Wildman v. Enfield

298 S.W. 196 | Ark. | 1927

This suit was begun in the Cleburne Chancery Court to set aside a tax sale made by the collector of said county June 12, 1922, and especially the sale of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 14, township 9 north, range 10 west, and to cancel whatever right or claim defendant acquired from the State by virtue of such sale.

The plaintiff alleged that the tax assessor failed to indorse the special oath upon the assessment list for the year 1921, as provided for by 9874, C. M. Digest. Second, that the county clerk of said county failed an neglected to attach to the taxbook a warrant authorizing the collector to collect the taxes assessed against the lands described in said taxbook for the year 1921, as required by 10016, C. M. Digest.

Defendant answered, denying the material allegations of plaintiff's complaint, and set up a claim under a donation certificate, and alleged that the value of the use of the lands was no more than the expense incurred by defendant. The defendant, appellant here, also urges that plaintiff is barred by the statute of limitations contained in 10119 of C. M. Digest.

The circuit clerk testified that he was the clerk and custodian of the records of Cleburne County. He examined the assessment record for 1921, and testified that he found no affidavit of assessor of that time, as provided by 9874, C. M. Digest. He also testified that he had examined the real estate taxbook for 1921 *1007 and found that it did not contain warrant of county clerk authorizing the sheriff to collect taxes of 1921, attached thereto. He found on the book the lands described in plaintiff's complaint, and found that said lands were advertised as shown by the record and sold to the State for taxes June 12, 1922, for taxes of 1921. He also testified that he had examined the real estate taxbook for the year 1922 and found that the clerk's warrant was not attached thereto authorizing the sheriff to collect the taxes. The warrant authorizing the sheriff to collect was not attached to the taxbook for said county for the years 1923 and 1924, and does not appear on either record.

On cross-examination witness said he had not examined the personal as well as the real property taxbooks for 1921, and subsequent years. That he had examined these records, and found that the clerk's warrant authorizing sheriff to collect said taxes is not attached to either record. That he did not know whether or not any such warrant was attached to any records mentioned at time same were placed in hands of collector, except the year 1925, but knows that no such warrant was attached. That his attention had been called to warrants for some years typewritten on sheets of legal paper and attached to the taxbook by pasting in the book or sticking them in the book with mucilage. That that had been done sometimes in that county. That the books he had examined were permanent records in his office and used by the collector in collecting taxes on real property in the county.

Robert Wildman testified that he was in possession of the land described in plaintiff's complaint, holding under a certificate of donation issued to him by the Commissioner of State Lands the 21st day of June, 1924.

The court found that the tax sale was void, and decreed a cancellation of such sale and quieted title to said lands in appellee, who was plaintiff in the court below. An appeal was prayed and granted.

It is unnecessary to set out more of the testimony, because the only questions for this court to determine *1008 are whether the suit was brought in time, and whether there was a failure of the clerk to attach the warrant authorizing the collector to collect taxes, and, if said warrant was not attached, whether this made the sale void.

Section 10119 provides: "All actions to test the validity of any proceeding in the appraisement, assessment or levying of taxes upon any land or lot, or part thereof, and all proceedings whereby is sought to be shown any irregularity of any officer, or defect or neglect thereof, having any duty to perform, under the provisions of this chapter, in the assessment, appraisement, levying of taxes, or in the sale of lands or lots delinquent for taxes, or proceedings whereby it is sought to avoid any sale under the provisions of this chapter, or irregularity or neglect of any kind by any officer having any duty or thing to perform under the provisions of this chapter, shall be commenced within two years from the date of sale, and not afterward."

It is contended by the appellant that this statute is a bar to plaintiff's cause of action, because it was not begun within the two years. We do not think that appellant is correct in this contention. This court has decided several times that the two-year statute of limitations, relied on by appellant in this case, has no application as to jurisdictional matters or vital defects in the proceedings relating to a tax sale, but only to irregularities.

The failure of the clerk to attach his warrant authorizing the collector to collect taxes, as provided in 10016, is not a mere irregularity but is such a defect that it is not cured by the two-year statute of limitations, relied on by appellant. Hewitt v. Ozark White Lime Co.,120 Ark. 528, 180 S.W. 199.

Appellant insists that, when the assessment of taxes is shown, the burden is on the party assailing to prove they are illegal, and relies on Memphis L. T. Co. v. St. Francis Levee Dist., 64 Ark. 258, 42 S.W. 763. The question decided in that case was a wholly different question from the one presented here, and the rule announced in that case has no application. In that case *1009 some parts of the record were read in evidence, but they did not purport to be a complete record, and there was no evidence of the contents of the record not read and no proof of what they did or did not contain. But in this case the law requires the warrant of the clerk to be attached, and we think the proof sufficiently shows that no warrant was attached. At least the chancellor evidently found from the proof that no warrant was attached, and we cannot say that his finding is against the preponderance of the evidence.

While it is true ordinarily that officers are presumed to perform their duty, we do not think that this presumption is sufficient to take one's property away from him. It has been said:

"I have no doubt whatever that it is essential, in order to give the surrogate jurisdiction of the persons of the heirs, that this provision of the statute should be strictly complied with. It is the only process to bring them into court, and without it they are without their day in court. And I think that notice for the full time required by the statute is equally indispensable; that short notice would be as no notice. And I think it was a fact which the defendant in this case was bound affirmatively to establish." Sheldon v. Wright, 7 Barb. (N.Y.) 39.

The Missouri court, in deciding a similar question, said:

"I will now pay some attention to the general doctrine invoked by the plaintiff's counsel. I hold it is true that, in ex parte and summary proceedings, the law must be strictly pursued. In the case of McClung v. Ross (5 Wheat. 116, 5 L.ed. 46) it was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States that, under the laws of Tennessee, where lands are sold by a summary proceeding for the payment of taxes, it is essential to the validity of the sale and of the deeds made thereon that every fact necessary to give the court jurisdiction should appear upon the records." Morton v. Reeds, 6 Mo. 64.

This court said, in one of the cases referred to: "The statutory presumption in favor of a conveyance *1010 of lands forfeited for taxes, executed by the Commissioner of State Lands, has been overcome in this case by proof that the land was not assessed by a sufficient description to identify the land." Cotton v. White,131 Ark. 273, 199 S.W. 116.

The presumption that an officer has done his duty is not sufficient to justify depriving one of his property, where the proceedings of the officer are ex parte and where the statute expressly required that certain duties shall be performed which are jurisdictional. However, in this case, as we have already said, the court was justified in finding that the warrant of the clerk was not attached.

Since we hold that the attaching of the warrant by the clerk was jurisdictional, and that the court's finding that this warrant was not attached is not against the preponderance of the testimony, it follows that the case must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.