Gautier v. Town of Crescent City

189 So. 842, 138 Fla. 573
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 So. 842 (Gautier v. Town of Crescent City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gautier v. Town of Crescent City, 189 So. 842, 138 Fla. 573 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Buford, J. —

We review on appeal and cross appeal a decree and supplemental decree in a suit to foreclose tax liens under the provisions of Chapter 15038, Acts of 1931. The decree adjudicated foreclosure of certain liens on described lands and dismissed the bill as to other described lands.

Owners of lands on which liens were foreclosed took *575 appeal and the Municipality took cross appeal from the decree dismissing the bill as to certain described lands.

Appellant poses two questions, as follows:

“May delinquent taxes, evidenced only by the roll, as distinct .from being evidenced by tax certificates, be foreclosed by a Town in a proceeding under Chapter 15038, Acts of 1931, where the charter of the Town has adopted the general law (R. G. S. 765, 1890, 756, 759, 766, C. G. L. 980, 3000, 969, 972, 981) requiring that lands be sold and tax sale certificates issued as the procedure upon delinquency ?
“Has' the Legislature power to ratify, confirm, validate and legalize a supposed assessment of a municipal tax where there was neither any determination of nor any levy of a tax millage by the governing body of the municipality?’’

Cross-appellant poses two questions as follows:

“Does a description of land upon a tax roll have to be sufficiently certain and definite so that from the fact of the description it affirmatively appears that the property is subject to being identified and located?”
“Can a single assessment by a municipal corporation which expressly identifies personal property taxed and real property taxed, be foreclosed as to such real property if by a mere mathematical calculation it can be determined which portion of the tax is applicable to the real property ?”

Chapter 15038, supra, provides in part:

“Section 1. The lien of any and all taxes', tax certificates and special assessments heretofore or hereafter imposed by any incorporated city or town in the State of Florida upon real estate may be foreclosed by such city or town by suit in chancery. * * *”
■ “Section 2. Suits- for the foreclosure of tax liens and/or special assessments under this Act shall be in the nature of *576 proceedings in rem against the lands upon which said taxes or special assessments are a lien or liens, and it shall not be material that the ownership of said lands be correctly alleged in said proceedings or that parties having an interest or interests in or liens or claims upon said lands be made parties to such proceedings by naxne or description or be served with px-ocess therein, except.as hereinafter provided. In any such suit as many lots, parcels or tracts of land, regardless of ownership, and as many tax liens, tax certificates and/or assessment liens may be included in one suit as the complainant may desire. * * *”
“Section 3. Such suits may be brought at any tune after any one or more of the following events, x-espectively: (1) After the expiration of two years from the date of axiy tax certificate issued and held by a city or towxi whose charter provides for or requires the issuing of tax ceidificates for delinquent taxes; (2) after the expiration of two years from the date any tax becomes delixiquent which was imposed by a city or town whose charter does not provide for or require the issuing of tax certificates; or (3) after the expiration of one year from the date any special assessment or installment thereof becomes due and payable. There may be included in any such suit all or any part of the lands upon which tax certificates have been outstanding or taxes have remained delinquent or any special assessment or installment thereof shall have been in default for the respective periods aforesaid, and there may be included therein all claims and demands of said city or town against said lands or any paid thereof for taxes, tax certificates and/or special assessments or installments thereof which may be due and payable to such city or town at the time of the institution of such suit. * * *”
“Section 5. * * * No tax or tax certificates shall be held invalid except upon proof that the property was not subject *577 to taxation or that the taxes had been paid previous to any tax sale or prior to the institution of the suit. If any person, firm or corporation shall claim that any tax, tax certificate or assessment is improper or illegal, and seek to contest the same, then such person, firm or corporation at the time of filing an answer resisting the foreclosure of any tax lien, tax certificate or assessment lien shall tender into the registry of the Court such amount as he, they or it claim was properly assessable or for which the property of such person, firm or corporation was properly assessable. $ *

The Town of Crescent City was incorporated under Chapter 6337, Acts df 1911. Sections 1, 7 and 8 of that Act provide:

“Section 1. That the Town of Crescent City in Putnam County, Florida, be and the same is hereby declared in all respects a legally incorporated town with all the powers and privileges incident thereto under the General Statutes of the State of Florida.”
“Sec. 7. That said Town of Crescent City shall have the full power to levy its own tax not to exceed 2 per cent on the assessed valuation of the taxable property within said corporation limits, and make its own assessments upon property situated in said town and for this purpose to fix the valuation of said property by its proper officers without regard to the valuation fixed thereon by the State and County officers charged with the assessment of property for taxation, but said assessment shall not exceed 1 /5 of the value of said property, and that the said-Town of Crescent City may prescribe by proper ordinances the time for the collection of taxes for said municipality.”.
“Section 8. That the assessment upon property and fixing the valuation of same as prescribed in the preceding Section shall be made by a Tax Assessor elected by the *578 voters of said town, and the Town Council is hereby constituted a Board of Equalization.”

Section 7 of the charter was amended by Chapter 8928, Acts of 1921, to read as follows:

“Section 7. That said Town of Crescent City shall have full power to levy its own tax not to exceed 2 per cent on the assessed valuation of the taxable property within said corporation limits, and malee its own assessments upon the property situated in said Town, and for this purpose to fix the valuation of said property by its proper officers without regard to the valuation fixed thereon by the State and County officers charged with the assessment of property for taxation, and that the said Town of Cres'cent City may prescribe by proper ordinance the time for the collection of taxes for said municipality.”

Section 1890 R. G. S., 3000 C. G. L., provides:

“To impose and collect taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 842, 138 Fla. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gautier-v-town-of-crescent-city-fla-1939.