Blackwell v. First National Bank

10 N.M. 555 | N.M. | 1900

MILLS, C. J.

The appellants rely on section 4066 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, which provides that delinquent taxes shall bear interest at the rate of 25 per cent, per annum, and chapter. XXVII of the Laws of 1899, which provides:

“That under all tax sales made heretofore by the various county collectors of this Territory, by virtue of the revenue laws in force prior to the first day of January, 1899, the certificates of sale issued by said collectors, as provided for by section 4092 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, shall and hereby do, vest in the purchasers to whom said certificates may have been issued, their heirs and assigns, all the right, title, interest and lien of the county and Territory, in and to the real estate sold for the taxes for which the same may have been sold, or subsequently paid as provided for by section 4094 of said laws; and under any sale made heretofore, under the provisions of said revenue laws for the non-payment of taxes which may-hereafter prove to be invalid, and ineffectual to convey the title for any cause, except in case of land exémpt from taxation, or upon which the taxes may have been paid prior to such sale therefor, the lien which the county and Territory had on such land for all taxes, territorial, county and municipal, for which said lands may have been sold, or subsequently paid by the purchaser at tax sale as provided for by section 4094, shall remain in full force and effect and is hereby declared to be transferred by said certificates of sale to the grantees, their heirs, and assigns, who shall be entitled to foreclose said lien as mortgages and other liens are foreclosed, the owner of said lands being allowed to redeem the same as now provided by law upon the payment to said county collectors of the amounts for which said property was sold for taxes, together with interest thereon at the rate heretofore provided by law and costs: Provided, that the holder of said certificate will pay or cause to be paid the full amount of taxes due upon said property, to the proper officer authorized to receive same.”

That the several irregularities set out in the complaint existed, in the manner of advertising and conducting the sales of the lots are admitted as they are not denied by the answers, and it is for us first to determine, whether or not any such irregularity was sufficient, to make the sales invalid and of no binding force and effect.

One of the alleged irregularities set out in the complaint was that the notice of sale required by law was not published for the length of time required, before the sale was made.

Taxes: sale for: notice. Section 4074, Compiled Laws of 1897, provides that on or before the first Monday in March, in each year, the collector is required to offer at public sale at the court, house door all delinquent real estate, and sell the same, Section 4076 provides that notice of such sale shall be given, stating the time and place of such sale, and containing a description of the parcels of real estate to be sold; what taxes, interest and costs are charged against each name of their owner, when known; and section 4076 requires that the collector shall give such notice by causing,the same to be published in some newspaper, once a week for four consecutive weeks, the last publication to be at least one week prior to the day of sale, and by causing a copy of such notice to be posted on the door of the county court house, for at least five weeks before the day of sale. The publishing and posting of the notice of sale is such an important step in tax proceedings, and is so vital to the validity of the further acts of the officer making the sale, that it must closely follow all the statutory directions and requirements. All of the provisions of law in this regard must be strictly complied with. The time prescribed by statute for the publishing and posting of the notice is essential to the validity of any sale made under it, and the notice if given for less than the statutory time, makes void all subsequent proceedings, no matter how regular they may themselves be. tract, and the

There was no legal notice of the sale of this property. Thirty-five days should have elapsed between the date of the first publication and the day of sale, and the notice should also have been posted at the door of the court house thirty-five days before such sale. The failure to give legal notice of sale makes the sale illegal and conveys no title to the property. Early v. Doe, 16 Howard, 610; Blackwell on Tax Titles, section 398; and cases cited in Note 1. In view of the foregoing it is unnecessary for us to consider the other irregularities alleged by the complaint to exist.

Taxes: void sale: when a lien. At the time that the sales for taxes were made there was no statute in force expressly giving the purchaser at an irregular or void sale any lien upon the property sold for the taxes paid at the sale, or for any subsequent taxes paid thereunder, as provided by the statute. Section 4070 of the Compiled Laws of 1897 provides: “In all cases where any person shall pay any tax, interests or costs, or any portion thereof that shall thereafter be found to be erroneous or illegal, whether the same be due to erroneous or improper assessment, or, improper or irregular levying of the tax, to clerical or other irregularities, the board of county commissioners shall order the same refunded to the tax payer without discount.” It will be observed that under this section, the county commissioners are required to refund the amount of the money paid “without discount.” It does not authorize the payment by the county commissioners of any interest or penalty upon the amount paid, and it also expressly applies only where the tax itself shall be found to be “erroneous or illegal.” This section does not apply to the facts in this case. It is nowhere alleged that the taxes for which the property was sold, or the subsequent taxes which it is alleged were paid by the purchasers at the tax sales, were “erroneous or illegal.” Section 4072 of the Compiled Laws of 1897 provides: “When by mistake or wrongful act of the collector, clerk, assessor or from double assessment, real estate has been sold on which no tax was due at the time, the county shall refund to the purchaser the amount paid by him, with interest thereon at the rate of twenty-five per cent, per annum; and the collector, clerk or assessor, as the case may be, shall be liable on his official bond to the county for all losses sustained by the county from sales made through his mistake or misconduct.” It will be observed that this section applies only where property has been sold by “mistake or wrongful act of the collector, clerk, assessor or from double assessment * * * on which no tax was due at the time.” It is not alleged anywhere in the pleadings in this case that the taxes for which the property was sold, or which were subsequently paid by the respondents or their assigns, was not due at the time that the property was sold for taxes. This section it will also be observed, only applies to money paid at the time of the sale in payment for the property sold. It does not apply to taxes subsequently paid by the purchaser at the void tax sale. It, therefore, does not appear that the respondents could recover from the county under either of these provisions any part of the money alleged to have been paid on account of these void tax sales, as the validity of the taxes assessed is nowhere questioned. The Territory and county, therefore, had no lien on account of any liability to refund to the purchaser the sums thus paid.

The only other section having any application to tax sales, in existence at the time that these sales were made, is section 4101 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, which provides that the deed given to the purchaser three years after the tax sale “shall vest in the purchaser all the right, title, interest and estate of the former owner in and to the lands conveyed, and also all the right, title, interest and claim of the Territory and county thereto, and shall be prima facie evidence in all courts in the Territory, in all controversies and suits in relation to the rights of the purchaser, his heirs or assigns, to the lands thereby conveyed” of nine different facts set out in this section of the statute, all of which were necessary to have made a valid sale of taxes and authorized the purchaser to receive a valid deed therefor. No deed was ever executed and delivered to the purchasers, or their assigns, in this case. It would seem to be plain that the purchaser is not entitled to receive a deed where the tax sale is void, for failure to give notice or any of the other causes alleged in the pleadings in this case, which would render the sale void.

Liens: retroac-tivelegislation. If the purchaser is not entitled to the deed and has not received any, it can not be very well contended that he acquires any lien by virtue of the section of the statute providing for the execution and delivery to him of a deed. He could not show himself entitled to a lien, which arises out of the deed when executed and delivered, unless he also shows himself entitled to receive a deed. It appears in this case, taking the allegations in the complaint to be true, as they are so taken upon demurrer, that the respondents were not entitled to receive a deed and therefore could not claim any lien under this section of the statute.

The act of 1899, above quoted, provides: “That under all tax sales made heretofore by the various county collectors, of this Territory, by virtue of the revenue laws in force prior to the first day of January, 1899, the certificates of sale issued by said collectors, as provided for by section 4092 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, shall and hereby do, vest in the purchasers to whom said certificates may have been issued, their heirs and assigns, all the right, title, interest and Hen of the county and Territory, in and to the real estate sold for the taxes for which the same may have been sold, or subsequently paid as provided for by section 4094 of said laws,” etc., and “under any sale made heretofore, under the provisions of said revenue laws for the non-payment of taxes which may hereafter prove to be invalid, and ineffectual to convey the title for any cause,” etc., the “lien which the county and Territory had on such lands for all taxes, territorial, county and municipal, for which said lands may have been sold, or subsequently-paid by the purchaser at tax sale as provided for by section 4094, shall remain in full force and effect, and is hereby declared to be transferred by said certificates of sale to the grantees, their heirs and assigns,” etc. We do not deem it necessary in this case to discuss how far the Legislature may attempt to enact retrospective legislation for the purpose of creating liens in favor of a purchaser at a void tax sale which he did not have by virtue of a statutory enactment at the time of such sale. All the authorities hold that no such lien exists in favor of the purchaser, except by virtue of the provisions of a statute. Croskery v. Bush, 74 N. W. Rep. 464, and authorities there cited; Nestor v. Bush, 64 Mich. 657, 31 N. W. Rep. 572; Adams v. Osgood, 60 N. W. Rep. 869; Conway v. Cable, 37 Ill. 82. We think it plain that no such lien existed, prior to the enactment of the-statute of 1899, in favor of the purchaser at a void tax sale, and certainty none such existed prior to the execution and delivery of a deed. The language used in section 4101 of the Compiled Laws is also used in the Iowa statute, and it has been there held that the legal title, and the right to the possession of the land, continues in the original owner of the land until the -tax deed has been regularly executed and delivered to the purchaser at the tax sale. Williams v. Heath, 32 Iowa, 519.

The right to collect 25 per cent upon the amount paid at the time of the sale, or for subsequent taxes, in this case must be based upon the act of 1899, as no previous statute expressly gave any such right. The general principles of equity would not require, as a condition for equitable relief, the payment of any such rate of interest, even if it be held that by such payment alone the purchaser at a tax sale is subrogated to the rights of the Territory and county. We deem it, however, unnecessary to discuss this proposition for the determination of this case.

Let us assume that the payment of the taxes by the purchaser and the subsequent payment of taxes did not have the effect of extinguishing the lien of the territory upon the property, and that such lien was in force and effect at the date of the passage of the act of. 1899. It seems to us clear that the act of 1899 could convey, and did convey only such lien as the territory and county had at the session of the Legislature when the act of 1899 was passed. In fact, we think it plain that the respondent could recover only to the extent of such lien as the territory or county could enforce at the date of the decree rendered in this case. In Hentig v. Thomas, 53 Pac. Rep., page 80, the Supreme Court of Kansas hold, that it was improper to allow 20 per cent, interest on the sum due at the date of the tax deed and, on taxes subsequently paid, because the statute as it existed at the time of the sale allowed such rate, the statute having been subsequently changed, thereby reducing the rate to 12 per cent. The court held that the latter rate, which was that provided by the statute at the time of the rendition of the decree was the correct rate. At the same session of the Legislature of 1899, however, an act was passed which provides “that all accrued penalties and interest upon- taxes now, or heretofore in this year delinquent, shall be remitted upon such taxes which have been or shall be paid on or before the first day of July, A. D. 1899.” Acts of 1899, chapter LII, page 106. This act was approved March 16, 1899. The act transferring the lien of the Territory, already discussed, was approved March 4, 1899.

lavs: construetion of. • It is a well settled principle ¡that all laws enacted at the same session of the Legislature relating to the same subject, are in pari materia, and are to be considered and construed together as if they were different sections of one act, and as if gnawed upon the same day. “Acts of the same session are, according to the British rule of construction of statutes and the rule which prevails in Virginia, parts of the same act, and have effect from the same day and are to be taken together as parts of the same act.” Brown v. Barry, 3 Dallas, 364. In another case the Supreme Court of the United States says: “The correct rule of interpretation is that if divers statutes relate to the same thing, they ought all to be taken into consideration in construing any one of them, and it is an established rule that all acts in pari materia are to be taken together as if they were one law.” U. S. v. Freeman, 3 How. 564. In fact, we understand that this is the common law rule of construction of the acts of parliament, and in this country of legislatures. See also Perkins v. Perkins, 92 Barb. 531; Sutherland on Statutory Construction, Sec. 283; Town of Highgate v. State, 7 Atlantic Rep. (Ver.) 898, and authorities cited; Sedgwick on Statutory- Construction, 209, and note; Cain v. State, 20 Texas 355; People v. Jackson, 30 Cal. 427; St. Martin v. New Orleans, 14 La. Ann. 113; Powers v. Shepard, 46 N. Y. 543; Board of Co. Comms. v. Cutters, 6 Ind. 354.

We do not doubt but that it is competent for the Legislature by statute to give a lien to purchasers at void tax sales for the money paid by them upon the property attempted to be sold, but we do not believe that such a lien can be created by re-troactive legislation. Only such lien as.the Territory already has may pass by such legislative transfer. Wisconsin Cent. Ry. Co. v. Comstock, 71 Wis. 88; Pier v. Prouty, 67 Wis. 218, and cases cited, supra. Construing these two statutes together as one law, the only lien which the territory had at the time that the decree was rendered in this case was for the payment of the taxes due. The person who owed the taxes had a right to pay them without any interest prior to the first day of July, 1899, by virtue of chapter 52, quoted, supra. We do not believe, therefore, that it can be contended that a person whose property the collector had attempted to sell at a sale which was void, can be required to pay more taxes by the act of the Legislature between the dates of the passage of these two acts and the first day of July, 1899, than any delinquent taxpayer whose property the collector had not attempted to sell at a void tax sale, nor would it be competent for the Legislature to make any such discrimination. By applying the well settled rule of construction above quoted, and construing these two' acts together, no such unjust and anomalous result follows. We, therefore, think the court below correctly construed these two statutes. If there was any error at all, it was in requiring the plaintiff to pay six per cent, interest upon the taxes actually paid by the defendants, but as that question, however, is not before us, the plaintiff not having taken any cross-appeal, we express no opinion upon it.

For the foregoing reasons, the decree and judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Parker and McFie, JJ., concur; Crumpacker, J., having heard the case below, and Leland, J., being absent, did not participate in this decision.