232 S.W. 490 | Tex. | 1921
On June 29th, 1905, the City of Laredo recovered a judgment in the District Court of Webb County, against Stephen E. Rice for $31.12, being taxes on certain blocks of land in the City of Laredo and penalties, with foreclosure of lien on the blocks. The clerk was directed to issue an order of sale, directed to the sheriff or any constable of Webb County, commanding him to seize and sell said blocks, as under execution, and to apply the proceeds of the sale to the satisfaction of the judgment and all costs of the suit.
On August 5, 1905, the district clerk issued an order of sale on said judgment, showing clerk's costs to be collected in excess of $1.50, such costs being taxed as in an ordinary civil case.
After due notice, the blocks foreclosed on were sold by the sheriff, under the order of sale, at public vendue, before the court house door of Webb County, during lawful hours, on September 5, 1905, when defendant in error, A. Bonougli became the purchaser of all said blocks, save two, for $45.50, and thereafter, the sheriff conveyed to defendant in error the blocks he had purchased.
Out of the proceeds of sale, the sheriff retained the sum of $1.25 for commissions to himself, as on an ordinary execution sale, and paid to the district clerk as his costs a sum in excess of $1.50.
On May 18, 1912, Stephen E. Rice quitclaimed certain of the blocks, which were purchased at the sheriff's sale by defendant in error, to John M. Daniel, who, on February 1, 1913, conveyed same to Walter Brown, plaintiff in error; and Brown thereafter filed this suit to recover the blocks of defendant in error.
The trial court concluded that the sheriff's sale to defendant in error was void, because made for clerk's and sheriff's fees which were excessive in amount, and rendered judgment that plaintiff in error recover of defendant in error the blocks sued for, on refunding certain amounts to defendant in error.
The Court of Civil Appeals decided that the sheriff's sale was not void, reversed the judgment of the trial court, and rendered judgment that plaintiff in error, Walter Brown, take nothing by his suit.
The Amarillo Court of Civil Appeals had previously determined in Hill Jahns v. Lofton,
The writ of error was granted because of the conflict between the holdings of the Court of Civil Appeals in this case and in the case of Hill Jahns v. Lofton, supra. While the writ of error has been pending, the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, in Teat v. Perry,
The Court of Civil Appeals was plainly right in holding that the clerk and sheriff were not entitled to collect fees in excess of those prescribed by article 7691 Vernon's Sayles' Texas Civil Statutes.
The title of a purchaser of land at a sheriff's sale, under a valid judgment and a valid order of sale, is not affected by the unauthorized retention by the sheriff of more than his lawful commissions. The land is not sold nor offered for sale to pay any certain sum for commissions to the sheriff. The purchaser pays no commissions. He pays the amount of his bid. Having paid the amount of his bid, the purchaser, at a sheriff's sale, otherwise valid, becomes entitled to his deed from the sheriff. Being in no wise connected with nor responsible for the default of the sheriff alone to lawfully account for the proceeds of the sale, such default can in no wise operate to defeat the purchaser's title. Moore v. Rogers,
The serious question in the case is whether the sheriff's sale was void because for an amount greater than that authorized by law to the extent of the excess in the clerk's fees.
It is urged in behalf of defendant in error that it was not shown that the land was sold for an excessive amount, for clerk's fees, but instead that the sheriff paid the clerk a greater sum than was lawful from the proceeds of the sale. The Court of Civil Appeals appears to have adopted that view. We do not so construe the trial court's findings, on which the case is to be reviewed. These findings are that there was taxed and collected a sum in excess of $1.50 as costs of the district clerk in the foreclosure suit. It must be presumed, in the absence of opposing evidence, that an endorsement was made by the clerk on the order of sale, "of the several items of the bill of costs to be collected," as required by article 3729 of the Revised Statutes. There is no warrant for any other inference than that the endorsement made by the clerk was in accord with the items which he both taxed and collected.
The order of sale, therefore, is to be considered as commanding the officer to seize and sell the blocks foreclosed on to satisfy not only the amount recovered for taxes and penalties but an amount for costs, which was excessive and not authorized by the judgment or the law. Was the order of sale void, as found by the trial court, because it bore the endorsement of illegal and excessive items of costs? *279
It has been invariably exacted of one asserting title under a summary tax sale to show that every legal requirement pertaining to the sale has been strictly and scrupulously complied with. Not only must each thing prescribed by law be done in advance, and at the time, of the exercise of the power to sell, but it must be done exactly as prescribed. Davis v. Farnes,
So, it was decided in Lufkin v. City of Galveston,
The rule announced in Lufkin v. Galveston, supra, was held to render void a summary sale by a tax collector of land, where the amount of taxes and costs for which the land was sold was excessive by reason of the tax collector's charge of too much for his levy and deed. Eustis v. City of Henrietta,
The decisions in the two cases last cited were succinctly summarized by Judge Brown, who wrote the opinion in Eustis' case, as follows: "A sale, made in the summary manner usual in collecting taxes, for a sum exceeding that which is a lawful claim against the property has been held by this court to be void." Nalle v. City of Austin,
Speaking of the method of collecting taxes under levy and sale by the tax assessor and collector, the court said in City of Henrietta v. Eustis,
The rule that it is essential to the power to summarily sell land for delinquent taxes that every legal requirement relating to the exercise of the power be absolutely fulfilled springs from the nature of the power as derived entirely from the statutes, and from the nature of the proceeding as harsh, peremptory, ex parte, and administrative. Blackwell on Tax Titles, Secs. 121, 131.
Ought the same rule to be applied to sales for the collection of taxes, under decrees of foreclosure, rendered by courts having jurisdiction over the delinquent property, on proper notice to the owner?
None of the controlling reasons which support the rule in summary sales apply to judicial foreclosures of tax liens. Where the *280
sheriff sells to satisfy a judicial foreclosure of a tax lien, his authority is no more derived entirely from the statutes than when he sells under an ordinary execution. The valid judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction and a writ for the enforcement of the judgment are essential to confer on the sheriff the power to sell. Bailey v. Block,
The statutes authorizing suits to foreclose tax liens were attacked on the ground that our Constitution authorized only summary sales for taxes. In upholding the statutes, the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, in an opinion of Chief Justice Garrett, expressly sanctioned by this court, said: "The Constitution certainly does not, either in terms or by implication, prohibit legislation providing for the foreclosure of the lien for taxes in the courts and a sale thereof by judicial decree. The legislature clearly had the power to provide such manner for the collection of taxes. . . . There is no prohibition against judicial sales in the constitution of 1876." League v. State,
The Legislature not only provided for a judicial tax sale in contrast with the former summary tax sale, but it was careful to secure the property rights of the owner from invasion.
After imposing the duty on certain officers to cause suits to be filed in the proper district courts to recover unpaid taxes, interest, penalty and costs, and to subject the lands to which the tax lien had attached to sale to satisfy such lien, the Legislature provided: "The proper parties shall be made parties defendant in such suits, and shall be served with process and other proceedings had thereon as provided by law for suits of like character in the district courts of this State; and, in case of foreclosure, an order of sale shall issue, and the land sold thereunder as in other cases of foreclosure." Articles 7688, 7689 Vernon's Salyes' Texas Civil Statutes.
The owner is here afforded full opportunity to defend an unfounded or unjust claim for taxes. After the claim is reduced to judgment, the owner has the same opportunities to prevent the sacrifice of his property as in other judicial foreclosures and sales. It seems to us not to admit of reasonable doubt that the validity of the sale under judicial foreclosure of a tax lien is to be determined by the rules governing judicial sales and not sales purely statutory and summary. *281
The law is thus plainly written in article 7689. The proceedings before judgment are to conform to the practice in other suits in the district court for the enforcement of liens on land. A foreclosure on the land being decreed, it is prescribed in language clear and unambiguous, that an order of sale is to be issued and the land is to be sold "as in cases of otherforeclosures."
Mr. Blackwell states a familiar rule in this language: "Where the words of a statute are plain and unambiguous, there is no necessity for resorting to technical rules of construction, but the legislative will, as expressed, must be obeyed." 1 Blackwell on Tax Titles, sec. 139.
Judge Cooley says: "The underlying principle of all construction is that the intent of the legislature should be sought in the words employed to express it, and that when found it should be made to govern, not only in all proceedings which are had under the law, but in all judicial controversies which bring those proceedings under review. Beyond the words employed, if the meaning is plain and intelligible, neither officer nor court is to go in search of the legislative intent; but the legislature must be understood to intend what is plainly expressed, and nothing then remains but to give the intent effect." 1 Cooley on Taxation, (3rd Ed.), 450.
If it were premissible or necessary to look beyond the plain language of the statute, it would seem manifest that it was the intent of the Legislature to remedy the evils, which had been inseparable from the futile attempts to collect taxes through summary sales of land, by authorizing their collection through judicial sales. The evils of the method of summary sales were: first, disregard of the owner's property rights in dispensing with notice and an opportunity to be heard; and, second, inability of the government to compel payment of that to which it was lawfully entitled. The second evil was the natural outgrowth of the first. Taxes could not be collected, save to a small extent, by sales which passed nothing. The nullity of the sales resulted from the practical impossibility of proving punctilious compliance with each and every legal requirement. Yet, in no other manner than by exacting proof of such compliance could the owner's right and title be protected from unjust invasion. The remedy which the Legislature adopted for these evils was to throw around the owner's right and title every safeguard furnished by due and orderly judicial procedure; and, to put the tax sale, in consummation of a valid judicial foreclosure, on the same plane, with respect to collateral attack, as other execution sales.
It is the settled law of the State that such a defect in an execution as the inclusion therein of an excessive charge for costs renders it merely irregular but not void. Hughes v. Driver,
In Irvin v. Ferguson,
The San Antonio Court of Civil Appeals certified to the Supreme Court the question whether the failure to appoint an attorney to represent a defendant cited by publication, in a tax foreclosure suit, as required by statute, would authorize the setting aside of the sale. In answer to the question it was announced that the failure to comply with the statute was an irregularity which would not affect the purchaser's title, and that the decree of foreclosure of the tax lien, rendered without the appointment of an attorney to defend the suit, was valid. Crosby v. Bannowsky,
The opinion of Judge Brown in Crosby v. Bannowsky, supra, cites Coker v. Dawkins,
Failure to give notice to the owner of land to be sold at a summary tax sale has always been fatal to the acquisition of title by a purchaser at the sale. 1 Blackwell on Tax Titles, sec. 486; Henderson v. White,
At the same term at which it was declared in Eustis v. City of Henrietta,
The judgment foreclosing the tax lien was not only valid but seems to have been entirely regular. The attack on the sale is collateral. The order of sale was not issued without authority. The manner in which the clerk issued the authorized writ was erroneous and irregular. The sale under the valid judgment and the merely erroneous and irregular writ was not a nullity. Hence, the title of the purchaser was good against collateral attack.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is affirmed.
Affirmed.