People v. Mahoney
Before: Ross
Synopsis
Assessment—Description—1Tax Suit.—A description sufficiently certain to convey land, between man and man, and which, if contained in an agreement to convey, would authorize a Court of Equity to decree a specific execution, may not answer in a proceeding to enforce the collection of a tax. In the latter case the description must be certain of itself, and not such as to require evidence aliunde to render it certain, llelcl, accordingly, that an assessment, one of the calls of which was, “ * * * north by the lands of James Reagan and others,” was void; and so held, also, with reference to an assessment, which described the land as “bounded * * * south by the lands of Eelton and Patterson.”
Ross, J.: The motion to dismiss the appeal was virtually passed upon, and was denied by our predecessors.
The only question upon the merits of the cause relates to the sufficiency of the description of the property assessed, which is as follows : “ 1,013.86 acres of land, being a portion of the San Pedro Rancho, bounded as follows: Rorth, by the lands of James. Regan and others; east, by the line of the San Pedro Rancho ; south, by the Pacific Ocean ; and west, by the lands of Richard Tobin. Also 15 acres of land, being a portion of the San Pedro Rancho, bounded on the north by the lands of Richard Tobin; south, by the lands of Felton and Patterson; west, by the Pacific Ocean; cast, by the lands of Richard Tobin.”
The statute, in force at the time the assessment in question was made, required that land should be assessed “ by township, [288]range, section, or fractional section ; and, when such land is not a congressional division or subdivision, by metes and bounds, or other description sufficient to identify it, giving an estimate , of the number of acres, locality, and the improvements thereon.”
It is hardly necessary to say that tax proceedings are in ■invitnm, and to be valid, must be in strict accordance with the statute. It may be conceded that the description here in question would be good in a deed, or agreement between private persons, but that is not the test of sufficiency in a case of this nature. In Blackwell on Tax Titles, page 124, it is said: “A description sufficiently certain to convey land between man and man, and which, if contained in an agreement to convey, would authorize a Court of Equity to decree a specific execution, will not answer in the jmoceedings to enforce the collection of a tax. In the case of private transactions, the courts, in construing the document, endeavor to collect the intention of the parties, and give that intention effect. If a latent ambiguity exists in the description, parol evidence is resorted to for the purpose of explaining it, and giving to the intention of the parties complete operation; and when the estate intended to be conveyed is sufficiently described in the deed or other writing, the addition of a circumstance, false or mistaken, will be rejected as surplusage in order to carry that intention into effect. But in these tax proceedings the owner of the estate has nothing to do ; he intends nothing. The government is acting, through its agents, in hostility to him, and with the view of enforcing the collection of a tax from him.”
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