Davidson v. Cantrell
This text of 1993 OK CIV APP 192 (Davidson v. Cantrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Miles Davidson sought to purchase a certificate of tax sale on property owned by the City of Tulsa [“City”], and demanded the Tulsa County Treasurer issue him the certificate. When the county treasurer refused his demand, Davidson commenced this action against the treasurer for writ of mandamus to compel issuance of the certificate.
City acquired the property by warranty deed June 9,1987, which was filed the following month. By that time, however, the property had already been assessed for 1987 ad valorem taxes. The Tulsa County Treasurer issued a tax sale certificate on October 3, 1988, reflecting non-payment of 1987 taxes.
The trial court initially granted the writ of mandamus, but allowed City to intervene to protect its interest in the property.3 Davidson paid $770.40 in accrued taxes, costs, and penalties, and the treasurer executed an assignment to Davidson in compliance with the writ. City then filed a motion for declaratory judgment, asserting the assignment was void. After healing, the trial agreed and rendered a declaratory judgment to that effect. Davidson appeals.
We reach the same result here as in the related case involving these parties. Although we are here concerned with an assignment of the certificate of tax sale instead of a tax deed, we are compelled by the same authorities to hold that the county treasurer was not authorized to issue the certificate to Davidson, and the certificate is therefore void.
The Oklahoma Constitution provides: “[A]ll property ... of municipalities of this State ... shall be exempt from taxation ...” Okla. Const., Art. X, § 6.4 A parallel legislative enactment has been codified since the statehood era. See R.L.1910, § 7303; see now 68 O.S.1991 § 2887(2).
The constitutional provision is self-executing. City of Hartshorne v. Dickinson, 207 Okla. 305, 249 P.2d 422, 424 (1952); see Independent School District No. 9 v. Glass, 639 P.2d 1233, 1238 (Okla.1982). The exemption is all-inclusive, and applies regardless of the use to which property is actually put. Sublett v. City of Tulsa, 405 P.2d 185, 198 (Okla.1965); State ex rel. City of Tulsa v. Mayes, 174 Okla. 286, 51 P.2d 266, 270 (1935).
Davidson contends the constitutional exemption is not implicated in this case, because the delinquent taxes were assessed when the property was in private hands, before the City acquired it. Davidson rests his arguments primarily on 68 O.S.1981 § 24232 [repealed],5 which required a city, [727]*727upon acquisition of property, to deduct the accrued property taxes and a proportional share of the current-year taxes from the purchase price, and pay those sums over to the county treasurer.
We find the issue presented here is controlled by State ex rel. Comm’rs of Land Office v. Galyon, 154 Okla. 204, 7 P.2d 484 (1932). In Galyon, the Land Office sued for injunction against a county treasurer. The Land Office had acquired property previously owned by a private individual, who had defaulted on his mortgage to the Land Office. At the time the Land Office received a sheriffs deed following the foreclosure sale, the property taxes had remained unpaid for four years. The county treasurer advertised the property for tax resale, and the Land Office then commenced its action to enjoin the sale. The Oklahoma Supreme Court held that, once the state had acquired title to the property, “the county treasurer ... had no legal authority to advertise the same for sale for taxes at a resale or to sell the same at such a sale.” Galyon, 7 P.2d at 486.
We find the following remarks by the Ga-lyon court, in which the court quotes the Minnesota case of Foster v. City of Duluth, 120 Minn. 484, 140 N.W. 129 (1913), to be particularly apposite:
“[I]t must be held that all proceedings taken after the property became public property were void, notwithstanding that the taxes for the current year may have been a lien on the property before its transfer. It by no means follows ... that, because there was a valid lien, the proceedings to enforce that lien were valid. Nor is it important here what becomes of the lien. We need not consider whether it still exists as an unenforceable lien, whether plaintiff is entitled to refundment, or whether the lien is merged in the fee title. All that is necessary to decide, and all that we do decide, is that all proceedings to assess the land for taxes, taken after it became public property, and all proceedings in attempting to enforce and collect the tax, were void.” We take that position with reference to the issue presented here.
Galyon, 7 P.2d at 485; see Foster v. City of Duluth, 140 N.W. at 131 [ellipsis in quotation added],
Galyon therefore represents a specific rejection of the position advanced by Davidson here. The result in that case is based solely on the exemption in Art. X, § 6.
The language of the constitutional exemption is unequivocal. Oklahoma Industries Authority v. Barnes, 769 P.2d 115, 120 (Okla.1988). The exemption has been construed to render public lands immune from tax resale, and no legislative enactment can abridge or qualify that exemption.
Property is never exempt from taxation except by special and definite provision of law. Unless the constitutional provision which grants the exemptions is self-executing, the Legislature may qualify, curtail or annul any exemption. Constitutional provisions which exempt certain classes of property or those which direct that the Legislature shall not tax designated property are self-executing.... The Legislature may not abridge or extend a constitutional provision which is a self-executing grant of power to the taxpayers if the provision is self-complete.... Nor may the Legislature require a certain procedure to be followed in claiming the exemption which will nullify the exemption and •validate an illegal tax.
Independent School District No. 9 v. Glass, 639 P.2d at 1238 [footnotes omitted]. See also State ex rel. City of Tulsa v. Mayes, 174 Okla. 286, 51 P.2d 266, 268 (1935) (“[Art. X, [728]*728§ 6] would seem clearly to place it beyond the power of any authority in this state, including the Legislature and this court, to tax property owned by any municipality of this state. There is no more authority for taxing such property than there is for taxing property of the United States or the property of this state.”).
Davidson’s arguments relating to legislative power under Art. V, § 50, Okla. Const.,6 are therefore misplaced, because, as noted above, the exemption for municipal property is a complete, self-executing constitutional provision which neither requires enabling legislation to be effective nor is subject to legislative diminution. Similarly, Davidson’s claim that 68 O.S.1981 § 24232 may be applied so as to render City’s exemption contingent upon payment of accrued ad valorem taxes is based upon the erroneous premise that City’s exemption is subject to such legislative qualification.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1993 OK CIV APP 192, 876 P.2d 725, 65 O.B.A.J. 2101, 1993 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 195, 1993 WL 666644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-cantrell-oklacivapp-1993.