114 So. 349 | Miss. | 1927
The appellee, Burns, filed a bill to confirm his title to certain lands, in the city of Gulfport, described in the bill, deraigning his title from the government of the Unitted States down to the assessment of the property in the city of Gulfport, and then alleged that the lands involved in this suit were duly assessed for taxation by the tax assessor of the city of Gulfport on the assessment roll of said city for the year 1912, to F.P. Shelby, and that said assessment roll was duly and legally filed by the said assessor with the mayor and board of commissioners of said city at the time and place and in the manner provided by law; and that the board did, at the time and place and in the manner and form provided by law, duly ratify, approve, and confirm said assessment roll, and that thereafter the said mayor and board of commissioners did, at the time and place and in the manner provided by law, duly and legally fix and levy the municipal tax levy for the said city of Gulfport for the fiscal year 1912, and that said assessment roll was duly and legally, at the time and place and in the manner provided by law, filed with the tax collector of the said city, for the purpose of collecting the municipal taxes for the said year.
It was then alleged that no person had paid the municipal taxes on said property duly levied and assessed as aforesaid for the year 1912, and that said taxes being due, delinquent, and unpaid, N.D. Goodwin, tax collector of the city of Gulfport, did duly and legally proceed to *211 advertise the said property for sale in the manner and form and for the time prescribed by law; and did thereafter, on April 7, 1913, being the first Monday in said month, at the south door of the city hall in the city of Gulfport, Harrison county, Miss., being the place fixed by an ordinance of said city for such tax sales, offer said land and property for sale at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, within the legal hours, for the municipal taxes due and delinquent thereon for the fiscal year 1912; and no other person bidding thereon, the same was struck off to the city of Gulfport, for the taxes and damages due thereon as provided by law, and the said city of Gulfport became and was declared the purchaser thereof; that the said N.D. Goodwin, tax collector, did duly and legally make and certify a list of lands sold to the city of Gulfport for the taxes due thereon and delinquent for the year 1912, which said list contained the property described in the bill, and which, it was alleged, was duly filed with the city clerk within ten days from the date of said tax sale and there remained on file for two years from the date of said tax sale, during which time said land and property was subject to redemption from said tax sale, but was never redeemed from the tax sale, and that by means of the premises the said city of Gulfport thereby acquired a good, legal, and valid title to said property.
The bill further alleged that pursuant to an ordinance of the city of Gulfport duly passed and adopted, providing for the sale of forfeited tax lands acquired by the city, for a valuable consideration the city of Gulfport, by its deed dated August 3, 1925, sold and conveyed said land and property to the complainant Burns, and one A.A. Washington, and that subsequently the said Washington deeded his interest to the complainant; and prayed for a confirmation of his tax title.
The defendant, Shelby, appellant herein, denied in his answer that the complainant, Burns, was the real and true owner of and in the actual possession of said land, *212 in Gulfport, described in the bill; and he further denied that the said lands were duly assessed for taxation by the tax assessor of the city of Gulfport on the assessment rolls of said city for the year 1912. He admits that he was the owner of said land in the year 1912, and still claims to be the owner thereof, but emphatically denies the land was assessed for taxes by the municipality for the year 1912; denies that there was a legal assessment and approval of the assessment roll by the mayor and board of commissioners during that year; denies that the mayor and board of commissioners did legally fix and levy the municipal tax levy for the year 1912; denies that the assessment roll for the year 1912 was duly and legally, at the time and place and in the manner provided, filed with the tax collector of said city for the purpose of collecting the municipal taxes for said year; denies that there was any legal assessment roll for the fiscal year of 1912 ever filed in the office of the city tax collector; and denies that there was any legal assessment of the real property in the city of Gulfport for the year 1912, and that any sale or pretended sale under said purported assessment roll for the year 1912, for the taxes for the year 1912, was and is wholly and totally null and void. The defendant, Shelby, admits that he paid no taxes to the city of Gulfport on the said land for the year 1912, but alleges that, in the absence of any legal assessment of said property for that year, he was not required to pay such taxes; that before taxes can be collected there must be a legal assessment of the property; and he denies that there was a legal assessment of the said property, for the year 1912, by the city of Gulfport.
The defendant, Shelby, further denied that the tax collector of the city of Gulfport did duly and legally proceed to advertise and sell the said property for the taxes due thereon for the year 1912; denied that said lots were legally sold on the first Monday, the 7th day of April, 1913, for the taxes due thereon for the year 1912; denied that the said N.D. Goodwin, tax collector of the city of *213 Gulfport, did legally make and certify a list of lands sold to the city of Gulfport for the taxes due thereon and delinquent for the year 1912.
After setting up these denials, the defendant, Shelby, made his answer a cross-bill and alleged that the municipality of Gulfport was operating in 1912 under what is known as the Code chapter on Municipalities, and as such was so operated in the years 1912 and 1913. He further alleged that in the year 1912 and prior years thereto, the city of Gulfport made its assessment as provided by the Code chapter on Municipalities; that is, by copying the county assessment roll made by the county assessor and approved by the board of supervisors, and filing such copy with the municipal tax collector as a warrant for the collection of municipal taxes after such copy had been approved by the mayor and board of aldermen or commissioners of said municipality. He then alleged that there is a purported assessment roll of real property for the year 1912 on file in the city clerk's office of the city of Gulfport, porporting to contain a list of lands in the city of Gulfport, and that this roll, or pretended roll, is not marked "filed" in any manner; that it is not signed, certified to, or authenticated in any manner whatever by the city tax collector, the city clerk, or any other person; that there is nothing on it to identify it as an assessment roll for the year 1912 except the printed copy thereon; that it bears no signature or certificate whatsoever by any person; that it does not show by whom made or how; that it could have been copied from any copy of the county assessment roll of any prior year, or copied from a prior year city assessment roll; that it bears no authentication as to how when and in what manner made and by whom — so far as the roll itself indicates, it could have been made by any person whatsoever; that it contains nothing to show that it was made as provided by law, made by the person whose duty it was to make such roll; and respondent here stated and charged that the said assessment is in fact no legal, valid assessment of property, *214 and certainly not such an assessment as would permit the sale of property of the citizens in the municipality.
Respondent further stated and charged that the mayor and board of commissioners approved some assessment roll for the year 1912, but which one, by whom made, when made, or how made, there is nothing to so show; that the assessment on file in the city clerk's office purporting to be an assessment of real property for the year 1912 was merely a blank book with some printed matter thereon, but aside from this there was nothing thereon to indicate that it was an assessment of real property in the city of Gulfport for the year 1912; that such pretended roll was not signed, certified to, or authenticated in any manner, and respondent and cross-complainant stated the fact to be that such assessment was no such assessment as the law provided and contemplated; and that in truth and in fact it was not a legal and valid assessment of property, and any sale or pretended sale thereunder for taxes was wholly and totally void. Respondent, in his cross-bill, offered to pay any indebtedness that might be due for the year 1912, and prayed that the said tax title be canceled.
The complainant, Burns, introduced his title to the lands down to the assessment and sale and the striking off of the property to the city of Gulfport. He then offered to show the following:
"Counsel for complainant next introduces page 53 and the antecedent pages relating to tax sales made by the tax collector of said city on April 7, 1913, for the delinquent taxes of 1912 due said city, together with certificate thereof signed by N.D. Goodwin, city tax collector of the city of Gulfport, which said sale book shows the same receipt number as shown on the book marked `Assessment Roll, 1912, of City of Gulfport.'
"Owner's name: F.P. Shelby.
"Description: Lots 15-16-17-18. Block 5.
"City taxes —
156. *215
"Tax collector's fees:
Ten per cent damage. One dollar for conveyance. Twenty-five cent fee.
"Ten per cent damage
16
"One dollar for conveyance.
1
"Twenty-five cent fee.
1.00
"Clerk's fee, fifty cents.
50.
"Printer's fee, twenty cents.
80.
"Total tax and cost —
5.02.
"Amount paid —
5.02.
"Twenty-five per cent to purchaser —
1.26
"Accrued taxes paid by purchaser —
1.56.
"Five per cent to purchaser on accrued taxes —
.08.
"Clerk's fee, twenty-five cents.
40. 25.
"Clerk's two per cent fee —
17.
"Tax collector's two per cent fee —
17.
"Total amount of redemption —
8.91.
"Quitclaim lots 15 and 16, Blk. 5, to Frank Burns and A.A. Washington 8-3-1925.
"Quitclaim lots 17 and 18, Blk. 5, to E. Waldmier 8-31-25.
"By whom redeemed —
Mrs. H.N. Fatheree 1/22/14. *216
"Counsel for complainant next introduces receipt No. — for the year 1912 on file in the office of the city clerk and tax collector of said city, showing that municipal taxes on lots 15 and 16 and block 5 of the East Side addition, city of Gulfport, assessed to F.P. Shelby, were not paid for said year.
"Original.
"Office of Tax Collector. No. 3655.
"Gulfport, Miss., April 8, 1913.
"Received of F.P. Shelby $5.02.
"Address
"City taxes for fiscal year 1912 as per following description of real estate and value personal property:
Total Personalty and Realty $ Rate Mills Dolls. Cts. Lots No. Blk. Valuation. Statement of Personal and realty tax General 15-16-17-18 5 120 Bond and Interest Cemetery fund Sinking fund Total East Side
"____, "Tax Collector, City of Gulfport."
Complainant also offered in evidence the quitclaim deed from the city of Gulfport, dated August 3, 1925, which was signed by the mayor and by the city clerk, with seal and acknowledged and recorded. He then, after proving the title to the land, introduced the city clerk, who was custodian of the city records relative to tax sales, and asked the following:
"Q. What is this book I hand you, marked `List of Lands Sold to the City of Gulfport?' A. That is our sales to the city.
"Q. On page 53 of this book that you have identified I note list of lands sold to the city of Gulfport by N.D. Goodwin, tax collector, for the taxes due thereon for the fiscal year 1912, lots 15 and 16, block 5, assessed to F.P. Shelby. Following that is tax collector's fees and damages and total taxes. Is there where it shows the *217 number of the tax receipt under which this land was sold? A. No; the tax receipt is not on there. This is the amount of the taxes.
"Q. Are you acquainted with Mr. N.D. Goodwin's handwriting? A. I have seen him write lots of times.
"Q. This order here, is that Mr. Goodwin's handwriting, dated the 10th of April, 1913? A. That is either Mr. Goodwin's or his deputy clerk. It looks like his handwriting.
"(Counsel for defendant objects to the introduction of that record because it is not identified or authenticated by any one.)
"By Witness: Mr. Jordan was Mr. Goodwin's clerk, and that looks like his handwriting.
"(Counsel for defendant would further object because the writing is not shown to be that of the city clerk.)
"Q. Have you the list of the tax sales for this year? A. I think so. They are all filed.
"(Objection to that list in that book is sustained, as it at present stands)."
There is nothing in the record to show that after this ruling excluding such evidence, there was any subsequent order admitting it in evidence; and the record before us contains no signature or certificate of the tax collector to any list of lands sold to the city of Gulfport on the first Monday of April, 1913, for the taxes due for 1912. It is asserted by one of the counsel that there was such a certificate to the said list of lands; but, by the other, if it existed, it was omitted in the making up of the record. The certificate of the clerk and the record certifies that:
It "contains a full, true, correct, and complete copy of all pleadings, orders, and evidence, being all of and the entire record in the state court of that certain cause in said court styled, `Frank Burns, Complainant, v. F.P. Shelby et al.,Defendants,' and numbered 8848 on the General Docket, which includes the original appeal bond *218 and summons and the decree appealed from, as the same appear of record and remain on file in my office."
Whenever the records certified to this court by a clerk are, in fact, incorrect, it devolves upon the attorney asserting such records to be incorrect to apply for a writ of certiorari to have the missing part of the record certified up, and if he fails to do so, the court must look to the record before it and decide according to the record. The record before us does not show a list of lands struck off to the city of Gulfport, signed by the city tax collector or certified to by him, and we think that it is necessary to so show. Mayson v. Banks,
By section 7007, Hemingway's 1927 Code (section 3424, Code 1906), it is provided that:
"The tax collector shall collect municipal taxes during the time and in the same manner and under the same penalties as the state and county taxes are collected. He shall, where not otherwise provided, in all particulars be governed by the general revenue laws of the state, so far as applicable, in making such collections; but he shall make the reports thereby required to the mayor and board of aldermen, and shall pay over the money collected to the municipal treasurer; and shall receive only such commissions or compensations as may be allowed by ordinance."
The opinion heretofore rendered is set aside, and this opinion is given in lieu thereof. The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded. *219