Bloomstein v. Brien

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 55 (Bloomstein v. Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomstein v. Brien, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 55 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

This is one of a number of bills filed to enjoin the execution of writs of possession, issued by the Circuit Court of Davidson County, to put the defendants Brien and Thaxton in possession of lands of the several complainants, as the purchasers of said lands at tax sales. This' case was heard upon the demurrer of the defendants, while other cases have come before me upon pleadings and proof. They all, however, turn upon questions of law, the facts admitted by the demurrer being established by the evidence in the other cases.

The facts are that the real estate in this county was assessed for taxes for the year 1873, under the act of the General Assembly of March 25, 1873, ch. 118, and the tax-books placed in the hands of the tax-collectors. By section 61 of that act it is made the duty of the tax-collector, where taxes remain due and unpaid on the first day of June in the year following the year for which the taxes are due, to make out a complete list of all unpaid taxes on real estate, add twelve per cent penalty, and, by publication in some newspaper printed in the county, advertise said property for sale. The form of this advertisement and the mode of publication are prescribed ; and by section 64 it is provided that the sale shall be made at the court-house door, on the first Monday of July of the year succeeding the year for which the taxes are due, and the next ensuing days, until the sale is completed. By section 63 it is directed that “each and every lot, tract, or parcel of assessed real estate, and the buildings and improvements thereon, on which the taxes, penalties, and costs are not paid before the day of sale, shall be sold, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to satisfy the taxes, penalties, and costs due thereon.” By section 65 it is provided “that no tract, lot, or parcel of land shall be sold for less than the amount of taxes, penalties, and costs due thereon; and that bidder shall be the purchaser who will pay the amount due for the least quantity of said lot, tract, or parcel of land, to be run [57]*57off from the beginning corner, and running with at least one' line of the tract.”

The tax-collector is by section 67 authorized, upon receipt', of the amount due, to give the purchaser a certificate of his-purchase. Section 68 is as follows: “That when said sales shall have been completed, and within thirty days after the first Monday of July of said year, the tax-collector shall certify all of said sales to the Circuit Court of his county.” * * ’* “ Said court, if in session, or, if not in session, then at the next term, shall enter said sales of record as-valid judgments, vesting title to the property so sold in the-purchasers thereof; and writs of possession shall in all cases be granted to the purchasers during said term, or at any time on demand, whether said purchaser’s shall be any person, company, firm, or corporation, or the treasurer of the state.”

Section 69 is : “That no sale shall be invalid because the-number of acres, or the size and dimensions, of any tract, lot, or parcel of land have not been precisely named, or the amount of the valuation or tax not precisely given ; nor because the property has been assessed and advertised in the name of a person who did not own the same, nor because the same was assessed and advertised to 'unknown owners, nor because a-distress wai’rant did not issue, nor on account of any objection or informality merely technical; but all such sales shall be good and valid if the taxes, penalties, and costs were actually due and unpaid, and the advertisement, sale, and certificate of sale to the Circuit Court shall have been made as provided for in this act”

Section 70 is: “That in each and every case of sale of real estate under this act, where a writ of possession has been issued, it shall be the duty of the sheriff to put the purchaser or purchasers thereof, his, her, or their agent or attorney, in possession of the same, with full power and authority of use and occupation of the same, and the enjoyment of all rents and profits arising therefrom, and the [58]*58Tight to sell any crops belonging to the owners, growing thereon, and to cut, remove, or sell timber from said land, until a full and complete redemption of the same by the «owner or owners, his, her, or their agent and attorney, has been effected, if within the time prescribed in the succeeding section of this act.”

This succeeding section — 71 — is in these words : “ That the owner or owners of any real estate sold at said sale, his, her, or their agent or attorney, shall be entitled and mllowed to redeem the same and recover possession thereof •at any time within one year from the day of sale, but at no 'time thereafter; and, to effect such redemption, shall pay, or cause to be paid, to the clerk of said court the -amount of taxes, penalty, and costs, with interest on the ■ same, at the rate of fifty per cent per annum, from the day -of sale, on the payment of which a judgment of redemption shall be entered of record in the court; and if the purchasers thereof shall refuse possession to said owner, a writ •of possession shall be issued, and the sheriff shall place the party in possession.”

Section 72 is: “That, in all cases redemption, the purchaser shall have the right to elect whether he will ¡accept the redemption-money paid to said clerk or retain the rents and profits arising from the use and occupation of ;said property up to the time of said redemption ; said purchaser shall abide by his said election, and ’signify said choice and election to the clerk of the court. If he elects .to retain the moneys already in his hands, the clerk of the court shall refund to the person paying the same the redemption-money so paid in ; but should he elect to take 'the redemption-money, he shall render an accurate account ■ of his receipts and disbursements from and concerning said property during his occupancy thereof, and pay the balance in his hands to the clerk of the court, to be paid to the cwner of said property, and receive the redemption-money.”

These provisions have been copied at large in order to [59]*59¡show that the Legislature did not intend the certificate of ¡sale to the Circuit Court to be a useless form, but had in •view in such return an important object. That object was to make the certificate, when of record, the basis upon which the rights of the parties were to rest, and through which the possession of the property could be controlled judicially, in accordance with the rights of the parties. And these sections manifestly contemplate the writs of possession jpro and con to be issued and executed within the year after sale.

On July 11, 1874, the sales in controversy in these cases were certified to the Circuit Court, then sitting. The certifi■cate commences with the collector’s advertisement of sale, followed by the list of delinquents, -and property on which the taxes are unpaid, and the taxes, with the name of the purchaser added at the end. The'principal objection raised "by these bills to this list is that there is no dollar or other mark to fix the denomination of the figures in the various ■columns. Then follows a certificate by the tax-collector that he received the tax-books from the county-court clerk •on November 7, 1873 ; that he gave at once public notice in ■each civil district that they were in his hands, and that he would attend and receive taxes at a place designated ; that he did attend, and at the expiration of ninety days issued ■distress warrants, which were returned nulla bona;

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomstein-v-brien-tennctapp-1875.