Grant v. Montgomery

5 So. 2d 491, 193 Miss. 175, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 79
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1942
DocketNo. 34783.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 5 So. 2d 491 (Grant v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Montgomery, 5 So. 2d 491, 193 Miss. 175, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 79 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 19, 1932, one McDonald owned and occupied a certain suburban lot in or adjacent to the City of Laurel, in Jones County, Mississippi, at which time the same was sold to the state for the unpaid taxes due thereon for the year 1931. Shortly after the sale, the building on said lot, which was occupied by the owner as a scenic studio, was destroyed by fire. A few months later, he moved to another state where he continued to pursue his vocation, and the lot was again sold to the *188 state in 1983 for the unpaid taxes due thereon for the year 1932. Both of these sales are admitted to be absolutely void for want of authority and power to sell on the part of the tax collector during either of said years, because of the invalidity of the assessments under which the sales were made, due to the lack of legal process and notice to the taxpayer prior to the equalization and approval of the assessment rolls; but the appellee, J. A. Montgomery, who, on March 11, 1939, obtained a forfeited state land patent for the tract of land through the office of the appellee, Guy McCullen, Land Commissioner of the State of Mississippi, relies upon the two-year statute of limitation provided for in Chap. 196, Laws of 1934, in bar of this suit brought by the appellant, B. R. Grant, on January 8, 1940', who has deraigned a good record title from the Government down and seeks to cancel the said tax sales and patent as clouds upon the title acquired by him under a quitclaim deed in his favor from the said McDonald bearing date of November 1, 1938.

The proof disclosed, and the chancellor so found, that neither McDonald, nor any tenant or vendee under him, was ever in the occupancy of the land at any time between the date of the destruction of the house by fire in the fall of 1932 and the time of the filing of this suit; also that neither the state nor its patentee had entered into the possession of said land, claiming it through either of the said tax sales or under the patent, but that the same had been a vacant lot, not in the occupancy of any person whatsoever, during the period of time hereinbefore stated. The proof did disclose, however, that the appellee Montgomery had cultivated the lot to some extent between the years 1935 and 1939 but without any claim of right to do so under authority from the state or under any claim of title derived through either of the said tax sales, but in recognition of the title of whomsoever should prove to be the owner thereof.

Thus it will be seen that we have before us a case wherein the constructive possession, in the absence of an actual *189 occupancy or possession, remained in the true owner who continued to hold the legal title after these unsuccessful attempts to divest him of the same without due process of law.

In order to uphold the constitutionality of Ch. 196-of 1934, which question was presehted for the first time on suggestion of error in the case of Russell Investment Corporation v. Russell, 182 Miss. 385, 178 So. 815, 182 So. 102, 107, the court said that it would “adopt a construction that will bring it into harmony with the constitution by restricting its application to the legitimate field of legislation, whenever necessary in order to uphold its constitutionality and carry its provisions into effect. ’ ’ In keeping with this declared purpose, it was further said in that case: “And in order that there he no doubt as to what we here hold, let it be understood that whenever it is sufficiently shown in any case that the former owner of land sold to the state for taxes has remained in possession thereof after the sale, either in person or by tenant, then and in such event Chapter 196, Laws of 1934, shall have no application, and that the claim of title and possession of such former owner can he defeated only by proof of a valid assessment, levy and sale of the land for taxes both under the statutes as well as the Constitution, coupled with a failure to redeem from such sale within the time allowed by law.” The writer of that opinion had in mind, or at least was under the impression, from a personal acquaintance with the former owner Russell, that he had remained in actual possession of the lands in question, either in person or by tenant, and the above language was employed in dealing with the particular situation which was thought to he presented by the facts of that ease. The case was before us on demurrer to settle the controlling principles involved, and it was therefore remanded in order that the former owner might amend his hill of complaint so as to allege the continued possession after the tax sale, if he *190 should so desire, and thereby save his property from being unlawfully acquired by an investment company which was then purchasing land from the state through “go-betweens” because of the limitation against more than 160' acres being acquired by one patentee during a single year.

That case was construed by the court below in the case at bar to limit the right of former owners to defeat the application of the statute of limitations prescribed by the said Ch. 196, Laws of 1934, to only such cases where they had remained in the actual possession of the land, either in person or by tenant, after the tax sale. However, in the later case of E. L. Bruce Company v. Smallwood, 188 Miss. 771, 196 So. 227, 229, where one hundred and sixty acres of land were involved on which the dwelling had been destroyed by fire, and of which only about ten acres were cultivated subsequent to the tax sale, and none of which was occupied, and where the tax sale was made for the taxes due thereon for the year 1932, the E. L. Bruce Company pleaded the alleged bar of Ch. 196-, Laws of 1934, against the right of the former owners to cancel the void tax sale and the claim of said company as vendee of a patentee from the state, and the court held that the statute was not applicable “since the possession of ' the appellees [the former owners], as it existed at the time of the tax sale, was never invaded or disturbed in any manner, either by the State while it was asserting title under the .tax sale, or by the patentee or his vendees, until the appellant [E. L. Bruce Company] began cutting the timber from the land after December 22, 1936; and hence, appellees were not required to commence an action until within two years thereafter. They were not required to actually occupy the land in the meantime by residing thereon in order to have it in their possession and under their control so as to prevent the running of the statute of limitations, it having been held in the case of Russell Investment *191 Corporation v. Russell, supra, that the State is without the constitutional power to require one to commence an action to recover property owned by him while he is already in the possession and enjoyment of all the rights claimed by him in regard thereto. Until his possession is invaded or disturbed by the purchaser at the tax sale, or by a subsequent vendee of such purchaser, the statute of limitation prescribed by the statute for commencing an action does not begin to run. ’ ’ From which holding, it follows that at the first opportunity afforded after the decision of the case of Russell Investment Corporation v.

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 2d 491, 193 Miss. 175, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-montgomery-miss-1942.