38 Fla. 276 | Fla. | 1896
The appellee filed his bill of complaint in the court below to foreclose a mortgage executed by one R. W. P. Thomas, deceased. The administrator of such deceased mortgagor, his widow, who had joined in the execution in order to bar her right of dower, and the husband with whom she had since intermarried, together with the appellant, were made parties defendant. The appellant was in the possession of the mortgaged premises claiming title thereto, and the bill sought to cancel and annul a tax deed which he claimed to be a valid title to the premises, and to declare that a sheriff’s deed also held by him to a portion of such property, conveyed a title subject to complainant’s mortgage. The decree was in favor of the complainant. The other defendants not desiring to appeal, proceedings against them by summons and severance have been had and the appellant alone prosecutes his separate appeal.
The first question presented by the record is whether
By reason of the foregoing facts, the complainant claimed in his bill of complaint that the second parcel of land hereinbefore described as being involved in the controversy, and attempted to be described in the second line of said page of said assessment roll, was not, as required by law, assessed either to the owner or occupant, or as unknown, and that the assessment of both parcels was illegal and void for the reason that the description and v'aluation of both of said parcels of land were vague, indefinite and uncertain, and not in accordance with the statute in such cases made and provided. The bill further states that the tax collector proceeded to advertise such lands, and to sell them in pursuance of said advertisement, on June 7th, 1886. The lands were described as the BT. W. qr. of BT. W. qr. of section 1, and B". E. qr. of B". E. qr. of section 2,.stating the proper township and range, and that the first tract was assessed to Thomas, R. W. P., and the second to “do,” the aggregate taxes and costs against both parcels being “545.” The said lands were sold under said advertisement at tax sale June 7th, 1886, to the defendant Addison P. McKeown. A certificate issued upon this sale, with same description as the advertisement, upon which a tax deed was executed June 10th, 1887, and the same was duly recorded. The complainant claims that the tax deed was void for reason of the matters stated.
The answer does not dispute the allegations of the bill as to irregularities and defects in the tax proceed
The statute above cited provides, with a saving-clause for persons under specified disabilities, that “no-suit or proceeding shall be commenced * * *. to-set aside any deed made in pursuance of any sale of lands for taxes, or against the grantee in such deed,. * * unless such suit or proceedings be commenced within three years after the recording of such deed in; the county where the lands lie.” In the assessment roll herein set forth only letters are used, and no words- or numbers are to be found which were necessary in connection with such letters to a clear and precise statement of the fractional subdivisions of the respective sections in which the lands were located. The advertisement, certificate and deed improperly varied from the assessment in inserting words which were-
The assessment was also fatally defective as to both tracts of land, because the respective amounts of valuation — the valuation of that which was assessed to “Thomas, R. W. P.,” as well as that which was not assessed to any owner — were aggregated, and the taxes computed upon such aggregate valuation. The taxes .should have been computed upon each tract separately, upon the separate cash value thereof. Subdivision 2 of section 18, Chapter 3413, acts of 1883, p. 25. A tax ■deed, where the assessment is not thus made, but where the valuation of several tracts is aggregated and the taxes assessed accordingly, is void. Levy vs. Ladd, supra, 35 Fla. 391, 17 South. 635.
A valid assessment of lands is an essential foundation to proceedings to subject them to sale for nonpayment of taxes. A sale without such assessment is a nullity. Augusti vs. Lawless, 43 La. Ann. 1097, 10
Besides the variance noticed, the tax deed and certificate also varied from the description in the assessment roll, in showing that all of the property was assessed to “Thomas, E. W. P.” It follows from what has been said, and from authorities cited, that a tax deed upon such a void and illegal assessment, and in which the description so varied from the assessment was wholly void, and the three years’ statute of limitations would not apply to a suit to set aside such deed, or to recover possession of the lands attempted to be conveyed thereby.
The court held that the sheriff’s deed to one of the forty-acre tracts of land in question conveyed to the appellant grantee therein the land subject to the mortgage of complainant. The facts in reference to this deed are as follows, viz: The land embraced in the sheriff’s deed was formerly owned in fee by one E. B. Standley, who, on May 16th, 1884, sold and conveyed the same to the aforesaid E. W. P. Thomas. Thomas executed to said Standley a paper of which the fol
“R. W. P. Thomas to R. B. Standley. — Lien Note.
Twelve months after date I promise to pay R. B. 'Standley, or bearer, the sum of three hundred and ■fifty dollars, for value received, this sixteenth day of may, 1884. And to further secure the above note, I hereby give a lien on the N. E. \ of N. E. J of sec. 2, 'township 21, range 19, lying and being in Hernando ■county, Florida. This note is given to secure a part payment on said described land as purchase money for ■.said land. Robert W. P. Thomas.
Witness: Jno. C. Law.
Recorded by me this 16th day of May, A. D. 1884. •Jno. C. Law, Clk.” The lands are situated in that portion of Citrus county- which was formerly Hernando county. Said note was transferred to the appellant who brought an action and recovered judgment upon the same against said Thomas. Execution issued upon said judgment and the land was sold thereunder, and purchased by the appellant, and upon such purchase the deed in dispute was made. The note -sued upon was made before the complainant’s mort.gage. But it was long after the execution and record of said mortgage that appellant obtained his judgment and execution and made sale thereunder. The -complainant was not made a party to these proceedings. It is not shown ■ that he had any notice or knowledge of them, or of the obligation in writing upon which they were obtained. It is only claimed that he had constructive notice from the alleged record •of the instrument. The appellant insists that the ■sheriff’s deed should be held superior to the mortgage -of the complainant, because the obligation upon
The lien is waived by the taking of additional se -curity, because it shows the intention of the vendor not to rely upon his implied equitable lien. This indention is as well shown by an informal act as by one .regularly done. Hunt vs. Waterman, 12 Cal. 301; 2 Jones on Liens, sec. 1088; Camden vs. Vail, 23 Cal. 633; Partridge vs. Logan, 3 Mo. App. 509. If we admitted, which we do not, that the instrument relied upon by the appellant was a mortgage, it could not help his case. Construing the instrument as a mortgage under our statute (McClellan’s Digest, sec. 6, p. 215; Revised Statutes, secs. 1972-3), it was not good or effectual in law or in equity against the complainant, who was a mortgage creditor, unless it had been .recorded as provided by the act. The act provides that in order to procure the recording of the instrument, the execution thereof shall be proved or ac. knowledged for record in the manner therein specified. The instrument relied upon by the appellant as a mortgage upon the property appears to have been transcribed upon the proper record, yet it can not be said to have been recorded as provided by law, because there appears to have been no proof or acknowledgement of its execution as is required by the statute. A transcription upon the record without proper proof of the execution of the instrument is a mere nullity, and .imports no notice to a subsequent bona fide mortgagee
There is no error in the decree of the Circuit Court, and it is affirmed.