104 Ind. 162 | Ind. | 1885
Lead Opinion
The principal question in this case is as to the authority of the treasurer to sell real estate upon an assessment made for building a gravel road.
The constitutionality of the statute authorizing the levying of taxes for constructing gravel roads has been so many times affirmed by this court, and by other courts, that the question may be considered as at rest. The authority to enact such statutes being assumed, the only question is as to their force and effect.
The statute providing for the assessment of taxes for the construction of gravel roads plainly contemplates that such taxes may be collected as other taxes, by sale of property. B..
Where the sale does not operate to convey title, the purchaser secures a lien for all taxes paid by him, together with the statutory penalty. The trial court did right in holding that the purchaser acquired a lien although the sale was void.
The statute places taxes assessed for the construction of gravel roads on substantially the same footing as other taxes, and all the usual incidents attach to a sale made for gravel road taxes, among them the right to the statutory penalty.
There was general authority to levy the tax and sell the property of the appellant, and he could not have relief without making a tender of the amount due the appellee. Peckham, v. Millikan, 99 Ind. 352; Ricketts v. Spraker, 77 Ind. 371, p. 376; McWhinney v, Brinker, 64 Ind. 360; City of Delphi v. Bowen, 61 Ind. 29, vide auth. p. 33.
The complaint does not plead a sufficient tender. The sum due the appellee was capable of exact computation, and it was the duty of the appellant to state in his complaint the sum tendered, so as to enable the court to judge whether the tender was sufficient. Conwell v. Claypool, 8 Blackf. 124; Miller v. McGehee, 60 Miss. 903; Chase v. Welsh, 45 Mich. 345. The appellant’s complaint does not even aver that he tendered the taxes and penalty; it simply avers that he “ has offered to pay to the defendant all money due to him for said sum so paid to the said treasurer and auditor on said sale as aforesaid, which he refused to accept.” This is plainly insufficient. It.is not for the plaintiff to determine what is due the defendant; that is for the court upon the facts stated.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition eor a Rehearing.
The appellant complains that we did not decide what penalty the appellee was entitled to recover, and insists that we now decide that question. We did not deem it necessary to expressly decide the question, for the reason that the judgment was for a less sum than the appellee was entitled to recover, even computing the penalty at the lowest sum fixed by any of the statutes upon the subject of taxes. Where the ultimate judgment is one of which the appellant can not justly complain, intermediate errors are harmless. Krug v. Davis, 101 Ind. 75.
Another point urged in the petition is, that we did not discuss the ruling on the motion to tax costs. This point we now expressly decide against the appellant without discussion, for we think the question so free from difficulty as not to require discussion. What we decide is this: Where a plaintiff brings a suit to quiet title, and the defendant, by a counter-claim, sets forth a lien, and obtains a judgment against the plaintiff foreclosing the lien, he is entitled to recover costs.
Petition overruled.