68 Miss. 739 | Miss. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the court.
Sections 5 and 6, the subject of this suit, were acquired in fee-simple by the appellant in 1846, and belong to him now, if his title has not been divested. The lands were in their natural state, undisturbed by man, without any sort of occupancy until 1888. Because of their liability to inundation from the Mississippi river annually, they were esteemed of little value, comparatively, and unsuited to cultivation until the past few years, during which the levees have given promise of protection; and because of this they were not settled upon; and during all these years the taxes on them were not paid. In the early part of the year 1888, the appellant made an actual entry upon the land, and commenced to improve it, by clearing and building, and about that time A. G. Paxton, son of the appellant, applied to the auditor of public accounts to purchase or redeem the land, offering to pay any dues, in order to effect this ; and he was informed that the state did not claim the land, and
The appellee (complainant in the suit) has vested in it whatever title the commissioners of the levee board or the state of Mississippi could convey by their several conveyances; and the important question is whether either had a title to transmit ? The tax-deeds of 1859 and 1860 may be dismissed from consideration. If those
The abatement act did not, by its mere approval, divest the title of the state or levee board. It does not release title. It abates or remits all taxes for years prior to 1874, and where land was dealt with and disposed of under it, any former title of the state or levee board was gone, but if from any cause land held and subject to disposition under this act was not disposed of, it was unaffected, and continued to be held as before. The purpose of the act was to induce delinquent owners to pay one year’s taxes as the price of relinquishment of all claim on the land for the past, failing in which the land was to be sold as prescribed, but the state did not, by this act of grace, renounce its title or reinvest the delinquent owner with it. It sought to induce him, by liberal terms, to come forward and pay the small part due for years of delinquency, and declared a purpose to sell the land and acquire a new title, if he did not pay, as proposed, but he could not claim anything, by virtue of the act, except by compliance with its terms.
The title of sections five and six was not affected by the abatement act, and remained as before. The liquidating levee commissioners, exercising their power under the law, and with the sanction
The defense of the statute of limitations of ten years, invoked by the appellant, is effectually disposed of by the fact that until 1888 he had no such possession of the land or any part of it as to set the statute in motion. Tush-Ho-Yo-Tubby v. Barr, 41 Miss. 52.
The conveyance by the auditor, under the act of 1884, was not invalid for failure to collect taxes for 1881 on the land, for none were due; and § 562 of the code of 1880 has no application to the deeds by the auditor under the acts of 1884 and 1888. It applies to conveyances contemplated by § 561.
Ve fail' to discover how the several decisions of this court, set forth in the answer of the appellant to the bill, cab avail anything in his behalf in this case. It is his misfortune not to have anticipated the announcement in Sigman v. Lundy, plainly foreshadowed by earlier decisions, in time to have prevented the bar of five years, by paying what was required to clear his title, but this court was not precluded from applying a statute designed for the purpose to the cure of irregularities in a tax sale, because of the fatal effects on delinquent land owners, who for years experimented as to the value
We regret that during the many years elapsed, and the many opportunities afforded, the owner did not free his lands from all claim, except his own, but the title, lost by delinquency and neglect, has been securely vested in another, and it must be upheld.
Affirmed.