34 So. 425 | La. | 1903
The plaintiff brings this suit under article 233 of the Constitution of' 1898 to quiet his title to certain lands acquired by him from the state, which the state, in turn, had acquired at tax sale. He has availed himself of the privilege accorded by the act to join in one suit a number of different tracts of land adjudicated to the state at different times,- and for taxes due by different persons, and he has made these several former owners, between whom there is no privity, parties defendant. Judgment went in his favor in the lower court, and one of the defendants, Mrs. M. J. Goodhue, has appealed.
The property in question is a lot of ground fronting 66% feet on Railroad avenue, and running back 150 feet oh Moss street, in the city of Lake Charles. It is alleged to have been acquired by the state at tax sale on the 2d of September, 1893, for the taxes of 1892, due by Thomas Bilbo, and to have been sold to plaintiff by the State Auditor on the 7th of December, 1901, under authority of Act No. 80 of 1888.
Mrs. Goodhue attacks the tax sale on two grounds: That the tax to satisfy which the sale purports to have been made, had been paid, and that the sale was not preceded by notice to the owner.
The evidence fails to substantiate the first of these grounds. It consists of the testimony of the tax debtor, Thomas Bilbo, who says that he does not remember whether he paid the tax, but that he is satisfied in his own mind he did, because it was his custom to pay his taxes promptly on receiving the notice, and he finds he paid his city tax of that year. This is merely inferential testimony, and not sufficient to overcome the strong presumption arising from the fact that the property was proceeded against for delinquency. As further proof of the payment, defendant adduces the curt recital, “Taxes paid,” found in the notarial act by which, on the 9th of January, 1895 — eight months, before the tax sale — he sold the property to the person from whom Mrs. Goodhue acquired. This recital is not evidence, except as between the parties to the act.
Against the second ground of nullity — that of want of notice to the owner — plaintiff pleads the prescription of three years established by article 233 of the Oonstitutiom This prescription cannot avail plaintiff. His-title was only one month old when h* filed this suit; hence the time he has to rely on for the prescription is that which elapsed while the title was in the state, and as the state would have been estopped from invoking the prescription, he, as her vendee, is equally ■ estopped. After the tax sale, the state, through its officers, continued to assess the property to the former owners, and tó collect taxes from them on the property. This estopped the state from availing herself of prescription against these former owners. Delay could not run in favor of the state while she was by these acts of her officers acknowledging the title of these former owners of the property. Martin v. Barbour, 140 U. S. 634, 11 Sup. Ct. 944, 35 L. Ed. 546. The former owners continued to claim ownership and possession of the property, and the tax collector, by collecting taxes from them, admitted their claims. Article 233 must, therefore, be held not to be applicable to the case.
The case is distinguishable from that of Ashley Co. v. David Bradford et al. (recently decided) 33 South. 634,
The evidence shows that the notice of delinquency was mailed to Thomas Bilbo, in whose name the property was assessed, instead of to Mrs. Irwin, to whom, by act duly recorded the property had been transferred. This was fatal to the tax sale. Geddes v. Cunningham, 104 La. 313, 29 South. 138, and cases there cited. Land Co. v. Sholars Case, 105 La. 357, 29 South. 908, contains nothing contrary to this. The notice there was served on the party who, by the records, appeared to be the owner. As a matter of course, the tax collector must be guided by the records in determining upon whom to serve notices.