Gunter v. Townsend

79 So. 644, 202 Ala. 160, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 23, 1918
Docket3 Div. 289.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 79 So. 644 (Gunter v. Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunter v. Townsend, 79 So. 644, 202 Ala. 160, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 337 (Ala. 1918).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The bill was to clear title of clouds. The determination of the questions presented for decision requires: (1) The construction of the limitation contained in section 2296 of the Code of 1907, as to the deed of the judge of probate to the purchaser at a tax sale, and (2) the construction of certain of the provisions of the will of Sarah J. Allsop, deceased.

It is averred in the pleading that the children of said testator to whom.property was devised and bequeathed were Emmie Townsend, Josie Walker, and Walter J. Allsop, who are still living; that Mary E. Slielton has since died, leaving as her only child, respondent Sadie Shelton; and that in April, 1916, the said Emmie Townsend conveyed to respondent all of her interest in said properties so devised and bequeathed by said will to her. It is further averred in the answer of respondent Walker that in the event of the death of Walter J. Allsop without children said respondent “will be entitled to a two-thirds undivided interest in the property described in the bill of complaint,” and a like averment as to an undivided one-third interest in such property being in Sadie Shelton as the only child of Mary. E. Shelton, deceased, is contained in the answer of said Sadie. The special judge decreed that “respondents Josie Walker and Sadie Shelton are tlie owners of the two-thirds and one-third interests, respectively, in vested remainder, to take effect in possession after the death of Walter J. Allsop.”

Complainant’s title was derived by mesne conveyances from purchasers at tax sales, respectively, for state, county, and municipal taxes due by the said Walter J. Allsop or Ms trustees; the municipal taxes due being for the year 1910 or years preceding, and the state and county taxes for the year 1912. The complainant’s title dated from January 11, 1913, through deed from the purchasers at said tax sales. The bill a.vers that complainant has since been “in the peaceable possession” of the lands; that he “found it necessary to improve the same and has done so; * * that respondents claim some interest in the said property; and that no suit is pending to determine and settle the title to said land.”

[1] It may simplify the questions for determination to first consider the legislative intent in the enactment of section 2296 of the Code, or of the concluding paragraph thereof, limiting the effect of a deed by a judge of probate to lands purchased at a sale for state and county taxes. A full understanding of this statute can be had only by a reference to its legislative history. Acts, 1884-85, qip. 21, 59, §§ 113, 114. Prior to this act of February 17, 1S85, a sale' of lands for unpaid taxes was held to be a sale of the fee, and not of the taxpayer’s interest only. The declaration in Thorington v. Montgomery, 88 Ala. 548, 553; 7 South. 363, was that the failure to pay tax by a tenant for life may result in a sale of the entire estate, and that the assessed taxes were a lien on the land itself, as well as a legal liability of the taxpayer.

Theretofore, in Jones v. Randle, 68 Ala. 258, where the quantum of interest acquired by a purchaser at a tax sale of real estate was for decision, it was declared that the statement of law contained in Dyer v. Branch Bank of Mobile, 14 Ala. 622, that at the sale of lands assessed to a person whose duty it was to pay the taxes for the given year tlie purchaser acquires “only the interest of such person,” was not a proper construction of the statute then of force, but 'that such purchaser “acquires the fee.” It is to be noted that Jones v. Randle, supra, was decided at the December term, 1880, of this court, and that in 1882 this announcement was adverted to by Mr. Justice Somerville, with the observation that:

“It may be true that a purchaser at a valid tax sale acquires, not only the interest or right of the owner of the land to whom it is assessed, but good title to the land itself, free trom claims of all persons.” Randle, Adm’r, v. Boyd, 73 Ala. 282, 287.

To render nugatory this construction of the statute by an act for “the assessment and collection of taxes for the use of this state and the counties thereof,” etc. (Gen. Acts, 1884-85, pp. 21, 59, §§ 113, 114), the Legislature provided for the execution of a deed by the probate judge, conveying to the purchaser at tax sale “all the right, title and interest of the person or persons whose duty it was to pay the tax on said land,” but not conveying the “right, title or interest of any reversioner .or remainderman in said land.” In section 114 is embodied the provision that such deed shall vest in the purchaser “all right, title, interest and estate of the former *162 owner, in and to the land conveyed.” The two sections define such “former owner” to be the person who had the primary duty of assessment and payment of the taxes, and thus by exclusion not a reversioner or remainderman of the legal or equitable estate. No other fair interpretation can be given this statute so soon enacted after the announcement in Jones v. Randle, supra, and the inquiry in Randle, Adm’r, v. Boyd, supra. As to reversioners and remaindermen, it was a re-enactment of the just rule announced by Chief Justice Collier in Dyer v. Branch Bank of Mobile, supra. This was:

“If the persons in possession * * * were liable to pay the tax for that year, their interest only could have been sold to enforce its payment; and if the defendant had a paramount title, dating back to a time previous, its right could not be impaired by the sale.”

Dyer’s Case is the sole authority for the text in Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure:

“If the laws contemplate only the sale and transfer of the title or interest of the person in whose name the property was assessed, the purchaser at a tax sale will become invested with precisely the same title which was held by the delinquent taxpayer. * * * ” 37 Cyc. 1474.

Such is the rule in other jurisdictions. Hopper v. Malleson, 16 N. J. Eq. 382; Powell’s Case, 95 Mo. 13, 8 S. W. 176; Morrow v. Dows, 28 N. J. Eq. 459; Nashville v. Cowan, 10 Lea (Tenn.) 209; Yenda v. Wheeler, 9 Tex. 408; Stansbury v. Inglehart, 9 Mackey (D. C.) 134; White v. Portland, 67 Conn. 272, 276, 34 Atl. 1022; Payne v. Arthur, 29 S. W. 860, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 784; Dunn v. Winston, 31 Miss. 135; Coucy v. Cummings, 12 La. Ann. 748; Hardenbergh’s Case, 4 Johns. (N. T.) 390; Estabrook v. Royon, 52 Ohio St. 318, 39 N. E. 808, 32 L. R. A. 805; Ferguson v. Quinn, 97 Tenn. 46, 36 S. W. 576, 33 L. R. A. 688, 693.

[2] Appellant insists that there are no' exemptions in section 1326 as there are in section 2296 of the Code. For a full understanding of section 1326, we must have recourse to Act Aug. 13, 1907, p. 790, § 107 et seq. There it was provided that cities and towns “may levy taxes upon property and all subjects of taxation liable therefor”; that objections to assessments may be made and heard by the board of assessors for the municipality (said act, § 107; Code, § 1311); that after a valid assessment has been corrected by the council or board “it has the force and effect of a judgment against the property, or against the person owning the same, and after delinquency may be enforced by an execution * * * levied upon the personal property of the person against whom such taxes were assessed, or against the property * * * so assessed for taxation.” The Act, § 108; Code, § 1313; Town of Albertville v. Hooper, 196 Ala. 642, 72 South. 258.

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79 So. 644, 202 Ala. 160, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunter-v-townsend-ala-1918.