166 Ind. 680 | Ind. | 1906
—The controlling question in this case is whether the act of 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 230, §§8603a-8603c Burns 1905) applied to cities having a population of more than fifty thousand and less than one hundred thousand inhabitants, to which class the city of Evansville belonged. §§3905-4054 Burns 1901 (Acts 1893, p. 65, Acts 1895, p. 258, Acts 1901, pp. 73,106, 127,173, 301). Section one of said act of 1903 provides: “That wherever any lands have been or shall hereafter be offered for sale for delinquent taxes, interest and penalty by the treasurer of the proper county for any two successive years and no person shall have bid therefor a sum equal to the delinquent taxes thereon, interest and penalty provided by law, then such county treasurerer shall at the next regular tax sale of lands for delinquent taxes in the year 1904, sell the same to the highest bidder, and the purchaser thereof shall acquire thereby the same interest therein as is acquired by purchasers of other lands at such delinquent tax sales.”
If said act applied to the city of Evansville when this controversy arose in 1904, this case must be reversed, other
Appellee insists (1) that the act of 1903, supra, did not apply to the city of Evansville because §148, supra, which adopted the laws of the State concerning taxation, adopted only the laws in force when the act containing §148, supra, was passed in 1895.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to overrule appellant’s demurrer to the petition and alternative writ, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.