Hartman v. Edwards

244 N.W. 474, 260 Mich. 281, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 1114
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1932
DocketDocket No. 158, Calendar No. 36,493.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 244 N.W. 474 (Hartman v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartman v. Edwards, 244 N.W. 474, 260 Mich. 281, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 1114 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Fead, J.

Plaintiff Hartman filed bill to quiet title to city lots purchased by him from the State under the tax homestead law, 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 3520 et seq. Cross-plaintiffs Edwards owned an interest in the original title, and, on the claim that the proceedings to convey the property by the auditor general to the State and by the department of conservation to plaintiff were without jurisdiction and void, filed cross-bill making the auditor general and director of conservation parties. The court entered decree dismissing plaintiff’s bill, setting aside the deed from the auditor general to the State and the deed from the director of conservation to plaintiff, ordered the lands returned to the records of the auditor general as State tax lands and gave cross-plaintiffs leave to purchase. The State officers have appealed.

The premises were held by the State as State tax lands for the taxes of 1924 and 1925, as State bid for 1926, and as delinquent for 1927 and 1928. In October, 1929, cross-plaintiffs, through their agent, Van Orden, whose agency, however, was undisclosed, made application to purchase the lands and paid the auditor general the required amount of $2,600.73. The auditor general accepted the application, made *284 proper book entries of sale to Van Orden, and executed appropriate tax deed, receipts, and certificates. He did not deliver them because on December 5th the attorney general advised him that, under Act No. 155, Pub. Acts 1927, he had no authority to sell lands for taxes after they had become five years delinquent. He destroyed the instruments, canceled the book entries, and sent check for the purchase price to Van Orden on December 9th, stating that the lands “have been withdrawn from sale under the provisions of Act No. 155, Pub. Acts 1927.” December 12th, Van Orden acknowledged receipt of the check, pointed out that it did not include an excess amount he had remitted, and asked correction of the check and early return to him. Correction was made, and the money accepted by Van Orden without protest.

Before withdrawal, proceedings had been begun to classify the lots as State tax homestead lands. November 25th the proper county clerk made certificate of no suit pending.. November 26th an examiner made report of nonoccupancy. December 14th the auditor general made certificate that the lands were delinquent for taxes, as provided by statute, and that no application had been made to pay, purchase, or redeem. On the same day the auditor general and director of conservation made determination, “under the provisions of section 127 of Act No. 206, Pub. Acts 1893, as amended by Act No. 107, Pub. Acts 1899,” and made the report provided by statute, including in it the statement, not expressly required by law, that no application had been made to pay the taxes or to purchase or redeem the lands. On the same day the auditor general deeded the lands to the State. The deed was recorded January 11,1930. June 25, 1930, the depart *285 ment of conservation deeded them to plaintiff, and the deed was recorded June 27th.

This suit was begun November 20, 1930, and the answer and cross-bill filed February 17, 1931.

Cross-plaintiffs contend the proceedings to determine and convey the premises as tax homestead lands were void because application to purchase had been made before the proceedings were commenced. The State claims that Act No. 155, Pub. Acts 1927, divested the auditor general of authority to accept an application to purchase after it appeared upon his records that the taxes were five years delinquent ; and that, on such delinquency, the lands were automatically withdrawn from sale.

Act No. 155, which was given immediate effect, introduced into the law the language in controversy here:

“Said lands shall be withdrawn from sale by the auditor general pending such examination and the determination hereinafter referred to.”

The amendment is fairly susceptible of the construction given it by the State. But there is a combination of considerations affecting it which, in our opinion, renders another construction more reasonable.

The State’s construction is not made imperative by the language of the act. “Pending” may mean “during the time intervening before; awaiting; until;” or “during.” 48 C. J. p. 782.

Prior to the amendment, application to purchase had been accepted at any stage of the tax homestead proceedings, before execution of the deed, and the proceedings then dismissed. It seems that if, overnight, the legislature intended to change this long-established law and practice so radically as the *286 State contends, it would have used language clearly evidencing such intention.

The State’s construction generally, if not always, would result in financial loss to the State, through sale of homestead lands at less than the amount of delinquent taxes, as occurred at bar. It would deprive municipalities of taxes justly due them and the State of moneys raised for general expenses, to the benefit of special State departmental purposes. It would violate the spirit of the tax law, which is to levy and collect taxes, not to appropriate lands, the homestead provisions being merely last resort remedies to be applied when collection of taxes by sale or otherwise fails.

Moreover, appropriate changes were not made in the statute by Act No. 155 to provide proper administration of the amendment as construed by the State.

The amendment was not automatic in operation although mandatory in terms. It required affirmative action by the auditor general to withdraw lands from sale. But it did not provide the evidence upon which he could withdraw nor outline his procedure in possible situations.

In addition to delinquency, it must appear that no action is pending in circuit court to set aside the taxes or remove the tax cloud on the title in order to subject lands to the act. A record of the pend-ency of suits is not required to be kept by the auditor general. He must obtain information elsewhere from which “it shall appear that no action is pending.” A certificate of the county clerk is made the evidence to support the final determination. The statute does not provide the evidence of “no action”, upon which the auditor general shall act in making an order of withdrawal. Nor does it *287 purport to give Mm authority to decide the fact of whether an action is pending. Consequently there is no method provided by which, under the State’s construction of the amendment, the auditor general, with assurance of legality, either could withdraw lands from sale or accept an application to purchase after the beginning of five years ’ delinquency.

In the ordinary course of departmental routine, it is inevitable that a considerable time must elapse, as to some lands, between the moment of five years’ delinquency and the examination. The situation as to the essentials of tax homestead lands may change during the period between delinquency and examination, by occupancy or abandonment of lands, suits begun or dismissed, or applications to pay, purchase or redeem made, rejected or withdrawn, so that at times the lands may, and at other times may not, be subject to the act.

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Bluebook (online)
244 N.W. 474, 260 Mich. 281, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-edwards-mich-1932.