188 S.W.2d 129 | Ark. | 1945
This is a suit by appellee, E. V. Fulton, to quiet title to lot 13, block 8, Craig's West End Addition to El Dorado, Arkansas, and to cancel a deed from the State Land Commissioner to appellant, C. A. Stringer. Appellee failed to pay the taxes for 1936 and the lot was sold November 1, 1937, and certified to the State Land Commissioner on December 11, 1939. On May 8, 1940, the State, pursuant to the provisions of Act 119 of 1935, procured a decree confirming the 1937 tax sale. Thereafter, on October 23, 1943, the State Land Commissioner delivered his deed to appellant, C. A. Stringer.
The sole ground relied upon by appellee to cancel the state deed to appellant was that the property was not advertised as provided by 13847 of Pope's Digest in that the notice of sale was published on October 22 and October 29, 1937, and the sale held on November 1, 1937. It is undisputed that the notice was published for a period of only 12 days prior to the day of sale, instead of the two full weeks required by the statute. It is also undisputed that this suit to set aside the tax sale of 1937 was not instituted within one year of the date of the confirmation decree of May 8, 1940. The trial court was of the view that the failure to give the statutory notice defeated the power to make the sale and that the decree of confirmation failed to cure such defect, even though the sale was not attacked until more than a year after the rendition of the confirmation decree. A decree was entered *896 canceling the deed of appellant and confirming title to the property in appellee.
To sustain the action of the chancellor appellee relies upon such cases as Edwards v. Lodge,
Appellee also relies upon such cases as Schuman v. Metropolitan Trust Company,
The case of Bolin v. Kelley,
The effect of a confirmation rendered pursuant to the provisions of Act 119 of 1935 is to cure all defects and irregularities of tax sales, after the lapse of a year from the confirmation proceedings, except those that go to the power to sell. Fuller v. Wilkinson,
Justice BAKER, speaking for this court in the case of Berry v. Davidson, supra, said: "If there are any taxes levied or assessed against the land, however defectively that may have been done and when the taxes shall not have been paid, the state has the power to sell."
In the case of Commercial National Bank v. Cole Building Co.,
The holding of these cases was reaffirmed in Faulkner v. Binns, supra, where it was held, to quote a headnote: "The effect of a confirmation decree rendered pursuant to the provisions of Act 119 of 1935 is to cure all tax sales where there is not lacking the power to sell, that is, all sales for taxes which were due and had not been paid."
In the case of Caldwell v. Martin,
We think the case of Redfern v. Dalton,
"The four objections to the sale herein copied above do not relate to the power to sell, and were not made within one year after the rendition of the confirmation decree. Appellant has, therefore, shown no cause for vacating it, and the decree from which is this appeal so holding is affirmed."
We follow the decision of Redfern v. Dalton, supra, and conclude that the failure to give the required statutory notice did not defeat the power to sell. Under the provisions of 9 of Act 119 of 1935, such defect could have been successfully interposed by appellee as a meritorious defense against rendition of the confirmation decree, or such defense might have been asserted within a year from the date of the confirmation decree in the absence of knowledge of the pendency of the confirmation suit. The present suit having been instituted by appellee more than a year after rendition of the confirmation decree, and the state having the power to sell, the defect complained of was cured.
The able chancellor erred in setting aside the tax sale and confirming title to the property in appellee. The decree is accordingly reversed and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint of appellee, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. *899