84 Mich. 113 | Mich. | 1890
This is a case arising upon a delinquent tax petition filed by the Auditor General in Wayne county under the tax law of 1889 (Act No. 195; 3 How. Stat. p. 2936).
The respondent, Baker, is the owner of 4=5 lots situated in the city of Detroit. These lots were separately entered on the assessment roll. The tax record referred to in the petition of the Auditor General does not state the names of the owners of the various parcels of land. The names of the owners were ascertained by the clerk of the Wayne circuit court by inquiry at the abstract office. The clerk issued separate subpoenas, addressed to the respondent, for each lot or parcel of land assessed, and delivered the same to the sheriff. The sheriff served 4=5 subpoenas upon the respondent, and the cost of the issuance and service of these subpoenas was added upon the tax record to the amount of the taxes, interest, and other charges against each parcel of land. Each subpoena described a particular lot, respecting which it purported to be issued.
The respondent tendered the county treasurer the amount specified in the petition as due for unpaid taxes, interest, and charges, and in addition the legal fees for issuing and serving one subpoena. This tender was refused because it did not include fees for issuing and serving all of the subpoenas. A formal objection to the allowance of these items of cost was filed in the circuit court, and on a hearing there the court held that the tender was sufficient; that the issuing of more than one
The question involved, owing to the incompleteness of the statutory direction, is not without difficulty. The statute does not require the subpoena to describe the land supposed to belong to the delinquent tax-payer on account of which it is issued, although there are important reasons why it should do so. It provides no means •of ascertaining the name or place of residence of the delinquent tax-payer. Yet, section 53 provides that,—
“After the filing of said .petition, the county clerk, acting as register in chancery, shall issue a subpc&na directed to each delinquent tax-paper who is a resident of this State,” etc.
We held in the case of Sherman v. Board of Supervisors, ante, 108, that under the present statute there was no authority in the clerk to incur any expense in ascertaining who were the owners of the lands on the tax record. It is urged by. counsel for the State that these proceedings contemplate the establishment of a lien upon each parcel ■of land for the particular tax and charges against it; that it is the parcels of land'that are delinquent, and not the owner; that the proceeding is, in effect, a separate suit against each parcel, as to each of which the owner may make a separate and distinct defense, and as to each of which the court may make a separate and distinct decree; that, by analogy to other suits, a subpoena should issue as to each of such parcels, whether the person upon whom service is to be made be the same in any two of them or not. In support of this view, we are referred to the proviso in section 53, which reads as follows:
“Provided, That when two or more subpoenas are served at the same time or place, upon different [delinquent] tax-payers, only one travel fee shall be charged and paid.”
But, however plausible these arguments may be, they must give way to the more substantial ones that are opposed to an interpretation so needlessly oppressive to the tax-payer. The purpose of these proceedings is not to punish the delinquent tax-payer, nor to enrich the officers charged with conducting them, but to collect the public revenues. This object is not subserved by adding to the original burden excessive and needless costs and expenses. The aggregate of the taxes, including interest, charged against these 45 lots on the Auditor General's petition, is $22.37. To this amount the Auditor General added $1 to each description for costs of advertising and other expenses of sale, making $45. The clerk's and sheriff's fees here in controversy amount to $66.35, so that if counsel for the State is right in his contention, before the State can get its $22.37 of revenue, the owner of the land must be able to pay in addition thereto $111.-35, or n,early five times as much, in costs and expenses. No merely doubtful interpretation of the statute will justify us in sustaining such a result. In the performance of his duty under the law, it would have been much less trouble for the clerk to have issued one subpoena containing a description of all respondent's lands, as they appeared in the tax record, and it would have answered the same purpose as a notice of the proceedings.
The same rule must apply to the sheriff. It is said that he was not to blame; that the writs came to him fair ■on their face, and his only duty was to serve them. Granting that, it does not follow that he can call upon the respondent to pay him his fees. The respondent is in no way responsible for the issuing of the unnecessary writs, and is no more liable to pay the sheriff for the unnecessary trouble he has taken than is any other person.
Respondent claims that no. decree should have been rendered against his lands for any sum, as he had tendered before the hearing the amount which the court found to be due; but the respondent has not appealed, -and we cannot review the correctness of that practice at his request here.
The court below awarded the costs to the appellee. We find no warrant for this in the tax law. The only provision relating to costs is at the close of section 56, which authorizes the court to. decree costs against a person contesting a tax, if the tax is adjudged valid. There is no provision for decreeing costs against the State. As costs are purely statutory, we must hold- that the powei conferred on the court by section 56 is exclusive of any other.
The decree of the court below, except as to costs, is