22 S.E.2d 606 | Ga. | 1942
Where a county has purchased property at a sale for taxes due to the State and the county, and after twelve months from the date of such sale has given notice to foreclose the right of redemption as provided by the act of 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, p. 491), the owner of the land (defendant in the tax executions under which the land was sold) can not maintain a suit to cancel the tax deed and enjoin the county from interfering with her possession of the property, upon the alleged ground that some of the tax claims were void, without first tendering to the county the amount of the taxes which she admittedly owed.
By an amendment the plaintiff alleged that Lamar County had not given her credit on her 1938 taxes for the $2000 homestead exemption provided for by the constitutional amendment of 1937, although through her husband as agent she notified the taxing authorities of her claim for said exemption; that under the constitutional *714 amendment, however, she was not required to file any written or oral claim for an exemption; and that the act requiring the filing of a claim (Ga. L. Ex. Sess. 1937-38, p. 145) is void, because it contravenes the constitutional amendment to which it refers. She further alleged, that she owed none of the taxes claimed against her, "with the possible exception of a very minimum amount;" and that after full credit was given her for amounts claimed which were not due, she stood ready to pay such amount as might be found due. She prayed for an accounting. She alleged, that the sale was illegal, because the county bid more for the property than the taxes and costs; and that because of her inability to ascertain the amount due, and because of her financial inability to tender the amount claimed by the defendant, she had made no tender of any amount.
The defendant answered, denying that tax sale and deed were invalid as alleged, and denying the plaintiff's right to any of the relief sought. It was alleged that the plaintiff was estopped from attacking the levy under which the sale was made, because she had sought to enjoin the sale in a suit which she had abandoned and which had been dismissed after she had been denied a temporary injunction.
The case was submitted to the judge on an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that the plaintiff through her husband as agent requested the county authorities to have the life-estate, rather than other property, levied on to satisfy the tax fi. fas., and asked the county to buy it in for enough to cover all the taxes due and the costs, stating that she would redeem the property within the redemption period; that the plaintiff failed to redeem the property within twelve months, so foreclosure proceedings were instituted; and that the plaintiff made no request for tax exemption under the constitutional amendment of 1937 until 1940. There was nothing in the agreed statement of facts to show that the life-estate was worth more than the amount bid by the county, but there was evidence that it was worth about that amount. On consideration of the pleadings and the agreed statement of facts, the court entered judgment for the defendant; and the plaintiff excepted.
The court did not err in refusing to grant the plaintiff any of the relief sought. Lamar County, the *715
defendant, was proceeding under the act of 1937 (Ga. L. 1937, p. 491) to foreclose the plaintiff's right to redeem property sold at a tax sale. While a portion of the taxes involved became due before its passage, this act was applicable because the sale took place after its passage. See DuBignon v. Brunswick,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Hewlett,J., not participating.