George v. Mutual Investment & Agency Co.

284 F. 681, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2430
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1922
DocketNo. 5905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 284 F. 681 (George v. Mutual Investment & Agency Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George v. Mutual Investment & Agency Co., 284 F. 681, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2430 (8th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, plaintiff in the trial court, brought this action against Several hundred defendants, including appellant herein, to quiet title to a certain tract of land consisting of 35,-084.78 acres in New Mexico, known as the Elena Gallegos land grant. Appellee’s alleged title arose out of a sale of said tract of land for delinquent taxes for the year 1908, its purchase by the county of Bernalillo, N. M., the transfer of the certificate of sale, and the making of tax deed to James W. Norment, and various conveyances on to appellee.

Appellant’s claim is that he is the owner of the east 30,000 acres of the Elena Gallegos land grant, and in paragraph 7 of the answer sets forth certain alleged illegal taxes assessed and levied as part of the levy preceding the sale for taxes.

Appellee moved to strike out all of paragraph 7 of the answer except the last subparagraph, which subparagraph sets up that the land was not subject to taxation, and that all taxes legally assessed against said grant were paid; the theory of the motion being that paragraph 7 of the answer set forth matters which amounted to a collateral attack on a tax judgment, and further that the curative statute of New Mexico es-topped appellant from raising the objection to taxes set forth in said paragraph. The motion was sustained by the court.

The assignments of error relate entirely to the action of the court in sustaining the motion with relation to paragraph 7 of the answer. If the matters set forth in this paragraph could be urged as against the tax sale and the tax title, then it was error, of course, to sustain the motion. If these matters could not be considered either by virtue of a judgment for the taxes having been rendered in a court of competent jurisdiction, or by virtue of the curative act of New Mexico, then the action of the court was correct. As a correct conclusion in this case is dependent upon the considerations suggested in said paragraph 7, and as this case is an action to quiet title where plaintiff-appellee must recover on the strength of its own title, we believe all the questions "suggested in paragraph 7 of the answer can properly be taken into consideration by this court regardless of the ruling of the trial court, and that the question of whether or not error was committed in sustaining the motion is rather immaterial.

The issues briefly stated are these: First, was there a valid assessment and levy before the sale of the real estate for taxes? Second, is the fact that certain illegal taxes were included in the levy sufficient to invalidate the entire levy?

As the motion to strike was sustained, we must accept for the purposes of this appeal the statements of fact therein as true. Hence we must accept as true that certain illegal taxes were included in the legal taxes levied against the land.

I. It is elemental that there must be an assessment of property for taxes in order that the levy of taxes and proceedings for collection thereof may legally be carried on. This property was assessed to un[683]*683known owners and assessed as “Elena Gallegos grant, Unk. owners, confirmed December 27, 1887, area in Bernalillo county, 35,080 acres.”

The tax proceedings were under the provisions of the Compiled Statutes of New Mexico of 1897, and under chapters 22 and 49 of the Session Daws of 1899 of the Territory of New Mexico, which were then in force. Under certain sections of these Compiled Statutes of 1897 the inhabitants of the territory were required to list property for taxation.

Section 4031 of said statutes provides that, if the owner or claimant of any property not listed was absent or unknown, the assessor could make an assessment of the value of the property, and, if the owner were unknown, the property could be assessed to unknown owners.

Section 4041 provides that, where a tract of land is claimed by several persons, and the same is not listed for taxes, the assessor shall make an assessment of the value of the tract and list and assess the same to unknown owners using such description as he can obtain from the public records or otherwise.

Section 4048 provides that the county commissioners of each county shall constitute a board of equalization. At different times they are required to correct the assessment roll and to notify persons affected. An appeal is allowed from the decision of this board to the territorial board of equalization.

Chapter 22 of the Session Laws of 1899 of New Mexico is a statute dealing with the collection of delinquent taxes and providing that, where, taxes are delinquent, the collector of the county must prepare and publish notice in the official newspaper of the county, or, if there be none, then by posting in front of- the courthouse and publishing with the delinquent tax list a notice that he will ask for judgment against the lands and for an order to sell the same to satisfy such judgment.

Section 17 of said chapter 22 provides that upon completion of the publication and notice the district attorney for the county shall file a complaint in the District Court setting forth the fact of the preparation and publication of the said delinquent tax list and notice, and shall ask judgment and decree of court against the property, and that the District Gourt shall acquire full and complete jurisdiction over the lands described in said delinquent tax list.

Section 18 of said chapter 22 provides for the examination by the court of said delinquent tax list and the entering of judgment for amount stated therein where the owners have interposed no defense to said action. And further the court directs the clerk to issue an order directing the tax collector of said county to sell at public auction the property included in said delinquent tax list, the statute providing tire terms under which the order shall be made.

Section 21 provides for an appeal to the Supreme Court of the territory.

Section 22 provides for the sale at the courthouse of each county of each parcel of property in the list attached to the order of sale.

Section 23 provides for the issuance to the purchaser at such sales of a certificate of sale showing properties sold, the name of person or [684]*684persons against whom the tax was assessed, or that the assessment was against unknown owners, amount paid therefor, etc., and further providing that final judgment for the sale of such real estate for delinquent taxes shall estop parties from raising any objection thereto or to a tax title based thereon which existed before the rendition of such judgment and could have been presented as a defense in such action in court which section will be referred to later. There are other sections of this general act which probably need not be referred to.

Reference should perhaps be made to chapter 49 of the Session Laws of 1899, providing for the assessment and collection of taxes on land grants. We have referred to these various sections briefly without attempting to set them out because the tax title on which appellee’s claim to ownership of these lands rests was derived through the procedure under these various sections. The land in question was a private land claim designated as the “Elena Gallegos land grant.” The grant was a very old one, and there were numerous heirs and assigns of the original grantee. The assessor, under the laws of the state of New Mexico hereinbefore referred to, was authorized to assess the property to unknown owners when he found it impracticable to obtain the names of the owners.

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Bluebook (online)
284 F. 681, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-mutual-investment-agency-co-ca8-1922.