58 Miss. 628 | Miss. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, on the sixth day of January, 1872, purchased certain land situated in Issaquena Couuty, at a sale thereof for the taxes for the year 1871. On the first day of November, 1875, he filed the bill in this cause against the appellees and all persons having or claiming any interest in the land, praying for a confirmation of his tax-title to the land. Appellees answered the bill, setting up in defence the invalidity of the tax-sale, for certain reasons stated in their answers.
The bill as amended, and the answers and proof, show, that the land was, prior to 1869, the property ol' the heirs-at-law of H. W. Peebles. It is situated in the levee district, and was delinquent for levee-taxes for the year 1868, for which, on the eighteenth day of May, 1869, it was by the sheriff of the county sold to the Board of Levee Commissioners. .On the eighteenth day of December, 1872, the Levee Commissioner’s sold and conveyed a portion of the land to the “ estate of H. "W. Peebles.” On the sixth day of January, 1872, the land was sold for the taxes of 1871, aud purchased by appellant, who has since paid taxes thereon. The levy of the county taxes for the year 1871 was not made by the Board of Supervisors at the time required by law, but was made at au adjourned meeting of the board held on the 24th of September, 1871.
The decisive point in this case has been settled by two decisions of this court, made in the case of Cogburn v. Hunt, which will be found reported in 56 Miss. 722 and 57 Miss. 682. We are urged by counsel for the appellees not to extend the scope of these decisions ; to which we reply : it is impossible so to, do, because the decisions themselves are as broad as the statute which they construe. In delivering the opinion of the court, as reported in 56 Miss. 723, Chalmers, J., said: “Art. 11 of the revenue chapter of the Code of 1871 was enacted for the purpose of protecting the rights of purchasers at tax-sales, and introduced into our law a new and valuable feature. The striking off to the State of delinquent lands, and their consequent withdrawal from the revenue-producing property of the ■Commonwealth, was felt to be a very great and growing evil, whorebjr the burdens of taxation grew year by year more onerous on those who promptly paid their taxes. For the pur
If the taxes attempted to be collected are themselves illegal, and not merely irregularly levied, the lien would not be conferred for their repayment; but where the objection is merely to the manner in which the powers conferred have been exercised, the lien exists. Experience had demonstrated the impossibility of devising any revenue-system sufficiently comprehensive to include the necessary machinery and sufficientljr simple to insure its regular and methodical execution by those agencies which the State is, from necessity, compelled to use; and that, by reason of the failure of the officers to perform their duties, the titles were rarely valid. Kecoguizing this, the Legislature has provided a remedy by which the purchaser at tax-sales may be secured in any'eveut against loss.
Appellant, then, was entitled to relief unless the land was exempt from taxation, or unless the taxes had been previously paid. An attempt was made to prove the payment of the taxes, but, we think, unsuccessfully. Was the land exempt from taxation? If the sale for the taxes due for levee purposes, made in 1869, was valid, the land was not subject to taxation while held by the Board of Levee Commissioners, as by the express terms of the act approved February 18, 1867 (Laws 1867, p. 237, sect. 18), it is provided that such lands as arc held by the board “ shall be exempt from State taxation, for levee purposes or otherwise, until the same shall be sold or disposed of by the board.” But this sale to the levee board was itself void, having been made on a day different
The decree is reversed, and cause remanded to the Chancery Court, to be proceeded with in accordance with the views herein expressed.