The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, George S. Holmes, instituted this suit in 1899, to recover of the defendant, W. S. Weinheimer, a lot in the town of Mount Pleasant. The lot was sold by the sheriff of Charleston County ’as the property of William .Horry for the collection of the State and county taxes, on January 4th, 1897, and bought by the plaintiff; and he claims under the title made by the sheriff to him. On June 7th, 1897, a lot, which plaintiff alleges is the same lot, was sold by the intendant of Mount Pleasant as the property of W. H. Horry for collection of town taxes, and bought by the defendant, who, it is alleged, holds possession under the intendant’s deed. The verdict was for defendant, and ‘ plaintiff appeals, assigning a number of erors in the charge to the jury.
The presiding Judge charged the jury, if the sale made by the sheriff to enforce the collection of taxes levied by the State, under which plaintiff acquired title, was regular and legal in all respects, yet plaintiff’s title would be defeated by a sale made to defendant by the intendant of Mount Pleasant to enforce a collection of municipal taxes levied on the lot as the property of the same owner. The appeal involves mainly the correctness of this proposition.
The view expressed in the charge was that these provisions of the municipal charter placed the enforcement of the collection of the town taxes on precisely the same footing as the enforcement of the collection of State taxes. The act in which State taxes were made a first lien was passed February 9th, 1882, and the portion of the section under consideration is: “All taxes, assessments and penalties legally assessed, shall be considered and held as a debt payable to the State by a party against whom the same shall be charged; and such taxes, assessments and penalties shall be a first lien in all cases whatsoever upon the property taxed; the lien to attach at the beginning of the fiscal year during which the tax is levied; and such taxes shall be first paid out of the assets of any estates of deceased persons, or held in trust as assignee or trustee, as aforesaid, or proceeds of any property held on execution or attachment; and the county treasurer may enforce the said lien by execution against the said property; or if he cannot levy thereon, he may proceed by action at law against the person holding said property.” Gen. St., 170. It will be observed the Mount Pleasant act confers upon the purchaser at the intendant’s sale all the rights, powers and privileges set forth in the act of December 24th, 1887 (19 Stat., 862). This is not the act which confers a first lien for State taxes, and it is, therefore, quite obvious the charter did not directly make the municipal taxes of Mount Pleasant a lien on the property taxed. It is hardly necessary to say that a municipal tax is not a lien on the property upon which it is levied, unless made so by direct legislative enactment, or by action of the municipal corporation in pursuance of express legislative authority.
Heine
v.
Levee Comrs.,
19 Wallace, 655. In the absence of any express provision of law that the town of Mount Pleasant
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shall have a lien like that of the State for its taxes, the charge to the jury could be sustained only on the ground that the lien for taxes is implied in the general “rights, powers and privileges” conferred on purchasers at sales made by the intendant. The law in express terms makes the claim of the State for taxes a first lien, and the Court would not, unless compelled by enactment capable of no other reasonable interpretation, impute to the General Assembly the inconsistency of attempting to make a municipal tax also a first lien. Certainly, it cannot by implication be held the statute amending the charter of Mount Pleasant must be so construed. To hold a municipal corporation has received by implication a power enabling it to defeat or interfere with the established policy adopted by the State for the collection of its own taxes, would be in the face of the plainest rules of construction.
Mauldin
v.
City
Council, 33 S. C., 23,
The second, seventh, tenth and sixteenth exceptions all relate to alleged errors in the charge in submitting to the jury the construction and import of deeds and other documents introduced in evidence. As the case is. to go back for a new trial, any detailed analysis or discussion of the charge in this regard would be of no value. It is sufficient to say, it is the province and duty of the Judge to instruct the jury as to the construction and nature of written instruments.
Russell
v.
Arthur,
17 S. C.,
480; Asbill
v.
Asbill,
24 S. C., 359;
Coates
v.
Early,
46 S. C., 220, 24 S. E.,
305; Burwell
v.
Chapman,
59 S. C., 591,
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Submitted on printed Briefs. — R.
