S. & G. Gump Co. v. City & County of San Francisco
Before: Edmonds
EDMONDS, J.
In 1936, the appellant paid under protest taxes upon personal property which was held by it on consignment and subsequently sued to recover the amount of such payment. There is no dispute concerning the facts and the judgment in favor of the respondent is based upon a construction of the applicable statutes.
At the time the assessment was made, the appellant was a dealer in art goods and merchandise and had in its possession certain goods entrusted to it for sale. It filed with the assessor of the City and County of San Francisco a statement or declaration of taxable personal property owned by it on the first Monday of March. In this statement the property held on consignment was not segregated from the merchandise owned by the appellant. Later, the appellant requested the assessor to assess the consigned property to it as bailee for the various owners and to record the assessment of such property separately from that of the property owned by the corporation. This request was not made under oath but in the form of a letter in which the appellant offered to furnish the names of the consignors and bailors, together with a list showing the items of personal property owned by each one of them. The assessor refused to change the assessment theretofore made.
By the provisions of section 3629 of the Political Code as then in effect (Rev. Code, see secs. 441 et seq.), the assessor was required to exact from each person a statement under oath setting forth “all the real and personal property not exempt from taxation owned by such person, or in his possession, or under his control, at twelve o’clock meridian on the first Monday in March”. The preceding section required the assessor to “assess such property to the persons by whom it was owned or claimed, or in whose possession or control it was” at that time. Section 3639 of the Political Code provided: “When a person is assessed as agent, trustee, bailee, guardian, executor, or administrator, his representative designation must be added to his name, and the assessment entered on a separate line from his individual assessment.”
The appellant contends that the assessment levied upon the goods which it held on consignment was void because it
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was not separately assessed in accordance with the statutory requirement. In support of the judgment, the city takes the position that the appellant’s offer to give the assessor the names of the various owners and the particular items of personal property owned by each one with its value was not a statement under oath, and, for that reason not entitled to consideration. It also declares that as property may be assessed to one not its owner, and as the appellant did not apply to the board of equalization for relief, no recovery may be had.
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