People ex rel. Rice v. Auditor General

30 Mich. 12 | Mich. | 1874

Campbell, J.

The relator, in October, 1868, became purchaser at a tax sale of certain lands in Monroe county, sold for taxes of 1867, and obtained a deed therefor, afterwards, on surrender of the certificates.

*13On the 26th day of September, 1872, upon, the trial of an ejectment suit, the circuit court for Monroe county held the tax title void for illegality in certain ditch taxes, which made up the greater part of the tax for which the sale was made.

The relator, having applied to the auditor general, with a proper showing of these facts, and asked him to refund the purchase money, with interest, and that officer having refused, obtained an order from this court requiring respondent to show cause why he should not be compelled by mandamus to refund the money. ■ Cause is shown by demurring to the legal sufficiency of the case made, by -these facts.

It is admitted by -counsel on both sides that the auditor general can only act in accordance with positive law, and cannot refund any moneys upon the failure of tax titles, except as some statute requires it. The state does not guarantee tax titles, except as statutes may provide for it. In all other cases the purchaser must be content with such interests as he gets under his tax purchase.

There are only two statutes claimed by either counsel as regulating the action of the auditor general. One is section 103 of the old tax law, as contained in the amendatory act of 1858. — Laws of 1858, p. 190. The other is “an act to authorize the auditor general to refund money paid for taxes and on tax sales, in certain cases.” — Laws of 1868, p. 196.

The act of 1858 is relied on by the relator, as broader than the act of 1863, and not repealed by it. The language of section 103, is as follows: “In all cases where lands sold for taxes have been conveyed by deed, and the title has leen annulled pursuant to law, the auditor general shall, on presentation of a copy of the judgment annulling the same, refund to the holder of said title, the purchase money and interest thereon, as the law requires, and certify the fact to the proper county treasurer.”

The first thing that attracts notice' in this section is *14that the judgment which is to create the right to re-imbursement is a judgment “annulling” the title. This, when taken according to its terms, would seem to mean a judgment or decree acting directly on the title, and not one where the title has merely been introduced in evidence, and held defective. In an action of ejectment the judgment never refers in terms to any particular origin of title. It simply finds the plaintiff entitled, or not entitled, to a right in the lands. No one can tell from pleadings or judgment whether either party relies on a tax title, and a single judgment in ejectment is not necessarily final for any purpose.

On looking further into the act of 1858, it will be found that section 103 is only a part of a new and peculiar system by which the legislature attempted to provide a new process for “annulling” irregular tax deeds. By sections 101 and 102, persons having interests in lands sold for taxes were authorized to set in motion a sort of chancery suit before a circuit court commissioner, analogous to a bill to quiet title. From him an appeal lay to the circuit court. The decree or judgment was one directly affirming or “annulling” the title. A certified copy of the judgment was to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds, and an entry of annulling or affirmance made on the face of the deed when recorded.

This was the judgment annulling the tax deed which is referred to in- section 103. It was a judgment showing on its face the title so annulled.

This system having been held contrary to the provisions of the constitution, because giving to a circuit court commissioner the full powers of a court of chancery (Waldby v. Callendar, 8 Mich. R., 430), the section in question became inoperative. It never referred to a judgment in ejectment, or to any but one operating specifically on the tax title.

It cannot be claimed that the statute of 1863, or any other statute to be found, which was in force at the time *15of this tax sale, authorizes money to be refunded upon every failure of title. By that statute the auditor is authorized to act in cases where either (1) the land was not subject to taxation at all at the date of the assessment, or (2) the taxes had been actually paid in due time, or (3) a certificate had been given in due time by the proper officer, that no taxes were charged on the land. — Laws of 1868, p. 197. If the land was subject to assessment, and if taxes had been actually assessed, whether legally or illegally, and no attempt had been made to ascertain and pay them, no provision was made for refunding. The purchaser’s right to re-imbursement only arose where there was either no jurisdiction over the land, or else a payment or attempted payment of the taxes actually levied; so that the state had received double payment, or had precluded itself from demanding the tax by assuring the land owners that no tax existed.

In such cases as these the equity is clear and palpable, and the state has properly acknowledged itself liable for its own wrong, against parties who owed it nothing legally or equitably. It has not seen fit to assume a responsibility for irregular conduct on • the part of local officers, where every tax purchaser has at least the same means of knowing the legality of the tax, that are possessed by any of the state authorities, and has practically much better facilities than the auditor general, who cannot investigate in person the local records.

It follows that the relator has shown no right to have his money refunded, and the auditor general was doing his duty when he refused it.

The mandamus must be denied, with costs.

The other Justices concurred.
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