Angels v. Redmon

132 S.W.2d 170, 198 Ark. 980, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 16, 1939
Docket4-5576
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 S.W.2d 170 (Angels v. Redmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angels v. Redmon, 132 S.W.2d 170, 198 Ark. 980, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 150 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

Smith, J.

A decree was rendered in the chancery court of Chicot county on April 6, 1936, confirming* title in the state to lands acquired through forfeitures to the state for the nonpayment of taxes for various years. The proceeding was had under the authority of act 119 of the Acts of 1935, page 318. Among other lands embraced in the decree was fractional -east % section 3, township 16 south, range 1 west, which had been sold and certified to the state in 1933 for the nonpayment of the taxes due thereon for the year 1932. At the time of the rendition of this decree the title to the tract of land described was in the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, which company, on April 2, 1937, conveyed the land, by quitclaim deed, to Sylvia Epstein, who later married one Angels, and on April 5th Mrs. Angels filed an intervention, in which she alleged her acquisition of the title to the land above-described, and that her grantor, the Insurance Company, had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit before the rendition of the decree. No affidavit to that effect was made by any representative of her grantor. In this intervention, Mrs. Angels alleged that the sale was void for the following reasons: ‘ ‘ That said tax sale to the state and confirmation -under said decree is void for indefinite description of said land, failure of the proper levying of the three-mill road tax, improper advertisement of sale by the sheriff and failure of the clerk to properly certify the tax records to the sheriff and issuance of warrant and other reasons.”

This intervention was filed pursuant to the provisions of § 9 of the act 119, which reads, in part, as follows : ‘£ The owner of any lands embraced in the decree may, within one year from its rendition, have the same set aside insofar as it relates to the land of the petitioner by filing a verified motion in the Chancery court that such person had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit, and setting up a meritorious defense to the complaint upon which the decree was rendered. . . .”

The intervention contained no tender of the amount of taxes, penalty and costs for which the land was forfeited to the state, nor of the amount which would have accrued as taxes thereon had the land remained on the tax books, as required by § 6 of act 119.

Later, on September 2, 1937, Mrs. Angels filed a complaint, under the same case number which the original confirmation proceeding had borne, in which appellee December Redmond was named- as defendant, in which she renewed and elaborated upon the allegations contained in her intervention which she had filed on April 2, 1937. At the time this complaint was filed, there was also filed ah affidavit showing .tender of taxes, etc., which had been refused. It was not recited when this tender was made; but it is not contended that it was made at the time of or prior to the filing of the intervention on April 2, 1937.

An amendment to the complaint was filed on January 7, 1938, renewing the allegations as to the invalidity of the tax sale; but neither the intervention, the original complaint nor the amended complaint contained any allegation to the effect that the tract of land herein described was not included in the list of lands which the state land commissioner had certified as having forfeited to the state, as required by § 5 of act 119, supra. It is not questioned that the land here in litigation had forfeited and had been certified to the state in 1933 for the nonpayment of the 1932 taxes.

The case was submitted to and .was heard by the court below upon an agreed statement of facts from which we copy the following relevant recitals. The land here involved was delinquent for the 1932 taxes, was sold to the state therefor, and the forfeiture was certified by the county clerk, December 13, 1935.

The confirmation decree was rendered under the authority of act 119 of the Acts of 1935, and included the land above-described. The intervention was filed April 2, 1937; but no affidavit of tender nor any tender was made to the clerk. However, on November 12, 1938, intervener made an actual tender of $174.75 (a sum sufficient in amount if the right to redeem exists), which tender was refused as not having been made in apt time.

The agreed statement of facts repeats the allegations of the intervention as to the defects in the tax sale, but proceeds to say: “However, all of said pleas are waived except as to the invalidity of the warrant attached to the tax books, and Sylvia Epstein relies on no other grounds set out in her complaint or amendment to complaint; and it is agreed that the certified copy of the warrant made by the clerk may be read and exhibited in evidence.”

The warrant made by the county clerk, to which the agreed statement of facts referred, was offered in evidence. This is the warrant which the county clerk is required to make by § 10016, C. & M. Digest (which section, as amended, appears as § 13763, Pope’s Digest) when the clerk delivers the tax books to the collector. It is conceded that this warrant was not made, nor was it attached to the tax books within the time required by law, and the effect of this omission was to make the tax sale invalid. It was so held in the cases of Wildman v. Enfield, 174 Ark. 1005, 298 S. W. 196, and Stade v. Berg, 182 Ark. 118, 30 S. W. 2d 211. But the purpose of the confirmation decree was to cure such defects, and if there is a valid confirmation decree, such is its effect. See Fuller v. Wilkinson, ante p. 102, 128 S. W. 2d 251, and cases there cited. This being the only defect in the sale relied upon, the decree—which appears to 'be regular in all respects—has cured it.

Now, this was a defect which would have entitled Mrs. Angels to redeem had there been a compliance with the provisions of act 119 in that behalf. Section 6 of that act permits a landowner to intervene before confirmation and to defend upon the ground that the sale to the state was void for any reason, but requires the owner to “tender to the clerk of the court the amount of taxes, penalty and costs for which the land was forfeited to the state, plus the amount which would have accrued as taxes thereon had the land remained on the tax books . .

Section 9 of the act permits the owner to intervene within one year after the decree of confirmation has been rendered, provided the owner file “a verified motion in the chancery court that such person had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit, and setting up a meritorious defense to the complaint upon which the decree was rendered. The chancellor shall hear such defense according to the provisions of this act as though it had been presented at the term in which it was originally set for trial. ’ ’

One of these provisions, as appears from the portion of § 6 of the act above-quoted, is that a tender of taxes be made. This was not done, and the right to redeem was properly denied for that reason, and this appeal is from that decree. The latest of the numerous cases relating to the necessity of tender is that of Chronister v. Skidmore, ante p. 261, 129 S. W. 2d 608.

As to the affidavit required by § 9 as to the lack of knowledge of the pendency of the suit, it may be said that we construe this statute to mean that the affidavit should be made by the person owning the land at the time of the rendition of the decree. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W.2d 170, 198 Ark. 980, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angels-v-redmon-ark-1939.