79 Tenn. 38 | Tenn. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
Bill filed upon a covenant .of general warranty of title to a lot of ground in the city of Memphis, to
The lot in question was sold and conveyed to C. Kortrecht on June 5, 1857, by the Planters Bank, that bank having bought it several years before from the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Memphis. On May 8, 1861, Kortrecht sold and conveyed the lot to Hiram Tillman, defendant’s intestate, and he, on October 26, 1868, sold and conveyed the lot to the complainant with a covenant of general warranty. All the taxes on this lot, State, county and city, both before and after the year 1857, were paid; except the United States district tax of 1864, for which the lot was sold and afterwards redeemed. Kortrecht was a man of wealth up to and including the year 1873, a good business man, and always specially careful in looking after his taxes. He died in 1878 insolvent, and his wife died the next year. Since the commencement of this litigation, the papers of Kortrecht have been examined, and no receipts for taxes paid on his property can be found prior to the year 1866. Tillman paid the taxes on the lot promptly, lived in the city from 1868 until his death in 1876, was solvent, and left a solvent estate. No claim for the city tax of 1857 seems to have been made on any one, and the existence of the tax was unknown to the complainant until a few days-before she paid it. The tax was assessed by the municipal authorities for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1857, and ending June 30, 1858, The tax not having
During the civil war Memphis was occupied by the armies of both sides, and all the records of the courts were carried South when the Federal troops entered the city in 1862’. The result was loss of papers and confusion in the public records. The State and county have not, therefore, attempted since the close of the war to collect any State or county taxes assessed before the year 1865. The corporation of the city of Memphis, however, assessed and colletced taxes during the war, and the city and its receiver collected back-taxes to the year 1856, and earlier.
From these facts it may be conceded, and the case has been argued upon the assumption, that the payment of the tax in controversy by the complainant was to avoid a threatened suit therefor by the city receiver, and that the successful prosecution of such a
By a well known rule of the common law time does not run against the sovereign or government. And therefore it has been almost uniformly held by the courts that the ordinary statutes of limitation, which, only bear the remedy, do not bind the State: Singleton v. Ake, 3 Hum., 626. The rule is founded on the principle of. public policy that the property and rights vested in the government for, the benefit of the whole community should' not be dependent upon the negligence or bad faith of the agents or officers to 'whom the conduct of public business must necessarily be entrusted: Swan v. Mayor and Aldermen of Knoxville, 11 Hum., 130. Lapse of time alone cannot, therefore, impair a public right or extinguish a public debt by raising a conclusive presumption of grant or payment, when it is made clearly to appear that no» grant or payment was ever in fact made: People v. Supervisors of Columbia County, 10 Wend,, 363; United States v. Williams, 4 McLean, 567. For neither lapse of time nor the laches of public officials can prevent
The authorities are hopelessly in conflict whether-this prerogative of government extends to municipal corporations considered as branches of the government. The weight of reason, and perhaps, of authority, is to. concede the exemption to such corporations as to all matters in which they stand in the place of the State for public purposes: Sims v. Chattanooga, 2 Lea, 694. And it has accordingly been held that taxes assessed by a municipal corporation for the public benefit stand* like the taxes assessed by the State: City of Memphis v. Looney, 9 Baxt., 130; State ex. rel. v. Butler, MS. opinion of this court at April term, 1882. The general statute of limitations was, therefore, no bar to the enforcement by the city or its receiver of taxes in controversy, nor would the lapse of time or laches of the city officials prevent a recovery of the tax if' elearly- shown to be properly assessed, unpaid, and a valid lien on the property oh which it was levied.
But these principles are entirely consistent with the rule, equally well established, that although lapse of time does not, of itself, furnish a conclusive legal bar to the demand of the sovereign or State, yet, if the demand might have been paid, or the adverse claim might have had a legal commencement, such payment or commencement may be presumed after many years of uninterrupted, adverse possession or enjoyment. The presumption in such case, subject to rebuttal, is one of fact to be deduced from the entire evidence and circumstances according to the common and received,
In like manner, at common law every debt evi-denced by specialty or judgment was presumed to be paid after the lapse of twenty years: Freeman on Judgments, sec. 464. By early judicial legislation in this State, the period of time required to raise this presumption was reduced to sixteen years: Blockburn v. Squib, Peck, 64. The presumption is not conclusive, but merely throws upon the party seeking to enforce his debt after the lapse of the prescribed period of ill-motion, the burden of proving that the debt is-unpaid: Stanley v. Kinzer, 7 Lea, 454; Thompson v. Thompson, 2 Head, 405. Independent of this arbitrary presumption from the lapse of a fixed period of time, the lapse of an indefinite period, though less than the full term of presumption, is a proper circumstance for the consideration of the jury, and may, in connection with other circumstances, authorize the presumption of payment as a fact: Freeman on Judgments, sec. 465. "Eight years with circumstances ha ye been held sufficient
The claim of the city in the case before us may be resolved into the debt evidenced by the tax, and' the lien on the land given by the statute. The only evidence introduced in support of the claim is the assessment on the tax books for the year 1857, and that there is nothing in the book to show satisfaction or payment. But it is also' shown that the city in 1858 , sold the lot in satisfaction of the tax, and bought it in for the amount due. Prima faeie there ought to-have been an entry of satisfaction on the tax book, and the fact, which is conceded, unexplained is an end of the claim for the debt. And no explanation is offered. In this view, conceding the validity of the-