Bowls v. Oklahoma City

1909 OK 149, 104 P. 902, 24 Okla. 579, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 13, 1909
Docket81
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1909 OK 149 (Bowls v. Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowls v. Oklahoma City, 1909 OK 149, 104 P. 902, 24 Okla. 579, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 77 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

*580 Turner, J.

From an order of the district court of Oklahoma county entered in this cause on January 27, 1908, dissolving a temporary injunction theretofore issued herein restraining the city of Oklahoma City and J. S. Alexander, county treasurer, and Ed. S. Blackburn, county clerk, and their successors in office, defendants in error, defendants below, from levying or attempting to levy any tax either general or special against lots 19 and 20, in block 17, Military addition to Oklahoma City, Okla. Ter., and said clerk and treasurer from spreading the same upon the records, R. L. Bowls, plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, brings error to this court, and avers that the court errs in dissolving said temporary injunction, because, he says, that, being a “conditional owner” of said property, said taxes were not properly assessable to him.

The facts disclose: That by an act of Congress approved August 8, 1894 (Act Aug. 8, 1894, c. 237, 28 Stat. 264), the United States granted to the city of Oklahoma City in trust for the use and benefit of its free schools a certain tract of land of which said lots are a part comprising the southwest quarter of section 34, township 12 north of range 3 west, in the territory of Oklahoma, which said act provided, after making certain reservations, “that said city shall cause the remainder of said reservation hereby granted to be divided into lots and blocks corresponding as near as practicable with the plat of said city,” and provided, further, in substance, that “when sales are made and the purchase money all paid said city shall execute proper deeds to the purchasers.” That on December 24, 1894, plaintiff and the defendant Oklahoma City entered into a contract of sale of said lots, whereby said city agreed to sell and convey to said Bowls, his heirs and assigns, said lots as shown by the plat then on file in the office of the register of deeds of said city, in consideration of $25 cash in hand paid, and the further payment of $32 on or before one year after said date, and the further sum of $75 on or before December 24, 1912, with interest on said deferred payments, provided, among other things, that said Bowls pay all *581 taxes special or general which might be assessed or levied against said lots when the same became due and payable. That, when said sums were fully paid as therein provided, said city agreed that it would cause to be executed, acknowledged, and delivered to said Bowls, his legal representative or assigns, a good and sufficient deed in fee simple to said lots. That thereupon said. Bowls took possession of said lots which he has since retained, and is not in default in any of said payments. That said lots were duly assessed for general taxes for the year 1904 in the sum of $16.72, which at the time- of the filing of this suit had not been paid, and were on the tax list of the county which were in the custody of said J. S. Alexander, treasurer, who was threatening to sell said lots for said tax, and which he would have done but for the restraining order issued in this cause. That said lots were duly assessed in the year 1905 for general taxes in the sum of $16.34, which said taxes were also on the taxTist and had been by the assessor certified to said Ed. S. Blackburn, county clerk of Oklahoma county, which at the time of this restraining order were being placed -on the tax rolls -by said Blackburn, assessor, preparatory to being certified to said county treasurer for collection. That a special tax of $81.68 had also been levied against said lots pursuant to an ordinance of said city for sewer improvements, which, at the time this suit was brought, was of record in the clerk’s office of said city as a charge, against said lots, and was being certified by said clerk to the county clerk of that county to be placed on the assessment rolls and tax rolls for collection, and that said sewer- was constructed and said assessment a proper apportion against said lots.

As it is admitted that, if said property is properly chargeable with the general, it is with the special, tax, we will confine ourselves to the inquiry whether the holder of the equitable title to land is regarded in law as the “owner thereof” under Wilson’s Eev. & Ann. St. Olda. 1903, § 5931, and, if so, whether an assessment of a general tax against the property in his name as such owner is valid. We think it is, and that, too, in depend *582 ent of any statute or the express stipulation contained in the executory contract, of sale. 27 Ana. & Eng. Enc. Law, 678, says:

“Assessments in the name of a person as owner, who holds the equitable title to property and is in possession have been generally upheld as valid”; citing authorities.

In the section of Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St. 1903, supra, it is provided:

“All taxable property, real and personal, shall be listed and assessed each year in the name of the owner thereof on the first of March of each year. * * *”

In Anderson v. Harwood, 47 Mo. App. 660, the governing statute read:

“Every person' owning or holding property on the first day of June * * * shall be liable for taxes thereon for the ensuing jrear.”

The executory contract contained no obligation on the part of the vendor to pay the taxes. The court in the syllabus said:

“A vendee of realty, in possession under a contract of sale at the date of the assessment, is the real owner for the purpose of taxation, whether, he hold the legal title or not.”

See, also, Farber v. Purdy, 69 Mo. 601.

In Miller v. Corey, 15 Iowa, 166, the facts were that:

“In 1854 defendant’s intestate sold to plaintiff a farm, for which there was to be paid $2,250. A bond was given, which recites the payment of $50 at the time of the contract, and that notes were given for different sums, the last one maturing March 1, 1861. Plaintiff was to have’ full possession on the 1st of May, 1855, and the notes drew interest from date at 6 per cent. Upon payment of these notes the vendor bound himself to make and deliver to plaintiff ‘a, good and sufficient deed, clear of all incumbrances.’ For the years 1858-61 the taxes were unpaid on the land thus sold, amounting to over $150. Plaintiff paid all the notes and demanded a deed, and thereupon a controversy arose as to whose duty it was to pay said taxes. The court below held that it was plaintiff’s duty to pay such as accrued after he took possession, to wit, May 1, 1855;'and from this order plaintiff appeals.”

The court in passing said:

“By the terms of the contract the vendee had a fight to the *583 possession of this land before these taxes were assessed, and this right, according to the finding of the court below, he exercised and enjoyed from and after the time thus fixed. He then had the sole control and was in the full receipt of all the accruing rents and profits of the property. The vendor was deriving no profit from the land and, indeed, as we have seen, aside from his lien, had no other interest in it than as trustee holding the legal title for the beneficiary or vendee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1909 OK 149, 104 P. 902, 24 Okla. 579, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowls-v-oklahoma-city-okla-1909.