84 Cal. 547 [24 P. 307]. It was there held that "such a paper must be authenticated in some form, either by the signature or the indorsement of the attorney, or the party, if he appears in person," to indicate by whom it was offered; that "it is no draught, unless upon its face or by proper indorsement it shows that it is one prepared and presented by a party to the cause." But respondent does not attempt to say that he was in any way prejudiced thereby, and since he has fully presented *Page 441 
his side of the case, no miscarriage of justice appears to have resulted from the oversight.
[4] We now proceed to consider the appeal upon its merits. One of the grounds upon which appellant claims the tax proceedings are void is that the resolution of the board of supervisors fixing the tax levy contains a declaration that a necessity exists for the levy of taxes upon property "exclusive of property within incorporated cities," but that the levy was actually made upon all property inclusive of that within incorporated cities. It is not claimed that the levy as made was not according to law in this respect, and the mere statement of appellant's position is a complete answer to his contention. If the order fixing the levy is legal, the mere recital, of which complaint is made, is unimportant. From the entire order it is apparent that the board intended to include all property within incorporated cities in the order, and that the use of the word "exclusive" was a clerical error. But whether it be regarded as a clerical error or not, the objection is without merit.
[5] It is urged that in the delinquent assessment-roll for 1919 it appears that there is an excess charge of one cent in the amount of the five per cent penalty, it being contended that fractions of a cent should be rejected, which it seems was not done, in computing the five per cent penalty. Hotchkiss v.Hansberger, 15 Cal.App. 603 [115 P. 957], is cited by appellant. This case merely applied section 3731 of the Political Code to the computation of taxes, which provides that the auditor shall compute the respective sums "in dollars and cents, rejecting the fractions of a cent, to be paid as a tax on the property therein enumerated." It seems obvious that this can have no application to the computation of penalties, and in the absence of any law authorizing the rejection of fractions of a cent the auditor would have no right to make such rejection.
Another point made by appellant is that the delinquent tax notice declares that the tax collector "will sell all said real estate upon which taxes are a lien to the State of California," and it is claimed that there should have been a comma after the word "lien," and that the notice as published does not indicate to whom the property would be sold. Appellant makes no attempt to do more than state this point and does not suggest how the change suggested by him in *Page 442 
the punctuation could result in any advantage to the property owner or how the absence of the comma has or could have misled appellant or in any way prejudiced its rights.
Appellant contends that the proceedings are void because, it is asserted, the school district is not designated on the assessment-roll or on the delinquent tax-roll. [6] As heretofore stated, the assessment-roll is not in evidence, and as to it, therefore, the presumption prevails that every requirement pertaining thereto was legally observed. (Pol. Code, sec. 3786.) Assuming that the delinquent assessment-roll was properly received in evidence, which respondent disputes, it does not appear from it that any defect exists therein concerning the location of the property assessed as to designating the school district in which the property is located. [7] Section 1576 of the Political Code provides that "Every city or incorporated town, except cities and towns of the sixth class, unless subdivided by the legislative authority thereof, shall constitute a separate school district." The city of Pasadena is not a city of the sixth class; there is no proof that it has been subdivided into more than one school district. Hence the showing that the property involved is situated in the city of Pasadena established the presumption that it is in the Pasadena city school district. Appellant argues that if the Pasadena city school district is different from the city of Pasadena, there is no school district mentioned on the assessment, since the only designation on the assessment is "City of Pasadena," but appellant has not overcome the presumptions that the property was assessed as required by law and that it was located in the Pasadena city school district because of the representation that it is located in the city of Pasadena. To warrant appellant's position would necessitate creating a presumption that because the record is incomplete in any detail the proceedings must therefore be void; the rule is, rather, that in the absence of a showing of illegality the statutory presumption of regularity amounting to conclusive orprima facie evidence applies and controls.
[8] It is said that the advertisement was in the name of Leonide Ducommun, as was also the assessment shown under "taxpayer's name," while the deed shows the name to be Leonide Ducommen, and that this renders the sale void. Inasmuch as the original assessment-roll is not in *Page 443 
evidence, there is nothing to indicate that the spelling in the deed is incorrect. In addition to this it is a sufficient answer that the doctrine of idem sonans applies, which renders this slight variance immaterial. It is not a substitution of the name of another person, but a mistake in spelling the same name. (Hall v. Rice, 64 Cal. 443 [1 P. 891, 2 P. 889];People v. Clausen, 120 Cal. 381 [52 P. 658].)
[9] Section 1764 of the Political Code requires the county superintendent of schools to furnish the board of supervisors of the county embracing his school district with an estimate of the minimum amount of the school funds to be required for the current school year; and it is further provided that the board of supervisors must annually levy and cause to be collected a tax to be known as the county school tax, the minimum rate of which shall not be less than sufficient to raise the minimum amount so estimated. It is insisted by appellant that the levy in question was much less than the minimum called for by the school superintendent, and was therefore illegal and void, but respondent argues that this procedure would result in delegating legislative powers to the county superintendent, which would render section 1764 of the Political Code unconstitutional. Appellant's complaint in this behalf appears to be that because the board did not require as great an amount in taxes from its property as might have or should have been done, it should escape from paying any taxes. Unless it can be shown that some part of the tax in question was illegally levied, the fact that an additional sum might have been required does not invalidate the assessment.
[10] The map of the subdivision in which the property here involved was situated is said to be so indefinite as to render it impossible to determine that said property was in the city of Pasadena. The delinquent tax list stated that the property was in Pasadena, and the lower court adjudged from all the evidence in the case that the property levied upon was so situated. In Fox v. Townsend, 152 Cal. 51, 58 [91 P. 1004], it was held that this is "a question of fact to be determined by the trial court upon such evidence as may be presented on that issue." Besides, it was the duty of the assessor to levy upon the property situated only in said city of Pasadena for the purpose of *Page 444 
raising funds for the schools of the Pasadena school district, and it nowhere appears that the assessor failed to perform his duty or that he levied upon any property outside the district for such purposes.
Other grounds of appeal are assigned without argument or citation of authorities which we do not deem to warrant discussion.
The decree is affirmed.
Finlayson, P. J., and Works, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on November 28, 1924, and the following opinion then rendered thereon: