Coulter v. Anthony

308 S.W.2d 445, 228 Ark. 192, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 412
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 4, 1957
Docket5-1245
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 308 S.W.2d 445 (Coulter v. Anthony) 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
Coulter v. Anthony, 308 S.W.2d 445, 228 Ark. 192, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 412 (Ark. 1957).

Opinions

George Bose Smith, J.

This is a suit by the two appellants, Murray Whitfield Coulter and George Pro-thro Coulter, to cancel the appellees’ tax titles to several hundred acres of unimproved land in Calhoun county. The chancellor, without reaching the question of Avhether the tax titles are valid, held that the appellants are not the real parties in interest and dismissed the complaint for that reason.

The plaintiffs assert that the lands were formerly owned by Harris Brothers, a partnership which was adjudicated a bankrupt on January 23, 1932. On June 13 of that year, while the bankruptcy proceedings were still pending, the land was sold to the state for nonpayment of the 1931 taxes. The state’s title was subsequently acquired by the appellees and is the basis for their claim of ownership.

The appellants derive their asserted title from the Harris Brothers bankruptcy proceedings. On August 16, 1933, the trustee in bankruptcy was authorized to sell the land to E. W. Prothro, by private sale, and the trustee’s deed to Prothro was executed on the following day. The trustee’s attorney in the bankruptcy proceedings was the appellants’ father, E. H. Coulter. It is contended by the appellees that the elder Coulter was the real purchaser at the bankruptcy sale and that the deed to his brother-in-law, Prothro, Avas a subterfuge. Eleven days after the sale Prothro conveyed the land to his two nephews, the appellants, Avho were then one and three years old respectively. When the present suit was brought one of the plaintiffs Avas twenty-one and ther other nineteen.

It is conceded by the appellants that they have no statutory right to redeem the land from the tax sale, for the period of redemption had already begun to run when they acquired their title and was not extended by reason of. their minority. Tarrence v. Berg, 202 Ark. 452, 150 S. W. 2d 753. If the appellants are to prevail they must show that the 1932 tax salé was void. Since this issue controls almost the whole case we consider it first.

Four defects are relied upon by the appellants to support their assertion that the tax sale was void. First, we are urged to declare the sale void because it was conducted without the consent of the bankruptcy court; Representative authorities cited by the appellants on this point include Dayton v. Stanard, 241 U. S. 588, 60 L. Ed. 1190, 36 S. Ct. 695, In re Eppstein, 8th Cir., 156 Fed. 42, and Remington on Bankruptcy (5th Ed.), § 2359.

We do not conceive the rule to be as far-reaching as the appellants would have it. Doubtless the bankruptcy court could have set aside the tax sale had it chosen to do so, but this merely demonstrates that the sale was voidable, not that it was void. There was no federal statute prohibiting the sale or requiring the tax collector to obtain permission to sell the property! The principle is instead a rule of judicial decision and is derived from the power of the court to protect property in its custody. It seems clear that some affirmative action on the court’s part is needed if the sale is to be avoided. In the Dayton case the bankruptcy court took that action by the entry of an order canceling the certificates of purchase and requiring the purchasers to assert claims against the assets of the bankrupt. A somewhat similar course was followed iii the Eppstein case. We are not aware of any decision holding that the mere failure of the taxing authorities to obtain permission for the sale renders the tax forfeiture absolutely void and open to collateral attack.

In the Harris Brothers matter the bankruptcy court made no effort to set aside the collector’s sale. To the contrary, the order authorizing the trustee’s sale to Prothro expressly made it subject to the delinquent taxes against the land. It is quite apparent that the tax sale did not interfere in any way with the bankruptcy court’s control of the property. • It would' be carrying the rule beyond its reason to say that the absence of prior judicial consent rendered this sale void.

Second, the certificate showing the publication of the notice of sale was not executed by the county clerk until the day of sale, when it should have been executed before that day. In the absence of a curative act this defect renders the sale void. Cecil v. Tisher, 206 Ark. 962, 178 S. W. 2d 655. One of the tracts involved, being a part of the fractional southwest quarter of section 31, township 11 south, range 13 west, was sold by the state after the repeal of Act 142 of 1935 and is not subject to the operation of any curative act. As to this tract the appellants are correct in their contention that the tax sale was void.

All the rest of the land was conveyed by the state during the two years that Act 142 of 1935 was in force, and hence the appellees are entitled to the curative benefits of that act. Wood v. Lovett, 313 U. S. 362, 85 L. Ed. 1404, 61 S. Ct. 983. As to these tracts the question is whether the clerk’s belated execution of the certificate was an irregularity cured by Act 142 or a jurisdictional matter lying beyond the remedial power of the legislature.

Our prior decisions indicate pretty clearly that the defect was a mere irregularity. Act 142 was first construed in the leading case of Carle v. Gehl, 193 Ark. 1061, 104 S. W. 2d 445. There we held that various matters such as the publication of the notice of sale are jurisdictional essentials, that the clerk’s records are the only legal sources of information about these matters, and that consequently a complete failure to make the required record is a jurisdictional defect not cured by Act 142. But with respect to the officer’s mere failure to act at the right time, as opposed to his total omission to act, we said: “Beyond question it is within the power of the Legislature to provide for the rules by which the foregoing exercise of power may be made both as to time mid form, and, having the power in the first place to make such rules, indubitably the Legislature lias the power to alter or dispense with the same.” (Italics supplied.)

The exact point now presented was decided in Wallace v. Todd, 195 Ark. 134, 111 S. W. 2d 472, and, in harmony with the reasoning in the Carle opinion, it was held that the clerk’s failure to make the certificate before the day of sale is an irregularity cured by Act 142. A contrary view was expressed, in a paragraph unnecessary to the decision, in Union Bk. & Tr. Co. v. Horne, 195 Ark. 481, 113 S. W. 2d 1091, but we regard the Carle and Wallace cases as sound and adhere to them.

The appellants’ third ground for attacking the sale presents a point of first impression. The assessment book shows that in three instances the county assessor listed and valued two contiguous forty-acre tracts, under the same ownership, as separate parcels. In each instance the county clerk, in making up the tax book, combined the two forty-acre tracts into one call of eighty acres (such as the E 1/2 NE' 1/4 instead of the NE 1/4 NE 1/4 and the SE 1/4 NE 1/4) and extended the' taxes against the total assessed value of the eighty acres. In the subsequent proceedings, including the collector’s sale, the eighty-acre descriptions were used.

In insisting that this asserted defect is fatal to the sale the appellants rely on a line of cases beginning with Cocks v. Simmons, 55 Ark. 104, 17 S. W. 594, 29 A. S. R. 28.

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Related

Coulter v. Clemons
372 S.W.2d 396 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)
Coulter v. Payne
362 S.W.2d 446 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
308 S.W.2d 445, 228 Ark. 192, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-v-anthony-ark-1957.