delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment. The property in controversy is situated in Baltimore City on the northeast corner of Grindall street and Riverside avenue. The case was tried before the Superior Court of Baltimore City without a jury. The learned Judge ruled that under the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff failed to show in himself any title or right of possession to the property in question. There was a verdict and judgment thereon for the defendant, Charles Shipley. The plaintiff has appealed.
A number of questions were discussed at the hearing, but all of. them—all that we think necessary to consider, are involved in the main question of the validity vel non of the proceedings in the Circuit Court of Baltimore which resulted in the sale of the property mentioned, for the unpaid taxes of 1885 and 1886. The city became the purchaser at the tax sale, and subsequently sold and conveyed it to the defendant Shipley, who is now the appellee.
The title of the defendant is founded upon and derived from the tax sale. Borroughs on Taxation, 346; Horseman v. Durham, 165 U. S. 147; Hefner v. North Western Ins. Co., 123 U. S. 751; for although he did not purchase at the tax sale, his grantor, the city, did. In Hefner v. Ins. Co., supra, it is said : “ If the tax deed is valid then from the time of its delivery if clothes the purchaser, not merely with the title of the person who had been assessed for the taxes and had neglected to pay them, but with a new and complete title in the land, under an independent grant from the sovereign authority, which bars or extinguishes all prior
During the course of the trial there was but one exception taken and that was to the ruling upon the prayers, which resulted in the granting of the defendant’s prayer and the rejection of the four prayers of the plaintiff. By the defendant’s prayer it was declared, as we have already seen, that the plaintiff had not shown any title or right of possession. All the rejected prayers are based upon the theory of the invalidity of the tax sale. The first and fourth ask the Court to declare that the plaintiff had shown a good and sufficient title and right of possession, and that, therefore, he was entitled to recover. But, as we have seen, the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s title prior to the tax sale is immaterial, if the tax sale be valid. And whether this sale be valid or not we will briefly inquire.
The grounds of attack on the tax sale proceedings as set forth in the second prayer of the plaintiff is that no levy was made upon the property, and in the third that “ the tax sale proceedings show that the City’s Collector failed to leave with the person by whom were to be paid the taxes * * or at his usual place of abode, a statement showing the amount of taxes due * * * with a notice annexed thereto, that unless said taxes so due were paid within thirty days thereafter, the said City Collector would proceed to collect the same by distress or execution, as provided by law.” These, together with the objection that the proceedings show that more land was sold than was necessary, constitute the case of the appellant.
First, then, in regard to the sufficiency of the levy. It has been often held in this State that when tax sales are under consideration it is only necessary that it shall appear that there has been substantial compliance with the law in all the proceedings of which the sale is the culmination,
Again, it was contended that the tax sale was not advertised according to the provisions of the Local Code of Baltimore City of 1879, Article 49, sec. 5, which provides that the property to be sold for taxes in arrear shall be advertised for sale once a week for four successive weeks in two daily newspapers published in Baltimore. The sale was made on the 24th December, the day named in the notice, and it was published according to the above section of the Local Code, four successive weeks before the sale, namely, on the 23th November, the 2nd, 9th and 16th of December. The objection that the sale should have been had on the 23d instead of the 24th December, and that therefore the whole proceeding is irregular and void is sufficiently answered by the fact that the sale took place on the day fixed by the notice, and that that day, if not the day immediately following the expiration of the notice, was the next day thereafter. This, in our opinion, was sufficient to constitute a substantial compliance with the provisions of the Local Code relative to giving notice of the sale. We see no objection to the description of the lot as set forth in the advertisement.
It is further objected that there was a failure to give the preliminary notice prescribed by sec. 4, Art. 49 of the Baltimore City Code 1879, which provides that there shall be no distress for arrearages of taxes until the collector shall first give to the person so in arrears, or has left at his or their residence or last known residence or if neither can be found, on the premises, a statement of the indebtedness, and not less than thirty days notice of intention, if bill is not paid in that time, that payment will be enforced by distraint or execution. The tax proceedings show that the statements of indebtedness, commonly called tax bills, were delivered to the wife of the owner or person assessed at his
The rule laid down in Dyer v. Boswell, 39 Md. 471; Margraff v. Cunningham, 57 Md. 585, and other cases, to the effect that where a part of the land taxed is sufficient to pay the taxes in arrear, the collector can sell only such part as has no application to a small city lot having a frontage of only twenty feet and a depth of one hundred and twenty feet, improved by a dwelling, stable and sheds.
Judgment affirmed.