43 Kan. 580 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The substantial question involved in this case is, who owns the north half of lot number 12 in block number 102, in Fort Scott? The title of the defendants in error, plaintiffs below, is as follows: It is admitted that Wil
The facts of the case concerning the taxes and the tax proceedings, as shown by the evidence outside of the tax deed, and stated very briefly, are substantially as follows: In the year 1873 the property in controversy was taxed for various purposes, and these taxes were placed upon the tax-rolls of Bourbon county. An amount was also assessed against the property by the city of Fort Scott for macadamizing the street immediately in front of such property, which amount was also placed upon the tax-rolls of the county for that year, and was designated and known as a “macadam tax.” All the taxes except this macadam tax were paid, and this macadam tax was not paid. On May 21, 1874, the property was offered for sale, for this macadam tax, and there being no bidders it was bid off' by the county treasurer for the county of
First: It is claimed that the tax deed shows that prior to the time of the tax sale other taxes besides the macadam tax had been assessed and levied upon the property in controversy for the year 1873; that all these taxes were still due and unpaid at the date of the sale; that the property was sold for all such taxes; that they all remained due against the land up to the assignment of the tax-sale certificate, and that the tax-sale certificate was assigned, not for all of them, but for the macadam tax only.
Second: It is further claimed, that the assignment of the tax-sale certificate was not made by the county clerk.
Third: It is also claimed, that a macadam tax is no tax at all, but only a “special assessment for improvements,” and that there is no law authorizing a tax sale or a tax deed for special assessments.
Fourth: It is also claimed that, although the macadam tax is a special assessment for improvements and nothing else, yet that under the law there can be no assessor in such a case; and that, as a tax deed is prima facie evidence only “ from the valuation of the land by the assessor, inclusive, up to the execution of the deed,” (Tax Law, §138,) a tax deed founded only upon a special assessment for improvements cannot be
First: Public officers are always presumed to do their duty.
Second: Section 139 of the tax law reads as follows:
“Sec. 139. No irregularity in the assessment roll nor omission from the same, nor mere irregularities of any kind in any of the proceedings, shall invalidate any such proceeding or the title conveyed by the tax deed; nor shall any failure of any officer or officers to perform the duties assigned him or them, upon the day specified, work an invalidation of any such proceedings or of said deed.”
Third: Section 141 of the tax law reads as follows:
“Sec. 141. Any suit or proceeding against the tax purchaser, his heirs or assigns, for the recovery of lands sold for taxes, or to defeat or avoid a sale or conveyance of lands for taxes, except in cases where the taxes have been paid or the land redeemed as provided by law, shall be commenced within five years from the time of recording the tax deed, and not thereafter.”
Fourth: The present tax deed was recorded more than five years before this action was commenced, and during all that time the claimants under it had the actual possession of the property conveyed, making improvements on it.
Fifth: And no person claiming to have any interest in the property at any time during the period that elapsed from the time when the taxes were first levied upon it in 1873, till after more than five years had elapsed from the recording of the tax deed, has ever made any claim to the property as against the claimants under the tax deed.
Sixth: Rut only persons holding under a quitclaim deed executed after more than five years had elapsed from the date
Seventh: If the tax deed should be construed so as to make the facts therein stated correspond precisely and exactly with the real facts of the case, then the tax deed would necessarily be held to be valid.
We also think that the tax deed sufficiently shows that the assignment of the tax-sale certificate was made by the county clerk of Bourbon county; for the tax deed recites that it was duly assigned by Bourbon county, and it could not have been duly assigned by Bourbon county unless it was assigned by the county clerk. The statutes require that when property is offered for sale for delinquent taxes, and when there are no bidders, the property shall be bid off by the county treasurer for the county, and when any person shall desire to purchase the county’s interest in the property and shall pay the amount required therefor, the treasurer shall issue to such person a tax-sale certificate, and the county clerk shall then assign the certificate to the purchaser, and such certificate and assignment “shall vest all the interest of the county in or to such land or town lot in such person.” (Tax Law of 1868, § 91; Tax Law of 1876, §117.) Prior to the tax law of 1876 the statute did not require that the tax deed should state that the county clerk had assigned the tax-sale certificate, but it left the county clerk in executing the tax deed to state the fact of assignment in any appropriate language which he might choose to use; and §155 of the tax law of 1876 reads as follows:
“Sec. 155. All matters relative to the sale and conveyance*588 of lands for taxes under any prior statute shall be fully ' completed according to the laws under which they originated, the same as if such laws remained in force.”
(See also Watkins v. Inge, 24 Kas. 612.)
It is claimed, however, by counsel for Rice, that a “macadam tax” is no tax at all, but only a “special assessment for improvements;” and they further claim that there is no law authorizing a tax sale for special assessments for improvements, and therefore that the tax sale in the present case and the tax deed founded thereon are absolutely void. Their principal authority for this claim is §33 of the act of 1872 relating to cities of the second class, which reads, so far as it is necessary to quote it, as follows:
“Sec. 33. The assessments made pursuant to the third clause of the second subdivision of the preceding section shall be known as ‘special assessments for improvements/ and, except as hereinafter provided, shall be levied and collected as one tax in addition to the taxes for general revenue purposes, and shall be certified by the city clerk to the county clerk, to be placed on the tax-roll for collection, subject to the same penalties and collected in like manner as other taxes under existing laws.”
We have now considered every objection urged by counsel for Rice against the tax deed; and we do not think that any 'one or more of them, or all together, are sufficient to defeat the tax deed.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.