Henderson v. Mayer

126 So. 531, 12 La. App. 531, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 37
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1930
DocketNo. 546
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 So. 531 (Henderson v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Mayer, 126 So. 531, 12 La. App. 531, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 37 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

LEBLANC, J.

This appeal is taken from á judgment in which a tax sale of two pieces of property in the parish of Beauregard was annulled for want of notice of delinquency.

A plea of three years’ prescription based on the allegations contained in a supplemental petition filed more than three years after the alleged tax sale was properly overruled in the lower court. The amended petition was merely an amplification of the allegations of one of the articles of the original petition and did not have the effect of changing any or presenting new issues in the case.

The appellant complains of the overruling by the lower court of a motion for a new trial based on the ground of newly discovered evidence. It is generally held that the granting of a motion for a new trial is a matter largely in the discretion of the trial court, whose ruling will not be disturbed unless it appear to be clearly erroneous, which is not the case here.

On the merits, the case was presented on an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that Joseph H. Henderson, the tax debtor, .had been up to the summer of the year 1924, and for many years previous a resident of the town of Merryville, in the parish of Beauregard. The property in[533]*533volved in this suit was assessed in his name on the tax roll of the parish for the year 1924, and the name “Merryville” appeared following his name on the tax roll. In the summer of 1924, he moved with his family to Beaumont, Tex., where he went to reside permanently.

About March 30, 1925, the deputy sheriff of the parish, in charge of the collection of taxes and the sale of properties for unpaid taxes, mailed registered notices of delinquency to each tax debtor, in what it seems was the customary manner prevailing in his office. The custom was to make a list of all notices sent, in duplicate. The list contained the name and address of each person to whom a notice was addressed. The postmaster at De Ridder, La., the mailing post office, then placed a registry number opposite each name on both the original and duplicate lists, retained the duplicate, and returned the original to the sheriff’s office. From such list it appears a notice had been addressed to Joe Henderson at Merryville, La. No request was made for a return receipt and none was ever received. The addresses were all taken from the tax roll and no effort was ever made to find out if there had been any changes.

The records of the post office at De Ridder contained the duplicate list of notices received from the sheriff’s office on March 80, 1925, from which it appears that a notice under registry No. P435 was addressed to Joe. Henderson at Merryville, La. As no registry records are kept in that office longer than three years, no further information concerning the handling of the notice was obtainable from that source.

The Merryville post office records indicate that registry item No. P435 from De Ridder was received March 31, 1925 and forwarded to Beaumont, Tex., April 1, 1925. Neither the addressee’s name nor any street address either in Merryville or Beaumont appear in the records of that post office.

The records of the Beaumont post office for April, 1925, do not show the receipt of the item designated as registry No. P435 from De Ridder, La., addressed to Joe. Henderson, nor that any registered item from Merryville, La., post office addressed to Joe. Henderson was ever received by that office.

In the agreed statement of fact, Joseph Henderson is made to state that he has never received any notice from the sheriff of Beauregard parish in 1925 of unpaid taxes for the year 1924 on his property in that parish,.

It can well be said, we believe, that notice to the delinquent tax debtor is the very basis of every tax title. It is a constitutional right of which the taxpayer cannot be deprived before steps are taken to dispossess him of his property. Under the same provision of the Constitution which grants him that right, the Legislature is charged with the duty of providing the manner in which the notice shall be given.

We find the method adopted in Act No. 170 of 1898, from whose provisions we quote the following:

“Sec. 50. Be it further enacted, etc., That on the second day of January, 1899, and each subsequent year, or as soon thereafter as possible, the tax collector or sheriff shall address to each tax-payer who has not paid all the taxes * * * assessed to him on immovable property, written or printed notice in the manner provided for in Section 51 that his taxes on immovable property must be paid within twenty days after the service or mailing of said notice. * * * ”

“Sec. 51. Be it further enacted, etc., That the Tax Collector or sheriff shall either deliver to each tax-payer in person [534]*534or,shall leave at his residence or place of business in the parish of Orleans one' of said notices and a return .or statement 'in writing of the mode of such service shall be made by the officer serving the same and be filed in the office of the tax collector or' sheriff and shall be received by the courts as prima facie evidence of notice. In the country parishes this notice shall be sent by registered mail. * * * ”

■ Section 51 was amended by the Legislature by Act No. 235 of 1928, but of course as the tax sale in this case took place in 1925, we have to consider the law as it existed prior to the amendment.

The Legislature must have realized that it was carrying out a mandate of the Constitution in a very important matter; and it prescribed a method which embodied formalities commensurate with its importance. For the taxpayer in Orleans parish it provided a manner of service equally as effective as in the case of service of citation. If for the other parishes it had not provided one equally as effective, the act would be open to serious attack as denying to the citizens of one part of the state the same protection afforded to those of another part, which of course would be violative of the Constitution of the United States.

It is worthy of nóte here that the amendment to section 51 by Act No. 235 of 1928 provides for a notice by registered’ mail in the parish of Orleans as well as in the other parishes. It may be that the Legislature had in mind the same idea which is here presented.

But we do not think that the Legislature intended to, nor did it, make any such discrimination between the citizens of the state in the original act, and if, at that time, it adopted a less cumbersome and expensive method of service of notice in the case of delinquent tax debtors in the country parishes, it was because the postal laws and regulations affecting registered mail insure the Handling of the notice as effectively as does a personal service.

The federal law regulating the sending of registered mail when Act No. 170 of 1898 was adopted, included the following provision:

Rev. St. section 3928:

“A receipt shall be taken upon the delivery of any registered mail-matter, showing to whom and when the same was. delivered, which shall be returned to the sender, and be received in the courts as prima facie evidence of such delivery.”

It will be observed that the return receipt which the sender obtains is to serve as the same kind of proof in court as the return of the serving officer in the case of personal or domiciliary service.

In 1910 (Act May 23, 1910, c. 255, 36 Stat. 416), the federal law (Rev. St. U. S. sec.

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Bluebook (online)
126 So. 531, 12 La. App. 531, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-mayer-lactapp-1930.