199 S.W.2d 409 | Mo. | 1947
Action for declaratory judgment in which plaintiff seeks determination of tax exemption from taxes due in 1944 on a lot purchased by it on February 26, 1944 and cancellation of a tax bill issued therefor. The court found that the lot was exempt from the date of its purchase and apportioned the taxes due in 1944 in accordance with the time of ownership of the parties during 1944, making the lot liable only for $190.37 of the total tax of $787.75. Defendant has appealed.
[1] The questions for decision are: When did the state's lien commence for taxes due in 1944? and Can these taxes be apportioned? Defendant contends that the state's lien attached on June 1, 1943 and that there can be no apportionment. Plaintiff contends that the state's lien did not attach until the amount of the tax was determined by the annual levy, which was after the sale to plaintiff, relying on McAnally v. Little River Drainage District,
As shown by the authorities cited in the opinion of the United States District Court in the St. Louis case, supra, (29 F. Supp. l.c. 96) there is considerable conflict of authority on the question of when tax liens [410] attach. [Sec also 61 C.J. 922-924, Sec's. 1172-1173.] The decision therein was based mainly upon the McAnally case, supra. However, we do not consider the McAnally case to be decisive as to the exact date upon which the state's lien attaches because the determination of that precise issue was not necessary to the decision. What was decided therein was that both the state's lien for taxes and the lien of a drainage district for its assessments attached annually, so that the foreclosure of the state's lien for taxes for the year 1926 did not destroy the lien of the district thereafter attaching for future unlevied installments (1927 and 1928) to pay the balance of the original assessment against the land for the drainage works.
This question must be decided upon the construction of Sections 10940 and 10941. (This and all other references not otherwise designated are to R.S. 1939 and Mo. Stat. Ann.) Section 10940 provides: "Every person owning or holding property on the first day of June, including all such property purchased on that day, shall be liable for taxes thereon for the ensuing year." We have held that this does not mean that a personal judgment against the taxpayer is authorized for taxes on real property but that the taxes may be collected by suit to enforce the state's lien against the land. [State ex rel. Hayes v. Snyder,
This court so held in McLaren v. Sheble,
[2] We must consider that the 1872 Revenue Act (Laws 1872, p. 80) by which our present land taxation system was established, was enacted with the construction of previous statutes made by these decisions in mind. [See discussion in Morey Engineering
Construction Co. v. St. Louis Artificial Ice Rink Co.,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a judgment declaring the land to be liable for all of the taxes due in 1944 and subject to the state's lien therefor until paid. All concur.