33 Fla. 356 | Fla. | 1894
The Florida Land and Mortgage Company, Limited^ filed a bill to have a certain tax deed obtained by Henry F. Graham and Lester Hubbell, and certain conveyances executed by them and their grantees, can-celled and removed, on the ground that they const!-, tuted a cloud upon the title to alleged real estate of •' the company situated in Hamilton county, Florida, On final hearing the chancellor decreed that said tax: deed and conveyances thereunder were void, and that-they be cancelled upon the payment by the complainant company of certain sums of money on account of.' taxes paid on the lands in question by the defendants-since the issuance of the tax deed declared void. From; this decree the defendants appealed, and the first question which they present for our consideration calls in question the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court to enter- • tain the suit. It is contended that the Florida Land, and Mortgage Company when it filed its bill was not in possession of the lands therein described, and as a. consequence could not maintain a bill to remove an cloud upon the title to the same. The lands in question embrace a large body consisting of some seventy-thousand acres.
The answers admit the conveyance to Sir Edward J. Reed, but it is alleged to have been made by the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of the State of Florida, and not by the State. The conveyance from .Reed to the company is also admitted, but this is •coupled with a denial that the company at the time of ■ filing the bill was the owner of the lands, it being alleged that certain named defendants were the owners, deriving title under the tax sale alleged to be void.
As to the character and occupancy of the lands, the ■ defendants answer as follows: “Defendants say they .’have no personal knowledge whether said lands are unimproved and unoccupied lands; therefore neither ad- ' mit nor deny same of their own knowledge, but demand strict proof of the same. Defendants say that ■ they are informed and believe, and so state on such information and belief, that some small portion of said ’ lands are occupied by persons other than complainant 'or its members, officers or agents.”
The tax assessor of Hamilton county for the years '1885 and 1886, testified that he did not know condition ■of lands in 1883 and 1884, but in 1885 said lands were -'unoccupied and unenclosed, except some few small
The] foregoing is substantially what the record shows as to the]character and possession of the lands involved in this suit, and counsel for appellants insist that it shows an absence of jurisdiction in the Circuit Court to entertain the cause. On this point the cases of Sloan vs. Sloan, 25 Fla., 53, 5 South. Rep., 603; United States vs. Wilson, 118 U. S., 86; Ellis vs. Davis, 109 U. S., 485; Killian vs. Ebbinghaus, 110 U. S., 568; Fussell vs. Gregg, 113 U. S., 550; Hipp vs. Babin, 19 How., 271; 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., sec. 700, note a; and 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., sec. 1399, note 4, are cited. In the Sloan case it was held that the holder of a legal title in possession could invoke the aid of a court of equity to cancel, a tax deed regular upon its face and made by statute prima facie evidence of the regularity of all the proceedings connected with the assessment and sale •of the property, but which was, in fact, founded upon .a void assessment. In that case the complainants were in actual possession, by agent, of the land, In Patton vs. Crumpler, 29 Fla., 573, 11 South. Rep., 225, it was decided that where complainant’s title was legal in its nature he must allege possession in himself in order to obtain the aid of a court of equity to remove a cloud from his title, and a failure to do so was fatal to the bill. In both of these cases, as well as in Haworth vs.
The revenue act under which the lands in question were sold (Chapter 3413, laws of 1883), makes the tax deed prima facie evidence of the regularity of all the proceedings connected with the assessment and sale of the lands, and bars suits by the former owner to set aside a tax deed made in pursuance of any sale of lands for taxes unless commenced within three years after the record^ of such deed in the county where the lands lie. The wisdom of the rule announced by the decisions referred to, finds ample vindication in the i’acts of the case before us. Here a large body of
It is also contended by counsel for appellants that the record of the tax deed put the .grantees therein constructively in possession of the lands, and they must be regarded under the statute as' in possession as against the former owner. The statute applicable provided that “no suit or proceeding shall be commenced by a former owner or claimant, his heirs or assigns, or his or their legal representatives, to set aside any deed made in pursuance of any sale of lands for taxes, or against the grantee in such deed, his heirs or assigns, or legal representatives, to recover the possession of said lands, unless such suit or proceedings be commenced within three years after the recording of such deed in the county where the lands lie,” with a saving of right to sue by certain persons under disability. The question of the bar of the statute as against the former owner is not involved in this case, as the bill to cancel the tax
The right of the former owner to file a bill to remove .a tax deed as a cloud upon title is recognized (Myers vs. Coonradt, supra), and where the tax claimant is not in actual possession of the land there is no legal remedy afforded, and no other way open to test the tax deed except by bill to remove it as a cloud, which, under proper allegations and proof, we think can be done.
From what has been said it follows that a complain.ant, in order to maintain his bill, should allege and prove, when denied, the fact that the land was wild and unoccupied. In the case before us we think the ■complainant was successful in this respect as to nearly nil the lands described in the bill. The proof shows,
The collector of revenue of Hamilton county sold, at a tax sale in May, 1886, to the State of Florida, the entire body of lands described in the bill, and the certificates of purchase issued to the State were sold in, November, 1887, to Graham & Hubb, who obtained thereon a tax deed from the clerk of the Circuit Court for Hamilton county and had it recorded in December of that year in said county. Subsequently Graham & Hubbell conveyed the lands to Gates, who sold to the-other defendants named in the bill. The tax sale to-the State and the subsequent deeds made thereunder, it is alleged, constitute a cloud upon complainant’s title. One of the grounds impeaching the validity of' the tax sale in 1886 is, that it was for the non-payment of the entire taxes assessed against said lands in 1885, for the years 1883,1884 and 1885, and that at the time-of said assessment and sale the taxes for the year 1883 had been paid to the State. The payment to the State is alleged to have been made as follows, viz: The-
The defendants further deny in their answers that; the lands were assessed for taxes in 1883 and sold in. 1884 in such manner, or with such effect as to constitute a legal assessment and sale binding in law, and while an attempt was made to assess said lands and sell a portion of them for the taxes of 1883, they allege that said attempted assessment and sale were-totally void and of no effect, and the payment thereunder amounted to no satisfaction of the taxes for 1883^,
Defendants further answer that a suit was commenced in the United States Circuit Court in April, 1885, by complainant against Baker and Blackwell and the clerk of the Circuit Court of Hamilton county, to enjoin the issuance of a tax deed on the certificate issued to Baker and Blackwell in 1884, and it is alleged that complainant in this said bill, upon the oath of its then managing officer, charged that the said assessment and sale were totally void, and that the payment •of any tax thereunder would not prevent the State •officials from proceeding to properly assess and collect the taxes of said year 1888 upon said lands, and also ¡set out at large in said bill other grounds for avoiding •said assessment and sale. . That upon the allegations •of this bill an injunction was issued restraining the .said clerk of the Circuit Court from issuing a deed upon the said certificate "of purchase by Baker and Blackwell, and this injunction, it is alleged, has never been dissolved, and a similar suit was commenced in the Circuit Court for Hamilton county in March, 1885.
It is admitted that Baker and Blackwell answered this bill, insisting that they were purchasers in good faith, ancL demanded the amount they had paid for taxes, and interest; but it is alleged that defendants had no personal knowledge of any payments to Baker ■and Blackwell by complainant on account of said certificate of purchase, and strict proof is demanded on this point.
It is further alleged that after said legal proceedings •on the part of complainant and its assertions of the total invaliditj7 and illegality of the assessment and ¡sale of the lands for the year 1888, the tax assessor for
The sale of the lands in 1886 for the taxes of 1883, 1884 and 1885, is alleged to have been regularly made upon due notice, and that the sale to the State was good. Also it is alleged that under the circumstances complainant can not be permitted now to assert that by the alleged purchase of the certificate from Baker and Blackwell the same operated as a payment of the taxes for 1883, in such sense as to render illegal the subsequent assessment and sale for the taxes of 1883, 1884 and 1885, and it is insisted that the taxes for 1883 were not thereby paid. The answers make reference to assessment rolls and notices of tax sales filed as exhibits therewith. Copies of the assessment rolls, or portions of them, for the years 1883 and 1885, and the notices and reports of the tax sales of lands in the years 1884 and 1886, as well as certified copies of the bill and answer in the suit commenced in the United States Circuit Court against Baker and Blackwell and the clerk of the Circuit Court of Hamilton county, were introduced in evidence and are before us.
Counsel for appellants contend that the assessment in 1883 was so irregular and defective as to amount to no assessment at all, and that they could be assessed for that year in 1885, and sold under Section 26, ’Chapter 3413, laws of 1883. This section provides .that ‘ ‘if any assessor, when making his assessment, .shall discover that any land in his county was omitted in the assessment roll of either or all of the three previous years, and was then liable to .taxation, he shall, in addition to the assessment of such land for that .year, assess the same separately for such year or years .that it may have been so omitted, at the just value ■thereof in such year, noting distinctly the year when .such omission occurred; and such assessment shall have the same force and effect as it would have had if añade in the year the same was omitted, and taxes shall
Upon what principle can these lands be resold for the same taxes? If it can be-done at all, it must be by-virtue of the 26th section of Chapter 3413, the revenue-act in force when the sale of 1886 was made. The design of the section referred to was to impose upon lands subject to taxation and omitted from the tax rolls of any or all of the three years past at the time of any annual assessment, their just proportion of the- burdens, of government by being put on the ro-l-li at the- just-value thereof in the year or years they were- omitted. The statute contemplates that the lands shall have-been oipitted from the assessment roll of some one of the three previous years, and that the taxes thereon-, shall not have been paid. After providing for the assessment of the omitted lands and declaring that the assessment of them in a subsequent year shall have
By the 5th section of Chapter 3685, approved June ‘ 2nd, 1887, the Comptroller, when proven to him that '.lands had been sold for unpaid taxes when the taxes on the same had been duly paid, or that lands were not ¿subject to taxation at the time of the assessment on '•twhich they were paid, was authorized to cancel the
Before the expiration of the year for redemption,, after the sale in 1884, appellee filed a bill in the Federal Circuit Court against the purchasers at that sale and the clerk of the Circuit Court of Hamilton county to enjoin the issuance of a tax deed on the certificate' of purchase. The assessment for 1883 was alleged in this bill to be void and insufficient to authorize a valid sale of the lands, and that the purchasers at said sale did not acquire a right to a tax deed on their certificate-of purchase. The bill alleged the sale to be void on several grounds: That the lands were assessed as one contiguous or compact body, while they were in many separate tracts and in different portipns of the county, and the assessor did not enter on the assessment roll a description of each tract of land separately,' with the-cash value set opposite the same, nor was the amount, of taxes in dollars and cents for the various state and county purposes placed opposite each separate tract, but the entire body was assessed as one tract at an aggregate valuation, and the various amounts of taxes were given as aggregate sums; that under the name of' Sir Edward J. Reed, imperfect and insufficient descriptions of the lands were made upon the assessment roll without stating whether the townships were north or south of the base line, or whether the ranges were east or west of the Tallahassee meridian, and that the said lands were situated on both sides of said base line; that the assessor did not visit and inspect said lands before affixing a valuation thereon, and he was
The levy of any tax for school purposes was alleged to be without authority of law, and that notwithstanding the imperfect and insufficient description of the lands and the void assessment of the taxes, the collector of revenue of Hamilton county proceeded to sell the same at a tax sale in 1884, and that Baker and Blackwell claimed to buy the same; that they agreed to-take 49,500 acres'of the land, or thereabouts, and this-number of acres was knocked off to them to be taken from the south-east corner of the lands, but as said lands were assessed as one entire body, and are separated into different tracts over the county, no right to any specific portion thereof was acquired at said sale. This sale was also alleged to be void because the notice of sale did not contain a proper description of the lands and was not published the length of time required by law. In reference to redeeming the lands, the bill contained the following, mz: “That your orator, though denying the regularity and legality of said assessment, and the proceedings thereunder, yet to avoid and escape the delay, expense and trouble of litigation incident to a contest, desires and offers to>
The answer of Baker and Blackwell controverted many of the grounds of irregularity alleged, and concluded with an offer to surrender and transfer their certificate of purchase acquired at the tax sale to the •company upon payment of the amount expended in the purchase of the lands, with costs and interest. The proof shows that this offer was accepted, the money paid by appellee, and the litigation terminated.
It is urged by counsel for appellants that appellee is •estopped by the allegations in its bill filed in the Federal Court, to which reference is here made, from asserting that the taxes on the lands in question for 1883 were paid by reason of the tax pi’oceedings -and sale in 1884. We think this contention is without merit, and that there is' no principle of estoppel to prevent appellee from maintaining its present suit. It is true, as a general rule, that a party will not be permitted to assume inconsistent positions in legal proceedings, and that when he has successfully made an allegation in pleading in reference to a fact, he will be ■estopped to deny the truth of such allegation in a subsequent action between the same parties involving the ■same transaction. The bill filed by appellee in the Federal Court was against the purchasers at the tax .sale in 1884 and the clerk of the Circuit Court of Ham
The chancellor decreed the cancellation of the tax ■ deed obtained by Graham & Hubbell and the conveyances executed by them to the lands embraced in the tax deed, upon condition that appellee pay the taxes on the lands for 1884, 1885, and all subsequent taxes paid by the' purchasers under the tax sale. Counsel for appellants insist that the court should have decreed the payment of the amount of purchase money paid by the purchasers for the lands, instead of the taxes expended on the same. It is not claimed that the .amount required to be paid by appellee on account of
The distribution of the money required to be paid iuto the registry of the court by the complainant on ■account of taxes paid by defendants subsequent to the tax sale was the subject of further action on the part of the court, and the rights of the respective claimants thereto can be protected.
After answers filed by defendants in the Circuit Court the bill was dismissed by orcLer of the clerk on following rule day for want of replication, and on petition to the judge this order was vacated and com
An order extending the time for taking testimony was also granted on application of complainant. The-ground for extending the time for taking testimony was-stated to be on account of an epidemic of yellow fever-prevailing in the city where complainant’s solicitors, resided. The orders of the court referred to are assigned as error here, but they relate to matters resting in thé sound discretion of the court, and unless it appears that such discretion has been abused the action of the court will not be reversed. There is. nothing in the record to show an abuse of discretion in making the orders complained of, and hence the case should not be reversed on account of them.
The decree is reversed, with directions to the court to ascertain in accordance with its practice what portions of the lands were occupied in section 31, township 1 south, range 15 east, section 5, towhnip 1 north, range 16 east, and in township 1 north, range 15 east;, and that upon the ascertainment of this, a final decree-be entered in accordance with this opinion. Decree to> be entered accordingly.