55 Ark. 192 | Ark. | 1891
Martin brought this action of ejectment against Townsend for the possession of a tract of land in Faulkner county, basing his claim of title upon a land commissioner’s deed to lands forfeited to the State for the nonpayment of taxes. The trial resulted in a judgment for Martin.
Counsel for Martin concede' that the application of the rule which has governed previous cases will defeat his title, but they contend that the legislature has established a different rule which cuts off all defenses except such as go to the foundation of the power to sell. The provisions of the statute relied upon are two sections from the revenue act of 1883, Mansf. Dig., secs. 5782 and 5791. The act provides that when lands are struck off to an individual at tax sale, the collector shall deliver to him a certificate of purchase .(Mans. Dig., 5770); and if the lands are not redeemed at ■the end of two years, the clerk of the county court is required, upon the surrender of the certificate of purchase, to execute to him a deed in the form prescribed by section 5780 of Mansfield’s Digest.
When the State becomes the purchaser, the clerk is required to record the fact in a book kept for that purpose; .and when the time for redemption has expired, the following provision governs, viz.: “ The clerk shall make out a certificate of sale to the State for all lands purchased by the State, as shown by the records of such tax sale in his office, which have not been redeemed, and state therein the amount of the taxes, penalty and costs thereon, and cause the same to be recorded in the recorder’s office of the county, and thereupon the title to all lands embraced in such certificate shall vest in the State, and the clerk shall immediately transmit such certificate to the commissioner of state lands, and thereupon such lands shall be subject to disposal, as other forfeited lands shall be.” • Mansf. Dig., sec. 5784. The provisions governing the deed executed by the -land commissioner to a purchaser from the State are found in section 4246 of the same digest. There is no provision in the statute expressly attempting to cut off any meritorious defense that may exist against a title claimed under a land commissioner’s deed. Scott v. Mills, 49 Ark., 266.
But it is argued that the certificate of sale executed by the clerk to the State is exactly equivalent to the deed executed by him to the purchaser, and that therefore section. 5782 should be held to apply to it.
The certificate of sale was certainly intended as the-State’s evidence of title, and to that extent operates as a. deed would, notwithstanding it contains no granting clause- or words of conveyance. It was competent for the legislature, if it had seen fit—notwithstanding the difference inform and of nomenclature—to give to the clerk’s certificate-of sale whatever conclusive effect it could give to the clerk’s-deed. But the question is, has it done it? By the express terms of the section relied upon, the limitation upon the right to defeat a tax title is confined to a title claimed under a deed executed by the clerk in substantial compliance with the provision of the act governing the execution of' such deeds, and it is silent as to the effect of a certificate, except that it is declared that the certificate shall operate as a conveyance.
In South Carolina, the statute required the county auditor (who stands for our county clerk in this case) to execute a deed to the individual purchaser and a certificate to the State, as our statute does. The statute declared also that the deed executed by the clerk should be prima facie evidence of the title, but was silent as to the certificate of sale executed to the State. In disposing of the question whether the State’s certificate was also prima facie evidence of title, the Supreme Court of South Carolina used the following language which is appropriate to this case: “ The General Assembly in its wisdom saw proper to make the deed of the auditor prima facie evidence of title as to delinquent lands sold by him in express terms as found in the one hundred and sixteenth section of the act of 1874. They also saw proper to leave those words out in the one hundred and seventeenth section, where the land was forfeited to the State for the want of bidders. We have the power to construe and interpret doubtful and analogous phrases and words in an instrument brought before us, so as to reach its true intent and meaning, but we have no power to. interpolate or insert words not used; especially should we be restrained in a case like this, where the words in question are expressly incorporated in one section and left out in the other. We must suppose that the legislature intended, for some good and sufficient reason, that the purchasers at delinquent land sales should stand prima facie upon the deed of the auditor, while in the case of the stringent doctrine of forfeiture it was the intention that the State should be required to make out its case.” State v. Thompson, 18 So. Car., 538.
In the case of De Treville v. Smalls, 98 U. S., 517, which is relied upon by the appellee, ‘the Supreme Court of the United States held that the presumptive effect which was given to a certificate of purchase issued to an individual applied also to a similar title held by the United States; but that was because the act of Congress contemplated that a •certificate of purchase should issue to the purchaser whether he was an individual or the United States, and gave to the •certificate a prima facie effect, by whomsoever held. The pivotal question in the case was, whether a certificate should issue when the United States became the purchaser. If our statute should be construed as requiring the clerk to execute to thé State a deed such as is required by section 5780, the case would be in point. But such a construction is not contended for.
In the case of Martin v. Barbour, 140 U. S., 634, the Supreme Court of the United States construed section 5782 of our statute as being limited in its operation to deeds made-by the county clerk. We concur in that exposition of the Statute.
The State’s title in this case was acquired after the decision in Radcliffe v. Scruggs, which, as we have seen, was one construing a statute, and was the culmination of a series of decisions under the same statute, recognizing the rule there-announced. The rule was one upon which property rights-were annually based. It is a familiar rule of courts that it is more important that such questions should be finally set-. tied than how settled. Taliaferro v. Barnett, 47 Ark., 359. The land owner in this case was justified therefore in relying upon the stability of the rule that the statute under consideration would not deprive him of any meritorious defense which threatened his title. It is not necessary to inquire whether the decisions construing the statute became a part of it so as to invest one who acted in reliance upon them with rights which the subsequent overruling of those decisions cannot disturb; for, if the land owner in this case would not be protected against the retroactive effect of the overruling or new decision, the injustice of the rule thereby established would remain; and it was the fear of working injustice that gave rise to the doctrine of stare decisis. That doctrine must rule this case. As we should decline to disturb the established rule, we decline to enter upon the consideration of the question whether it is well founded or not.
The power of the legislature to enact that no irregularity shall avoid a tax sale except such as is fundamental, is fully-recognized in Radcliffe v. Scruggs, sup., and Barton v. Lattourette, ante, page 81, but the provision under consideration cannot have that effect in this case.
For the error indicated the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. It is so ordered.