Johnson v. Alma Investment Co.

Citation120 Cal.Rptr. 503,47 Cal.App.3d 155
Decision Date11 April 1975
Docket NumberNo. 1974,1974
PartiesGlenn I. JOHNSON et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. ALMA INVESTMENT COMPANY, etc., Defendant and Respondent.
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeals

Vizzard, Baker, Sullivan, McFarland & Long, Bakersfield, for plaintiffs and appellants.

Donald G. Kendall, Bakersfield, for defendant and respondent.

OPINION

FRANSON, Associate Justice.

Appellants sued to quiet title to real property alleging a failure of the taxing authorities to give adequate notice of a special water district assessment on the property which resulted in a sale of the property to respondent for delinquent taxes. The trial court found that adequate notice of the special assessment had been given to appellants, and it entered a judgment in favor of respondent as the owner of the real property.

FACTS

In he early 1960's appellants, who have lived at the same address in Palo Alto, California, since 1951, purchased two 20-acre parcels of property within the Semitropic Water Storage District in Kern County. The first parcel, not in question in this action, was purchased in 1961. The second parcel, designated in the water district's tax roll as Smyrna Colony Lot 57, was purchased in 1962 for about $6,000.

The tax records of three Kern County governmental agencies are relevant to the resolution of this case: the tax assessor, the tax collector and the Semitropic Water Storage District.

The 1963 county tax statement received by appellants from the tax collector for the property not at issue had appellants' name and 'address unknown' typed on it, but written to the right in pencil was the correct Palo Alto address. The 1964 tax statement had the correct address typed in.

The 1963 and 1964 tax statements for Lot 57, the property in question, also stated 'address unknown' but the correct Palo Alto address was penciled in on both statements received by appellants. In 1965, and in the ensuing years, the correct address was typed on the statements.

The tax collector's copy of the final assessment rolls showed that in 1963 and 1964 Lot 57 was assessed to appellant and 'address unknown' was typed in; in 1963 and 1964, however, employees of the tax collector's office had penciled in the correct Palo Alto address on its copy of the assessment rolls. In 1965 and ensuing years, the correct address was typed on the collector's copy of the assessment roll listing Lot 57.

The original assessment roll in the assessor's office listed Lot 57 as assessed to appellant Glenn Johnson at 'address unknown' with no address correction in 1963 and 1964. The 1965 assessment roll had the correct address typed in.

A deputy tax collector testified that the fact that a tax collector employee had penciled in the correct address on the 1963 and 1964 copies of the assessment rolls indicated that the tax collector had received correspondence from the assessee (appellants), and that the notation 'per letter' on the 1964 copy of the assessment roll indicated that the assessee had specifically requested that the correct address be inserted permanently.

The assistant tax assessor testified that it could take one or two years for the correct address to get from the tax collector's office to the assessor's rolls.

On October 14, 1964, the water district levied a special assessment of 50 cents per acre on the 2,000 parcels within the district. It was the first assessment levied by the district since 1958. In order to make up the district's assessment roll as required by law (Wat.Code, §§ 46200, 46209), the district had to record the name and address of the owner of each tract of land within the district, if known, and if unknown, that fact. (Wat.Code, § 46200, subd. (c).) To obtain this information, the district hired part-time help; these employees used the parcel numbers to ascertain the name and address of the owner of each parcel from the assessor's tax roll. This was done sometime in the summer of 1964. The district's assessment roll then was transmitted to the county treasurer (Wat.Code, § 46205) along with a notice of the assessment for mailing or for publication as required by law. (Wat.Code, §§ 46695 and 46696.)

Crystal Harris, a former assistant secretary to the board of directors of the water district testified that on October 6, 1965, a form letter was sent to the delinquent taxpayers to remind them of the assessment but it must not have been sent to appellants because the water district still didn't have an address on Lot 57. Mrs. Harris said it was possible that they rechecked the assessor's rolls at that time but she wasn't sure; they could have made a mistake. She said that in her new job with another water district she learned that other sources of information on taxpayers were available so she now checks with the tax collector as well as the assessor to get the names and addresses. She couldn't remember why she hadn't checked with the tax collector in 1964--1965, but she said it seemed to her like a 'lack of activity' on the water district's part not to have done so.

As a consequence of drawing its information from the assessor's rolls, the district's assessment roll listed the correct Palo Alto address for appellants' property not in dispute, but for Lot 57, the appellants' address was listed as "address unknown.'

Appellants received through the mail a notice of the $10 assessment on the uncontested parcel which they paid on October 21, 1964, one week after the assessment was made. No notice of the $10 assessment on Lot 57 was mailed to appellants; however, notice of the assessment was published in the Kern County newspapers as authorized by Water Code section 46696. 1

The assessment on Lot 57 became delinquent; notice of the delinquency and the date of the proposed tax sale was published in the Kern County newspapers on January 28, 1966, and February 4, 1966, as required by law. (Wat.Code, §§ 46730, 46731.) On February 17, 1966, a tax sale was held and respondent purchased Lot 57 for $185.

The tax collector continued to bill appellants for county taxes on Lot 57 through 1969. Appellants paid the taxes. In 1970, when appellants did not receive a county tax statement on Lot 57, they wrote the assessor's office; the assessor wrote back informing appellants of the transfer of title to respondent. 2 This was the first the appellants knew of the assessment or the delinquency and sale.

DISCUSSION

We hold that appellants were deprived of their property without due process of law because they did not receive adequate notice of the special assessment notwithstanding publication of the notice of assessment as authorized by Water Code section 46696.

The fundamental requisite of due process is Notice reasonably calculated under the circumstances to apprise the interested parties of the proceedings. (Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314, 70 S.Ct. 652, 657, 94 L.Ed. 865.) In Mullane, the court addressed the sufficiency of published notice to beneficiaries on a judicial settlement of accounts of a common trust fund. The court held that where the addresses were known, published notice was insufficient because, under the circumstances, it was not reasonably calculated to reach those that could easily be informed by other available means; as to them, notice by mail was required. 'More specifically, Mullane (holds) that notice by publication is not sufficient with respect to an individual whose name and address are known or easily ascertainable.' (Emphasis added.) Robinson v. Hanrahan, 409 U.S. 38, 40, 93 S.Ct. 30, 31, 34 L.Ed.2d 47.

Mullane has been followed in a number of cases. In Covey v. Town of Somers, 351 U.S. 141, 76 S.Ct. 724, 100 L.Ed. 1021, the respondent municipality instituted proceedings to foreclose a tax lien against a parcel owned by appellant. Notice was given to the taxpayer by mail And by publication. No answer was filed and the property was sold for taxes. The taxpayer was an incompetent without an appointed guardian who lived alone. Because the town knew this but made no attempt to have a legal representative appointed prior to the tax foreclosure, the notice was inadequate and the taking of the property was without due process.

In Walker v. City of Hutchinson, 352 U.S. 112, 77 S.Ct. 200, 1 L.Ed.2d 178, it was held that where the landowner was a resident of the state and his name was known to the city and was on the official records, newspaper publication alone of notice of condemnation proceedings against his property did not comport with due process.

In Schroeder v. City of New York, 371 U.S. 208, 83 S.Ct. 279, 9 L.Ed.2d 255, the city instituted condemnation proceedings in connection with the planned diversion of a river upstream from appellant's land. Although the landowner's name and address were readily ascertainable from both deed records and tax rolls, no notice was mailed. Instead, notice was published in 4 newspapers and was posted on 22 trees and poles along a stretch of the river in the general vicinity of appellant's vacant land. This notice was held to be insufficient. 3

In Bennett v. Hibernia Bank, 47 Cal.2d 540, 556, 305 P.2d 20, it was held that the provisions of the California Bank Act (§ 29(a)) authorizing certain banks without corporate stock to bring an action to determine persons entitled to membership therein or to any right or interest in its property or assets and providing that all persons appearing on the records of the corporation as members and all other persons who are known by it to claim to be members shall be included as defendants, when properly construed, requires personal service not only upon resident members whose names actually appear on the corporate records, but also upon persons residing in California who are successors of such members provided the corporation is aware Or could by the exercise of reasonable diligence discover that they are successors. (47 Cal.2d at pp. 555--556, 305 P.2d 20.) To...

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