90 So. 419 | La. | 1921
Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment rejecting their demand to have a tax deed decreed null and to regain title to a tract of land containing 14.72 acres in the city of Shreveport. The district court maintained the defendants’ plea of prescription of 10 years, acquirendi causa; which is the only defense they urge.
The land in contest is entirely within the 5. W. Vi of N. W. Vi of section 2, in township 17 north, range 14 west, and is described by survey thus: Commencing at a point on tbe south or southwest side of the main track of the IC. C. S. & G. Railway, and 100 feet therefrom (measured at right angles), said starting point being 15 feet west from the east boundary line of the S. W. % of N. W. % of section 2, in township 17 north, range 14 west; thence south (on a line parallel with said east boundary line of the S. W. % of N. W. Vi of section 2, and 15 feet therefrom) 248.6 feet, to the center line of section 2; thence west (along said center line of section 2) 1,305 feet, to the west boundary line of the section; thence north (along said west boundary line of section 2) 728.57 feet, to a point on the south or southwest side of said K. C. S. & G. Railroad track and 100 feet distant therefrom (measured at right angles); and thence in a southeastern direction, on a line parallel with said railroad track and 100 feet distant therefrom, to the place of beginning.
Plaintiffs are the heirs at law of Patrick S. Eivers, who acquired title to the N. W. % of the section by patent from the United States, dated the 19th of November, 1874. The heirs of Eivers sold the east half of this quarter section to J. B. Chrisman, who sold it to Andrew Currie. The latter acquired title to the west half of the same quarter section, including, of course, the 14.72 acres in contest, by virtue of .the tax deed, dated the 12th of August, 1882, for the taxes of 1881, said to have been assessed to the heirs of P. S. Eivers. The property is described in the tax deed as‘follows:
“W. Vs of N. W. Vi, Sec. 2, Twp. 17, range 14, of the parish of Caddo, together with all buildings and improvements thereon, and being same property assessed to heirs of P. S. Ei-vers upon the tableaux of taxes in and for the parish of Caddo for the year 1881.”
The tax sale to Currie was recorded in the conveyance records of Caddo parish on the 12th of August. 1882. The defendants hold title by mesne conveyances from Currie.
It appears that the tax collector, before offering the property for sale for taxes, corrected the assessment to this extent: He erased the initials “C. C.” before the name “Eivers,” and interlined the name “Patrick” and the word “Heirs,” thus making the assessment read as if made in the name “Patrick Eivers Heirs.” He did not, however, on the assessment roll, change the erroneous subdivision “N. %” to the correct subdivision “W. %,” but he described the correct subdivision, “W. in the tax deed; and he further described the land in the deed as “being same property assessed to the heirs of P.S. Eivers upon the tableaux of taxes in and for the parish of Caddo for the year 1881,” although, in fact, it had not been so assessed.
The revenue law then in force, being Act 77 of 1880, did not purport to give the tax collector authority to correct an error in the name of a person assessed for taxes, although section 49 of the statute did give him authority to correct any clerical error in the description of any property assessed, viz.:
“If any clerical error in the description of any property be discovered by the tax collector or sheriff it shall be his duty to note the correct description on the margin of the tax list and tax' rolls, and to advertise and sell said property by its correct description.”
The important fact is that the land belonging to the heirs of Patrick S. Eivers, being the W. % of N. W. % of section 2, was so described in the tax deed, and was further described therein as having been assessed in their name; and we presume that it was so advertised. Whether it was or was not so adVertised, however, would not alter the fact that the tax deed was, on its face, translative
Counsel for appellants cites seven decisions in support of his contention that an invalid tax sale cannot support the plea of prescription of 10 years, acquirendi causa, even though the deed be prima facie valid; none of which decisions, however, do we find appropriate, viz.: Renshaw, Cammack & Co. v. Imboden, 31 La. Ann. 661; Marmion v. McPeak, 51 La. Ann. 1531, 26 South. 376; Millaudon v. Gallagher, 104 La. 714, 29 South. 307; Cane v. Herndon, 107 La. 591, 32 South. 33; Guillory v. Elms, 126 La. 560, 52 South. 767; Quaker Realty Co. v. Posey, 130 La. 941, 58 South. 822; Board of Commissioners v. Concordia Land & Timber Co., 141 La. 247, 74 South. 921. In the twn cases last mentioned, as in Cane v. Herndon, the ruling was with regard to the prescription of three years, not 10 years. In Renshaw, Cammack & Co. v. Imboden, the nullity of the tax sale was patent on the face of the deed because, in violation of the statute, it was made for less than the amount of the taxes, penalties, and costs, as shown in the deed. In Marmion v. McPeak, as in Millaudon v. Gallagher, the purchaser at tax sale did not hold title in good faith because he did not pay the taxes which, by the terms of the statute, he was required to assume, and which, by the terms of the deed, he did assume. In Guillory v. Elms, the purchaser at tax sale was held to have been in bad faith because he prepared the deed, and wrote into it a description of property which could not otherwise have been identified as the property assessed..
There is no proof nor presumption, in fact it is not even contended, that Andrew Currie was ever aware that the tax collector had corrected the assessment, or that the description in his tax deed did not correspond with the description in the assessment, or that a part of the land had been dually assessed, or that any part of the taxes for which the property was sold had been paid.
It is argued on behalf of appellants that, even if we should 'give effect to the correction made by the tax collector, and treat the assessment made in the name of C. C. Eivers as having been made in the name of the heirs of Patrick S. Eivers, there was no assessment of the south half of the land sold to Currie for taxes. That is true, unless we regard the description N. % of N. W. %, as a clerical error, having been intended for the W. % of N. W. %, because the N. y2 of the N. W. % takes in only the N. y2 of the W. % of the quarter section, besides, of course, the N. y2 of the E. y2 of the quarter section. But that fact does not alter the fact that the tax deed was, on its face, translative of the W. y2 of the quarter section, which was the correct description of the land that belonged to the heirs of Patrick S. Eivers, and which, we assume, was intended to be assessed to them, or to
“Assuming, however, that there was no assessment, and that, there having been no assessment, there could have been no valid sale for taxes within the meaning of the Constitution, we are, nevertheless, of opinion that defendant’s title is protected, by the prescription of 10 years, since the evidence to the effect that he received the deed here, attacked, in its present condition, is uncontradieted, and, as the party who delivered it to him testifies that he received it in that condition from the officer by whom it was executed, it is clear that, even if defendant had been able to read, the inter-lineations, so far as he is concerned, are sufficiently accounted for.”
The case before us is a better basis for the 10 years’ prescription than was the case of Hickey v. Smith, because, in this case, there were no interlineations in the tax deed, nor other such circumstance that might have suggested to the purchaser at the tax sale to investigate the assessment rolls before paying for the property, Our conclusion is that the tax sale to Andrew Currie, being prima facie valid, although in fact invalid, was a title sufficient to sustain the prescription of 10 years acquirendi causa.
The judgment is affirmed, at appellants’ cost