delivered the opinion of the court.
The Circuit Court excluded the list of lands sold to the State by the tax collector, because the clerk of the Chancery Court had not complied with § 47 of “ An Act in relation to Public Revenue,” approved March 5,1878. Laws of Mississippi, p. 49. That section required the chancery clerk, before recording the list of lands sold to the State, to compare it with the assessment roll and with the advertised list with which he was to be furnished by the collector, and if he found any land on the list sold which was not assessed and advertised, he was to strike it from the list, and record the list thus purged, and he was to write the word “ assessed ” opposite each piece found to have been assessed and the word “ advertised ” opposite each piece advertised; and the clerk was, after examining, comparing, and recording such lists, to certifjr that he had made the required examination, and that the lands sold had been assessed and advertised, &c.; and such entries and certificate were made prima facie evidence that the lands had been assessed and advertised according to law. Proof was proposed to be made in connection with the list offered, that the land sold and now in controversy was in fact duly assessed and advertised to be sold, when it was sold, but because the list did not show the words “ assessed ” and “ advertised,” written by the clerk opposite each parcel of land, and his certificate as required by the forty-seventh section above cited, the court refused to admit in evidence the list with or without the evidence of assessment and advertisement.
In this the court erred. Whatever may have been the object of enacting the forty-seventh section of the Revenue Act of 1878, it was not to annul the title acquired by the State by a sale of land for taxes due on it and unpaid. It does not declare that such result shall follow a failure by the clerk to comply with its requirement. Its sole object, as it seems to us, was to provide a safeguard against mistakes in selling land not assessed or not advertised. It was not intended to make the title acquired by the State dependent on
The whole object of § 47 appearing to be to guard against a sale of land for taxes, when it was not assessed or not advertised, it would seem that proof of the due assessment and advertisement of the land for sale should be held to obviate all objection to a list which did not contain the entries and certificates required to be made by the clerk. Such entries are declared to be “ prima facie evidence that the lands had been assessed and advertised according to law,” and their absence would be fully supplied by proof of those facts. But, as before stated, the title acquired by the State did not depend on compliance by the clerk with § 47 of the act mentioned, and the list of land sold to the State was admissible without evidence of assessment or advertisement.
The only question is as to the validity of the section quoted. It is assailed as unconstitutional, in that it makes the deeds mentioned in it conclusive evidence of title in the grantee after five years from the sale, and it is claimed that the legislature had no right to declare this, and that this court so decided in Virden v. Bowers,
The requirement of a bond, before the eolleetor should collect the taxes, was made by the legislature. It might have been dispensed with by the legislature, and it was competent for that body to declare that compliance or non-compliance should not be inquired into afterwards. It is true that this declaration was made by a subsequent act, but more than five years elapsed after it was passed in which questions of this kind could have been raised. But for the decision in Vasser v. George,
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.
