Flanagan v. Dunne

105 F. 828 | 5th Cir. | 1901

PAEDEE, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). The second assignment of error presents the main question on this appeal, and it is whether the assessment made in 1894 of the property of the Florida Land & Lumber Company in the name of the Florida Land & Improvement Company as owner was a valid assessment. The law of the state of Florida providing for the manner of making assessments on lands is as follows:

“Sec. 21. The lands in each county in this state, subject to taxation and not included in the limits of incorporated towns and cities and laid off in lots and blocks, shall be assessed by townships; and in making the assessment the assessor shall begin with the lowest numbered section in each township, and shall assess each lot, tract or parcel of land therein, in accordance with the description as returned for taxation by the owner or agent: provided, the assessor may correct any errors in the description so returned, and if the owner or agent fails to make such returns the assessor shall assess all lands not returned, according to the government survey, and can assess in one assessment all the lands in a section belonging to the same owner, or *831assessed as ‘unknown’; and the assessor shall continue in his assessment roll the description and assessment of the remaining sections in tlie township in the order of their numbers, and in the same manner lie shall then assess all the other townships in his county in like manner: provided, that when private surveys of land or descriptions by metes and bounds have taken -1 he place of government surveys, and the land is known, designated, and described only by such private surveys or metes and bounds, the description in the assessment shall he made in accordance with such surveys or descriptions as recorded in the office of the clerk of the circuit court; and when Spanish grants or donations exist in any county in this state which have not been surveyed and platted, or which plats are not recorded in the office of tlie clerk of the circuit court, the assessor for such county shall assess the several tracts of land owned in such grants, not platted as above, describing the same by reference to deed of record, giving tlie book and page of record as appears in tlie office of tlie clerk of tlie circuit court, and if the deed conveying such tracts is not recorded upon its production to tlie assessor he may describe the land as being that tract, lot, piece or parcel described in a deed executed by the grantor, (naming him) to the grantee (naming him) therein, and bearing date (giving tlie date shown by deed), and such description shall be valid and sufficient for ay purposes of the assessment. The county commissioners of each county in this slate shall purchase and have mounted on cloth, and then bound in volume or volumes, two complete sets of plioto-llthograplied township maps in their respective counties, one to he kept in the office of tlie clerk of the circuit court and the other in the assessor’s office in their several counties, and all these maps, and all maps and information which may come into the hands of the several assessors, which may be used in preparing the assessment roll, shall remain in the assessor’s office and he delivered to his successor in office: provided, that any maps now owned by any tax assessor may bo purchased at their discretion by the county commissioners at a reasonable price. And should any assessor so fail to deliver said maps as above provided, his bond shall be responsible to the value of said property, as required for the faithful discharge of his duty. He shall make the assessments of real estate in cities and towns, by lots and blocks, in regular order, throughout the original plau of the city or town, and all additions thereto, all the lots of a block to be listed in their regular order-under the letter, number or other designation of the block as filed and recorded in tlie office of the clerk of the circuit court, blocks also to follow in their regular order, (and all lots or sub-divisions of a block, when belonging to one owner and being numbered consecutively and lying contiguously, may be assessed together and the taxes extended on one line,) each of tlie smallest sub-divisions of such block to be entered and the taxes thereon to be extended separately-.
“Sec. 22. Tlie assessor shall ascertain by personal inspection, where not already sufficiently acquainted therewith, tlie value of the lands, and assess them at their full cash value, and set down in the assessment rolls following and opposite the description of the lands, the name of the owner or person in whose name the return is made, and when the land has not been returned and when the assessor has no means of discovering the name of the owner the assessor shall enter the word ‘Unknown’ in the column of the assessment roll provided for the name of the owners or persons making the return. The assessment books as provided by the comptroller shall contain an alphabetical index in which the assessor shall be required to indicate 1he name and tlie post-office address, if it can be ascertained, of each person whose name appears upon tlie assessment roll, and shall Indicate opposite such name, as indexed, the pages upon which any tax or taxes may he found to be assessed.
“Sec. 23. In order to facilitate the assessor in ascertaining the names and post-office address of owners of real estate, the several clerks of the circuit courts in each county of this state, shall be required to furnish to tlie assess- or of his county, on the first day of January of each year, an abstract showing the names of grantors and grantees, and description of land, and their post-office address, (if it ean be ascertained), with date of transfer of deeds and conveyances which have been filed for record in his office during the previous year; which abstract of transfers shall guide the assessor in entering the *832names of owners of real estate on the assessment roll for the ensuing year. The clerk of the circuit court in compensation for his services shall he allowed ten cents for each instrument of conveyance .filed for record in' his office, which amount he shall add to his legal costs for recording the same.”
Laws Fla. c. 4115.

The intent of the lawmaker unquestionably was to have the assessments of lands in the names of the owners, and that the land should be assessed otherwise only when the assessor could not, with diligence and the means at hand, obtain the name of the owner, in which case the assessment could be entered “Owner Unknown.” To find the name of the ownér, the assessor was to look to the records, the returns, if any, made, and other information at hand. Under former statutes, very similar as to the duties of assessors, the purpose to assess the land in the name of the owner has been clearly decided. Thus, in L’Engle v. Railroad Co., 21 Fla. 353, it was held that an assessment in the name of one who claimed on a master’s deed based upon the foreclosure of a mortgage, the mortgagor not having a good title, was void. And in L’Engle v. Wilson, Id. 461, it was held that an assessment to Parkhurst, when the land belonged to Wilson, the executor of the estate of Parkhurst, was void. See, also, to the same purport, Brown v. Castellaw, 33 Fla. 204, 210, 14 South. 822. In Stackpole v. Hancock, 40 Pla. 362, 384, 24 South. 914, 921, where lands belonged to W. P. Stackpole and J. L. Connor, and J. L. Connor made a return for taxation, yet the assessor returned the lands in the name of W. L. Connor, the assessment and all proceedings thereunder were held void. We quote from the case as follows:

“T,he evidence introduced by tbe complainants was sufficient to prove, in the absence of a counter showing, that the land, was returned to the assessor for the year 1888 in the name of J. L. Connor, who was an owner to the extent of an undivided half interest, and that the assessor undertook to base his action in assessing the property upon this return. It was his duty to make the assessment to the owner or person making the return, but this was not done. The assessment was to a person not the owner, nor to one making the return, and in this respect it was clearly in violation of the statute.”

The assessment law given supra authorizes returns to be made by owners and agents; and declares the consideration to be given by the assessor to such returns; and we are clear that when, by the law, the assessor is authorized to assess property in the name of the person who makes the return, the return referred to is the return authorized by the law, — the return made by the owner or agent, a legal return. And it is on this line that we understand the court in Stackpole v. Hancock, supra, where it was said, “It was his duty to make the assessment to the owner or person making the return.” To hold otherwise would be to permit the assessor, who does not know the owner, and has no means of discovering the name of the owner, to receive and act on a return made,by any one merely reciting that he was not the owner. In the present case no return was made by any owner or agent, nor purporting to be by any owner or agent. The return made and presumably acted upon shows on its facé that it was by one who not only had no title, but did not claim any. Under the law of Florida a mortgage is a specific lien on the property therein described, and not a conveyance of the legal title or of the right of *833possession: Rev. St. Fla. § 1982. See Pasco v. Gamble; 15 Fla. 562; Jordan v. Sayre, 24 Fla. 1, 3 South. 329. The return in question, so far as. the assessment of the land to the owner was concerned, was wholly outside of the matter, and for the assessor to have taken it to make his tableau of assessment was unlawful, and invalidated the assessment. All proceedings on a void assessment are void. L’Engle v. Railroad Co., supra; L’Engle v. Wilson, supra; Brown v. Castellaw, 33 Fla. 204, 14 South. 822; Daniel v. Taylor, 33 Fla. 636, 15 South. 313. And see Stackpole v. Hancock, supra.

This decision renders it proper to affirm the decree of the court below without the necessity of considering other assignments, unless there he merit in the third assignment, which is so general in its character that it might be wholly disregarded under onr rules. Tinder this assignment the appellant undertakes to raise the question •that, as the Florida Land & Improvement Company made a.return to the assessor that it held a mortgage upon the lands in controversy, upon which return the assessor assessed the lands in the name of the Florida Land & Improvement Company, and thereafter, on the foreclosure of a mortgage and the decree of sale thereunder, the Florida Land & Improvement Company became the successful bidder for the said lands, and before confirmation and deed assigned the hid to the present complainant, the present complainant is estopped from denying that the lands in controversy were not properly assessed to the Florida Land & Improvement Company as the owner. We have found that the act of the assessor, on the return of the Florida Land &. Improvement Company, in assessing the lands to the company was illegal and void. The present complainant does not hold title under the Florida Land & Improvement Company, and is neither by deed, record, nor en pais estopped by any of the acts and declarations of said company. So far as this record goes, we doubt if there would be any estoppel as against the Florida Land &' Improvement Company, if that company were before the court asking relief. In short, we find none of the elements of an estoppel as against the complainant, and hardly consider the argument made on that line as serious. The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.