Crorow Hardwood Co. v. Moye

137 So. 493, 161 Miss. 642, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 287
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1931
DocketNo. 29501.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 So. 493 (Crorow Hardwood Co. v. Moye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crorow Hardwood Co. v. Moye, 137 So. 493, 161 Miss. 642, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 287 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

, The appellees, consisting of a child of F. A. Moye, deceased, and descendants of other children, as heirs-at-laws, filed their bill against the Crorow Hardwood Company, L. O1. Crosby, and Lamont Rowland, setting up title to a certain forty-acre tract of land in Pearl River county deraigning their title through their ancestor, F. A. Moye, from the government to the state, and letters patent from the state to P. A. Moye, and alleging that the defendants had cut timber from these lands of the value of two thousand five hundred dollars, and sought a recovery from the appellants for the value thereof.

The appellants answered admitting that the appellees were beirs-at-law of F. A. Moye, but claimed title to the lands in controversy by adverse possession, by laches, under a tax title acquired by their predecessors in title in 1880, and under a tax title acquired by their predecessors in title in 1886.

The court below rejected these defenses and entered a decree on behalf of the appellees against the appellants for fifteen hundred dollars, and, from this decree, Rowland, Crosby, and the hardwood company appeal here.

After a careful study of this record, we have reached the conclusion that the tax title of 1886 vested title in the purchaser thereat, there being no controversy but *648 that if the tax deed of 1886 he established as valid to convey the title to the lands in controversy then the appellees have no standing in court. The tax collector’s deed is here set forth in full, omitting the acknowledgment:

“Tax Collector-To-Poitevent and Favre
‘ ‘ The State of Mississippi
“Hancock County
“I, Joseph Cazeneuve, Tax Collector of Hancock County, have this day according to law sold the following land situated in said County, to-wit:
“The W% of Lot No. 2 in Section 10, Township 4 South, of Range 18 West, containing forty acres, more or less, and assessed to A. B. Spinney, for the taxes assessed thereon for the year 1885, when Poitevent and Favre became the best bidder at the sum of $-65/100 --I, therefore, convey said land to the said Poitevent and F’avre their heirs and .assigns forever.
“Given under my hand the 2nd day of March, A. D. 1886.
“Joseph F. Cazeneuve,,
“Sheriff and Tax Collector.
Sheriff’s fees Deed .......................... $1.00
Clerk fee certificate .......................... .25
Printers fee ................................. .20
State Tax ................................... .05
County Tax . ...;.............................20.
Damages .....................■....'........... .03
Excess ...................................... .17
Total $1.90.”

The deed was duly acknowledged on the 31st day of March, 1886, and on the same day filed for record.

The appellees ’ attack on this deed, which was sustained by the court below, is that the consideration set out in *649 the body of the deed is sixty-five cents, which, it is argued, is less than the amount of taxes and all costs, and, that being the case, the sheriff could not have sold, the land to an individual for less than the taxes and all costs. In other words, the bid of the purchaser at this sale was not enough to cover the fee of one dollar allowed to the sheriff for executing the deed, and the fee of the clerk of twenty-five cents for acknowledging same; they contended that in order to comply with the law the individual must have bid, in this case, one dollar seventy-three cents, and, because of not having so done, it was the duty of the sheriff under the law to strike off the lands sold to the state. The appellees, and the court below, based this view entirely upon the case of Yazoo-Delta Mortgage Co. v. Lumbley, 149 Miss. 864, 116 So. 95, 97.

The appellants contend that according to the deed the purchaser bid an amount sufficient to cover all taxes and all costs and an excess of seventeen cents; that it was not necessary for the sheriff to require a bidder to bid for lands at a tax sale at that time an amount to equal costs which accrue after the moment of the public sale.

In the Yazoo-Delta Mortgage Co. v. Lumbley Case it was shown that the tax deed on its face recited the bid, as consideration thereof, to be sixty-four dollars and thirteen cents, while there was disclosed_ upon the back of the deed a notice that the total amount of tax due on the property described was seventy-three dollars and fifty-four cents, it being there contended that the tax sale and deed thereunder was void for the reason that the tax collector had no power to make a sale for an amount less than the taxes, costs, etc., due on the property. The court there proceeded to construe section 6103, Hemingway’s Code, 1927, as to the duty of the sheriff to strike off the lands to the state where no one will bid the whole amount of the taxes and all costs, and there held that *650 said section must be complied with and the failure so to do would render the sale and deed thereunder void. Judge Ethridge, as the organ of the court, said in conclusion: “Section 6108, supra, is an important statute designed to protect both the state and the landowner. If a sale for less than the amount of taxes, damages, and costs can be made, and if it were valid when made, the state might be wholly unable to collect this revenue from the land so taxed, as the individual might be insolvent and the land would be the only means of affording the state a certainty of securing its revenue. On the other hand, it would be highly prejudicial to the individual owner, for the reason that the lands might be put up and sold for a, mere fraction of the taxes due, leaving a personal debt due by him to the state - which could be collected by judgment and execution, as a debt due by the debtor to the state under section 4256, Code 1906 (Hemingway’s Code 1927, section 8189). See, in this connection, also, Womack v. Central Lumber Co., 131 Miss. 201, 94 So. 2; Hewes v. Seal, 80 Miss. 437, 32 So. 55; Brannan v. Lyon, 86 Miss. 401, 38 So. 609.”

It will be observed that the question here sharply presented is: Does the failure of the bid of the purchaser at a tax sale to cover the costs of executing the deed subsequent to the time of' the actual sale render the sale and the deed thereunder void? It may be said that there is practically no difference in the statute considered by Judge Ethridge in the Lumbley case, supra, and the statute which we shall now proceed to discuss with reference to the point involved in this case. We do not think the Lumbley Case is decisive of the question presented here now for decision. What constituted “all costs” within the meaning of the statute was not considered by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 493, 161 Miss. 642, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crorow-hardwood-co-v-moye-miss-1931.