79 Ala. 481 | Ala. | 1885
The bill is filed by the City Council of Montgomery, as a municipal corporation, to enforce the payment of back taxes, due for nine consecutive years, and assessed against the real property belonging to a married woman. A demurrer was filed, in which many causes were assigned, and among others the objection, that the complainant’s remedy, was at law, and not in a court of equity, which had no jurisdiction, as was urged, to enforce a tax lien. This demurrer was not, however, insisted on, nor ruled on by the court, but was waived by a mutual agreement of the parties litigant, by which it was stipulated that the pending controversy should be compromised upon certain specified terms, and should be submitted to the chancellor for the rendition of a decree by him, “upon the basis of this agreement.” It is quite obvious that the effect of this agreement, bearing date October 18th, 1882, was to abandon the demurrer, and all objections raised by it, so far as this could be accomplished by consent. The argument is made, however, that notwithstanding this agreement, the Chancery Court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter in controversy, and that consent of parties can not confer such jurisdiction. Let us examine the nature of this suit, with the view of testing the correctness of the application of this principle.
The subject-matter of the suit, as we. have said, is the enforcement of a lien, given by statute, against the separate estate of a married woman, for taxes assessed according to law. In Perry County v. Railroad Company, 58 Ala. 546, it was said that, according to a preponderance of the authorities, taxes levied and assessed become a legal liability on the tax-payer, and may be enforced by an action at common law, unless the statute gives a remedy which is intended to be exclusive. It was not necessary, however, to go further in that case than to hold, that a levy and an assessment of taxes create a legal liability on the tax-payer to pay. Desty, in his treatise on Taxa
It can not be doubted, that there may be circumstances under which a court of equity would take jurisdiction of the enforcement of a tax-lien ; although the rule may be, that it will decline to do so without the existence of some ground of equitable cognizance, other than the mere fact that there is a lien. In State v. Duncan, 3 Lea (Tenn.), 679, a bill of this character was sustained, the question of equitable jurisdiction to enforce such liens being one especially under consideration. The argument there was the same as that urged here — that the lien being one created by statute, and the mode of its enforcement being expressly given, all other modes were excluded by necessary implication. The lands had been sold for ten years’ successive taxes, and purchased by the complainant, the sales being void for irregularity in the proceedings. It was held, that the statutory remedy was not adequate in a case of complication and embarrassment like the one in hand, where the purpose was to collect back taxes; and the bill was accordingly sustained, as was also asimilar one in Edgefield v. Brien, 3 Tenn. Ch. Rep. 673. The courts of Tennessee, we may add, have always
The remedy of the complainant in the present case is shown to be attended with many embarrassments. The lien for taxes is created by law, and is a legal right which exists independently of the remedy-for its enforcement. This remedy given by statute is gone with the lapse of years, because of the failure of the proper officer to enforce it at the authorized time. The owner of the property is a married woman, against whom a personal judgment will not lie, and who is not suable in an action of ordinary debt at law, because of her coverture. This fact is often, of itself, a ground of equitable cognizance. 1 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., § 160; Fariss v. Houston, 78 Ala. 250. We might safely assert, that the allegations of the complainant’s bill, setting out the foregoing facts, show a proper case for the jurisdiction of a court of chancery. But this we need not now decide. It is'unimportant that the averments of the bill were defective, or wanting in fullness, and, therefore, that it was for many reasons demurrable, or that the bill itself was wanting in equity, because the complainant had a complete and adequate remedy at law. These defects, if they existed, were capable of being cured by amendment; and the consent of the defendants, that a decree should be rendered by the chancellor, was tantamount to an agreement that all amendable defects should be supplied by intendment.- These we will accordingly regard as having been made. Consensus tollit errorern. What we decide is, that, in this case, the Chancery Court'was not without jurisdiction to render a decree "condemning the property of the defendant, Mrs. Winter, to the payment of such taxes as were due by her to the City Council of Montgomery, under the allegations of complainant’s bill. Abraham v. Hall, 59 Ala. 386; Westmoreland v. Foster, 60 Ala. 448; State v. Duncan, 3 Lea, 679, supra.
The only decree which the chancellor was authorized to render, however, was one based on the written agreement of the parties. If we can clearly see from the evidence that his decree conflicts with the stipulations of this agreement, it is our duty to declare it to be so far erroneous. It is an important feature of this agreement, that it recognizes a prima facie liability on the part of the defendant to pay all taxes levied to pay the current expenses of the city, as weil as those levied under the act of December 16th, 1876, from the year 1873 to the year 1881, inclusive. From this amount there is an express agreement that certain deductions may be made, some absolutely, and others on conditions specified.
It is insisted on the part of the appellants, that they should have been permitted to enter into a collateral investigation of
As it was provided by item 6 of the agreement, that “ no taxe'á were to be paid on any property which did not belong to the defendants” at the time the taxes were assessed, it was competent for them to show that the ownership of any of the property, so assessed was in another person at the time of such assessment. It appears that this was attempted to be done by the introduction of certain deeds and affidavits, referred to in the register’s note of testimony. As these papers are no where set out in the record, we can not know their purport or contents, and must presume the finding of the register and of the chancellor to be correct.—Toon v. Finley, 74 Ala. 343.
Eor a like reason, we decline to disturb the finding of the chancellor on the question whether the sale by the city of certain property for the taxes of 1873 extinguished the demand of the city for such taxes. There appears to have been an agreement of counsel as to the facts attending the sale of this property, which was in evidence before the register; but it has been omitted from the record, without, any evidence of its contents. Non constat but that it sustained the conclusion reached in the decree, and so the law presumes. The obvious condition, upon which it was impliedly agreed that this matter should be snb
It is further contended that, under the terms of the agreement of October 18th, 1882, the Chancery Court was excluded from considering the question of the validity of the city’s claim of taxes levied to pay interest on certain bonds issued in aid of the South and North Alabama railroad ; that this matter of controversy was agreed to be submitted to arbitration, and the jurisdiction of the courts was thereby ousted. We do not construe the agreement to have this effect. It has been held by this court, that a mere agreement to arbitrate a controversy “ can not be enforced at law or in equity, because no one can effectually waive his right to have his suits determined in the proper courts provided by the laws of his country.”—Bozeman v. Gilbert, 1 Ala. 90; Stone v. Dennis, 3 Port. 231. However this may be, the authority of arbitrators, under a submission at common law, could always be revoked by either party before the making of the award, and a mere agreement to arbitrate is not considered a defense to an action.—2 Greenl. Ev., §§ 79, 69. IIow far, if at all, these principles may be affected by our present Code of laws governing statutory arbitrations, is not a question before us.—Code, 1876, § 3536. Our proposition is, that it was never contemplated by the agreement of the parties that the chancellor should not consider the-question of the validity of the railroad tax. The agreement itself, upon the basis of which the decree was rendered, recognizés a prima facie liability for all taxes levied by the city to pay the bonds on which this interest was due. It was agreed that the cause should be submitted for decree within thirty days from October 18th, 1882, and that the defendants should have one, two and three years, in which to pay “the amount found due.” Inasmuch, however, as a case was then pending in this court involving the legal validity of this tax, it was agreed that, in the event that the decision was adverse to the tax, “it should be stricken from the amount claimed by said city.” If no decision was made by the fifteenth of July, 1883, the question was to be submitted to arbitration, on demand of either party, “ and,” it was added, '•‘•no collection of said railroad taxes shall be made, until the decision of said arbitrators, provided such decision is made by July 15th, 1884.” This provision operated only as an agreement to stay the collection of the tax for the time, and under the conditions stipulated, and not to waive the plaintiff’s right to have it reduced to judgment by the court to which the whole controversy had been submitted by the terms of the agreement. If its invalidity had been pronounced, in the manner agreed on, the amount of the tax could have
We find no error in the chancellor’s decree, and it must be affirmed. “