56 Miss. 704 | Miss. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff' >vho rests his title upon a tax-deed received from the auditor of public accounts is not protected by the statutory presumptions Avhich, under sect. 1700 of the Code of 1871, attach to a tax-collector’s deed, but, by production of the delinquent-list, he must show title in the State. Clymer v. Cameron, 55 Miss. 593.
The plaintiffs in the case at bar, aware of this duty, produced the delinquent-list filed in the clerk’s office of Adams County ; but, when produced, there was shown a fatal variance between this list and the deed received from the auditor. The deed Avas to “ Commencement Plantation, consisting of 1,330
If, therefore, the State’s title to Commencement Plantation depended alone upon that acquired under the forfeited-list of 1875, the action of the court in excluding the auditor’s deed would have been correct. But plaintiffs offered in evidence a deed to the locus in quo, made to the State by the tax-collector of Adams County, in 1873, by virtue of a sale for the unpaid taxes of 1872. This deed, also, was excluded by the court, and the correctness of this ruling requires more careful examination.
The revenue law of 1872, as said in Weir v. Kitchens, 52 Miss. 74, was peculiar in its character. It required, among' other things, that the tax-collector should return the list of delinquent lands to the board of supervisors on the first Monday of December; and if he failed to do so, such failure was made a felony, punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary, aud by the imposition, upon himself and sureties, of the whole amount of delinquent taxes due the State and county. It was held in Weir v. Kitchens, supra, that, where there had been such failure, no valid forfeiture or sale of the lands could take place.
The tax-collector of Adams County failed to return his delinquent-list on the first Monday of December, 1872, and did not, in fact, return it until the first Monday in Januaiy, 1873. ' This fact being admitted, the court below excluded the deed to the land in question executed by the tax-collector on the 3d of May, 1873.
But before the making of such deed, — to wit, on the 21st of February, 1873 (Sess. Acts, p. 289), — the Legislature, by an
That the Legislature has the constitutional right to pass such laws, to operate retrospectively, and that their effect is to cure such irregularities as occurred in this instance, is universally now conceded. Inasmuch as it is entirely competent for the Legislature to prescribe such formulas as it pleases with regard to the levy and collection of taxes, it is fully within its power, by retroactive legislation, to dispense with their necessity and obviate the evils of their non-observance. Cooley’s Const. Lim. 371, and cases cited.
But it is urged that the proceedings for the condemnation of lands for taxes, under the act of 1872, were judicial in their nature, as held in Weir v. Kitchens, supra; and that, inasmuch as the citation to the delinquent tax-payer, provided for by that act, was issued and served in the proceedings before the Board of Supervisors of Adams County for the condemnation of this land before the passage by the Legislature of the curative act of February 21, 1873, the utmost effect of that act was to entitle the State to .institute new proceedings, and that it was not competent for the Legislature to affect in any manner the gzicm'-suit then pending.
This view cannot be maintained. While it is true that the Legislature cannot validate void judicial acts, nor interfere in any way with the judgments of the courts, either to ratify or nullify them, litigants, before judgment, where their claim or defence depends upon an informality not affecting substantial legal rights or equities, have no vested interest in existing legislation ; and where the legislative power to pass the new law is undoubted, as it is in* this case, it applies as well to pending as to future suits. Shenley v. The Commonwealth, 36
In this instance, the citation to the owners of the land issued on the 14th of January, 1873, and was served on the 15th of February thereafter. By it they were summoned to appear before the Board of Supervisors,’and show cause why the land should not be condemned, on the 3d of March. Before that time arrived, — to wit, on the 21st of February, — the curative act was passed, by which the irregularity in the return of the delinquent-list was validated. Of this act the owners of the land were bound to take notice ; and when, on the 6th of March, the order of condemnation and sale was made, it was in all respects valid and obligatory.
It follows that’the court below, in the trial of the case at bar, erred in excluding the deed made to the State under this sale, that deed being in all respects regular upon its face, and having been executed under and by virtue of a valid sale..
It follows, too, that the court erred in excluding the auditor’s deed to plaintiffs, since the tax-collector’s deed of 1873 placed the title to the land in the State, so far as this record shows, and thereby furnished the basis for the introduction of the deed from the auditor.
The court rightly ruled that the description of the land in the auditor’s deed was sufficient.
Reversed and remanded.