Crowe v. Security Mortgage Co.

5 S.W.2d 346, 176 Ark. 1130, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 841
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 346 (Crowe v. Security Mortgage Co.) 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
Crowe v. Security Mortgage Co., 5 S.W.2d 346, 176 Ark. 1130, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 841 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This action involves the title to the north half of the southwest quarter land the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section five, township two south, range four west, lying in the Northern District of Arkansas County.

The Northern Road Improvement District was organized under special act No. 247, passed at the regular 1919 session of the Greneral Assembly (Special Road Acts 1919, page 1071, volume 1), and benefits were duly assessed under the authority of the.act against all the lands in the district, including the lands above described. The taxes were not paid on the above-described lands for the year 1921, and both tracts were duly returned by the collector of taxes as delinquent on April 11, 1922. Thereafter suit was brought by the district to enforce payment of the delinquent taxes, and on February 13, 1923, a decree was rendered foreclosing the lien of the improvement district for the 1921 taxes, and the lands were ordered sold by a commissioner appointed for that purpose.

This suit was brought under the authority of § 13 of the act creating the district, which provides that the county collector shall not sell the land returned delinquent for the nonpayment of the improvement taxes, but shall report such delinquency to the board of commissioners of the improvement district, who, after adding a penalty of 25 per cent., are required to enforce payment of the delinquent taxes by proceeding in the manner provided by §§ 23 and 24 of act 279 of the Acts of 1909 (Acts 1909, page 829), but it was there provided that the landowner might redeem his land at any time within five years from the time “when his lands have been stricken off by the commissioner making the sale.”

Section 23 of the act of 1909, Supra, provides that the proceeding to enforce payment of delinquent taxes shall be in the nature of a proceeding in rem, and by § 24 of that act it is provided that if, at the sale by the commissioner, no one offers to bid the taxes, penalty, interest and costs due on any tract of land, the ‘ ‘ commissioner shall bid the same off in the name of the said board of directors, # * * bidding therefor the whole amount due as aforesaid, and shall execute his deed therefor, as in other cases under this act, conveying such land to such * * * board.”

On April 5, 1923, pursuant to the decree of sale, the lands above described were offered for sale, and, there being no bidder therefor, the same were struck off to the road improvement district, and a certificate of purchase was issued to it. This sale was duly reported to and confirmed by the chancery court, and the commissioner was directed to execute deeds to the vai’ious purchasers at the .sale.

On April 5, 1925, the commissioners of the improvement district assigned its certificate of purchase to J. E. Duncan, and on January 5, 1926, a commissioner’s deed was duly executed to Duncan as such assignee, and on April 24, 1926, Duncan conveyed the lands to appellant, J. R. Crowe,- who now claims title thereto by virtue of such deed.

. Appellee, Security Mortgage Company, is the owner of the original title to the lands here in controversy, and in January, 1927, brought this suit to redeem from the sale for the 1921 taxes and to cancel the deed to appellant Crowe as a cloud on its title. The court granted the relief prayed, but held that, inasmuch as Crowe and Duncan had redeemed the lands from separate decrees of sale for other taxes, appellant Crowe was entitled to a lien on the lands for the amount expended to effect these redemptions, and from that part of the decree there was no appeal (Turley v. St. Francis County Road Imp. Dist. No. A 171 Ark. 939, 287 S. W. 196), but Crowe has appealed from that part of the decree holding that the right of redemption from the 1921 sale existed.

, The act of 1919 creating the improvement district provided, as has been stated, that the proceedings to enforce payment of the delinquent taxes shall be in accordance with the procedure provided by act 279 of the Acts of 1909, but that the owner 'Should have the right to redeem at any time within five years from the date of sale. Later, by act No. 223, passed at the 1921 session of the General Assembly (Acts 1921, page 296), the period of redemption was shortened to two years, and the validity of this last-mentioned act was upheld by this court in the case of Northern Road Imp. Dist. v. Meyerman, 169 Ark. 383, 275 E. W. 762, which case arose under a commissioner’s sale made under the authority of special act No. 247 of the Acts of 1919, supra.

At the 1925 session of the General Assembly, act No. 346 was passed (Acts 1925, page 1033), extending for a period of three years, in addition to the time then allowed by law, the right to the landowner to redeem, and it was the opinion of the court below that this act applied to the sale here in question, and gave the owner the right to redeem at the time that application was made. The court below was also of the opinion that, as the act creating the improvement district did not, in express language, authorize the commissioners of the district to sell lands struck off to it by the commissioner, it could not assign the certificate of purchase nor otherwise dispose of any lands struck off to it.

The court below was also of the opinion that the right of redemption existed because of the noncompliance with the provisions of act No. 445 of the Acts of 1923 (General Acts 1923, page 395), entitled “An act to require additional publicity to tax sales of lands and sale of land for local improvement assessments.”

Section 1 of this act provides that: “When any lands are sold under the decree of chancery court for delinquent taxes or assessments levied by any special or local improvement district, * * * the clerk of said court shall, within ten days after the filing in his office of the report of the court’s commissioner making any such sale, prepare and file with the county clerk of the county in which the lands are situated, a certified list of the lands so sold; said list to contain a description of each tract under which the same was sold, the name of person or persons in whose name each tract was assessed and sold, the date of the sale, the name of the purchaser of each tract at such sale, and the amount of taxes, including penalty and costs, for which each tract was sold.”

It was the opinion of the court below that the statute limiting the right of the delinquent owner to redeem Ms property from the sale did not begin to run until this statute had been complied with, and that, inasmuch as there had been no compliance with this statute, the right of redemption had not been barred.

The first question presented is that of the right of the improvement district to assign the certificate .of purchase issued it under the decree foreclosing the lien of the district for the unpaid 1921 taxes. • "We think the district had this right.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 346, 176 Ark. 1130, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowe-v-security-mortgage-co-ark-1928.