Deraney v. Mays

52 S.E.2d 711, 205 Ga. 142, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 1949
Docket16575.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 S.E.2d 711 (Deraney v. Mays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deraney v. Mays, 52 S.E.2d 711, 205 Ga. 142, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 548 (Ga. 1949).

Opinion

Wyatt, Justice.

The evidence in this case discloses the following facts with reference to the claimed titles of the respective parties: The plaintiff claims title by virtue of a deed executed by her husband in 1926 and recorded in that year. The defendant claims title by virtue of a tax sale for city taxes, made pursuant to tax executions in personam against J. B. Mays for the years 1928 to 1935, inclusive. Tax deeds, accompanied by the executions, entries of levy, and copies of advertisements were introduced in evidence. These deeds appear to be regular in every respect, with one exception. The executions were in personam against J. B. Mays and not Mrs. Martha S. Mays, who held a warranty deed to the property, duly recorded in the year 1926.

This ease, we think, turns upon a consideration of the question of agency.

It appears from the evidence, some of which is quoted in the statement of facts, that shortly after the execution of the deed from Mays to his wife in 1926, creditors of Mays instituted a suit against him and his wife, and others to whom he had executed deeds, seeking to set these deeds aside as being fraudulent. This litigation pended for about ten years, and until a short time prior to the sale of the property to satisfy the city tax executions. The litigation terminated with the deed executed to Mays’ wife being upheld, while other deeds executed to other *148 parties were set aside. Prior to 1926, Mays had paid all the city taxes on the property in dispute; and during the pendency of the litigation instituted by the creditors, he made payments of taxes on a part of the property in dispute. In the litigation instituted by the creditors of Mays, his wife, the present plaintiff, swore that Mays was her agent, collected the rents on the properties, and looked after the property for her. The undisputed evidence in the case was to the effect: that from 1926 to the date the property was sold for taxes, Mrs. Mays never paid any taxes on the property and never contacted the taxing officials; that Mays controlled and managed the property, contacted the taxing officials, and made payment of taxes thereon; that shortly prior to the sale, Mays went to the office of the Tax Receiver and Collector of the City of Jackson, selected several pieces of property he intended to buy, said that he didn’t care anything about the rest of the property, and demanded that each piece of property stand good for the taxes on that piece of property, and that the property be segregated and sold separately, which was done; that Mays attended the sale, at which there were only two bidders, he and the City of Jackson, Mays bidding on and buying the parcels he wanted, and having deeds to a part of the property bought executed to his wife, and the city bidding on and purchasing the property not bid on by Mays. After the sale, neither Mays nor his wife ever attempted to exercise any control over the property; and thereafter the City of Jackson collected rentals on a part of the property. After the sale by the City of Jackson to the defendant, he thereafter collected rentals, made valuable improvements on the property, and was in the uninterrupted possession and control of the property from August, 1937, until the filing of the present suit in March, 1943.

On the trial, neither the plaintiff nor her husband, who were present at the trial, denied that he was, in his handling of the property, the agent of his wife. Neither took the stand to testify.

We think — under this undisputed evidence, showing, among other things, the exclusive control and management of the property in question by Mays for years, from the date he executed a deed to his wife until the date of the tax sale, with the knowledge and acquiescence of his wife, as well as the previous sworn admissions of the wife, unexplained or denied on the present *149 trial, to the effect that her husband was her agent in managing the property — that a finding was demanded that her husband was her general agent in the control and management of the property, and that such relationship existed at the time of the tax sale.

(a) The evidence establishing the agency of the husband for his wife, the tax executions issued against him in personam, subsequently to the transfer of title by him to his wife, were not invalid because not issued against the owner of the property.

Assessments for taxes on the property had been made by the city against Mays prior to the date he transferred title, and he had paid the taxes thereon. Subsequently to his transfer of title, he as the general agent of his wife continued to manage the property and to contact the taxing officials With reference to the property, and to pay taxes thereon. So far as the evidence shows, Mrs. Mays never notified the city of any change in the status of the title of the property, and never attempted to pay any taxes on the property. In the circumstances, the fact that the city in making an assessment made it against the agent of the true owner, instead of the owner, would not render the assessment and subsequent tax sale thereunder void.

“As a general rule, noi property can be sold under a tax execution in personam as the property of the defendant therein, when the defendant has neither title nor possession nor any right to represent the person who has it; and a sale under these circumstances would be void as to the true owner.” Haden v. Atlanta, 177 Ga. 869 (171 S. E. 703). Since it appears without dispute in this case that the execution in personam was against the person who had the “right to represent” the owner as general agent, and who as such was in the exclusive control and management of the property levied on, we think that the present case falls within an exception to the general rule which requires executions in personam to issue against the true owner. As recognized in the statement quoted in the Haden case, supra, tax executions may be valid though not against the true owner, and such executions have been held valid by this court on a number of occasions.

In State v. Hancock, 79 Ga. 799, 801 (5 S. E. 248), a man resided with his wife and daughter on lands to which his wife *150 and daughter held title. He returned the land and failed to pay taxes thereon. With reference to the validity of an execution in personam against him, this court held: “While it is true that the legal title to this house and lot was in the claimants, it is also true that it had never been returned by them for taxes in the years for which these executions were issued. They had allowed the husband and father to return it as his own. All the property, of whatever kind, in this State, unless expressly exempted by the laws thereof, or by the laws of the United States, is subject to taxation and must pay its pro rata part "of the taxes for the support of the government, in whosever hands it may be, or whoever may return the same for taxation. It is not incumbent upon the State or county to investigate the legal title to property before assessing the same. The only duty of the tax receiver of the State and county in regard to this matter is to see that all the property, not exempted as above set out is returned by someone.

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Related

Bailey v. Todd
191 S.E.2d 547 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1972)
Yancey v. O'KELLEY
68 S.E.2d 574 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1952)
Mays v. Deraney
63 S.E.2d 380 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1951)
Townsend v. McIntosh
54 S.E.2d 592 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E.2d 711, 205 Ga. 142, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deraney-v-mays-ga-1949.