Burgess v. Robinson

49 A. 606, 95 Me. 120, 1901 Me. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 A. 606 (Burgess v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Robinson, 49 A. 606, 95 Me. 120, 1901 Me. LEXIS 36 (Me. 1901).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is a writ of entry to recover possession of certain real estate situated in Searsmont, in the county of Waldo, bounded as therein described, and alleged to contain one hundred and eighty-seven acres, more or less.

The plaintiff derives her title to the land by a deed from the inhabitants of the town of Searsmont to whom the land was sold by its collector of taxes December 8, 1896, for non-payment of the tax assessed thereon for the year 1895, as the property of Joseph S. Burgess, the plaintiff’s husband. The defendant derives title under a sheriff’s deed dated November 5, 1896, given in pursuance of a sale thereof on an execution against Joseph S. Burgess, which passed to the defendant all the interest Burgess had at the date of the attachment on the original writ, June 8, 1895.

It is contended in behalf of the defendant that the plaintiff’s attempt to set up a tax title cannot prevail, first, because the requirements of the statutes were not observed by the town officers either in assessing the tax, or in conducting the sale of the land for non-payment of the tax; and second, because he says that if the town did acquire a valid title under its tax deed, the plaintiff acquired no title under her deed from the town, for the reason that the purchase was in fact made by the husband and the consideration furnished by him, and the deed taken in the name of the wife, this plaintiff, for the manifest purpose of defeating the rights of the attaching creditor.

In support of the plaintiff’s tax title it is suggested that the amendatory act of 1895, chap. 70, relating to sales of land for nonpayment of taxes, (made applicable by chap. 137 to taxes assessed that year) affords relief from a rigid compliance with some of the requirements of the statues to which many of the adjudications of of this court have hitherto related; and it is contended that the proceedings in this case show a strict adherence to the mode prescribed by the statues as amended by the act of 1895.

But a careful examination of the provisions of that act fails to

[124]*124disclose any attempt or purpose to modify the rule established in Greene v. Lunt, 58 Maine, 518, and re-affirmed in all the subsequent decisions down to Green v. Alden, 92 Maine, 177, that in the assessment which establishes the lien on land and forms the basis of all subsequent proceedings, there must be a definite and distinct description of the land upon which the tax is intended to be assessed. Indeed, it may fairly be said that a contrary intention affirmatively appears, for in R. S., c. 6, § 193, as amended by the act of 1895 above cited, is still found the provision authorizing the collector to post notices of the sale, “designating the name of the ownei’, if known, the right, lot and range, the number of acres as nearly as may be, the amount of tax due, and such other short description as is necessary to render its identification certain and plain.”

This identical language is found in the original act of 1844 (ch. 123) and has been retained in all subsequent revisions. It is also cited by the court in Greene v. Lunt, 58 Maine, supra, in confirmation of the view there taken respecting the necessity for a definite description of the land in the assessment list; for.the list of assessments commited to him is the source from which the collector must obtain the information to enable him to give such “short description as necessary to render its identification certain and plain” in the notices of sale to be posted by him, and in the returns which he is required to make to the town clerk and treasurer.

It further appears that sect. 197 of the same chapter, though amended by the act of 1895, still declares that within thirty days after making such sale the collector “shall make a return, with a particular statement of his doings in making such sales, to the clerk of his town, who shall record it in the town records; and said return .... shall be evidence of tbe facts therein set forth in all cases where such collector is not personally interested.” The amendment then provides that this return shall be in substance like the form there prescribed; and by this form he is required to “set forth each parcel of the estate so offered for sale” in the schedule outlined, under the caption “description of property.” Nor is there any provision in the act of 1895 to relieve [125]*125the collector from the duty of making this return to the clerk in accordance with the strict requirements of the statute. True, the amendment to sect. 193 provides that “no irregularity, informality or omission in giving the notices required by this act, or in lodging copy of any of the same with the town clerk as herein required, shall render such sale invalid,” but'this obviously has no reference to the formal return of his doings which the, collector is required by section 197 to make to the town clerk within thirty days after the sale.

The defendant accordingly insists, in the first place, that the assessors’ description of the land in their inventory or assessment list, is imperfect, indefinite and insufficient to meet the requirements of the law. The same description is given in the plaintiff’s writ as follows: “On Brown road, bounded N. W. by O. E. Robbins & als, N. E. by Brown road, S. E. by Appleton Ridge road and E. Luce and S. W. by S. R. Bennett. 2 Hs. 2 Bs. No. of acres 187.”

But the real estate owned by Joseph S. Burgess in the town of Searsmont in 1895 consisted of at least four definite parcels in the locality indicated, and the boundaries named by the assessors do not appear from the evidence to be an accurate description, either of all the land in solido, or of any particular parcel of it. The number of acres is stated to be 187, while the land owned by Burgess consisted of 162 acres. The Brown road, as a northeast boundary is applicable only to that part of the property known as, the “Morton Bennett farm,” for taken as a whole it is also bounded on the northeast by land of O. E. Robbins. That portion of the land known as “the 22 acre meadow lot” is bounded on the southeast by the “ S. R. Bennett farm ” and not by “ Appleton Ridge road and E. Luce.” A portion of the land on the southwest is bounded by land of H. Whitney and not by land of S. R. Bennett. Again, a small lot carved out of one of the parcels known as the “Elijah Luce farm” was in the spring of 1895 owned by John Keene. The figures and letters “ 2 Hs. 2 Bs.” are mystic abbreviations which lend no practical significance or force to the other terms employed. There is no mention of, the number [126]*126of any of the lots, and the land is not even designated as the Burgess farm. In view of these facts it is extremely doubtful if the person named as the owner of the land, relying upon this description alone, could determine whether it was his property or his neighbor’s that was taxed, or if a purchaser could obtain from it sufficient information in regard to the extent of the land to enable him to make an intelligent offer for it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 606, 95 Me. 120, 1901 Me. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-robinson-me-1901.