84 P. 85 | Ariz. | 1906
This action was brought by the territory of Arizona, upon relation of Poster S. Dennis, treasurer and ex officio tax-collector of the territory of Arizona, against the appellant, for the recovery of certain taxes alleged to have been assessed on appellant’s property in the county of Mohave, territory of Arizona, for the years 1902 and. 1903, and alleged to be delinquent, pursuant to the authority given by act of the legislature No. 92, entitled “An act to amend chapter VII of title LXII of the Revised Statutes of Arizona, 1901,” entitled “Collection of Delinquent Taxes,” adopted March 19, 1903, (Laws 1903, p. 148). The court below, upon the issues raised by the pleadings and the evidence adduced at the trial on the part of the plaintiff, no evidence being introduced by the defendant, found for the plaintiff and entered judgment against the defendant for the amount of the taxes found to be due as alleged in the complaint. Prom this judgment and an order denying a motion for a new trial the defendant has appealed to this court.
The errors assigned by the appellant raise, first, the question whether the trial court was right in admitting in evidence over objection certain documents offered by the plaintiff,— to wit, the assessment-rolls of the county of Mohave for the years 1902 and 1903, respectively. The objections to the assessment-rolls were that they do not contain the certificate of the assessor as required by the statute, and that, though produced as records of the county, they were not signed, certified to, or authenticated by the assessor. The section of the statute relied upon is as follows: “On or before the third Monday in June of each year the assessor shall complete his tax-list, or assessment-roll, and shall attach his certificate thereto, and deliver it and the map-book, and all of the orig
The statute referred to, and under which this action was brought, was adopted March 19, 1903. (Laws 1903, p. 148, No. 92.) It contains the following provisions, among others:
“See. 87. All actions commenced under the provisions of this chapter, shall be prosecuted in the name of the territory of Arizona at the relation and to the use of the tax-collector, and against the owners of the property; and all lands owned by the same persons may be included in one petition and in one count thereof, for the taxes for all such years as taxes may be due thereon, and the said petition shall show the different years for which taxes are due, as well as the several kinds of taxes or funds to which they are due, with the respective amounts due to each fund, all of which shall be set forth in a tax-bill of said back taxes, duly authenticated by certificate of the tax-collector and filed with the petition, and
“Sec. 105. No irregularity in the assessment-roll, or omission from the same, or mere irregularity of any kind in any of the proceedings, shall invalidate any such proceeding, or the title conveyed by the tax-deed, nor shall any failure of any officer or officers to perform the duties assigned him or them on the day or within the time specified, work any invalidation of any such proceedings, or of such deed, and no overcharge as to a part of the taxes or costs, and payment of such taxes or costs, shall invalidate a sale for taxes, except as to a part of the real estate sold to the proportion of the whole thereof as such part of the taxes and costs is to the whole amount for which land was sold. Acts of officers de facto shall be valid as if they were officers de jure, and if a deed would be valid, as to the sale for any one tax it shall not be impaired by any irregularity, error in the proceedings or sale for any other tax or taxes.”
This statute is similar in its terms and its purpose to acts passed in many of the states to provide for a collection of taxes levied, and to correct the errors and omissions of assessors and other officials intrusted with the making of the assessment and the levying of the tax. The purpose of the curative portion of the act is to prevent a person from escaping the payment of taxes due from him by reason of acts or omissions on the part of the taxing officials, where such acts or omissions are mere irregularities, and are of such a nature that the legislature might by prior statute have dispensed with them. Such a law is within the legislative discretion, and is a valid exercise of its powers. Williams v. Supervisors, 122 U. S. 164, 7 Sup. Ct. 1244, 30 L. Ed. 1088; Territory v. Delin
The remaining question presented by the appellant is as to the validity of the act of 1903. The objections urged to this act, as set forth in the brief, are that it is void, in (a) that the act contravenes section 63 of the Organic Law of Arizona (Eev. Stats. Ariz. 1901, p. 85), prohibiting the passage by the legislature of any local or special law regulating the practice in courts of justice; (5) that said law is retrospective and deprives the defendant of its property without due . process of law, in violation of the provisions of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States; and (c) that said law is void for uncertainty.
(a) If we understand the contention of the appellant under this head, it is that the act does not permit any redemption therefrom, as in sales upon execution issued on judgments in other judicial proceedings, and that therefore it is in contravention of the so-called “Harrison Act.” As we have seen, the act provides that the general laws of the territory as to practice and procedure shall apply so far as not inconsistent. The act further provides that execution shall issue upon the judgment against the real estate named in the judgment, and directing the sheriff to sell the property to pay the judgment, “the same as the sheriff might do under ordinary execution.” A sale under such execution would be governed by the general statute, and would follow the same. But if the right of
(&) Conceding that the act is retrospective, it does not deprive any person of property without due process of law. It simply provides a remedy and procedure for the’ collection of a debt already due. The power to tax property lies solely in the legislature. The legislature has full authority to make needful regulations to enforce the collection of the tax. If the legislature has the power and authority to make certain restrictions, it has likewise the authority to remove them. If it has authority to pass laws, it may repeal or modify them. The legislature can burden officers with directions and restrictions as to their duties. It can remove those restrictions or modify or change them. And having this right or authority, it is well settled that the power exists to' validate retrospectively any proceeding it might have authorized in advance. Judge Cooley, in his work on Taxation (3d ed., p. 517), uses this language: “The general rule has often been declared that the legislature may validate retrospectively the proceedings which they might have authorized in advance. Therefore, if any directions of the statute fail of observance which are not so far of the essence of the thing to be done that they must be provided for in any statute on the subject, the legislature may retrospectively cure the defect.” The fact that the law may operate retrospectively does not necessarily, nor in this case, invalidate it; but it falls within the general well-recognized rules with respect to such legislation. Ensign v. Barse, 107 N. Y. 329, 14 N. E. 400, 15 N. E. 401.
(c) To sustain the claim that the act is void for uncertainty, counsel point out some provisions, which, if differently stated in the act, might, perhaps, have rendered the same clearer; but we find nothing in the defects suggested which would warrant us in holding the act void for uncertainty.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.