34 Iowa 108 | Iowa | 1871
The plaintiff, in the petition, states that since the 29th day of September, 1865, the said county of Guthrie has been and still is the owner of the following described lands, situated in Carroll county, Iowa, to wit: The northwest quarter and the south-east quarter of section thirty-three, and the north-east quarter of section thirty-five, in township eighty-three, north of range thirty-six, west of the fifth principal meridian, containing four hundred and eighty acres. That said lands were granted by the United States to the State of Iowa, as indemnity for swamp and overflowed lands in the said Guthrie county, entered of the United States by the location of military bounty-land warrants, under and by virtue of certain acts of congress, to wit: “An act to enable the State of Arkansas and other States to reclaim the swamp lands within their limits,” approved September 28, 1850. “An act for the relief of purchasers and locators of swamp and overflowed lands,” approved
It is also expressly averred that the plaintiff has, at no time, held said lands for pecuniary profit, blit has, at all times, held them for the use and benefit of the public; that plaintiff has, at all times, been ready and anxious to sell said lands, whenever, by such sale, the public interests could be subserved, and the purposes of the grant accomplished ; that by reason of the lands being remote from timber and settlements, they could not, hitherto, have been sold to advantage. That the defendant has levied taxes upon said lands for the years 1865 to 1870 inclusive, and has sold the same for taxes to the defendants named. Other averments more in detail are also made. The defendants demurred because the petition did not state facts constituting a cause of action, and because it states facts which avoid the cause of action. This demurrer was sustained, and thereon arises the only question for our decision.
Our conclusion that the lands were not taxable prior to 1870 is fortified by a legislative construction implied in a a statute, approved April 16, 1870, enacting “ that any and all lands in any county in this State, which are owned or held by any other county or counties claiming title under locations with swamp-land indemnity, scrip or otherwise, shall be taxed the same as other real estate within the limits of the county.” If such lands were taxable before this act was passed, then there was no necessity for the act. The enactment of the statute amounts to a legislative declaration that such lands were not taxable before. This declaration accords with our view of the law. The proposition, under the averments of the petition and the requirements of the statutes through which the county derives its title, we deem too clear to demand further elucidation from us.
But, in order to avoid any further controversy in regard to the questions involved in this case, we deem it proper to add, that, in our view, under the statute last above quoted, the said lands are liable to taxation for the year 1870. They were owned by the county on the first day of January of that year, and the statute took effect before the
Reversed.