7 Mo. App. 420 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to enforce the lien of the State on the realty described in the petition, for back taxes assessed for 1868. The petition alleges that defendant was the owner of the land described in the petition. The tax-bill filed with the petition is for taxes due in 1868. The petition seems to set forth all the facts required by sect. 6 of the act concerning delinquent taxes, passed April 12, 1877, on which the action is based.
In the court below, defendant interposed a demurrer to
It is insisted that the pecuniary demand of the State was extinguished by the sale and forfeiture of the lands in October, 1869, set out in the petition, and hence that the State has no subsisting cause of action; that the act of Assembly which gives the right of action, so'far as it authorizes recovery of the taxes, is in violation of the Constitution of the State, as being retrospective in its operation, and that the action is barred by the Statute of Limitations.
The act under which this land was forfeited to the State provides (Wag. Stats. 1870, p. 1205, sect. 116) that every tract not sold, for want of bidders, “ shall be, and is hereby, declared forfeited to the State, and thenceforth all right, title, and interest of every person, of, in, and to said land, shall be considered as transferred to, and vested absolutely in, the State'; and such real estate shall not afterwards, in any case, be subject to taxation or sale as other lands, except as hereinafter provided, until sold again to some person by the State, or redeemed.” The act of March 18, 1870 (Acts 1870 Adj. Sess., p. 114), provides (sects. 17, 18) for thek assessment of lands theretofore forfeited to the State for the nonpayment of taxes, and that the taxes, interest, and costs on any tract forfeited to the State for 1868, or any subsequent year, are a lien upon such tract, and provides for redeeming such lands. The act of March 20, 1872 (Wag. Stats. 1154), provides for the redemption of lands forfeited for taxes, aud in 1875 a supplementary act was passed providing for the receipt and collection of taxes due upon forfeited lands.
By the terms of the law in force at the time of the alleged forfeiture, it was the duty of the collector to file with the clerk of the County Court a delinquent-list of lands on which taxes were unpaid. On this list he applied for judgment at a stated term of the County Court, having first given notice by publication in a newspaper. If no owner
Whether it would be competent for the Legislature to vest title of land in the government for the continued delinquency of the owner, by the formal acts of parties acting rather in a ministerial than a judicial capacity, and without inquisition, it is not necessary now to inquire. Forfeitures are not favored by the law, and there seems to be nothing in the provisions of the law under which this property was returned as delinquent which necessitates the interpretation that the title to the State vested, proprio vigore, as soon as the land was marked sold to the State upon the
The object of the law was revenue, to be raised by collecting the taxes assessed upon lands, and it is unreasonable to give it a construction which defeats its object. The law nowhere directs the taking possession or appropriation of the land, and sect. 116 was intended merely as preliminary, and was to work no divestiture of title until the second sale. It became subject to vest in the State on being marked unsold, and the title was to- be actually divested out of the owner upon the public sale to a private purchaser provided for by the act, and not before; the State, meanwhile, retaining- its lien created by the assessment. This is clear from the object of the law, and the provisions as to redemption.
If the title did not vest in the State, the claim for taxes was not extinguished. The judgment of the County Court upon the tax-list did not establish any claim of the State against the owner of the land taxed, and was merely the declaration of a lien upon the land, and an order for its sale to pay the taxes and costs.
2. So far as the constitutional question is involved, it is not objected to the law of 1877 that it changes the remedy. This, it is admitted, might be done without any violation of the Constitution. But the contention is that this act creates a new obligation, imposes a new duty, or takes away a valid defence. This cannot be said, of course, unless the forfeiture of the land to the State under the act in force when the land was offered for sale worked an ex-tinguishment of the tax. The position assumed is that the judgment of the County Court, the sale and forfeiture, vested the title in the State, and therefore extinguished the claim for taxes. It appears from what has been said that we consider that title to the land never vested in the State, and that the claim of the State to the collection of this tax was never extinguished by any forfeiture of the land.
At the time the tax in question became due, the State could proceed to its collection only by the summary process given by the existing law against the land assessed, and upon which the tax was a lien. It had no power to proceed to get judgment and a special execution against the
3. The remaining question is as to the Statute of Limitations, which provides (Wag. Stats. 918, sect. 102) that an action upon a liability created by statute, other than a penalty or forfeiture, is barred in five years.
We do not think that this clause of the statute can be held to apply to the summary proceeding on the part of the State to forfeit land for non-payment of taxes. The actions spoken of in the statute are designated as “ personal
It was clearly competent for the Legislature to make the changes in the Statute of Limitations at any time whilst the right to sue had not been already barred. Seibert v. Copp, 62 Mo. 182.
. We think that the demurrer should have been overruled. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.