97 So. 97 | Ala. | 1923
The bill in equity was to ascertain the amount of taxes due the state and county for the tax year indicated, and to enforce the respective liens thereon for the taxes.
The subject of the jurisdiction of a court of chancery to re-establish lost or destroyed records, such as are the subject of consideration, was recently discussed in Wise v. State,
The court committed no error in admitting in evidence the substituted tax assessments and decrees thereon, the preliminary proceedings thereto, and the respective notices and orders thereof provided and required by statute to be given to a due substitution of such tax records. It is immaterial that the substitution of the records was made subsequent to the filing of the bill in the instant case. The tax having been duly assessed, etc., the lien for such taxes attached, that lien was not destroyed by the loss or theft of the records in question, and may be substituted under a retrospective statute. Folsom v. Carnley, post, p. 131,
The authority to establish the records, as was done in this case, is to be found in the Act of the Special Session, 1921, page 22 et seq.:
"To provide a statutory method for substituting any tax record in any county in this state and giving to the substituted records the same force and effect for all purposes as the original had, where such original record has been lost, stolen or destroyed."
It is provided in the act that when any tax record has been lost, stolen, or destroyed, the same may be substituted, "and such substituted record shall be of equal validity with the original"; and that notice of the proceedings prior to the decree of substitution shall be given by publication. Provision is also made for objection by the taxpayer and for appeals; and, in fact, adequate procedure is provided for carrying into effect the purposes and provisions of the act. State Tax Commission v. Bailey Howard,
The act was approved on the 29th day of October, 1921, and the original bill in this cause was filed October 8, of the same year, prior to the passage of the act. Being remedial in its nature, and having retrospective operation, the statute applied to pending cases.
The retrospective operation of statutes has been often discussed by this court. It is said that a statute intended by the Legislature to be applied to, or have effect on, past actions, transactions, contracts, offenses, or the exercise of power, may be valid and effective when the Legislature originally had authority to confer the power, or to authorize the act or transaction; that is to say, in cases where the curative statute does not (1) have the effect of impairing a vested or contract right, or (2) of validating an unconstitutional statute or proceeding, or (3) of taking away a cause of action, or (4) of destroying an existing defense to a cause of action after suit has been commenced, or (5) of reviving a right or remedy which had been barred by lapse of time or by statute. Board of Revenue of Jefferson County v. Hewitt,
The observation of appellant's counsel is that the loss of the original record may not be proven by the certificate of the tax assessor. The authority was given by section 2 of the Act of October 29, 1921 (Acts, p. 22), to the tax assessor to notify the state tax commission in writing of the loss, theft or destruction of such records. The record shows that the first step looking to the substitution of such lost or stolen tax records was made by the certificate of the tax assessor notifying the state tax commission, in writing, as required by the act, of the loss, theft, or destruction of the tax records made the subject of this controversy. This certificate, unless successfully impeached, imports absolute verity. There was no proof tending to impeach the tax assessor's certificate, and hence the loss of such original records was sufficiently proved as required and provided by law.
The statutory method for substituting a tax record in any county, where the same has been lost, stolen, or destroyed, was essentially a proceeding in rem as to certain of the initial proceedings, and the nature thereof was not changed until it became in personam by intervention of interested taxpayers availing of the hearings and appeals. It was not essential to the validity of such proceedings that personal notice be given to the parties affected. State Tax Commission v. Bailey
Howard,
The curative statute under discussion, of date October 29, 1921, had not the effect in the instant case (1) of impairing a vested or contract right; or (2) of validating an unconstitutional proceeding; or (3) of taking away a cause of action (Const. § 95; Lindsay v. U.S. S. L. Assn.,
In Simon v. Craft, supra, Mr. Justice White said:
"* * * The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not necessitate that the proceedings in a state court should be by a particular mode, but only that there shall be a regular course of proceedings in which notice is given of the claim asserted, and an opportunity afforded to defend against it. Louisville N. R. Co. v. Schmidt,
The insistence of appellant that the title of the act of October 29, 1921, was offensive to section 45 of the Constitution, on the ground that there was nothing in such title showing an intention to give the act retrospective operation, is untenable. Lindsay v. U.S. S. L. Ass'n,
Appellant insists that there was no proof of the original tax assessment and of its subsequent loss, spoliation, or destruction; and that error was committed in admitting in evidence the decree, together with all preliminary steps pursuant thereto, as provided by the statute. The initial procedure, of statutory requirement, was the report of the proper officer to the state tax commission of such loss or destruction of the original tax records. This was sufficient, in the absence of other evidence to the contrary on this point.
The judgment of the circuit court, in equity, is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.