167 Ga. 671 | Ga. | 1929
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Section 1070 of the Civil Code of 1910 provides that “Any wild lands not given in for taxes in the county in which they may be shall be subject to double tax, as other property; and it shall be the duty of the tax-collector, when taxes are not paid in the time provided by law, to issue executions against said wild land, and after due advertisement, as now prescribed by law, to sell said lands for payment of taxes.” Can a tax-collector under this section issue an execution for taxes due upon unreturned wild lands, in the absence of an assessment thereof for taxation, upon the tax-digests of the county in which the land is located? “All lands in this State subject to taxation, whether improved or unimproved, shall be returned by the person or persons owning the same, his, her, or their agent or attorney, to the receiver of the county where the land lies.” Civil Code (1910), § 1068. The form of return for all property, including improved and unimproved land, is provided. § 1087. Tax-receivers are required to receive all returns of property for taxation, to make out and perfect three digests of such returns in writing and figures, plainly, legibly, and neatly, one for the comptroller-general, one for the ordinary, and one for the tax-collector, and deposit one with each of said officers, to embrace in said digests a list of all defaulters, the amount of their direct and double tax, and all property assessed by them and returned by no one, and to assess upon the digest deposited with the ordinary the county taxes according to law, and the rate of per cent, levied by the proper county authorities. § 1197. “When the owner of property has omitted to return the same for taxation at the time
In case there is land in a county, which is not returned by anybody, and the tax-receiver does not know the owner or possessor, “it is his duty to assess and double-tax it, describing it particularly.” This same power is conferred on the tax-collector as to such property, when not assessed or overlooked by the receiver. § 1106, supra. “It is the duty of tax-collector to search out and ascertain as far as possible all taxable property not returned to the
So we are of the opinion that the plaintiff’s title to the land in dispute, derived from the sale thereof under an execution issued by the tax-collector, when the land had never been assessed and an