Court Opinion

ID: 3306997
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:21:30.798341+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:33:54.225591
License: Public Domain

This is an appeal from a judgment in respondent's favor in a proceeding to recover certain inheritance taxes alleged to be due the state upon certain stock in a corporation known as J. S. Gibson Company, assigned and transferred by J.S. Gibson to the defendants and appellants herein in May, 1906. Said Gibson died on June 14, 1906. The defense to the action was the statute of limitations.
We are unable to perceive any distinction in principle between this case and the case of Chambers v. Gallagher,177 Cal. 704, [171 P. 931], nor any reason for the application of a different rule than that therein applied. In the briefs of counsel for respondent filed since the decision of that case it is urged that such a distinction is to be found in the fact that in the Gallagher case the action was against the executor of an estate in respect to whom no lien was created by the state upon the property which has passed through his hands while in the instant case it is contended that by the act of 1905 (Stats. 1905, p. 374), under which the tax is sought to be collected, a lien was imposed upon the property in the hands of the donees of the decedent, and that this is a proceeding to enforce that lien. The fact that the statute imposes such lien does not affect the application of the doctrine laid down in the former decisions, for it is there shown that in analogous cases when the law permits a personal action to be maintained for the collection of taxes upon property, which taxes are also a lien upon such property, the personal liability created by statute for such tax is a cause of action which, under section 338, subdivision 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure, is barred after the expiration of three years from the time when the right of action accrued. The right of action in the present case accrued upon the death of the donor of the property claimed to be subject to this tax and must, therefore, have been commenced within three years thereafter. (San Diego v.Higgins, 115 Cal. 170, [46 P. 923); Los Angeles v. *Page 418 Ballerino, 99 Cal. 595, [32 P. 581, 34 P. 329]; SanFrancisco v. Luning, 73 Cal. 610, [15 P. 311]; Lewis v.Rothchild, 92 Cal. 625, [28 P. 805]; Dranga v. Rowe, 127 Cal. 506, [59 P. 944]; Clark v. San Diego, 144 Cal. 361, [77 P. 973].) Upon the authority of these cases and ofChambers v. Gallagher, 177 Cal. 704, [171 P. 931], the judgment is reversed.
Shaw, J., and Sloss, J., concurred.