Hunter v. Bennett

115 So. 204, 149 Miss. 368, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 16
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1928
DocketNo. 25509.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 So. 204 (Hunter v. Bennett) 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
Hunter v. Bennett, 115 So. 204, 149 Miss. 368, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 16 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

McGtowen, J.

The appellant, C. W. Hunter, filed his bill in the chancery court of Coahoma county, the purpose of which was to quiet title to lots of land in sections 5 and 8, township 26, range 7 west, in said county. Attached to the bill was Exhibit A, which might be termed an abstract of title, and which, in our opinion, constitutes a deraignment of title.

In the court below, upon an answer denying the allegations of the bill filed by the defendants O.. A. Bennett and others, the complainant’s title to the land was put in issue. Especially is the title based upon tax sales growing out of an assessment of taxes for the year 1892 and an assessment of taxes for the year 1913, the complainant having acquired title by virtue of these assessments from and as a direct result of a sale of the lands for taxes.

The court below dismissed the bill on two grounds, only one of which will be considered by-us, as the complainant’s title depends upon the validity of the assessments above mentioned; the court holding that complainant acquired no title by virtue of the several tax sales. As to said tax sales, for convenience, and in order that this opinion may be more readily understood, we set out *376 the facts which we think necessary, in connection with the several points presented as to the validity or invalidity of said sales.

1. As to the tax title acquired from a sale of these lands in 1893 conceding that they were in the state of Mississippi, and that the chancery court of Coahoma county had jurisdiction, which we do not decide, two propositions were presented: (a) Whether or not the assessment roll was void, because not filed according to law; and (b) whether or not the assessment roll was void, because received and approved, and the taxes thereon levied, at a meeting held at a place other than the courthouse.

The meeting of the board of supervisors of Coahoma county, which dealt with this assessment roll, was held on the first M'onday of July, 1892, in the chancery clerk’s office at Friar’s Point, and at that time the said chancery clerk’s office was located in the jail building, which was not connected with the courthouse, was some little distance away, just outside the courthouse lot, and not thereon.

The minutes of the board of supervisors at this meeting are silent as to the filing of the assessment roll, and the chancellor was warranted in finding, from the testimony of Chatters and others, that the assessment roll was not filed at that time, and it was shown orally that the time was extended to the assessor to file the roll at the August meeting of the board. '

In August the minutes are silent as to the filing of the assessment roll.

At the September meeting an order appears on the minutes of the-board reciting that the assessment rolls of the county, as “heretofore presented,” be approved.

The testimony affirmatively shows that the assessment roll for the first district of Coahoma county was not filed on the first Monday of July, 1892, nor was there any extension of time entered on the minutes at that meeting.

*377 Boards of supervisors have a special and limited jurisdiction, and oral testimony may not be offered to approve the action of such boards. Boards of supervisors must speak through and by their minutes. In order for an extension of time to be valid, it was necessary that the minutes should show the granting of such extension, and, in the absence of such showing*, no legal extension of time was granted. The failure of the assessor to file his roll within the time prescribed by law makes it a void or dead roll within the meaning of the law, and any levy of taxes or any tax sale based on such roll is absolutely void. See Stovall v. Conner, 58 Miss. 138; Mitchum v. McInnis, 60 Miss. 945; Fletcher v. Trewalla, 60 Miss. 965; Carlisle v. Chrestman, 69 Miss. 392, 12 So. 257; Pearce v. Perkins, 70 Miss. 276, 12 So. 205; Brothers v. Beck, 75 Miss. 486, 22 So. 944; McGuire v. Union Investment Co., 76 Miss. 868, 25 So. 367; Bennett v. Maxwell, 82 Miss. 70, 34 So. 226; Seals v. Perkins, 96 Miss. 704, 51 So. 806, 52 So. 584.

Counsel for appellant, however, argues that the principle laid down, supra, and the eases cited therein, are inapplicable, because any irregularity in the filing and approval thereof has been cured by the provisions of section 3783 of the Code of 1892, which reads as follows:

“The failure of the assessor to certify and swear to his assessment roll, or to return it on the day-named for its return, shall not affect the validity of the assessment if approved by the board of supervisors, or by operation of law. ’ ’

The fact that the board of supervisors, at its September meeting, approved the roll, does not make it valid. The cases cited above were, for the major part, decided before the adoption of the Code of 1892,- yet the corresponding section in the Code of 1880, being section 500 thereof, is exactly the same as that in the Code of 1892, except that in the latter section the concluding words are “or by operation of law.” The addition of these words did not cure the invalidity, for the reason that the as *378 sessment roll was approved by the board and not by operation of law. Therefore the cases cited, supra, are applicable.

This is obvious, but in the case of McGuire v. Union Investment Co., 76 Miss. 868, 25 So. 367, it was held that the view contended for by appellant was “maintainable only when section 3783” was “wrested from all the other provisions of the Code, which constitute one whole; harmonious scheme of assessments.” The court further said in that case:

‘£ There is a vast difference between a failure to return an assessment roll on the very day named for its return, followed by compliance on the board’s part with all the other requirements of law,'and a failure to return for two months, and an approval, without opportunity to taxpayers to make, objections, on the very day fixed by the board’s order for its return. The statute was designed to cure trifling and immaterial delay in returning the assessment, but surely not to authorize assessors to return and boards to approve at their unrestrained pleasure at any time.” See, also, Womack v. Central Lbr. Co., 131 Miss. 201, 94 So. 2.

Appellant also insists that it is shown that eleven pages immediately following the recapitulation of the assessments were missing from the assessment roll, and that there was therefore an incomplete record of the making thereof; that on these pages there might have appeared the filing date of the roll showing it to have been filed in time, and that it must be now presumed that such filing date appeared therein, and that the roll was actually filed at the proper time, citing, in support thereof, the case of Herndon v. Mayfield, 79 Miss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 204, 149 Miss. 368, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-bennett-miss-1928.