167 So. 206 | La. Ct. App. | 1936
The property involved, which is fully described in the petition, consists of lots 4 and 5 in square 1379 in the third district of the city of New Orleans, and was acquired by Daniel Halstead Twogood on September 26, 1843. It had been continuously assessed in the name of Twogood since that date. In the year 1890 it was adjudicated to the state of Louisiana for the taxes due for that year. It was subsequently adjudicated to the city of New Orleans for taxes for the years 1910, 1915, and 1921, and was sold by the city to private individuals for taxes due for 1905, 1906, 1918, and 1919. Sometime in the year 1933 — the record does not disclose the exact date — Clarence Peters, plaintiff herein, made application to the registrar of the state land office for the purchase of the property, caused it to be advertised for sale and sold by the sheriff of the parish of Orleans, bid it in at the sheriff's sale for the sum of $27, an amount in excess of its assessed value at the time of its adjudication to the state in 1890, and thereafter brought this suit against the tax collector for the city of New Orleans and others whose names have been connected with the title for confirmation of his title represented by the sheriff's deed under date of November 27, 1933. The claims of all persons who appeared in the trial court, except the city of New Orleans, were rejected, and no appeals in their behalf have been prosecuted.
The issue is therefore narrowed to the question of the right of the city of New Orleans to collect taxes assessed against the property in the interim between the adjudication to the state in 1890 and the purchase by plaintiff at the sheriff's sale in 1933.
Plaintiff's case is based upon Act No.
In the lower court the city of New Orleans contended that the act was not susceptible of the construction placed upon it by plaintiff, since there is no provision which expressly declares that the purchaser at the tax sale shall be relieved of the payment of taxes due municipalities. In *208 this court an exception of no cause of action was filed by the city based upon the alleged unconstitutionality of the act as contravening article 4, section 13, of the Constitution of 1921, which prohibits the Legislature from extinguishing debts due municipalities.
Concerning the exception of no cause of action, it is sufficient to say that it is not well founded for the reasons given by us in our opinion in the case of State ex rel. Huggett v. Montgomery, State Tax Collector for City of New Orleans, 167 So. 147, handed down March 27, 1936, in which we considered a similar attack leveled at Act No.
The authorities relied upon by the city to support its construction of the statute are not in point. Bellocq v. City of New Orleans, 31 La.Ann. 471, West v. Negrotto, 52 La.Ann. 381, 27 So. 75, Gulf States Land Co. v. Parker (C.C.) 60 F. 974, and Gamet's Estate v. Lindner,
The state of Louisiana became the owner of the property by adjudication to it for unpaid taxes in the year 1890. As we said in State ex rel. Huggett v. Montgomery, supra, the state can dispose of its property in any manner it sees fit and subject only to constitutional restraint. While the city of New Orleans is permitted to assess property for taxes after adjudication to the state or city as though the property were in private ownership, which, in the event of the sale or redemption of the property under the general revenue laws, must be paid, nevertheless, if the state chooses to provide for the disposition of its property in some other way which does not involve the payment of past due taxes, it may do so.
Our conclusion is that the plaintiff, Clarence Peters, the purchaser at the tax sale, acquired the property free of all assessments for taxes due the city of New Orleans, and that therefore the judgment appealed from must be amended in that respect.
For the reasons assigned it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from be and it is amended so as to order the tax collector of the city of New Orleans to erase all taxes assessed against the property described in plaintiff's petition for the year 1891 and all subsequent years, up to and including the year 1932, and, as thus amended, the judgment is affirmed.
*209Amended and affirmed.