46 La. Ann. 529 | La. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The record discloses that on the 16th day of July, 1836, Honoré and Alexander Coulon mortgaged the lot and improvements thereon, claimed in this suit, to the Citizens Bank to secure-the payment of stock debt of seven thousand dollars.
The plaintiff was the adjudicatee of the property at tax collector’s sales for State taxes of 1887. The assessment was made in the name of Joaquin Sambola.
The latter acquired the property by authentic deed, duly recorded, in May 1885, from J. B. Henry, Jr.
Henry became the owner at tax sale made for taxes of the year 1883 under an assessment in the name of the estate of Alexander ■Ooulon. The property was assessed for the taxes for years 1870 to 1885 in the name of the estate of Alexander Ooulon, for the years 1886, 1887 and 1888 in the name of J. J. Sambola, and for years subsequent in the name of plaintiff, Augusti.
The State taxes for the years 1871, 1872, 1874 and 1875 were paid by the defendant, the Citizens Bank.
The testimony shows that there is a large amount unpaid of bonds issued under the law of 1836, amendatory of the charter of the bank. These bonds it is urged by defendant have such a guarantee from the State that the State can not in consequence lessen the security by selling for taxes property mortgaged for their security. The plaintiff alleges that the Citizens Bank has slandered and continues to slander his title and disturb him in the enjoyment of his ownership of the property.
The prayer of his petition is for an injunction restraining the bank from interfering with the petitioner or his tenants and from asserting that it is the owner of the property, and that plaintiff be quieted in the enjoyment of his possession.
In the answer the defendant pleads a general denial and specifically sets forth that plaintiff has no title to the property; that the property was not assessed in the name of the owners in 1883.
That the tax sale of 1885 was an absolute nullity — the adjudicatee, Henry, acquired no title and could not transfer any; that in consequence the second adjudicatee having to trace his title to the first acquired no title, as the true owner had never been divested.
In the alternative, the defendant’s argument through counsel is that, if the tax sale be valid, it would not under the provisions of the charter of the Citizens Bank affect her mortgage upon the property for the reason that all mortgages executed for stock or loans may be closed at any time in whosesoever hands or possession the property
The first question which presents itself for our determination is,. if the sale is not void, what effect must be given to the non-alienation clauses of the bank’s charter?
The second question is, is the tax title to the property based upon the tax sale for the taxes of 1887 a valid title?
This court has expressed its recognition of the binding force of the section of the Citizens Bank’s charter cited, and stated with some em - phasis that no sale, whether judicial, torcedor voluntary, of property mortgaged to the Citizens Bank, can in any manner affect the rights. secured to that institution by the 24th section of its charter; that the Legislature intended no exception and made none. Bertoli vs. Citizens Bank, 1 An. 120.
In the different cases to which our attention is directed the interests . were private and the suits related to the disposition of the property sought by persons seeking to realize rights which they had acquired subsequently to the bank’s mortgage.
In those cases the rights involved were passed upon as if the prop- ■ erty was in the possession of the original mortagor.
The question at issue in the case at bar is different.
The Constitution ordains that all property shall be taxed in propor- • tion to its value.
While this provision does not extend to or include public property of the general government, of the State, or any of its subordinate subdivisions, or property specially exempted, it extends to and includes all property in commerce.
The State is not the owner of the property taxed.
The property of the mortgage stockholders was always subject to taxation and the remedy to compel payment remained unimpaired by the charter.
The taxes attach primarily to the lands and remain until satisfied by payment or from the proceeds of the sale for their payment.
Nothing in the charter prevents a tax sale of the property of a mortgage shareholder.
There exists a presumption against the legislative intent to affect ■ government.
Unless sovereignty is expressly embraced by the terms of the
The rights of the State to collect her taxes should not be treated as relinquished or conveyed away by inference.
The liability of the original stockholder to pay his taxes does not become ineffective from the moment the bank proceeds to foreclose its mortgage.
This exceptional right, in opposition to the State, can not be created by legal construction.
“It is presumed that the Legislature does not intend to deprive the crown of any prerogative, right or property, unless it expresses its intention to do so in explicit terms or makes the inference irresistible.” Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, p. 223.
There is no direct expression in the statute upon the subject and there is nothing in its terms which makes the inference irresistible.
The tax sale. The validity of the tax sale involved in the case at bar, must be determined irrespective of the charter.
It is made the duty of an assessor, by statute, to examine the records of the conveyance office to ascertain what taxable property there is in his district or parish.
The record of deeds of conveyance and of mortgage are taken as the basis of the assessment.
It does not devolve upon him to test the validity of these acts in order that he may ascertain in whose name to assess the property.
If an act be not radically null upon its face, he is within the law in taking as correct a recorded deed interested parties have for years permitted to remain on the record as an adverse title, unquestioned and unassailed.
There was a notarial deed of record dating from 1885.
It devolved upon the owner annually to make a return of the property, a required formality uncomplied with.
He knew that the property had not been assessed in his name.
The notarial record in the conveyance office was a notice that title was recorded in the name of the person to whom it was assessed; the owner has no legal cause of complaint of the sale of the property for the taxes.
Two years prior to the registry of the notarial act of sale to Sam* bola, in whose name it was assessed when the last adjudication, that
The objection is directed against this tax sale, i. e. the tax sale to Henry in 1883, null, it is urged, because assessed in the name of the estate of Alex. Ooulon, it being at the time the property of the estate of HonoxA and Alexander Ooulon.
Defendant’s counsel forcibly argues in support of the proposition that the defect in the tax sale of 1885 is fundamental and not curable by monition.
Be that as it may it does not follow that the tax sale of 1888, pleaded in the case at bar, is also null.
The deed itself is prima facie evidence of a compliance with the requisition of the law.
The deed was evidence of title.
When the party claiming adversely shows that a prerequisite to the validity of the title has not been complied with, the prima facie is destroyed, the presumption defeated and the deed becomes entirely useless as a title.
The defendant, a mortgage creditor, having a direct interest, possibly more valuable than that of the owners themselves, suffered the prima facie evidence to remain unquestioned. ■
The property passed into other hands under this title.
The ministerial officers performed every duty imposed by law. The assessment was made by reference to the deed of record, and every other condition essential to the character of the deed was complied with. It therefore became conclusive evidence of title.
The tax deed generally is an original title, not derivative, and can not be defeated by a missing link in the chain of title.
Titles that are intrinsically null, if permitted to remain unquestioned, may become the basis of an assessment that will result in a valid sale.
Any other ruling upon this point would compel the assessors to investigate titles and ascertain as to their conclusive ¡validity. This was never contemplated by the law. The evidence of a prima facie title is the requirement.
Such evidence was of record when the assessment was made of the property sold at tax sale in 1888.
The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed at appellants’ •costs.
Mr. Justice Miller recused.