198 Ky. 679 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
This action involves the title to a house and lot located in Eminence, Kentucky, of the value, according to the proof in the case, of between one thousand and fifteen hundred dollars. The appellant and defendant below, Geo. C. Paul, claims title to the lot under a deed executed to him on October 21,1919, by Robert L. Green, then audi: tor of public accounts of Kentucky, which deed was executed pursuant to a sale of the lot made by W. H. Gray, revenue agent for the state at large, on October .13, 1919, at which sale defendant became the purchaser at the price of $11.50. The sale by the revenue agent was made pursuant to the provisions of section 4154 of the Kentucky Statutes, and the tax sought to be realized was that which was due and payable in the year 1913 on the assessment to be made as of September 1,1912, at which time the lot was owned by J. H. Booker, he having purchased it from the owner in the month of May, 1912, and he sold it to W. E. Brawner on November 2,1912, and the latter sold it to appellees and plaintiffs below, Curtis Goins and wife, Mary B. Goins, on March 23, 1917, and they were the owners on the day the lot was attempted to be sold by the state revenue agent. The authority of the latter to make that sale is bottomed on a prior sale of the lot made by the sheriff of Henry county on January 4,1914, to collect alleged taxes due the state from Booker on the assessment which should have been made in 1912, the amount of forty-four (44) cents, and taxes due Henry county on the same assessment amounting to $4.08. At that sale the
Plaintiffs are non-residents of the county and had no actual knowledge of the sale made by the sheriff or the one made by the revenue agent, nor did they know that Booker had failed to assess the property in 1912, much less that he or any one else had failed to pay the taxes due on such assessment, and when they learned that defendant was asserting ownership of the lot under his deed from the auditor they filed this equity action in the Henry circuit court to enjoin him from doing so and to cancel his alleged deed as a cloud upon their title, and alleged numerous non-compliances with the law as grounds for such rehff, among which was that the lot had never been assessed by any constituted assessing authority either in the name of Booker, the true owner, or in the name of any subsequent owner for the particular taxes sought to be collected.
Formerly the burden was upon the holder of a tax title to prove strict compliance with all the provisions of law regulating the subject in order to sustain his title. In other words, there was no presumption that prior provisions of the law relating to the collection of taxes or the sale of land therefor were complied with, but since the enactment of section 4030 of the statutes the sheriff’s deed to an individual purchaser of the land at a sheriff’s sale, and an auditor’s deed made pursuant to a sale by a state revenue agent of land purchased at the sheriff’s sale by the taxing authority reciting the statutory steps, will create a prima facie presumption that all prior requirements were complied with and the burden is cast upon the taxpayer to prove the contrary. James, Auditor, etc. v. Blanton, 134 Ky. 803; Mosley v. Hamilton, 136 Ky. 680, and Taylor v. Arndell, 192 Ky. 249. The recitations in the auditor’s deed in this case are sufficient to
As heretofore stated, a number of omissions and irregularities affecting the validity of the sale are alleged in the petition, but we deem it necessary to refer to or discuss only one of them, although there is evidence to-sustain some of the others. This court, following the universal rule upon the subject, has consistently held that a prerequisite to the sale of property for the collection of taxes is a valid assessment of the property in the name of the owner, and without it no lien for the taxesiscreated nor can the property be sold for the payment of the alleged taxes, and if such sale is attempted no title to the property will pass. The necessity for such prior assessment lies at the very basis of all proceedings to collect taxes and a compliance with the requirement is so fundamental and universally applied that its substantiation with cited authorities is unnecessary.
Plaintiff introduced the county court clerk of the county and proved by him that the lot in question was not assessed to Brooker, the then owner, for the year 1912, either by him or by the assessor for the county, nor was there any record of its being assessed by any other assessing authority having the right to assess omitted property at any time subsequent thereto, or before the sale made by the sheriff on January 4, 1914, either in the name of Booker or in the name of Brawner, who as we have seen purchased it from him on November 2, 1912. The only assessment against Booker-for the year 1912 was a poll tax of $1.50; ánd in the -absence of any assessment of the lot involved the sale of it by the sheriff to collect the alleged taxes due was and is void and vested no sort of title in the Commonwealth or in Henry county, and a fortiori rendered the attempted sale by the state revenue agent likewise void, since such a sale is necessarily rested upon a valid prior one by the sheriff of the county after the expiration of the two years in which the taxpayer may redeem. Upon the ground stated there was no alternative action for the trial court to take except to render the judgment complained of, and upon that
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.