36 Miss. 692 | Miss. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by the defendant in error, to recover a tract of land in the possession of the plaintiff in error, being one-eighth of a section of land in Copiah county.
Upon the trial, the plaintiff below showed a patent from the United States to him for the land, and rested his case.
The defendant then read in evidence, a deed from the tax-collector of that county, to Martin J. Malloy, dated in February, 1846, conveying the land in controversy, and divers other parcels of land, stated therein to have been sold to Malloy at tax-collector’s sale, due for the year 1845, for the purpose of showing divestiture of the plaintiff’s title; also deeds from Sellers to Robertson, and from Robertson to the defendant, to show color of title in Robertson and in defendant. He also proved, by several witnesses, the value of the land and improvements, and then rested.
The errors assigned will be stated and considered in the order in which they are presented by counsel for the plaintiff in error.
The first error assigned is to the action of the court below in admitting the evidence offered by the plaintiff, to show that the land in controversy had not been legally assessed, and in order to show that the tax-sale, by which the plaintiff's title was alleged to be divested, was void.
The objection to this evidence is founded on the Statute of 1842, eh. 1, § 28, which provides that the deed of the tax-collector, in the form therein prescribed, “ shall be prima facie evidence that the tax collector performed all things required by law of him, before selling the same (land), and that he was authorized by law to sell the same for taxes; and said deed shall not be impeached, unless for some neglect or fraud directly charged and proved.” And upon these provisions, it is insisted that it was not competent to show that a valid assessment and other things required to be done in order to a valid sale, had not taken place.
We do not consider the position tenable. It is founded on an incorrect view of the concluding part of the clause of the statute cited. The former part of the clause has reference to the force and effect of the deed as evidence-, rendering it prima facie evidence that he had performed the things required by law to be done by him in order to make the sale valid, and that he was authorized by law to make the sale; that is, that the steps required by law to render the land liable to sale for taxes, had been taken. The residue of the clause must have reference to the validity of the deed in other respects, as fraud in making the sale or in executing the deed or the like. It is not clear what was intended to be the force of this provision, and what “neglect or fraud” was in contemplation; but it is clear that it cannot have the effect to destroy the rule established by the preceding part of the clause, making the deed prima facie evidence of the prerequisites to the validity of the sale; for that construction would render nugatory the clear and positive rule of evidence as to the prima facie effect of the deed, so distinctly stated in the preceding part of the clause.
We think that the deed was on]j prima facie evidence of the
The next assignment of error presents the question, whether, after the resignation of Brown, as commissioner to classify the lands under the Act of 1842, chap. 1, the board of police had power to appoint another commissioner to perform the duties remaining unfinished at the time of Brown’s resignation, or whether the acts of the second commissioner so appointed are valid acts so far as the public interest is concerned and so as to render the lands subject to taxes. The negative of these propositions was given by the court in the first instruction asked in behalf of the plaintiff.
The first objection taken to this ruling of the court, is that the appointment of Brown was void, because it was made at a special meeting of the board of police, in March, 1842.
It is provided by the fifth section of the act, that the board shall, “at their first meeting after the passage of the act,” appoint the commissioner to classify the lands, &e. The act was passed on the 28th February, 1842, and the meeting at which the appointment was made, was the first meeting after its passage. Special meetings of the board are authorized by law, at which business generally may be transacted. Hutch. Code, 710. And there is nothing either in the language or general object of the Act of 1842, that would restrict the appointment to a regular meeting of the board. On the contrary, the purposes of the act might render it proper to have the appointment made at an earlier day than the regular meeting of the board; for the services, which were most probably laborious, were to be completed by the first of July following, and it might have been important to have them commenced at as early a day as practicable. This objection is, therefore, without force.
The question then arises, what were the powers and duties of the board after Brown’s resignation, the work remaining to be done, and what are the character and legal effect of the acts of Ma-theney, performed under his appointment ?
No provision is made in the act for the appointment of but one commissioner, nor expressly for the death or resignation of that person, leaving the duties unperformed. The act requires, in the fifth section, that the board, at its first meeting after the passage of the act, shall appoint one honest and discreet citizen of the county, a
But we do not think that this section contemplated such a case. The language is, if the commissioner appointed “ shall fail or neglect, from any cause to perform the duties required of him.” This language is not properly applicable to a case of resignation or death, though it may, in some cases, receive such a construction, when justified by the nature of the case and the purposes of the act, and is in keeping with the powers of the board of police, as in the case of Morgan v. Harrell, 26 Miss. 408. Both of the words employed, “fail or neglect,” strictly imply the non-performance of the duties by the fault, inability, or delinquency of the commissioner, and convey the idea of his still continuing in office, and yet not performing the duties required of him. It is easy to perceive
It appears that in this case, Brown resigned shortly after his appointment, and in time for another person to perform the duties within the time required by the statute; that Matheney was appointed to complete the work, and gave bond and entered upon and completed the work in due time. This appointment, and the acts of Matheney under it, it is insisted, are absolutely void, because, upon Brown s resignation, the performance of the duties of the office devolved upon the members of the board of police, so that there was no vacancy in the office requiring the appointment of another commissioner.
For the reasons above stated, we do not consider this a correct view of the statute, and the circumstances of the case do not bring it within the contingency provided for in the eleventh section, upon which the duties of the office were to be performed by the members of the board.' It is also plain that no provision is expressly made in the statute for supplying a vacancy in such a case, and it appears manifestly to be a casus omissus. What then is the character of this second appointment, and the effect of the acts done under it ? It is clear that it did not constitute the appointee an officer de jure, be-
The appointment is not forbidden by the constitution nor any statute, and there is no law declaring the acts of such an officer void, and they must be taken, as to the public, to be those of an officer defacto, and therefore valid.
Under this view, the first instruction given by the court, at the instance of the plaintiff below, was erroneous, and should have been refused.
The last assignment of error insisted upon, applies to the rule stated by the court in the second instruction, at the instance of the plaintiff, to wit, that if the tax-collector sold and conveyed, in the deed to Malloy, more than an eighth of a section, and struck off and sold to Malloy each eighth of a section in said deed, in distinct and separate lots or parcels of one-eighth of a section at a time, until the sale was completed, said sale was illegal and void.
As the question is now directly presented, whether the sale by separate eighths is valid, we have no hesitation in saying, that such a mode of sale is clearly authorized by the language of the statute, and that the purchaser obtained a good title under it, and the instruction was erroneous.
For these reasons, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded fer a new trial.
A reargument was asked for, and refused.