45 Fla. 179 | Fla. | 1903
It appears from the abstracts that in February, 1898, plaintiff in error began an action of ejectment against the defendant in error in the Circuit Coux*t of Marion County to recover certain land situated in that county. Defendaxxt pleaded not guilty. At the trial plaintiff proved title by patent from the Uixited States to Postell Taylor, and deed from the latter to the plaintiff, and rested his case. Defendant therexxpon introduced in evidence a deed executed December 10, 1890, by Hon. H. L. Mitchell, Governor, and IToix. John L. Crawford, Secretary of State, under the seal of the Commissioner of Agriculture, pxxrporting to convey to one C. T. Oulverhouse “all the right, title and interest the State of Florida may have required under the provisions of an act entitled ‘an act to px*ovide for certifying lands to the Comptroller, upon which taxes have not been paid for the redemption thereof, and for the forfeiture and sale of lands not redeemed.’ approved June 10, 3891,” in-and to the lands in controversy, recited in such deed to have beexx embraced in 'tax cer,tífica tes Nos. 2137 and 2339 of 3893, of lands certified to the Stale. Plaintiff objected to the introduction of this deed xxpon Various grounds, om; being that the deed appeared to have been execuled under and by virtue of a power and authority, and .such power and axxthoritv had not been
The court at the conclusion of the evidence instructed the jury that the deed introduced by defendant showed title in Culverhouse, and directed a verdict for defendant, to which instruction an exception was taken. From the judgment entered upon the verdict for defendant this writ of error was taken.
The only question which the court finds it necessary to discuss or decide arises on the second exception above mentioned.
Chapter 4011, acts of 1891, provided that after January 1, 1892, no more lands shall be sold for taxes, and made it the duty of the tax collectors at the time therein specified to it and which shall not have been redeemed shall the taxes had not been paid. It also required the Comptroller to publish a list of the lands so certified, and authorized the redemption of any lands so certified at any time within two years. By section 6 it was provided that “the State’s title to all lands which shall have been certified to it and which shall not have been redeemed shall mature and become absolute at the expiration of two years from its certification, and all such lands shall be placed by the Comptroller upon the State’s list of public lands, and when sold by the State all proceeds arising therefrom over and above the amount of taxes, interest
The deed introduced by the defendant purports to have been executed in pursuance of this act, and the question for decision is, was the deed alone sufficient to prove title in the grantee. We have no statute making the deed prima facie evidence of the regularity of the proceedings, or of the title in the guarantee. There are statutes which provide that tax deeds executed by the clerk of the Circuit Court under poAvers vested in him are prima facie evidence, but these statutes do not embrace deeds executed by the Governor and Secretary of State, conveying the State's title to lands certified to it under the act of 1891. ^
Tn Dickerson v. Acosta, 15 Fla. 614, text 619, 620, it is said: “Very generally it has been held by the courts of various States and by the Supreme Court of the United States under various statutes regulating tax sales, that a deed given upon a sale for the nonpayment of taxes was
The judgment of thé Circuit Court is reversed and a new trial granted.